Folk: album review – Andy M. Stewart ‘Songs of Robert Burns’

No, not the tartan-bedecked Andy Stewart of ‘Donald Where’s Your Troosers’ fame but Andy M. Stewart, former lead singer Scottish folk band, Silly Wizard, who went on to enjoy a successful solo career before succumbing to a tragic premature death in 2015.

A number of his self-penned songs have entered the folk canon and been widely performed by artists around the world but Stewart was also an adept interpreter of traditional material as well and was particularly fond of the work of Robert Burns.

Back in 1989, Stewart was  approached by a German record label, Wundertute, to record an album of Burns’ songs. Accompanied by Mánus Lunny (guitar and bouzouki), Charlie McKerron (fiddle) and Donald Shaw (accordion and keyboards) the album proved to be a wonderful celebration of Scotland’s national bard but for one reason or another it suffered from a distinct lack of promotion at the time and failed to attract the attention it deserved. Now, almost four decades later, Stewart’s son, Donald, and his former Silly Wizard bandmate, Martin Hadden, have remastered the album and made it available through Hadden’s own Birnam CD enterprise.

This rediscovered lost gem is a genuinely delightful album. From the rousing rendition of ‘Rantin’ Rovin’ Robin’ which opens the album to the sombre beauty of ‘Green Grow the Rashes, O’ it’s a wonderful showcase for both Stewart’s extraordinary talent as an interpreter of traditional material and for Burns’ timeless genius as a poet and lyricist.

Released: 25 January 2026 https://www.birnamcdshop.com/product/andy-m-stewart/

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