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NMB – release video for “Do It All Again” the first single from the upcoming album ‘Innocence & Danger’ Pre-order starts today Tour Dates revealed for US and Europe ![]() Watch the video for “Do It All Again,” created by Christian Rios, here https://youtu.be/PiNt_kQvoagMike Portnoy says this about the track, “This was the first song we wrote when we reconvened for the sessions for this album. It rooted from an idea Bill Hubauer brought in and we built off it from there. Like most NMB songs, I love the sharing of lead vocals…Neal Morse on the verses, Bill on the B section and an amazingly catchy 3-part harmony chorus with Eric Gillette taking the lead.” ‘Innocence & Danger’, featuring artwork by Thomas Ewerhard (Transatlantic), will be available as: • Limited 2CD+DVD Digipak (featuring a Making Of documentary) • 3LP+2CD Boxset • Standard 2CD Jewelcase • Digital Album Pre-order now here: https://thenealmorseband.lnk.to/InnocenceAndDanger ![]() USA 2021Oct 8th & 9th – Cross Plains, TN – Morsefest 2021 Oct 12th – Seattle, WA – The Triple Door Oct 14th – St Charles, IL – The Arcada Oct 15th – Pontiac, MI – The Crofoot Ballroom Oct 16th – Ft Wayne, IN – Pieres Oct 17th – Cleveland, OH – The Beachland Ballroom Oct 19th – Glenside, PA – The Keswick Theater Oct 20th – Baltimore, MD – Soundstage Oct 21st – Boston, MA – The Sinclair Oct 22nd – New York City, NY – The Sony Theater Europe 2022May 28th – Madrid, Spain – Teatro Kapital May 29th – Barcelona, Spain – Apolo May 30th – Milan, Italy – Live Club May 31st – Pratteln, Switzerland – Z7 June 2nd – Tilburg, Netherlands – 013 June 3rd – London, England – Shepherds Bush Empire June 4th – Paris, France – Trianon June 5th – Esch Sur Alzette, Luxembourg – Rockhal June 7th – Cologne, Germany – Live Music Hall June 9th – Brno, Czech Republic – Sono June 10th – Krakow, Poland – Studio Club June 11th – Warsaw, Poland – Progresja June 13th – Hamburg, Germany – Markthalle June 15th – Copenhagen, Denmark – Amager Bio June 16th – Gothenburg, Sweden – Pustervik June 17th – Oslo, Norway – Cosmopolite June 18th – Stockholm, Sweden – Lilla Cirkus*** With NMB’s previous two releases being concept albums, it’s perhaps remarkable that Innocence & Danger is a series of unrelated songs, but drummer Mike Portnoy says “After two sprawling back to back double concept albums in a row, it was refreshing to get back to writing a collection of unrelated individual songs in the vein of our first album.” Indeed, making this album came easy to the band; while the initial inspiration came particularly from Bill Hubauer (keyboards) and Randy George (bass), the ideas flowed from everybody from there on, as George recalls: “I am excited about the level of collaboration that we achieved on this one. We even went in with a lot of ideas that weren’t necessarily developed, and I think in the end we have something that represents the best of everybody in the band.” In fact – like its two acclaimed predecessors – Innocence & Danger is a double album by inspiration, rather than design, as Portnoy explains: “As much as we wanted to try and keep it to a single album after having just done two double albums, we wrote so much material that we found ourselves with our third double album in a row! That’s pretty prog!” There is also plenty in Innocence & Danger to excite those prog fans who have a thirst for epics, as Neal Morse explains: “There’s one half hour epic and another that’s about 20 minutes long. I really didn’t realize that they were that long when we were recording them, which I guess is great because if a movie is really good, you don’t realize that it’s three hours long! But there are also some shorter songs: some have poppier elements, some are heavier and some have three part acoustic sections. I’m excited about all of it, really.” NMB (Neal Morse Band) is Neal Morse (vocals, keyboards and guitars) Mike Portnoy (drums, vocals) Randy George (bass) Eric Gillette (guitars, vocals) Bill Hubauer (keyboards, vocals)NMB ONLINE:www.facebook.com/The-Neal-Morse-Band www.instagram.com/thenealmorsebandofficial www.twitter.com/nealmorseband1 INSIDEOUT MUSIC online:www.insideoutmusic.com www.youtube.com/InsideOutMusicTV www.facebook.com/InsideOutMusic www.twitter.com/InsideOutUSA InsideOutMusic.Store Spotify: Prog Metal Playlist Spotify: Prog Rock Playlist |
Monthly Archives: June 2021
FOUR GREAT GIFTS OF THE ROMANS
Rome Wasn’t Murdered in a Day – Joseph Epstein, Commentary Magazine





June 15, 2021
“Re: Rome Wasn’t Murdered in a Day” By Joseph Epstein
As usual I found a Commentary piece by Joseph Epstein to be stimulating and very interesting.
