Authentic field recordings Approximately 139 recordings have been made of authentic versions of the ballad sung by traditional singers, mostly in the
United States and
Scotland. The following are examples of these recordings: • Ethel Findlater of Dounby,
Orkney,
Scotland, recorded by
Peter Kennedy in 1954. • Lucy Stewart of
Fetterangus,
Aberdeenshire, Scotland, recorded by
James Madison Carpenter,
Peter Kennedy /
Hamish Henderson in 1955, and
Kenneth Goldstein in 1959. • Christina MacAllister of
Aberdeenshire, Scotland, recorded by
Ewan MacColl and
Peggy Seeger, 1962. • Helen Scott of
Fraserburgh,
Aberdeenshire, Scotland, recorded by
Kenneth Goldstein, 1960. • George Fradley of
Sudbury,
Derbyshire,
England, recorded by Mike Yates, 1984. •
Horton Barker of
Chilhowie,
Virginia,
United States, recorded by Arthur K. Davis, 1932. • Charles Ingenthron of Walnut Shade, Missouri, USA, recorded by Randolph Vance, 1941. •
Jean Ritchie of
Viper,
Kentucky USA, recorded by
Artus Moser and recorded separately with her sisters by
Mary Elizabeth Barnicle in 1946.
Other versions and settings •
Andrew Bird recorded a setting titled "Two Sisters" as the fifth track of his album
Music of Hair. •
Martin Carthy and
Dave Swarbrick recorded a version titled "The Bows of London". • The Irish group
Clannad has a version titled "Two Sisters" on their album
Dúlamán. This version inspired the name of Minneapolis Celtic-rock band
Boiled in Lead. •
Oli Steadman included it on his song collection "365 Days Of Folk". •
Bob Dylan performed "Two Sisters" in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and a recording of an impromptu version in the apartment of his friend Karen Wallace from May 1960 appears on
The Genuine Bootleg Series, Take 2. He also based "
Percy's Song" on the variant "The Wind and the Rain". •
Jerry Garcia and his acoustic band recorded Jody Stecher's version of the ballad, "Dreadful Wind and Rain", on their 1988 album
Almost Acoustic, and another recording, by
Jerry Garcia and
David Grisman, was later included in the 1996 posthumous album
Shady Grove album. •
Folk metal band
In Extremo recorded an
Old Norwegian version of the song ("Two søstra") for the last track of their debut album
Weckt Die Toten!. •
Ewan MacColl recorded a version in
Scots called "Minorie" which can be found on several of his recordings. • Folk singer
Peggy Seeger recorded a version entitled "O The Wind and Rain" on her album
Bring Me Home, and another version entitled
Two Sisters based on
Horton Barker's previously mentioned recordings. •
Julie Fowlis recorded another version of this song, titled "Wind and Rain". •
Pentangle released their album
Cruel Sister in 1970, the title track being a rendition of this ballad. •
Rachel Unthank and the Winterset recorded "Cruel Sister" on their album
Cruel Sister. •
Tom Waits includes his own version of "Two Sisters" on the
Bastards disc of his
Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers & Bastards trilogy. •
Julia Wolfe composed an instrumental rendition of the ballad titled
Cruel Sister in 2004. •
Custer Larue recorded the song on her album
The Daemon Lover. • The Irish band
Altan recorded a version of the ballad "The Wind and Rain" on their 2005 album
Local Ground. •
Loreena McKennitt covered a version of the tale "The Bonny Swans" on her album
The Mask and Mirror. •
Bellowhead recorded a version called "Wind & Rain" for their album
Broadside. •
Nico Muhly composed a version called "The Only Tune" for folk musician
Sam Amidon in 2007. • Norwegian folk band
Folque recorded a version called "Harpa" on their 1974 self-titled debut album. •
John Jacob Niles recorded an eight-verse version of the song, collected from Arlie Tolliver of Cumberland, Kentucky in 1932. •
Old Blind Dogs recorded a version called "The Cruel Sister" on their 1993 album
Close to the Bone. •
Méav Ní Mhaolchatha recorded a version titled "The Wicked Sister" on her album
Silver Sea. •
Progressive bluegrass band
Crooked Still recorded a version called "Wind and Rain" on their 2006 album
Shaken by a Low Sound. • The Folk metal band
Subway to Sally recorded a German version called "Grausame Schwester" on their 2014 album
Mitgift. • Celtic rock band
Tempest recorded "Two Sisters" on their 2001 album
Balance. • The pagan-folk Band
Omnia recorded a version called "Harp of Death" on their 2016 album
Prayer. • The musical
