It's hard to listen to this song without being moved to tears. The rhythm of his feet sound just like the marching of soldiers, going away, away, in mournful retreat. Gosh.
Bittersweet, beautiful and genuine - I feel the emotion in every note. It is hard for me to express how much I appreciate this tune. Thank you Mr. Specker.
Funny thing- one night I dreamed of Bonaparte doing a stand-up routine about the Retreat from Moscow. Can't remember what he said, whatever it was I was laughing hard enough to wake me up! Turned on the radio, and heard "You have been listening to the Bonaparte Retreat."
As far as I know... Napoleon disbanded the last of the "Irish Brigade" which had soldiered for France and won many victories over the British since first being made up of the wild geese Irish troops who emigrated to the continent after the Treaty of Limerick 1691. He used those former Irish brigade troops, essentially an officer corps, to form 4 Irish led regiments in his own army who eventually went on to perform many gallant acts and constantly hungered for action on the field against the British.
John Specker is one of the few artists that got this right. The tune can be played in two tempos, slow and sad per the Irish or slightly upbeat per the English. Thanks John for pointing this out. It gets even better when we have Bonaparte crossing the Rhine. Celebratory if he is going eastwards..from an Irish perspective.....lots more on this....
Possibly it needs to be somewhat slower from an Irish perspective. I should have mentioned the Irish supported Bonaparte in Ireland. Thanks for this fabulous rendition.
He's got it pretty close in this one but the way John Salyer played it is probably the most authentic to how it was played- as a dirge to the tempo of a march. It really should sound like a call to retreat to the rest of the troops.
Hi John, I think you failed! I have listened many times, and enjoy it more each time. I find it to be a happy tune! Well played and thank you very much.😊
Great tune , excellently played but I've pointed out on another video that John Specker's friend has told him all wrong re the origin. The retreat the tune refers to is not from 1815 Waterloo but 1812 Moscow...which is why it is a happy tune. Many such tunes commemorating this retreat appeared in Britain, mainly England, arouind the same period. The Waterloo explanation is also wrong for another reason. The Duke of Wellington was himself Irish and around one-third, 8,500, of all the British Isles troops were made up of principally 3 Irish regiments. .
Napoleon Bonarparte's retreat, John Specer's hands have been touched, He play's it as it really was, Society is in retreat once again, Retreat, Regathere, Reform, Then continue the campaign. Eye's to the front. Over and Out.
Thank you for this awesome interpretation. A few weeks ago I was looking up new fiddle songs to learn and the title Bonaparte's Retreat piqued my interest, I was expecting something slow and Celtic, I was shocked to find out it was essentially Copland's Rodeo and a little dissapointed since its kind of cheery and already well known. But this version really reconciles the two, the begining is plodding and somber and the end is resilient and defiant. I feel like your version is closer to the spirit of the tone the original writers were going for 200 years ago. This video has inspired me to try and learn this piece.
Thanks very much for demonstrating the unity of the traditional and William Stepp versions. First time I've ever heard them played in such a way that I can actually hear the same tune in both.
Thank you for confirming that they're the same melody. I was going back and forth between Willie Nelson and Jay Ungar's covers and getting terribly confused. So just to be clear, the William Stepp interpretation is faster and emphasizes the first figure, like we hear in Aaron Copland's _Hoedown_, but the traditional version is more like Willie Nelson's without the swing, which is slower and emphasizes the second figure?
@@mfeltes I'd say you're a much better musician than I. The faster Stepp version begins here at about 4:32 then really kicks in about 4:42. I understand the conventional wisdom is that Stepp's version was recorded or at least transcribed by Depression-era government archivists, and later found by Copland, who of course made it famous. I've not heard Willie Nelson's version but there are many covers played with the traditional slower rhythm, a dirge or march compared to Stepp's reel; my favorite traditional cover is by Aly Bain and emphasizes the slow, stately dirge tempo. I think the key to recognizing both versions here is that Specker spends the first 4 1/2 minutes playing the traditional version at the faster tempo of the Stepp version.
@@houstonsam6163 Oh, I think this would be clear as day to me if I were any kind of musician, but it's a fascinating puzzle all the same. Digging through the history, it appears that Willie's version follows Pee Wee King's interpretation, which added lyrics and transformed the melody into a mid-tempo dance number. I can't hear the _Hoedown_ line in Willie's version at all, though, which is why I wondered whether Willie's version was just completely unrelated and only mentioned "Bonaparte's Retreat". That's why I appreciated your saying that you could hear the same tune. For that first section up to 4:32, I can sort of hear the two interpretations in tension, but as soon as the William Stepp/_Hoedown_ line comes more to the fore toward the end of Specker's version, it's all I can hear. Somehow it seems like an aural version of the faces/vase optical illusion. A real testament to how a great melody can be adapted to many arrangements, each of which has its own character. Thanks! ua-cam.com/video/bHxZBK4XnOo/v-deo.html
I first heard it from Benny Martin, with John Hartford on an old Album I had, I always thought it was from when the russians kicked his butt. another tune with Napoleon / Russian scotts Irish connection, is a bonny bunch of roses.oh. if I were still playing the song, it would be around 40 years for me also. He makes me want to get out a fiddle . I never made the song sound this good.
