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The Owl & the Pussycat from 2003featuring Peter Ostroushko, The Boys of the Lough, and Velma Frye
A Prairie Home Companion returns to TanglewoodNew Music from Richard DworskyJust released, a new track from Richard Dworsky. He says, “I was inspired by Emily Dickinson’s beautiful and heartbreaking poem about how our grief can be triggered by even the sweet and innocent chirping sound of the birds. My huge thanks to the wonderful Gaby Moreno for her lovely vocal. And great thanks to Madeleine Hart for the beautiful video. Sending my love and prayers to all who are suffering loss.” Listen to the classic showThis week, we revisit a show from March 8, 2003, which was performed at the Moran Theater in Jacksonville, Florida, with Celtic band Boys of the Lough, singer Velma Frye, and Peter Ostroushko. Highlights include talk about Florida plus a new version of “The Owl and the Pussycat,” “Mr. Jacksonville from Jacksonville” and “Diddie Wa Diddie” from Pat Donohue and the band; “Florida Song” from Velma Frye; “I Drew My Ship into a Harbor” and “Polkas” from The Boys of the Lough. Plus a sketch about Married Couples, Michael Jackson, Guy Noir, and the latest News from Lake Wobegon. Get your toes a-tappin’ and give the show a listen! The Boys of the Lough were the first of the full-time professional Celtic bands to make a name on the international scene. After their first tour in 1967, the Boys went on to do countless tours of the U.S., plus Australia, Europe, and Asia. They also released more than two dozen albums, establishing a reputation for first-rate musicianship and technical brilliance. At the same time, they helped to keep the centuries-old music of Ireland and Scotland close to its roots. They play, someone aptly wrote, “music that tastes of itself.” An early review from a 1972 Rolling Stone put it about as well as it has been said since: “… and a quartet of young British instrumentalists and singers set the Saturday night crowd howling and dancing in the full fury of an August thunderstorm with Gaelic tunes played on fiddle, guitar, flute and bodhran.” Mandolinist, composer, arranger Peter Ostroushko, who made his first Prairie Home Companion appearance in 1974, grew up listening to tunes played at family get-togethers in the Ukrainian community of northeast Minneapolis. It’s the music that provided the basis for many of his compositions — works that have been performed by the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra and others. Peter won an Emmy for the score of Minnesota: A History of the Land. Below is a tribute compilation of Peter’s many musical contributions to the show. Here are the lyrics for APHC’s version of “The Owl and the Pussycat” from this week’s classic show: The Owl and the Pussycat went to sea, Pussy said to the Owl, “Your tender avowal Said the Owl, “Key West would make a nice nest, They sailed at once for a couple of months “Dear Pig, is it possible to put down the gospel They dined on grits and eggs at the Ritz, They promised of course to share household chores They live on the shore by the breakers’ roar, © Garrison Keillor 2003 Serenity at 70, Gaiety at 80 |
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