Originally recorded in 1977 and reissued on CD in 1994,
Song of the Seals is one of
Jean Redpath's finest solo albums. As usual, she accompanies herself on guitar and, as is the case on a number of her records, she is also helped out by cellist
Abby Newton, whose instrument adds a note of haunting melancholy to a number of the songs. Fiddler
Jay Ungar contributes as well, but the focal point here is
Redpath's sweetly rough mezzo-soprano and, of course, the songs themselves. All of them are lovely, but particular highlights include the gorgeous "Mill O'Tifty's Annie" (Child number 233) and the eerie title track, which draws on ancient Scottish legends of "seal folk" (who could "cast their sealskins and assume mortal form"). The album's emotional centerpiece, though, is the heartbreaking "College Boy," in which a young woman berates her father for marrying her to a teenage boy, then mourns her young groom's death. Highly recommended. ~ Rick Anderson