You should always take accounts of the origins of fiddle tunes and what they're 'really about' with several truckloads of salt, unless there is a known composer who has stated what the tune is 'about' - then just take it with one truckload of salt. Here's an excerpt from the lengthy Fiddler's Companion entry on this tune: In fact, the tune has Irish origins, though Burman-Hall could only find printed variants in sources from that island from 1872 onward. "It has been collected in a variety of functions, including an Irish lullaby and a 'Frog Dance' from the Isle of Man" (Linda Burman‑Hall. "Southern American Folk Fiddle Styles," Ethnomusicology, vol. 19, #1, Jan. 1975). Samuel Bayard (1944) concurs with assigning Irish origins for "Bonaparte's Retreat," and notes that it is an ancient Irish march tune with quite a varied traditional history. The 'ancient march' is called "The Eagle's Whistle [1]" or "The Eagle's Tune," which P.W. Joyce (1909) said was formerly the marching tune of the once powerful O'Donovan family. Still, states Bayard, the evidence of Irish collections indicates that it has long been common property of traditional fiddlers and pipers, and has undergone considerable alteration at various hands.
I do believe that you are right. The retreat was from Moscow. There was just nothing left of Napoleon’s army. He, and the small contingent of French who were still able, fled for home. Everyone else had to fend for themselves.
This is the first history of this song I have heard anyone mention before. The Irish would have to wait for another hundred years to be free after Napoleon got sent into retirement.
There is a video of Texas fiddler Benny Thomasson playing this tune in the early 70’s. He explains the sad history of Napoleon’s retreat and the Irish. Specker plays it just as Thomasson did many years before.
That's how you make one fiddle sound like a whole damn army!
Wow, that’s a fiddle & stomping tour de force. 👏👏👏👏👏
Best use of feet Can really hear the bodhrans not to mention best rendition of Bonaparte’s Retreat on fiddle ever
Just four strings, a bow, and two feet. What an amazingly powerful performance.
i have been known to listen to this for at least 2 strait hours . . . need i say i love it?
Me too!
I never get tired of listening to this. And watching John enjoy himself so much… His whole body in the music.
This man is an American treasure
Brilliant ! His footwork lends the performance such a hypnotic DRIVE.
It's hard to listen to this song without being moved to tears. The rhythm of his feet sound just like the marching of soldiers, going away, away, in mournful retreat. Gosh.
... yes, a mournful- and increasingly hurried- retreat.
They were the invaders, conscripted for a tyrant. A tyrant who sold territory in the US to fund his ambition. They needed to be stopped.
@@NickleJyeah they are running
Bittersweet, beautiful and genuine - I feel the emotion in every note. It is hard for me to express how much I appreciate this tune. Thank you Mr. Specker.
This is what I would Call Heavy Metal. I cant stop moving. I still Feel it. Superb
John took it to another whole level!!!!!! Wonderful.
This is really, really good -- most excellent!
Yeeeeeaah! This boy’s got it down. Plays in the groove so perfectly. Inspirational, absolutely beautiful energy. Thank you for sharing with us.
Why would anybody give this a thumbs down. I wish that I could play this tune with the effort that he puts into it. Someday.
Many years ago I was lucky enough to hear John Hartford in a small venue. This reminds me so much of that concert. Wonderful memory. Love this music!
This is so good. Listened to it many times over the years
Right there back in time ... beautiful x
so here it is seven years later and I find this... I love this.
One of my favorite UA-cam videos ever. I keep returning to watch it again and again. So much soul, energy, and passion. It makes me feel alive.
Wow
Fantastic performance, and a great bit of history conveyed. Thank you.
Thank You John.
This is the best version of Bonaparte's Retreat ever. Thank you for this.
Special ,so special
Funny thing- one night I dreamed of Bonaparte doing a stand-up routine about the Retreat from Moscow. Can't remember what he said, whatever it was I was laughing hard enough to wake me up! Turned on the radio, and heard "You have been listening to the Bonaparte Retreat."
Magnificent!!!
Excellent
Brilliant!
Beautiful. I have now been educated on the provenance and proper rendering of one of my all time favorite fiddle tunes. Thank you.
I watch this every morning to set my timing for the day . Thanks
Bravo!
What an experience! I wish I had been there!
