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1A Canadian recording artist and touring musician, Heather Dale writes songs for "modern dreamers": witty, fun-loving, imaginative people who aren’t afraid to be different. Heather’s original songs tap into legends, mythology, history and fantasy.
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3Heather Dale is a full-time touring musician, whose original songs explore legends, mythology, history and fantasy, fusing the Celtic folk tradition with a healthy mix of world music and rock influences. Her most famous songs are based on Myth/ArthurianLegend, with ''Mordred's Lullaby'' in particular becoming very famous. In 2015 a musical based on these works, ''Queens of Avalon'', was funded and created via Indiegogo.
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5Heather's website can be found [[http://heatherdale.com/ here]].
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7[[foldercontrol]]
8
9[[folder:Discography]]
10* ''Light of the North'' (1996; cassette only -- out of print; songs celebrating an idealized Medieval culture)
11* ''White Rose'' (1997; cassette only -- out of print; songs celebrating an idealized Medieval culture)
12* ''The Kingsword'' (1997; cassette only -- out of print; the first recording of some of Dale's King Arthur songs)
13* ''Bow To The Crown'' (1998; cassette only -- out of print; songs celebrating an idealized Medieval culture)
14* ''Dances by the Marian Ensemble'' (1998; instrumental versions of Medieval dance music, re-released on CD in 2003)
15* ''The Trial of Lancelot'' (2000; Dale's first studio album, featuring 9 of her King Arthur songs)
16* ''Call The Names'' (2001; a compilation of 20 of Dale's songs, originally appearing on her cassette tapes)
17* ''The Call The Names Book'' (songbook) (2001)
18* ''This Endris Night'' (2002; Dale's arrangements of early Christmas carols; she plays all the instruments herself)
19* ''May Queen'' (2003; a follow-up to Dale's "The Trial of Lancelot" CD, with ten more of her original King Arthur songs)
20* ''The Road to Santiago'' (released in April 2005; ten original songs and two cover songs, all inspired by legends & folktales)
21* ''The Hidden Path: Live & Rarities'' (released in November 2006; fourteen tracks of live recordings, alternate recordings and traditional songs)
22* ''The Legends of Arthur'' (story/songbook; 120-page re-telling of the King Arthur legend, with sheet music for Dale's Arthurian songs) (2006)
23* ''The Gabriel Hounds'' (released in May 2008; fourteen original songs, all inspired by legends & folktales)
24* ''Heather Dale: Live in Köln'' (2008; live CD of a German concert)
25* ''Heather Dale: Live in Montreal'' (2008; live CD of a Canadian concert)
26* ''The Green Knight'' (released in July 2009; fourteen original songs inspired by the idealized Middle Ages and the Renaissance)
27* ''Avalon'' (released in December 2010; new versions of Dale's Arthurian Legend songs, 18 on one CD)
28* ''Heather Dale: Live in Connecticut'' (released in October 2011; live CD of an American concert)
29* ''Fairytale'' (released in December 2011; music about growing up, dealing with the real world, and still keeping a healthy dose of fantasy in your life)
30* ''Perpetual Gift'' (released in September 2012; a free CD experiment released by Dale, with 14 original songs performed live with her full band, plus an intro/outro explaining that fans are encouraged to copy & share the songs widely.)
31* ''My Celtic Heart'' (released in November 2013; sixteen of her favorite traditional Celtic ballads from her childhood.)
32* ''Imagineer'' (released in August 2014)
33* ''Spark'' (released November 2016; another Christmas Album.)
34* ''Heather Dale: Live in Dallas'' (released in September 2018)
35* ''Sphere'' (released in October 2019)
36[[/folder]]
37----
38!Heather Dale's music contains examples of
39* AbusiveParents:
40** Morgan in "Mordred's Lullaby" raises her son (who's a product of BrotherSisterIncest with her half-brother Arthur) to overthrow that same brother, with MindScrew emotional abuse and demanding absolute loyalty from her son. Morgan did have a FreudianExcuse for all this, in that Uther, Arthur's father, murdered Morgan's father and married her mother, though that still doesn't make her actions right.
41** Sedna's father, in "Sedna", is a DirtyCoward who thinks nothing of [[OffingTheOffspring throwing his daughter into the frigid Arctic water just to make his kayak go faster]] when a storm endangers the boat. Luckily for Sedna, his KillItWithWater attempt fails, though she can't return to the surface.
42* AllLoveIsUnrequited: SubvertedTrope in "Fille du Roy". The narrator is confident that the titular fille du roy [[note]] French orphaned girls who were sent to Quebec [[/note]] "can't want a sailor like me", but in the end she confesses her love for him.
