Song picture
The Traveller's Farewell
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License   $25
Single   $0.75
Album   $10
A little Irish and a little English baroque influence, played on a Martin Backpacker guitar.
singer songwriter acoustic folk british guitarist song celtic traditional fingerstyle scottish scotland guitar kelso
Artist picture
Solo singer-songwriter and tunesmith playing British fingerstyle steel and nylon string guitar, and historic instruments. Scots and Irish influences.
I've been writing and playing songs and tunes since teenage years in folk clubs and pubs. I co-organise the Kelso Friday night live music sessions at the Cross Keys (hosted singaround 7.45-10pm) and Cobbles Inn (10-12pm open mic with The Cobbles Band) with the help of many friends. All welcome! Visit us at kelsofolkandlive co uk. It is worth clicking on the tab because the sound quality of my tracks is far higher than the auto player on this page. Many can be streamed or downloaded at 320KBps and the enhancement for solo guitar/voice far exceeds the benefit you get for highly compressed band recordings. My recordings are full dynamic, not compressed. Just select Hi-Fi for the first song, and an MP3 high bitrate window will open - you will still get a sequence of songs. Most of my downloads are free, but some 320KBps tracks are paid-for. These are selected because they make up my main instrumental album. I now have a YouTube page and have started doing some video recordings for fun: @daviddkilpatrick I have mainly played Lowden guitars since 1999. I current play a 1985 S5FN (nylon string), 1986 S22 (jumbo O-size mahogany/cedar), and 1995 S32 (small body rosewood/spruce). I also play my own 1997-built Martin 'kit' Grand Auditorium rosewood/spruce, a Sigma OM-T, Furch Little Jane, Tacoma Papoose, Guild 8-string baritone, Vintage V880 parlour guitar and Gordon Giltrap signature model, a Troubadour mahogany/spruce classical and an Adam Black 12-string. And that's just the guitars... also viola, mandolin, mandola, waldzither, bouzouki, Appalachian dulcimer, low D whistle, keyboards.
Song Info
Charts
Peak #38
Peak in subgenre #19
Author
David Kilpatrick
Rights
David Kilpatrick
Uploaded
February 07, 2008
Track Files
MP3
MP3 2.9 MB 320 kbps 3:08
Story behind the song
People are always asking what the Martin Backpacker Travel guitar sounds like (it looks like a wedge shaped stick with strings). Personally, I can understand why some styles will not suit it - it gets a bad report from many players. But its resonant, airy sound and lightning fast response make it ideal for celtic instrumental playing. This is a piece I wrote for the Backpacker (tuned in drop D) and of course, the name reflects the instrument but also the tradition of Irish farm workers coming seasonally to Scotland and England.
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On 14 Playlists
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