When he quoted Mary Beard to say “I no longer think, as I once naively did, that have much to learn directly from the Roman or for that matter from the ancient Greeks…” my first response is only a contemporary Englishwoman could have written that. I cannot imagine Edith Hamilton, Gilbert Highet, Moses Hades, or Thomas Cahill would have said anything remotely like it.
Epstein certainly recognizes that much of the greatness of the Roman world (or I would say Greco-Roman world) was their very great literature of prose and poetry rich in imagination and subtle in expression in almost every conceivable genre.
But literature and art were not the supreme gifts of the Romans.
Among these were:
- The Romans preserved the best of Greek civilization and literature (virtually every Greek book we have is derived from a Roman copy)
- The Romans were great organizers and administrators, builders of public buildings, ports, aqueducts and roads unequaled until the mid-19th century. The Pax Romana is an incredible achievement.
- Much of our thinking about the rights and duties of citizens derives directly from Greco-Roman thought and law. We think of Rome as an Empire but for centuries the Romans preferred a free republican government over a monarchy.
Epstein says “I am glad not to have been a Roman” but one of the remarkable things about Roman society is that he COULD HAVE BECOME a ROMAN with all the rights of a Roman citizen just like the Jews Josephus or St. Paul and countless Illyrians, Gauls, Spaniards, Germans, Africans, Syrians, Egyptians and Britons.
However, as a Christian and a Gael I am deeply aware the greatest of the gifts of the Romans was their translation of the Bible from Greek and Hebrew into Latin and hence their inestimable gift of ethical monotheism. Rome to me is Cicero, Vergil, Horace, Pliny, Seneca, Epictetus and Aurelius but also St. Patrick, St. Augustine, St. Gregory and is inseparable from the 12 Apostles of Ireland (including St. Columba of Iona).
The Greeks studied no literature but their own but the Romans were great interpreters, international merchants, missionaries and translators. The Odyssey was translated into Latin and the Aeneid was translated into Gaelic.
The Romans began a tradition of bilingualism and multilingualism where monks, priests and scholars understood not only Old German or Anglo-Saxon or Old Irish but Latin also (and sometimes Greek). St. Patrick, a Roman, was probably fluent in three languages (Old Welsh, Old Irish and Latin). His tremendous success at spreading Christianity as well as literacy among the Gaels was a great feat of education and organization that only a cosmopolitan Christian Roman could have achieved.
We remember Patrick as one of the great educators of history and a towering figure in the history of human rights as his was one of the first unequivocal denunciations of slavery (in his Letter to Coroticus).
We remember Rome, not for her darker side of violence, ruthlessness and cruelty but for her gentle scholars and saints who taught a love of art and learning with a gospel of love and universal brotherhood.
Richard K. Munro
Pure Americana
Recently I was on another ferry ride to San Juan Islands, that last frontier before Alaska, in fact at various points on those islands we can gaze at the Canadian shores across the water. Most of my previous rides were during colder months of autumn and spring, so almost always I was the lone motorcyclist on the ferry. This time it was a summer group ride and also there were several other unknown motorcyclists waiting at the terminal for the ferry back to Anacortes.
Among those unknown riders was this older gentleman riding a 500cc Royal Enfield. The signature classic look and that inimitable thump, even though muffled by the newer pipes, were instantly discernible. I walked over to him and mentioned how much I have enjoyed touring on these motorcycles, but of course it was over a decade ago and it was also the older 350cc variant. Interestingly he knew exactly what I was talking about. Even though a Westerner, evidently he has been living in Nepal for a while, and has done extensive touring of Indian subcontinent. More I conversed with him, more I realized how well aware he was about the machine’s quirks, subcontinent geography, and the motorcycle culture there.
Just to put all this in perspective – my conversation is with an American several generations older to me, riding a motorcycle originally invented in Britain, but now Indian engineered and exported to the US. While I am on a British designed Triumph, and most likely manufactured in Thailand. We are having this impromptu talk on a ferry terminal, in a corner of the world so distant from the Great Britain, Thailand or India. Even in our near past, possibility of this happening would be remote. But not anymore, seems like both humans and the products we engineer travel the world.
Even though the conversation itself wasn’t about the US, this situation might just be another silent illustration of American exceptionalism. Might sound like a leap, but we are in a more cohesive, connected world because of early American Federalists. That causal chain from the formation of an experimental republic, to current world is definitely long, tortuous, and involves several complex factors. But, beneath all the layers, that mechanism underlying globalization — which is essentially a contractual union of countries retaining their political identity but coexisting without cultural and economic barriers — sounds like pure Alexander Hamilton – James Madison – Americana!