Ghost Quartet draws from this ballad as inspiration, as well as having a version of the ballad called "The Wind & Rain". • Indie-rock band
Okkervil River on the 10th Anniversary edition of their album
Black Sheep Boy, titled "Oh, the Wind and Rain". •
Rab Noakes and
Kathleen MacInnes constructed an arrangement in 2013 joining a Scots/English version and a Scots Gaelic version back-to-back. Rab recorded his Scots/English part of it on his ''I'm walkin' here'' album, released on Neon Records in 2015. • Folk rock band
Steeleye Span recorded "Two Sisters" on their 2016 album
Dodgy Bastards. • Traditional Irish/bluegrass band
We Banjo 3 recorded "Two Sisters" on their 2016 album
String Theory. •
Alasdair Roberts recorded a version called "The Two Sisters" on his album
Too Long in This Condition. • Rachael McShane & The Cartographers recorded a version called "Two Sisters" on their 2018 album
When All Is Still. •
House and Land recorded a version called "Two Sisters" as the first track on their album
Across the Field (2019), and the group's name is in the song's lyrics. •
June Tabor &
Oysterband recorded a version called "I'll Show You Wonders" on their 2019 album
Fire & Fleet, which was available at gigs and via their website. • Emily Portman recorded a haunting version accompanied by a harp called “Two Sisters” on her debut album “The Glamoury” in 2010. • Swedish folk band
Garmarna recorded "Två systrar" on their 2020 album
Förbundet. • Sverre Jensen's mediaeval group
Aurora Borealis recorded 13 Scandinavian and British versions from Norway, Sweden, Scotland, Finland, Denmark, the Faeroes and England. The album is titled
Harpa, which is the predominant Norwegian name for the ballad, was recorded on authentic mediaeval instruments and was released by Grappa Musikkforlag 4132 in 1999. • Anita Best and Rachel Morgan recorded "The Two Sisters" on their album
The Colour of Amber. •
Brian McNeill and Iain MacKintosh recorded "The Wind and Rain" on their album "Live & Kicking" in 2000.
Retellings in other media •
Cyril Rootham's three-act opera
The two sisters (1918–21, libretto by Marjory Fausset) is based on "The Twa Sisters O'Binnorie"; it opens with an unaccompanied rendition of six verses of the ballad instead of an overture. •
Percy Grainger's
Danish Folksongs Suite (1926–41) incorporates melodic material the composer had noted down in 1923 from a traditional
Jutish version sung by "folksongstress" Ane Nielsen Post. • A prose version of the story was featured in Time Life's series The Enchanted World, in "Ghosts" volume in 1984. It appeared under the title, "Song of the Sorrowing Harp." • A version of the tale by
Patricia C. Wrede called "Cruel Sisters" appears in her 1996 anthology
Book of Enchantments, detailing the tale including the minstrel, as told from the perspective of the third sister who often disappears in other versions of the tale. This version casts doubt on whether the accusing deceased sister is telling the truth. • "Binnorie" in
Joseph Jacobs'
English Fairy Tales (1890). •
Mercedes Lackey used the tale as part of the plot of her 2016 book
A Study in Sable, part of her
Elemental Masters series. • In the novel ''
Assassin's Quest'' by
Robin Hobb, the narrator reflects on the content of this "familiar song" he overhears at the royal court. • In the
Sarah J. Maas book
A Court of Mist and Fury (the second book in
A Court of Thorns and Roses series), The Weaver sings a song referencing this story. • In the
Witcher videogame, the quest "The Heat of the Day" is a retelling of the Polish version of the ballad, including the reference to the patch of raspberries. • The video game
Her Story includes the interviewee, played by
Viva Seifert performing a version of the song on acoustic guitar. •
Marie Brennan retells the story at Cruel Sisters. •
Caitlín R. Kiernan's "The Ammonite Violin (Murder Ballad No. 4)" is a variation on the story. •
Lucy Holland's "Sistersong" is a retelling with the two sisters as two of the three perspective characters. • In the Phryne Fisher novel
Death in Dayleford by
Kerry Greenwood the character Dot makes a reference to the song "The Cruel Sister". • The
Ursula Vernon novel
Minor Mage, written under the pen name T. Kingfisher, features a character whose special skill is making instruments from the corpses of murder victims so they can tell the story of who killed them. • The
Amal El-Mohtar novella
The River Has Roots is a reimagining of the ballad. ==See also==