43* AllMythsAreTrue: If we assume that all her albums [[TheVerse occur in the same setting]] (except for ''Call the Names'' about the UsefulNotes/SocietyForCreativeAnachronism and ''This Endris Night'', an album of Christmas carols) then we have {{Satan}}, TheFairFolk, [[DemBones a thinking skeleton]], Robin Hood, SelkiesAndWereseals... if we include the above albums, we can add Jesus, angels, elves and dragons.
44* AllThereInTheManual: Heather usually explains the stories behind the myths in live performances. If you're listening on Website/YouTube and you aren't a folklore buff, you're screwed.
45* AntiHero: Joan in the song of the same name is a Type IV, while Mordred [[DesignatedVillain comes off as]] a Type III
46* ArtisticLicenseHistory: "Joan" portrays the titular heroine as an ActionGirl, when in RealLife she never killed anyone.
47* AxeCrazy: The narrator of "I Follow My King" seems a little ''too'' willing to strike people down, threatening to do it once per verse for such minor offences as blocking a gate.
48* BadassBoast: Almost every line in "Joan" is one. Here's a particularly badass verse:
49--> "I fight were {{God}} tells me, I never ask why\
50[[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu I've bloodied the devil with steel from on high]]\
51I kill without consequence, heed no mans law\
52I sift out the righteous like grain from the straw\
53I am judgement, and Heaven is nigh."
54* TheBard: "Come and be Welcome" and "The Bards of Ealdormere" encourage other bards and storytellers to join in, and Heather herself is one for the UsefulNotes/SocietyForCreativeAnachronism.
55* BlasphemousBoast: In "Black Fox", when a fox-hunting party fails to track down a quarry, the huntsmaster grouses that "If only the Devil himself ran by, we’d run him such a race!" Cue a little black fox with bright red eyes suddenly bolting out of a hole...
56* ChangelingTale: "Changeling Child" is about a woman who accepts a changeling son from the fairies. He [[NotGrowingUpSucks remains an infant for fifty years or more]], since it's implied his human mother's ghost still cares for the immortal infant.
57* ColdIron: "Fair Folk" exhorts the listener to "hold high the iron that they fear". Is implied in "Joan", where Joan states that "I've bloodied the Devil with steel from on high."
58* ConceptAlbum: At times, Heather seems to do nothing ''but'' concept albums
59** ''This Endris Night'' twofold -- it's an album of Christmas carols and all the instruments were played by Heather herself.
60** ''Avalon'', about Myth/ArthurianLegend.
61** ''Call the Names'', PatrioticFervor for her UsefulNotes/SocietyForCreativeAnachronism kingdom of Ealdormere.
62** ''Fairytale'' about growing up.
63** ''May Queen'' another album about Myth/ArthurianLegend.
64%%* CourtlyLove:
65%%** "Tristan and Isolde" covers the subject, even if it's of the more tragic side.%%ZCE
66%%** "With Your Grace as Inspiration" is a happier example.%%ZCE
67* CreationStory: "Sedna" is the Inuit story of the creation of sea life, rendered in song.
68* DarkActionGirl: Joan, from the song of the same name, is this and TheFundamentalist. "I kill without consequence, Heed no man's law/I sift out the righteous like grain from the straw."
69* DeadPersonConversation: "Lily Maid" is Elaine of Astolat talking about [[DeathByDespair her love for Lancelot from beyond the grave]].
70* DefiantToTheEnd:
71** The unnamed narrator of "Hero" (WordOfGod is that it's about Robin Hood after being captured by the Sheriff of Nottingham), who declares "Though I'd prefer a happy end, [[YouCantFightFate no man can cheat the grave]]."
72** Captain Bryce from "The Greyhound" tells his men to "curse the reaper, bend your back and cheat your sorry grave" as the titular ship is going under the waves.
73* DaddysGirl: The daughter of the Duke in "The Old Duke" is his only child and heir, and he is clearly very fond of her, valuing her as much as a son in a society that thinks he is a fool for it.
74* DemBones: Double Subverted in "Skeleton Woman". The narrator is chased by a skeleton he fished out of the ice, who was previously established as having desires. By morning, it turns out that the skeleton was just bones tangled in his fishing rod. He then cries in pity for the skeleton, and his tears animate it.
75* ExactWords:
76** You have to [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor be extremely careful when making requests of the fairies]], as the human mother in "Changeling Child" discovers -- she bargained for a child and got precisely that. She never specified that she wanted a child who would grow up.
77** A LighterAndSofter variant is in "Black Fox", where the fox hunters declares that if the devil arrived, they'd run after him. They get their wishes, and flee back to town unhurt but terrified.
