This article is about the contemporary music album. For the speech, see Burns Supper. For the toast to "the immortal memory" of Lord Nelson, see Trafalgar Night.
2004 studio album by Lisa Gerrard and Patrick Cassidy
Gerrard first met Cassidy in 2000 in Los Angeles (where he lives), when she came to work on the Gladiator soundtrack, and they planned to work together one day.[5] When they eventually found a shared two-month break, they joined at Gerrard's Australian studio for this record.[6]
Gaelic (ancient Irish) in "The Song of Amergin" (based on the first song supposedly sung by a mortal on Irish soil).
Aramaic in "Maranatha" (meaning "come lord, come teacher"), and "Abwoon" (meaning "our father", a rendition of the "Lord's Prayer" in the language of Jesus).
Latin in "Psallit in Aure Dei" (meaning "singing in the ear of God", a dirge for Patrick Cassidy's late father).
Track listing
No.
Title
Length
1.
"The Song of Amergin"
5:27
2.
"Maranatha (Come Lord)"
3:43
3.
"Amergin's Invocation"
6:19
4.
"Elegy"
6:41
5.
"Sailing to Byzantium"
5:04
6.
"Abwoon (Our Father)"
4:12
7.
"Immortal Memory"
4:28
8.
"Paradise Lost"
7:03
9.
"I Asked for Love"
5:00
10.
"Psallit in Aure Dei"
9:01
Music by Lisa Gerrard (tracks 1–9) and Patrick Cassidy (tracks 1–10).