What an awesome job you did, I am gonna learn his song. Again John you did an inspiring job on this
So much glorious sound from one lovely soul! Bravo!
Heard this played from childhood up. I like this rendition.
Please sir I want some more!
Napoleon is regarded with some affection in this country (Ireland) and is known as The Green Linnet in many songs.
Very new reading to me. Love the drone sound and love the rhythm.
Amazing, sir. You're awsome.
One of my favorite tunes from one of my favorite musicians.
As far as I know... Napoleon disbanded the last of the "Irish Brigade" which had soldiered for France and won many victories over the British since first being made up of the wild geese Irish troops who emigrated to the continent after the Treaty of Limerick 1691.
He used those former Irish brigade troops, essentially an officer corps, to form 4 Irish led regiments in his own army who eventually went on to perform many gallant acts and constantly hungered for action on the field against the British.
Got to wonder if those soldiers enjoyed coming up against their kin fighting for Wellington. Oh the irony, the irony.
DAMMMM Beautiful, Thanks!
Legendary, incomparable!
Very powerful. Love this performance.
John Specker is one of the few artists that got this right. The tune can be played in two tempos, slow and sad per the Irish or slightly upbeat per the English. Thanks John for pointing this out. It gets even better when we have Bonaparte crossing the Rhine. Celebratory if he is going eastwards..from an Irish perspective.....lots more on this....
it still sounds snappy, a snappy dirge..love it
A masterpiece!!
Wooooooooooooow!..........................................VERY COOL!
Possibly it needs to be somewhat slower from an Irish perspective. I should have mentioned the Irish supported Bonaparte in Ireland. Thanks for this fabulous rendition.
like this kind of not too fast ,rythmic fiddling with a haunting melodie ! very good john !
Great. Love the performance.
Utterly brilliant
Fabulous!
love his music, he is a one man show, so full of energy.
I’ve listened to at least 9 or 10 versions of this played by different artists but yours is the best of all in my humble opinion.👍👍👍
He's got it pretty close in this one but the way John Salyer played it is probably the most authentic to how it was played- as a dirge to the tempo of a march. It really should sound like a call to retreat to the rest of the troops.
Amazing! Really great performance! Thank you for posting this!
Absolutely love it!!
Absolutely ❤this
That is so sweet....love it! Thanks for playing
Linda Caul
fantastic !
Hi John, I think you failed! I have listened many times, and enjoy it more each time. I find it to be a happy tune! Well played and thank you very much.😊
Whoa! This is like trying to pat your head and rub your tummy! Impressive!!!
Toutefois bravo pour cette composition .
Magnifique musique
stunning!
Great tune , excellently played but I've pointed out on another video that John Specker's friend has told him all wrong re the origin. The retreat the tune refers to is not from 1815 Waterloo but 1812 Moscow...which is why it is a happy tune. Many such tunes commemorating this retreat appeared in Britain, mainly England, arouind the same period. The Waterloo explanation is also wrong for another reason. The Duke of Wellington was himself Irish and around one-third, 8,500, of all the British Isles troops were made up of principally 3 Irish regiments. .
Fantastic! Originally made for a bagpipe?
Napoleon Bonarparte's retreat, John Specer's hands have been touched, He play's it as it really was, Society is in retreat once again, Retreat, Regathere, Reform, Then continue the campaign. Eye's to the front. Over and Out.
awesome! thank you :)
Thank you for this awesome interpretation. A few weeks ago I was looking up new fiddle songs to learn and the title Bonaparte's Retreat piqued my interest, I was expecting something slow and Celtic, I was shocked to find out it was essentially Copland's Rodeo and a little dissapointed since its kind of cheery and already well known. But this version really reconciles the two, the begining is plodding and somber and the end is resilient and defiant. I feel like your version is closer to the spirit of the tone the original writers were going for 200 years ago. This video has inspired me to try and learn this piece.
Copeland's Rodeo was actually lifted from William Stepp's version, which was housed in the Library of Congress, where Copeland found it and used it.
Very nice version
😎
Yes, lovely it sounds a nice bit Scottish thank you for that
He said it was Irish
Freaking sweeeeeet man!
Holy crap! unreal!
The Irish fighters were basically mercenaries called "THE WILD GEESE" they would join ANY army that were fighting the English.....
Thanks very much for demonstrating the unity of the traditional and William Stepp versions. First time I've ever heard them played in such a way that I can actually hear the same tune in both.
Thank you for confirming that they're the same melody. I was going back and forth between Willie Nelson and Jay Ungar's covers and getting terribly confused. So just to be clear, the William Stepp interpretation is faster and emphasizes the first figure, like we hear in Aaron Copland's _Hoedown_, but the traditional version is more like Willie Nelson's without the swing, which is slower and emphasizes the second figure?