Big Big Train’s Apollo
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Big Big Train release new instrumental single ‘Apollo’ Track taken from forthcoming album Common Ground due out July 30th |
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“Apollo” is the second track to be taken from Big Big Train’s forthcoming album ‘Common Ground’ due out on July 30th, 2021 on English Electric Recordings. The new album, recorded during the worldwide pandemic, sees the band continue their tradition of dramatic narratives but also tackles issues much closer to home, such as the Covid lockdowns, the separation of loved ones, the passage of time, deaths of people close to the band and the hope that springs from a new love. “Apollo” is a seven-minute plus instrumental written by Big Big Train drummer Nick D’Virgilio and will be an undoubted highlight when the band tour in 2022. “When the time came to start coming up with ideas for the next BBT album, I felt very strongly that we should include a quintessential instrumental track. I wanted to write the band’s version of Genesis’s Los Endos and to make a track that really showed off the talent of all the amazing musicians in this band. I knew that the team could totally play anything I threw at them, and boy, did they prove me right! I thought about the unique instrumentation of BBT. We have so many wonderful ‘voices’ to play with and I wanted every one of them in this song. In the big end bit, I can totally envisage the crowd with their hands in the air going back n forth, all of the lights and haze on the stage, the band just absolutely slamming, the crowd singing along with the melody the BBT brass ensemble is playing, until we reach a glorious end.” Watch the video for “Apollo” here: https://youtu.be/88HHhbD1vFE |
Tracklisting:1. The Strangest Times 2. All The Love We Can Give 3. Black With Ink 4. Dandelion Clock 5. Headwaters 6. Apollo 7. Common Ground 8. Atlantic Cable 9. Endnotes ‘Common Ground’ is available for pre-order now as Double Vinyl, CD, and Bandcamp Download at these sites: https://burningshed.com/store/bigbigtrain https://bigbigtrain.bandcamp.com ‘Common Ground’ sees the band taking in wider musical and lyrical inspiration from artists such as Elbow, Pete Townshend, Tears For Fears, Elton John and XTC, as well as acknowledging their more progressive roots. As ever, Big Big Train will take listeners on a journey, be it waiting for the UK 5pm pandemic press conferences (’The Strangest Times’) to the library of Alexandria (‘Black With Ink’) to the bottom of the ocean (‘Atlantic Cable’). For the ‘Common Ground’ tour, which will be their most extensive to date and which will culminate in the UK with a show at the prestigious London Palladium, Greg Spawton (bass), David Longdon (lead vocals, flute), Nick D’Virgilio (drums, vocals) and Rikard Sjöblom (guitars, keyboards, vocals) will be joined by Carly Bryant (keyboards, guitars, vocals), who contributes vocals to ‘Common Ground’, Dave Foster (guitars), who plays on two tracks on the new album, Clare Lindley (violin, vocals) and by a five piece brass ensemble. The band expect to announce North American tour dates shortly. |
BIG BIG TRAIN UK TOUR 2022 TUE, MARCH 15TH – YORK, BARBICAN WED, MARCH 16TH – CAMBRIDGE, CORN EXCHANGE FRI, MARCH 18TH – BIRMINGHAM, SYMPHONY HALL SAT, MARCH 19TH – BATH, FORUM MON, MARCH 21ST – GLASGOW, ROYAL CONCERT HALL TUE, MARCH 22ND – MANCHESTER, BRIDGEWATER HALL WED, MARCH 23RD – LONDON, PALLADIUM TICKETS ON SALE HERE: https://myticket.co.uk/artists/big-big-train |
Big Big Train was initially founded in 1990 and went through several line-up changes, but in 2009 the band decided on a fresh start, and the core of the current version of the band was born. Since then, they have gone on to win four Progressive Music Awards, played sold out shows and seen their last album, 2019’s ‘Grand Tour’, reach #1 in the Official UK rock charts and break into the top 40 in the Official UK album charts. The band toured the UK for the first time in 2019, culminating in a sold out show at London’s Hackney Empire, subsequently released as the critically acclaimed Blu-ray ‘Empire’, and 2022 will see the band performing their largest UK tour to date along with their first ever dates in North America. |
On ThE POWER OF IDEAS and the REVOLUTIONARY MIND OF THE FOUNDERS
Where Bailyn and Wood gave too much credence to the power of ideas (again, as somewhat determinisms and deterministic), Thompson wrestles with the much more difficult problem of individual free will. After all, imagine a world in which every single person—past, present, and future—is a moral agent. The world gets very, very complicated, very, very quickly.” Very well, done , Brad. I read this book recently. Ideas are of course very important. But some people believe it is one idea or new ideas that transform everything. But the world is very very complicated. Individuals are complicated. Communities are complicated. Economic environments are complicated. Political and military necessity are complicated. Of course, individual persons and peoples are changed by their interaction with new ideas. But as free individuals they decide to accept the idea or reject the idea or adapt the idea as they see fit. And something always remains of the old ideas and old cultural patterns. Some old ideas and old cultural patterns are very enduring. I was never raised to think emancipation of slaves or anti- slavery views or ideas began with English Quakers. One of the earliest anti-slavery voices is St. Patrick in his letter to Coroticus and the Bible itself has the seed of universal equality that long predates the Declaration or the Enlightenment. And the idea of individual dignity, the right to the self determination of small nations (or clans) and religious pluralism peacefully coexisting all existed outside of America and before the Enlightenment as well. One of the oldest Jewish communities in the British Isles is in Glasgow. Jews were expelled from England but never from Scotland and Scotland had in effect, curiously TWO established churches the Episcopal Church (Anglican Communion) and the Presbyterian Church of Scotland (Calvinist). But the result of this incomplete hegemony meant that religious minorities continued to exist in the shadowlands between the Episcopal Church and the Church of Scotland from which fractured many denominations the Free Churches of the 19th century.
