Tri Martolod

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Tri Martolod ("Three sailors" in Breton) or Tri Martolod Yaouank ("Three young sailors"), is a traditional Breton song which dates to the 18th century in Lower Brittany. It was made famous by the interpretation, the arrangement and the recordings made by the Breton harpist Alan Stivell, in the 1970s.

The lyrics tell the story of three young sailors who embark for Newfoundland and the history quickly settles into a romantic dialogue. The music is a round in three steps typical of the South Cornouaille and common in the Breton coastal areas.

Performers

Nolwenn Leroy and Alan Stivell duo in 2012.
  • Zaïg Monjarret (An tri-ugent martolod)
  • Alan Stivell (live À l'Olympia in 1972, single, Again in 1993)
  • Tri Yann (Tri Yann an Naoned, 1972)
  • Deep Forest (Dao Dezi, 1994)
  • Yann-Fañch Kemener (with Didier Squiban, 1995)
  • Micamac (Breton folk band, album Froggy Dew, 1999)
  • Shannon (Polish band, 2000)
  • Gérard Jaffrès (Belgian singer, album Viens dans ma maison, 2003)
  • Claire Pelletier (Quebec singer, En concert au St-Denis, 2003)
  • Arany Zoltán (2009)
  • Nolwenn Leroy (album Bretonne, 2010)
  • Les Marins d'Iroise (2011)
  • Santiano (German band, 2011)
  • Dunkelschön (German band, album Zauberwort, 2011)
  • Alexandrov Ensemble (2012)
  • Restless feet, Almost Irish (2013)
  • Faitissa (album Terra aviatica, 2014)
  • MystTerra (Russian metal band)(2015)
  • Annwn (album Enaid, 2016)
  • Metal Cambra, 10th Anniversari Album, 2019 (Band from the Catalan Countries)
  • Kick Your Heart (metal band from Hungary)(2019)
  • Dr Peacock - Tri Martolod (Frenchcore Hardstyle Genre - 2020)
  • The Longest Johns, Contre vents et marées (Between Wind and Water re-release with additional French shanties, 2021)
  • Joshua Burnell (album Songs From The Seasons II, 2022)
  • The London Sea Shanty Collective (in translation as Three Breton Mariners)

Other songs

Other songs on the same musical air:

  • Danish band Lars Lilholt Band "Et folk, Et menneske" ("One People, One man") Danish lyrics by Lars Lilholt (2012)
  • French band Manau, La Tribu de Dana ("Tuatha Dé Danann", about a Celtic warrior tribe, 1998)
  • Polish band Ryczące Shannon (album Ryczące Shannon Project, 2005)
  • Russian band Nachalo Veka (НАЧАЛО ВЕКА) feat. harpist Hellawes (Хелависа), "I Waited You" ("Тебя Ждала") (single "Tebya Jdala" 2008, album "Formy Vremeny" 2010)
  • Irish singer Méav Ní Mhaolchatha sings this song in English as titled "Once You Were My Lover". (album The Calling, 2013)
  • Olli & the Bollywood Orchestra, Teen Aazaad Naavik (album Olli goes to Bollywood, 2013)
  • Swiss band Eluveitie, Inis Mona (album Slania, about the Gallish Wars and related to De Bello Gallico by Julius Caesar, 2008) Additionally, Celtos (album Origins, focusing on Gaulish folklore, 2014) and Ogmios (album Evocation II: Pantheon, 2017)
  • Brazilian band Terra Celta, "O Quadrado" (album Folkatrua, 2010)
  • Montenegrin song Ovo je naša zemlja, Sergej Ćetković & Danijel Popović (2009)
  • Dutch hardstyle DJ and producer Adaro, "Flame Up High" (2018)
  • Dutch frenchcore DJ and producer Dr. Peacock, "Tri Martolod" (2020)
  • DJ Bens, Dadinho, Kofs and RK, "Dans la cité" (2022)

Lyrics

References

Links