@@mfeltes I'd say you're a much better musician than I. The faster Stepp version begins here at about 4:32 then really kicks in about 4:42. I understand the conventional wisdom is that Stepp's version was recorded or at least transcribed by Depression-era government archivists, and later found by Copland, who of course made it famous. I've not heard Willie Nelson's version but there are many covers played with the traditional slower rhythm, a dirge or march compared to Stepp's reel; my favorite traditional cover is by Aly Bain and emphasizes the slow, stately dirge tempo. I think the key to recognizing both versions here is that Specker spends the first 4 1/2 minutes playing the traditional version at the faster tempo of the Stepp version.
@@houstonsam6163 Oh, I think this would be clear as day to me if I were any kind of musician, but it's a fascinating puzzle all the same. Digging through the history, it appears that Willie's version follows Pee Wee King's interpretation, which added lyrics and transformed the melody into a mid-tempo dance number. I can't hear the _Hoedown_ line in Willie's version at all, though, which is why I wondered whether Willie's version was just completely unrelated and only mentioned "Bonaparte's Retreat". That's why I appreciated your saying that you could hear the same tune. For that first section up to 4:32, I can sort of hear the two interpretations in tension, but as soon as the William Stepp/_Hoedown_ line comes more to the fore toward the end of Specker's version, it's all I can hear. Somehow it seems like an aural version of the faces/vase optical illusion. A real testament to how a great melody can be adapted to many arrangements, each of which has its own character. Thanks!
ua-cam.com/video/bHxZBK4XnOo/v-deo.html
I just set my mind to finding out how this tune got its name and, lo and behold, you told me in the first video I looked at.
classic
just absolutely brilliant unique rendition see chieftains version
Great rendition russ barenburg transatlantic sessions is also great. Have a wonderful day everyone.
Legendary
This guy is a genius.
This guy's New York hipster persona couldn't be more abrasive to my eyeballs, but alas music is for the ears, and this is fine, mighty fine!
Lol he is from Queens and has retired the vest 🙏🏼
@@IdaMaeSpecker Living in Vermont now isn"t he?
@@Genetk44alive and well in Vermont
Funny observation
nice
WOW!!! He makes that thing sing!!!!!!! Beautiful.
Wow !....:)
Spirited performance.
I first heard it from Benny Martin, with John Hartford on an old Album I had, I always thought it was from when the russians kicked his butt. another tune with Napoleon / Russian scotts Irish connection, is a bonny bunch of roses.oh. if I were still playing the song, it would be around 40 years for me also. He makes me want to get out a fiddle . I never made the song sound this good.
You should always take accounts of the origins of fiddle tunes and what they're 'really about' with several truckloads of salt, unless there is a known composer who has stated what the tune is 'about' - then just take it with one truckload of salt. Here's an excerpt from the lengthy Fiddler's Companion entry on this tune:
In fact, the tune has Irish origins, though Burman-Hall could only find printed variants in sources from that island from 1872 onward. "It has been collected in a variety of functions, including an Irish lullaby and a 'Frog Dance' from the Isle of Man" (Linda Burman‑Hall. "Southern American Folk Fiddle Styles," Ethnomusicology, vol. 19, #1, Jan. 1975). Samuel Bayard (1944) concurs with assigning Irish origins for "Bonaparte's Retreat," and notes that it is an ancient Irish march tune with quite a varied traditional history. The 'ancient march' is called "The Eagle's Whistle [1]" or "The Eagle's Tune," which P.W. Joyce (1909) said was formerly the marching tune of the once powerful O'Donovan family. Still, states Bayard, the evidence of Irish collections indicates that it has long been common property of traditional fiddlers and pipers, and has undergone considerable alteration at various hands.
Love the foot work! Tune makes you want to move your feet.
🙏🏻💚
And there was I thinking it was referring to his retreat from Moscow in 1812!
I do believe that you are right. The retreat was from Moscow. There was just nothing left of Napoleon’s army. He, and the small contingent of French who were still able, fled for home. Everyone else had to fend for themselves.
soul spirit and passion... rocks my world
This is the first history of this song I have heard anyone mention before. The Irish would have to wait for another hundred years to be free after Napoleon got sent into retirement.
bad new,s Ireland still aint free.
There is a video of Texas fiddler Benny Thomasson playing this tune in the early 70’s. He explains the sad history of Napoleon’s retreat and the Irish. Specker plays it just as Thomasson did many years before.
@@8969alyI’ll have to check that out
Amazing, my favorite version. What tuning on the fiddle?
Is that in AEAE? Best version I've ever heard.
Give the fiddler a dram~!
Very pretty. Good job.
SPECKER, Is the Can-More, Over and Out
Great! I am a minor collector of versions of this tune.
So you have the version with Emerson, Lake and Palmer ? It's called Hoedown
Look at the Glen Campbell live London performance.