People learned to have a Protestant Trail (Edmund Burke’s father and paternal grandfather were of the Anglican Communion -Church of Ireland but his mother and sisters and cousins were all raised Roman Catholics. It was the kind of compromise people made to survive. My parents were married in the Episcopal Church and the Roman Catholic Church. It allowed them to be switch hitters. That sounds like nothing now but then one had to be prepared to serve the yoke and to take part in Anglican ceremonies on board ship or while on military service. My son appeased the bold state by having a civil marriage in Arizona but he celebrates his later marriage date, in Mexico, in the Catholic Church as his true wedding anniversary. Similarly my parents had two wedding dates but only one wedding anniversary. We often look at European History as one of religious monoliths of Protestant Kingdoms and Catholic Kingdoms but the reality on the ground was more complex. Some of that complexity and religious pluralism was imported into America. The Eisenhower family (Swiss German in origin) descended from a splinter Protestant group persecuted both by Lutherans and Catholics. I cannot but help thing that his family history helped make Ike the perfect man for a great Allied coalition. Something always remains of the past. The past is never merely a tabula rasa. Education (ideas) are strong but as the old saying goes “the blood is strong” as well.
My family, I think, always respected education but we had little of it generally speaking because were were among the lower orders of society. Before my father graduated from Manual Training HS in 1933 no one in my family had ever gone past the sixth grade except for the odd cousin who became a priest. My father only knew one close family relative who was a a high school and college graduate and this was his mother’s sister’s son John (“Uncle Johnny”) Dorian who was in fact his fourth grade teacher and later schoolmaster of St. Anthony’s in Govan and much later the Superintendent of Catholic Schools in Glasgow. But even if my family was not formally educated they showed some talent as multilingual scouts in the British Army in India and North America. We excelled as soldiers (we were a fierce people) and colonial administrators. We tended to be the assistant mechanic, first mates and NCO’s if we were not fishing or shipbuilding in the old country. Being of the lower orders we were more likely to intermarry with local peoples than the English ruling class.
As an example of the clash of ideas, my entire life I have tried to understand how the Reformation could have happened and its tragedy (the sectarian hatreds and jealousies the persecutions and counter persecutions, the Thirty Years War etc etc.) After many years I think I understand the outrages and disappointments and injustices that may have caused some people to become disillusioned with the Catholic Church. I have experienced distrust and disillusionment myself. Yet my very devout wife being my anchor I never drifted far and today we listened to and repeated the Rosary as my ancestors had also for over 1000 years. So as much as I have changed here is something that my grandparents and great-grandparents would have recognized immediately. Some ideas and values endure. Something of the old always remains.
I also believe that Christianity is permanently fractured and all the king’s horses and all the king’s men could not put the wee frees (independent churches) together again. But there are good aspects to this fracture. The independent churches vary enormously in practice, belief and theology. It could be that in some environment (Communist China or Soviet Russia) hierarchical churches cannot function properly or freely and in such repression “Bible Christians” or “Evangelical Christians” might thrive better. Christianity does not put all its eggs in one basket. I know different church traditions by personal experience as I was the product of a mixed marriage. Part of my family was Roman Catholic (my father’s side) and the other half were not Lutherans or Russian Orthodox and some people might believe but “Free Church” in the North of Scotland and Scandinavia among seafaring peoples the “Free Church” persuasion was very common.
As a small boy talking about religious differences was something no one ever did and I senses there were some wounds there.