78* FaceDeathWithDignity: "Into Town" is about an old farmer who, feeling death approaching, asks his son to take him into town so he won't upset his grandchildren.
79-->I've lived a life without a lot of fuss\
80I see no need to change it now
81* TheFairFolk:
82** The song "Fair Folk" specifically addresses them and does a good job describing how ''creepy'' they can be.
83** They are also the subject of "Changeling Child", where a woman asks them for a baby, [[ExactWords and ends up with a child who never grew up, with the mother nursing him eternally]].
84* FantasticAesop: The message of "Changeling Child" and "Fair Folk" -- don't make deals with TheFairFolk.
85* {{Feghoot}}: "Pierre and Marianne" in a nutshell. Pierre goes off to Paris to marry Marianne, gives a cloak to a beggar in exchange for a magic acorn which he tucks into his underwear, is given an ass in exchange for a his tired horse and meets another beggar who mistakes him for the king because of how he rides. Pierre's final words are "My dear, I bring you my good ass/I'm told I ride it well/I've got a gift in my underwear/ We'll share at the wedding bell."
86* FlawlessToken: Defied in ''One of Us.'' The female knight the singer sees in her youth isn't any better than her male peers, but just the fact that she stands with them as an equal inspires the singer to become a warrior herself.
87* TheFool:
88** Pierre in "Pierre and Marianne". Also a {{Cloudcuckoolander}}.
89** Don Ambruglio in "Up Into the Pear Tree".
90* ForeignCultureFetish: Heather has one for Medieval English and Welsh culture and folklore, as evidenced by the large number of albums about Arthurian mythology.
91* GayngstInducedSuicide: The cover of "I Never Will Marry" is a love between two women, one of whom killed herself, and the protagonist will never marry a man as she pines for her.
92* TheGoodKing: "I Follow My King" is about one such King and why the singer follows him.
93* TheHighQueen: Along with TheGoodKing, the leaders the listener is encouraged to acknowledge in "Bow to the Crown". Guinevere describes herself as this in "Queens of Avalon".
94* InhumanlyBeautifulRace: TheFairFolk in the song of the same name are described as "tall and proud and wondrous, fair."
95* InterspeciesRomance: "The Maiden and the Selkie" describes one between a human woman and a selkie man, complicated by the fact that she cannot breathe underwater and he cannot live on land for more than a day.
96* KarmicJackpot: The protagonist in "Fisherman's Boy" makes a habit of [[NatureHero only taking as much fish as he needs,]] throwing the extra ones he catches back in. When he falls overboard in a storm, he's washed up alive on the shore the next morning, the sea having thrown him back out.
97* LadyOfWar: The main character in "One of Us", who becomes an accomplished fighter in the SCA.
98* LawOfInverseFertility: "Changeling Child" concerns a couple who wanted a child for twelve years, but the wife can't have one. Driven to desperation, she bargains with the fairies to give her one, which turns out badly.
99* LiteralGenie: Either out of ignorance or malice, the fairies in "Changeling Child" gave an infertile woman a changeling baby... who never ages, as a babe was what she asked for.
100* LyricalDissonance:
101** "The Poachers" has a cheery, upbeat tune for a song about poaching. This is downplayed for most of the text, which from the point of view of the singers is about feeding themselves by flouting tyrannical laws, but particularly glaring in the chorus, with a cheery tune describing the number of fingers poachers have cut off in punishment for taking particular animals.
102** "Pied Piper" also qualifies, with a happy tune about children and a wandering piper conning a town and insisting that their parents wouldn't miss them.
103* {{Medusa}}: She's the subject of "Medusa", which portrays her as an embittered outcast from society who takes pride in her monstrous appearance.
104* MerlinAndNimue: "Hawthorn Tree" is a song about the original; in the last verse, a knight reports that Vivien had turned Merlin into a tree.
105* TheMiddleAges: A main source of inspiration for Heather's songs, including the "Current Middle Ages", aka the Society for Creative Anachronism.
106* MinimalistCast: The musical ''Queens of Avalon'' has Music/SJTucker and Heather as Guinevere and Morgana, with others being talked about but never seen.
107* NotMakingThisUpDisclaimer: "These are the actual medieval lyrics, I didn't make this up" for a lyric in ''Martin Said To His Man'' [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E1DUIDzKbPk during public performances]].
108* {{Omniglot}}: Heather sings in English, French, Gaelic, Latin, German, and even Wendat.
109* PatrioticFervor: ''Call the Names'' (both the song and the album) praise Heather's UsefulNotes/SocietyForCreativeAnachronism kingdom of Ealdormere. A downplayed example as Ealdormere is not a country outside of the SCA.
