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Flora MacNeil MBE
Unanimously ranked among the finest singers ever to emerge from
Scotland, Flora MacNeil MBE has been a vital force throughout the
revival of Gaelic music that began after World War II, and continues
to thrive today. Heiress to a vast treasure-trove of ancient ballads
and work-songs preserved through generations of her family, she
spearheaded the rescue of Gaelic singing from the Victorianised,
pseudo-classical straitjacket that was threatening to strangle it,
and brought it to the world in all its original, unadorned glory.
Flora was born in 1928 on the island of Barra, one of Gaelic songs
most important strongholds. There were singers on either side of
her family, but this was a time when the menfolk were often away
at sea for long periods, leaving the women to raise the children
and tend the croft singing all the while, to assuage their
labours and most of Floras repertoire was passed on
through her mother, Ann Gillies.
In these pre-television days (Floras family didnt even
have a radio until the 1950s), ceilidhs with the neighbours were
a regular occurrence in the MacNeil household, and from earliest
childhood she remembers soaking up literally hundreds
of songs, as if by osmosis. Clearly, the music was in her blood:
by age four, famously, she was already tackling the sophisticated
poetry of Mo Run Geal Og (My Fair Young Love),
one of the greatest of the Orain Mor, or big ballads.
Following in the footsteps of countless young islanders before
her, Flora left her beloved Barra in 1948 to find work in Edinburgh.
The wealth of songs carried in her head soon began to find a public
platform in the burgeoning round of ceilidhs and concerts that marked
the first stirrings of the Scottish folk revival. These brought
her to the attention of Hamish Henderson, who recorded her singing
as part of his landmark 1950s collecting project with Alan Lomax.
He also invited her to perform at the inaugural Edinburgh Peoples
Ceilidh in 1951, an event whose seismic repercussions, in bringing
live, authentic, traditional Scottish music to an international
audience, are still being felt today.
Since then, Flora has sung on many of Europe and Americas
most illustrious stages, mesmerising audiences everywhere with the
strength and sweetness of her voice, her profound interpretative
empathy, and her magically subtle handling of ornamentation. She
has also recorded two classic albums, Craobh nan Ubhal in 1976 (reissued
in 1993) and Orain Floraidh in 2000. One of the last true carriers
of a living oral tradition, she has not only inspired growing numbers
of talented successors every contemporary Gaelic singer from
Karen Matheson to Julie Fowlis cites her as a formative influence
but helped to shape the very musical context in which their
careers have flourished.
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