But I as grew up I realized both sides of the family had something in common. They both were from communities that belonged non-established Churches and so were both religious and linguistic minorities. They also were unified by a deep skepticism for modern secular ideas especially Marxism and Communism. And they both came to America, in a large part because, as religious minorities their legal and economic opportunities were limited in the old country. America was the land of the free with work and bread for all. I can’t speak for other people and other people’s family but I have noticed one key factor in the descendants of my grandparents. Those who believe and practice a religion have families and those who do not tend to be childless.
Brad Bizer writes:
“For probably every reader of The American Conservative, Thompson’s points—however beautifully and expertly articulated—might seem obvious. After all, these are points that Socrates, Cicero, Thomas Aquinas, Thomas More, and Friedrich Hayek all could have made. Yet, in the modern academy, so enamored with horrific ideas of determinism, Thompson is nothing if not revolutionary in his insistence on these things. Not only is Thompson gloriously correct, but again, it is worth noting, he has just complicated history, recognizing that history turns not on some predestined pivot, but on the moment-to-moment moral decisions every human being makes in every aspect of his life. Life is messy.”
Here both Thompson and Birzer hit home runs. Social determinism, economic determinism, racial determinism, sexual determinism are , in fact, false and evil ideas. One thing life has taught me is that religion and cultural values are not enforced by coercion or even taught but they are caught by the atmosphere of the home and taught not by (la mano dura) mere authority alone but by love. I sing songs my grandfather and great grandfather loved; songs my parents loved. I say prayers and repeat proverbs that have been among the people of my race and line for time immemorial. I love music and poetry because we all loved music and poetry. The music and poetry is deeply imbued with a love of nature, a love of natural love between men and women in families, of the great virtues, politeness, fidelity, prudence, justice, generosity, compassion, gratitude, purity, humor, a deep desire for freedom, courage and a deep faith. I would hope to think my forefolk would recognize in my and my family some of the same virtues they extolled and lived. I did not learn these virtues, primarily in American public schools or universities but in spite of them. I was prepared for college life and military life by my intense home-schooling. Every American should be intensely home-schooled ESPECIALLY those who attend public schools and universities. Even after so many years I remember the intense shock to learn that most schools and universities were like in the days of the Penal Years virtually enemy institutions. And I think it is much worse today. People with conservative or traditionalist views need to keep their heads down. But I survived the 20th century. It was not easy but I survived as a soldier and laborer like my father and grandfather and great grandfather before me. I did not feel at home in the universities nor in the Anglophone world of New York or Boston. So like my father, like my grandfather, like my great grandfather I remembered we were a cosmopolitan people an amphibious people. So I took a wife who had not a single word of English and zero feminist or Marxist influence. Her aunt was a charming singing nun; she had two uncles who were missionary priests. Everyone one in her family was against our marriage. After all I was a foreigner and a heretic a soldier not to be trusted. But I knew her ways and their ways and checkmated their doubts. I spoke to them in their language. When I came to ask for my wife’s hand in marriage Father Cirilio, a Jesuit priest who was a close friend of mine came with me. He vouched for my character and my faith background. And we were married on June 9, 1982 on the feast of St. Columba, patron saint of the Gaels. They questioned my faith but I told the Bishop of the Burgo de Osma that we were Catholics when most Spaniards were Moors. And that we fought the Moors and Scottish Knights with the heart of Robert the Bruce (long buried in Spain). I told them I was their friend and their Ally. We both had a memory of Christendom and I told them no one in my family every looked towards London but always to Rome. And that were very grateful for Spain. For you see the priest that baptized my father (Father Collins) and the priest that baptized my father’s mother both spoke Spanish and had been educated at the Scots College (then at Valladolid). No objection was made and we lived happily ever after. Mrs. Munro, of course, now speaks English is a naturalized US citizen and is an honorary but only honorary member of the Anglosphere. She remains deeply attached to her tradition faith -which we share-and the language and cultural traditions of the Hispanophere or la Hispanidad. In a long journey some things have to be left behind but the most essential things are faith, a certain economic security and freedom.
I don’t look at Colonial America as being a Little England in America. I don’t look at the Founding Fathers as Englishmen although of course George Washington and Franklin were very English in origin and so were some others. But Jefferson and Monroe were deeply Celtic (Monroe was mostly of Scottish Highland and Welsh origin; and Jefferson himself was of Welsh and Scottish Origin -one of his ancestors signed the Declaration of Arbroath in Scotland). Then there is Witherspoon (Scots) Paterson (Irish) and so on. Only about 49% of the population were of English origin in 1775. People of non-English origin signed the Declaration (Paca and Carroll) all were nominally subjects of the King and but Anglicans were a distinct minority even of those of English origin. Those who came to America were the religions minorities of Europe and the British Isles, French Huguenots, English Quakers, Irish Presbyterians (so-called Scots-Irish), Gaelic speaking Highlanders (both Catholic and Protestant -Catholics tended to settle in Canada and Protestants in North Carolina) German Moravians, Dutch Jews, Swiss Mennonites. Jorge Ferragut (later known as George Farragut father of Spanish-speaking Admiral Farragut) was a hero of the Revolution. He spoke English of course but taught Spanish to his children (his wife was of southern Irish origin). General Winfield Scott’s people fought against the British; his people of course had been doing that for generations. He was descended from Scottish Jacobites who oddly enough believed the Hanoverians to be illegitimate. They stubbornly refused to give consent to the German Laddies as they called them. It is said -this has not been entirely proven- that a piper who fought at Culloden played Jacobite pibrochs at Yorktown.