110* PerfectlyArrangedMarriage: What the narrator of "As I Am" is hoping for.
111--> ''"Don't take me out of duty, don't take me out of pride\
112Just take me if the man you see is one you'd stand beside\
113I'm offering an open heart, I'm asking for your hand\
114And I only ask you take me, you take me as I am..."''
115* PoliticallyCorrectHistory: Zigzagged in "Trail of Tears". on the one hand, the narrator rejects racism, despite being a 19th century [[DeepSouth Southerner]]. On the other hand, the song is about the eviction of Native Americans due to the same racist beliefs.
116* PoliticallyIncorrectHero: The protagonists of "Black Fox" are [[EvilPoacher fox hunters]] who end up confronted by the devil
117* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: ''Triumphant Return'' is Penelope chewing out Odysseus for leaving her alone to raise their son, rule over Ithaca and fend off her suitors for twenty years while he gallivanted across the Aegean and expecting to be welcomed back with open arms.
118* RoguishPoacher: "The Poachers" is about a band of these in the time of William the Conqueror. They aren't evil men, but Robin Hood-esque types just trying to get by under the overlordship of a new and more tyrannical lord than King Harold.
119* RuderAndCruder:
120** "Pierre and Marianne" is a piece of {{Feghoot}} with an amazing ending line.
121** Subverted in "The Poachers". Despite referring to William the Conqueror as "the Bastard" this was a title that he held in real life.
122* SelkiesAndWereseals: ''The Maiden and the Selkie'' is about a human girl (whose great-grandmother is implied to have been a selkie herself) and a "Seal-Lord" selkie who wants her for his bride.
123* SadlyMythtaken: Culhwch and Olwen refers to Modron as Mabon's father. Modron is his ''mother'', with his father being uncertain, though people think that his father's name was Mellt (blending him with another Mabon mentioned in Arthurian mythology.)
124* SatanIsGood: A downplayed example in "Black Fox." While the devil isn't exactly good, he's only a harmless prankster.
125* SpeakOfTheDevil: In ''Black Fox'', a fox hunter frustrated with the lack of quarry remarks that he would chase the Devil himself if he were there, [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor with predictable results]].
126* StarCrossedLovers: "The Maiden and the Selkie" seem to be this, as the human woman cannot survive underwater, but the selkie man will die if he stays on land past midnight. [[spoiler:The issue is solved by them finding a seal cloak so she can become a selkie too.]]
127* {{Tykebomb}}: "Mordred's Lullaby" is about Morgan turning Mordred into one.
128* TheMagicGoesAway: "White Rose" is about the elves leaving the earth.
129* VillainSong:
130** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ny7NZPfl0l4&feature=related "Mordred's Lullaby"]] is about [[Myth/ArthurianLegend Morgause]] singing a prophecy to her son about how he is going to be used to bring about King Arthur's destruction -- and die in the process.
131** The song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-74MSONOf_E "Medusa"]] may also qualify as this. It is mostly about being true to yourself in the face of others' judgment, through the PointOfView of [[PerspectiveFlip Medusa]].
132--->''My garden's full of pretty men who couldn't stay away''
133** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=84xZYSQRhQ4&feature=related "Joan"]] is more of an AntiHero song, but can qualify depending on how you look at it. "I kill without consequence", after all.
134** "Crashing Down" is officially about Mordred convincing his men to rebel against King Arthur.
135** "Golgotha" is a borderline example, since it's about someone in a dystopian world who thinks it isn't their place to do anything.
136** "Trail of Tears" is more an AntiVillain [[VillainSong Song]], since it's about a soldier who's JustFollowingOrders, though he doesn't like them.
137* VulgarHumor: ''Pierre and Marianne'' which ends on an InnocentInnuendo by Pierre:
138--> "''My dear, I bring you my good ass\
139I'm told I ride it well\
140I've got a gift in my underwear\
141We'll share at the wedding bell."''
142* WanderingMinstrel: ''Troubador'' is about one of these. It is implied that the titular harpist has died. They also make an appearance in "Come And Be Welcome":
143--> ''"Come from the forest and sit 'round the fire\
144Come from the fields and enter our hall\
145Come drink from the guest-cup, come join in our circle\
146Come and be welcome ye bards one and all."''
147%%* WarriorPrince: The Prince described in "True and Destined Prince" is clearly one of these.
148* YankTheDogsChain: "Changeling Child" tells about a childless woman who goes to the faeries to ask for a baby. After a long night's bargaining, she comes home with one, to great joy from her and her husband -- only for them to find that their "son" will never grow beyond babyhood. Even in death, the mother still tends the changeling.

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