BARBELITH underground
 

Subcultural engagement for the 21st Century...
Barbelith is a new kind of community (find out more)...
You can login or register.


Summer Solstice songs

 
 
Dark side of the Moonfrog1
08:40 / 15.06.07
Not sure whether to put this in music or Temple, so feel free to move if necessary, mods.

I'm playing a few songs at a friends summer solstice shindig next week and was wondering if anyone could suggest any solstice/sumer related songs/poems I could play/read?

They don't have to necessarily be traditional pagan folk songs, could be modern pop songs with a pagan twist, or poems/chants I could put to music.

Any help will be much appreciated.
 
 
Sibelian 2.0
08:48 / 15.06.07
Ha. You could do "Willow's Song" from the Wicker Man. But that's probably a slightly silly suggestion. However, I can think of few modern songs that, for me, capture the feel of summery paganism as well as that one...
 
 
Quantum
08:50 / 15.06.07
Julian Cope 'Battle of the Trees'?
 
 
Ticker
12:53 / 15.06.07
Pretty much anything off of the Wicker Man works I think...

King Volcano is also a fav on the mandolin. Reminds you there's a bit of mischief and danger in the magic of the night.
 
 
EvskiG
15:19 / 15.06.07
You might want to look at Dafydd ap Gwilym's poem "An Address to the Summer." Welsh, bardic, and excellent. Just add your own music.

Here's the best translation I could find:

Thou summer! so lovely and gay,
Ah! whither so soon art thou gone?
The world will attend to my lay
While thy absence I sadly bemoan:
With flow'rs hast thou cherish'd the glade,
The fair orchard with opening buds,--
The hedge-rows with darkening shade,
And with verdure the meadows and woods.

How calm in the vale by the brook--
How blithe o'er the lawn didst thou rove,
To prepare the fresh bow'r in the nook
For the damsel whose wishes were love:
When, smiling with heaven's bright beam,
Thou didst paint every hillock and field,
And reflect, in the smooth limpid stream,
All the elegance nature could yield.

Perfuming the rose on the bush,
And arching the eglantine spray,
Thou wast seen by the blackbird and thrush,
And they chanted the rapturous lay:
By yon river that bends o'er the plain,
With alders and willows o'erhung,
Each warbler perceiv'd the glad strain,
And join'd in the numerous song.

Here the nightingale perch'd on the throne,
The poet and prince of the grove,
Inviting the lingering morn,
Taught the bard the sweet descant of love:
And there, from the brake by the rill,
When night's sober steps have retir'd,
Ten thousand gay choristers thrill
Sweet confusion with rapture inspir'd.

Then the maiden, conducted by May,
Persuasive adviser of love,
With smiles that would rival the ray,
Nimbly trips to the bow'r in the grove;
Where sweetly I warble the song
Which beauty's soft glances inspire;
And, while melody flows from my tongue,
My soul is enrapt with desire.

But how sadly revers'd is the strain!
How doleful! since thou art away;
Every copse, every hillock and plain,
Has been mourning for many a day:
My bow'r, on the verge of the glade,
Where I sported in rapturous ease,
Once the haunt of the delicate maid--
She forsakes it, and--how can it please?

Nor blame I the damsel who flies,
When winter with threatening gale,
Loudly howls through the dark frozen skies,
And scatters the leaves o'er the vale:
In vain to the thicket I look
For the birds that enchanted the fair,
Or gaze on the wide-spreading oak;
No shelter, no music, is there.

But tempests, with hideous yell,
Chase the mist o'er the brow of the hill,
And grey torrents in every dell
Deform the soft murmuring rill:
And the hail, or the sleet, or the snow,
On winter's hard mandate attends:
To banishment, hence may they go--
Earth's tyrants, and destiny's friend!

But thou, glorious summer, return,
And visit the destitute plains;
Nor suffer thy poet to mourn,
Unheeded, in languishing strains:
O! come on the wings of the breeze,
And open the bloom of the thorn;
Display thy green robe o'er the trees,
And all nature with beauty adorn.

'Midst the bow'rs of the fresh blooming May,
Where the odours of violets float,
Each bird, on his quivering spray,
Will remember his sprightliest note:
Then the golden hair'd lass, with a song,
Will deign to revisit the grove;
Then, too, my harp shall be strung,
To welcome the season of love.
 
 
EvskiG
15:51 / 15.06.07
Wish I could find a better translation -- he's a poet who really benefits from a fairly literal translation without shoehorning him into an English rhyme scheme.

For example, Bother in a Tavern.
 
 
EvskiG
04:51 / 16.06.07
And here's a beautiful short one by Thomas Telynog Evans:

Winter and Summer

All the sweetness of nature was buried in black winter's grave, and the wind sings a sad lament with its cold plaintive cry; but oh, the teeming summer will come, bringing life in its arms, and will strew rosy flowers on the face of the hill and dale.

In lovely harmony the wood has put on its green mantle, and summer is on its throne, playing its string-music; the willow, whose harp hung silent when it was withered in winter, now gives forth its melody -- Hush! Listen! The world is alive.
 
  
Add Your Reply