We like to think there was a uniform belief or fealty towards the British Monarchy but in fact many American colonists were indifferent or even hostile to the Anglican Church and the Protestant Hanoverian Ascendency of England. One of the results of the American Revolutionary period was the Quebec Act which led to the tolerance of the Catholic Church in Canada. And the American Revolution and the French Revolution had the effect ironically of strengthening the Catholic Church in America, England and Canada because of the many exiled French Catholics (life Father Dubois) , Father Hassett, the Duponts. This would eventually lead to Catholic Emancipation in England in the early 19th century and later by 1859 Jewish Emancipation.
Ideas are important in history but so are customs. and traditions. And something always remains. Even of a culture, language, religion or race considered to have been extirpated and wiped out. Stubbornly there are always those lone survivors those lone rebels with a a long memory. Stevenson, not an Englishman as Arthur Conan Doyle was not an Englishman -he came from a Scottish Catholic family- said, “For that is the mark of the Scot of all classes: that he stands in an attitude towards the past unthinkable to most Englishmen, and remembers and cherishes the memory of his forbears {his race and line} good or bad; and there burns alive in him a sense of identity with the dead even to the twentieth generation.” (From the Weir of Hermiston). Once I was provoked to a fight in school. My mother said I should do nothing and ignore the bully. That I should turn the other check. By my father said, “Remember the people you came from. Remember the courage of your ancestors. Teach that laddie a lesson that he will never forget. Let him learn not to touch the cat but with a glove. Remember you have with you the Mire-catha (the ancient blood lust/battle frenzy). Take care not to kill you opponent. Don’t lose your self-control. Do only what is necessary for your honor. ” And like a medieval Scottish Knight I was sent into singular combate. And so I suffered my first and only school suspension. But I bloodied and defeated the foe and was never bothered again. The Men of Munro began their historic life as warriors, Christian Crusaders fighting Pagan Vikings and Moors. And something of that deep faith and something of that ferocity still remains. I have a strong identity. I am an American by choice, I was a US Marine by choice (a volunteer), I am a Christian in the Roman Catholic tradition by choice but I still retain a more ancient identity. For over a thousand years we were men of the north of Ferindonald and when we saw the ancient beacon light ablaze to gather to fight the foe “Caisteal Folais Na Theine” we gathered and followed our chief to the field where our laurels were gathered before. It is hard for many Americans or Europeans to believe but Toynbee recognized it. We were for over thousand years an independent nation and clan the very last Iron Age Peoples of Europe. The last White Barbarians. The memory of that clan loyalty, that Regimental loyalty, the memory of deep oaths and sacred oaths, of battles lost and won is very, very deep. To us the Gairm (the Call to arms) has long been a sacred thing. I might change my nationality. I might change my religion (though very doubtful) but am and always will be of the Seventh Son of Hugh, of the Men of the Halo River for that is my true race and line the race and line not of Briton or Vass (Viking) or Saxon or Frank but of the Gaels and my clan (though I am descended from many famous clans) is the clan of my father. I will always be a Gael and a Munro. I will always be above all that “leal ‘n true mon. ” And if my children have not this identity I care not because I know something will remain because the teaching is strong and the blood is strong. Both will call to them. Being born in a garage does not make one an automobile. One is as one is bred and raised.
Calvin Coolidge on the Finality of the Declaration
About the Declaration there is a finality that is exceedingly restful. It is often asserted that the world has made a great deal of progress since 1776, that we have had new thoughts and new experiences which have given us a great advance over the people of that day, and that we may therefore very well discard their conclusions for something more modern. But that reasoning can not be applied to this great charter. If all men are created equal, that is final. If they are endowed with inalienable rights, that is final. If governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, that is final. No advance, no progress can be made beyond these propositions. If anyone wishes to deny their truth or their soundness, the only direction in which he can proceed historically is not forward, but backward toward the time when there was no equality, no rights of the individual, no rule of the people. Those who wish to proceed in that direction can not lay claim to progress. They are reactionary. Their ideas are not more modern, but more ancient, than those of the Revolutionary fathers.
