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5 Songs That Will Shoogle Your Hurdies

"Shoogle your hurdies" is a Scottish phrase that essentially means "shake your booty."
Jeff J Mitchell
/
Getty Images
"Shoogle your hurdies" is a Scottish phrase that essentially means "shake your booty."

If music makes you shake your booty, you're sure to shoogle your hurdies to these tracks. Before you go looking for an online Scots dictionary, enjoy Fiona Ritchie's handpicked set of irresistible tracks with Eileen Ivers and Immigrant Soul from the U.S., Scotland's Capercaillie and The Chair, and from Ireland T with the Maggies and Arty McGlynn. There's no point in even trying to sit still. Staun up!

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5 Songs That Will Shoogle Your Hurdies

Eileen Ivers & Immigrant Soul, 'Darlin' Corey'

From 'Eileen Ivers and Immigrant Soul'

Capercaillie, 'Seice Ruairidh (Roddy's Drum)'

From 'Secret People'

The Chair, 'Knees Of Fire'

From 'The Road To Hammer Junkie'

T with the Maggies, 'Wedding Dress'

From 'T with the Maggies'

Arty McGlynn & Nollaig Casey, 'Lead the Knave/Bunker Hill'

From 'Lead the Knave'

Fiona Ritchie
Fiona Ritchie strolls along the main street of a small village in rural Scotland and steps through the plain doorway of an 18th century stone building. Passers-by would find it difficult to imagine what this simple gesture initiates: a weekly connection with devoted public radio listeners throughout the United States. In over two decades of broadcasts, Ritchie's radio program The Thistle & Shamrock has become one of NPR's most widely heard and best-loved music programs. She has entered the lives of millions of Americans by way of an inconspicuous studio door, thousands of miles away in Scotland.Ritchie has come full circle to re-settle and create her radio programs at home in Scotland. Along the way she has forged a strong association with the United States, her adopted homeland, and made a unique contribution to the American airwaves.