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风格
#苏格兰民谣 #凯尔特民谣
地区
欧美

艺人介绍

by Craig HarrisBuddy MacMaster has been called the dean of Cape Breton fiddlers. Although MacMaster was little known outside of Cape Breton, an island off the coast of Nova Scotia, until retiring as an agent operator from the Canadian National Railway (C.N.R.) in 1988, his subsequent tours of the United States and the United Kingdom and his two albums — Judique On The Floor in 1988 and Glencoe Hall in 1991 — have enabled him to share his waltzes, jigs and reels with an international audience.

Although MacMaster was born in Ontario, his life has been profoundly influenced by the musical culture of Cape Breton, where he moved with his family in 1929. As an infant, MacMaster spent hours listening to his father play Cape Breton tunes on the fiddle. At the age of three and four, he imitated the fiddle style with small pieces of wood. Finding his fathers fiddle in a trunk, at the age of eleven, he played his first tune the same day. By the following year, he was playing well enough to enter an amateur show in Port Hood. MacMaster played his first dance at the age of 14. Over the next four decades, MacMasters fiddle playing was featured regularly at house parties, weddings and concerts throughout the region. Music, however, remained mostly a hobby as MacMaster took on a position as telegrapher and station agent with the C.N.R. in May, 1943. During trips to Scotland with the Cape Breton Symphony in 1982, 1984 and 1988, MacMaster explored the roots of his music. MacMaster returned to Scotland in 1991 for a tour with Alistair Fraser and Barbara Magone. A show taped by the BBC marked MacMasters recording debut. MacMasters first album, Judique on the Floor, released in 1989, featured piano accompaniment by John Morris Rankin of the Rankin Family. On his second album, Glencoe Hall, released in 1991, MacMaster was accompanied by Rankin and guitarist David MacIsaac. MacMaster is the uncle of Cape Breton fiddlers Natalie MacMaster and Ashley MacIsaac.