The full speech (courtesy of Teaching American History . Org):
Evership’s THe Uncrowned King Act I Rules!
A few posts back, I passed along the news that Evership was about to release a new album, The Uncrowned King. Well, it is now available, and it is the best work they have done.
The Uncrowned King is a concept album based on an allegorical story by Harold Bell Wright of the same title. It’s basically a very brief Pilgrim’s Progress, and since it’s in the public domain you can read it for free here. I highly recommend listeners take a few minutes to read through the story, because the album won’t make a lot of sense if you don’t. The story involves twin princes of a kingdom who take very different paths. In the end, they both learn that “The Crown is not the kingdom, nor is one King because he wears a Crown.”
Musically, The Uncrowned King is the most accomplished and adventurous achievement of Shane Atkinson and Beau West yet. Fans of melodic prog will love every song. There are hints of classic Boston, Styx, and Kansas throughout, while Atkinson’s unerring ear for a beautiful melody keeps Evership’s sound sui generis. Standout tracks are “The Tower” and the epic “Yettocome/Itmightbe”.
Beau West has been a phenomenal vocalist since the debut album, but his singing on The Uncrowned King is simply amazing. He is blessed with some awesome pipes, and Atkinson’s compositions give him plenty of space to wield them.
There have been several outstanding prog albums released in the past few months, and The Uncrowned King is definitely a contender for the best of 2021. Here’s the official video for the Overture:
A FAREWELL SONG
(these are the last notes of an Auld Sang)
By Richard K. Munro
I can’t remember a time that I did not know this song by heart. This farewell song is from the point of view of the soldier who will be executed: When he sings, “ye’ll tak’ the high road and I’ll tak’ the low road” in effect he is saying that you will return alive, and I will return in spirit.
Why was there a rebellion or Rising as it was called in 1745?
At the time in Scottish history when “Loch Lomond” was a new song, the United Kingdom (which united Scotland, England, and Wales) had already been formed.
But some Highland Scots (Gaels) wanted a Scottish Stewart, not an English King to rule. Many called George II a “wee German laddie” and felt the current government was illegal and unconstitutional.
But like the American Civil War the Scots themselves were divided. Many remained loyal to the Crown (the Hanoverians) but others felt it was now or never so rose up in rebellion.
It was called the “Cause of True Honour” but of course it was doomed to failure.
What chance could a handful of tribesmen have against an Empire and “Britannia’s sons with their long-range guns”?
As my Auld Pop used to day “we won all the songs but lost all the battles.”
Many’s the lad fought on that day
Well the claymore could wield,
When the night came silently lay
Dead on Culloden’s field.
Burned are our homes, exile and death
Scatter the loyal men…….
Led by their Bonnie Prince Charlie (Prince Charles Edward Stuart) the Highland army gained some early victories by dint of daring and sheer courage.
But his army of 7,000 Highlanders were utterly defeated on April 16, 1746 at the famous Battle of Culloden. It was the last battle fought on British soil.
In the aftermath of the battleThe Duke of Cumberland (called “The Butcher”) led brutal reprisals and indiscriminately burned the homes and farms of any Highlander whether or not they had participated in the rebellion.
YOU CAN READ ABOUT THIS in ANDREW ROBERT’S NEW BOOK on George III THE LAST KING OF AMERICA which comes out this fall. It was my privilege and honor to have helped Professor Roberts with the research of the book and its editing. So take it from me this is a wonderful and original book a real tour-de-force!
https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/612529/the-last-king-of-america-by-andrew-roberts/
« Drumossie moor, Drumossie day,
A waefu’ day it was to me !
For there I lost my father dear,
My father dear and brethren three.
Arnold Toynbee said this was the last day of the European Iron Age when the last tribes of White Barbarians (as he called them) were subdued.
The aftermath led to the Highland Clearances ,mass emigration and the suppression of the Gaelic language and Highland dress.
It is this same battle that directly gives rise the LOCH LOMOND song.
After the battle, many Scottish soldiers were imprisoned within England’s Carlisle Castle, near the border of Scotland. “Loch Lomond” tells the story of two Scottish soldiers who were so imprisoned.
One of them was to be executed, while the other was to be pardoned.
According to Celtic legend if someone dies in a foreign land, his spirit will travel to his homeland by “the low road” – the route for the souls of the dead. In the song, the spirit of the dead soldier shall arrive first, while the living soldier will take the “high road” in the Land of the Living over the mountains, to arrive afterwards.
But the pardoned soldier knows he will never meet his comrade again, in the land of the living, and that their defeatedd cause is finished and “will never know a second Spring.”
He remembers his happy past, “By yon bonnie banks … where me and my true love were ever wont to gae [accustomed to go]” and sadly accepts his death “the broken heart it ken nae [knows no] second Spring again.”
The lyrics intertwine the sadness of the Highland soldier’s plight his deep love for his country and his comrades with beautify imagery of Loch Lomond’s stunning natural beauty under Ben Lomond (a ben is a mountain).
My family emigrated from Scotland en masse 1923-1948 so I grew up in Kearny, NJ and Brooklyn, NY among many immigrants.
They passed on to me a love of the traditional and national music of Scotland but also the sad wisdom of these songs which are filled with that the Highlander calls CIANALAS a word that could be translated as deep nostalgia but also a connectedness to the past and heritage and an awareness that the greatest distance between people and places is not the miles but TIME.
One of the lessons you learn from the traditional songs is to persevere, to endure defeat, exile and disappointment and that you have to be prepared to say goodbye to the places and the people you love and that nothing endures forever.
So my parent’s home and my grandfather’s home and his Auld Regiment are now part of “Yesterday’s Seven Thousand Years”. I know there is no home to go back to. But while never forgetting the past I face firmly towards the future and I am very grateful for the safe harbor that America has been to my immigrant family, my children and my grandchildren.
My mother used to say, “Life and love are brief moments in time so let us tell the people we love NOW and appreciate them WHILE they ARE here with us.”
Ah, yes, how sweet was then my mother’s voice in the Martyr’s Psalm.
Tomorrow is my last day of instruction.
My last full day at West High and in the Kern High School district.
So I bid adios and goodbye and farewell.
SLAN LIEBH GU BRATH. SEMPER FI.
We will see you at sundown.
Richard Keith Munro
(Ricardo Munro)
New Neal Morse Band Announced
NMB ANNOUNCES “INNOCENCE & DANGER” |
Hey, everyone!We’re delighted to announce details of the eagerly-anticipated new NMB album! Some incredible new music is coming your way. We will be starting pre-orders at www.radiantrecords.com on Friday, June 18th. Watch for our updates as we reveal some amazing exclusives relating to this release, plus another release only available from our website! |
** OFFICIAL PRESS RELEASE **NMB are pleased to announce the release of their much-anticipated fourth studio album Innocence & Danger on August 27th, 2021.With NMB’s previous two releases being concept albums, it’s perhaps remarkable that Innocence & Danger is a series of unrelated songs, but drummer Mike Portnoy says “After two sprawling back to back double concept albums in a row, it was refreshing to get back to writing a collection of unrelated individual songs in the vein of our first album.”Indeed, making this album came easy to the band; while the initial inspiration came particularly from Bill Hubauer (keyboards) and Randy George (bass), the ideas flowed from everybody from there on, as George recalls: “I am excited about the level of collaboration that we achieved on this one. We even went in with a lot of ideas that weren’t necessarily developed, and I think in the end we have something that represents the best of everybody in the band.”In fact – like its two acclaimed predecessors – Innocence & Danger is a double-album by inspiration, rather than design, as Portnoy explains: “As much as we wanted to try and keep it to a single album after having just done two double albums, we wrote so much material that we found ourselves with our third double album in a row! That’s pretty prog!”There is also plenty: “There’s one half hour epic and another that’s about 20 minutes long. I really didn’t realise that they were that long when we were recording them, which I guess is great because if a movie is really good, you don’t realise that it’s three hours long! But there are also some shorter songs: some have poppier elements, some are heavier and some have three part acoustic sections. I’m excited about all of it, really.”The album will be released as a Limited 2CD+DVD Digipak (featuring a Making Of documentary), 3LP+2CD Boxset, Standard 2CD Jewelcase & Digital Album, featuring artwork by Thomas Ewerhard (Transatlantic). Pre-orders start on the 18th June, and the full track-listing is below:CD 1 (Innocence):1. Do It All Again 08:552. Bird On A Wire 07:223. Your Place In The Sun 04:124. Another Story To Tell 04:505. The Way It Had To Be 07:146. Emergence 03:127. Not Afraid Pt. 1 04:538. Bridge Over Troubled Water 08:08CD 2 (Danger):1. Not Afraid Pt. 2 19:322. Beyond The Years 31:22The Neal Morse Band (now NMB) was formed in 2012, featuring long-time collaborators Neal Morse (vocals, keyboards and guitars), Mike Portnoy (drums, vocals) and Randy George (bass), as well as Bill Hubauer (keyboards, vocals) and Eric Gillette (guitars, vocals). The band’s first album, The Grand Experiment, showed both a freshness and maturity that was further developed in 2016’s The Similitude Of A Dream, 2019’s The Great Adventure and 2021’s Innocence & Danger.Look for NMB on tour in North America in October 2021 and in Europe throughout May/June 2022. Tour dates coming soon! |
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