LISBON — Maine folk duo The Squid Jiggers will celebrate the release of its second full-length CD, a tribute to vinyl records titled “33 1/3,” — with three shows this month.

The first show, at 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 22, will be at Graziano’s Casa Mia Dinner. Tickets are $30, which includes a family-style Italian buffet dinner at 6 p.m. with cash bar. Call 1-866-655-7171.

Folk veterans Dave Rowe and Troy R. Bennett’s second show will be at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 26, at Bull Feeney’s on Fore Street in Portland. The show is free with the purchase of drinks or a meal. Call 773-7210.

The third show, at 8 p.m. Friday, Oct. 28, will be at the Black Bear Cafe on Route 302 in Naples. The show is free with dinner. Seating is limited. Call 693-4770.

Since March 2010, The Squid Jiggers have played nearly 250 shows and released a debut album. They play a hearty mix of traditional and tradition-inspired music from Ireland, Scotland, Atlantic Canada and Maine — interspersed with Down East wit.

Their “33 1/3” CD, a nod to the rotational speed of long-playing discs, seeks to capture the warmth and style of the vinyl records the Jiggers grew up with. The CD cover recalls a 1960s Columbia Records release, complete with tracks listed on sides one and two. The disc itself looks like a miniature, grooved record.

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The resemblance doesn’t stop there.

Recorded at vocalist and bass player Rowe’s recording studio in Raymond, the CD sounds like a record. “We would have loved to release this album on vinyl, but the cost was just too prohibitive,” Rowe said.

He and Bennett used vintage equipment and a little studio trickery to evoke the sounds of the familiar black spinning platters. The album opens with the sound of a tonearm being activated. Then the needle hits the “record” and a few stray crackles and pops are heard before the first track. The music is notably warmer, more live and without the crisp digital edge of a standard CD.

“I’m not at liberty to divulge our methods,” Bennett said. “Let’s just say it involved two elderly, quarter-inch tape machines, a Dual 1229 turntable, some sophisticated software and an old Glenn Miller album.”

Bennett and Rowe, son of well-known folk musician Tom Rowe of Schooner Fare, say records were their biggest connection to the wider world of folk music while growing up. Bennett recalls combing the cutout bins in Portland record stores, looking for the kind of music he wasn’t going to hear on the radio.

“As soon as I got my license, I was driving to Portland every week, looking for Clancy Brothers, Dave Mallet, Christy Moore and, of course, Schooner Fare records,” Bennett said. “I spent every dime I had on records, gas, girls and guitar strings.”

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In the days before eBay, iTunes Youtube and Google searches, finding non-mainstream music was a challenge. Bennett shopped yard sales and borrowed records by the dozen and transferred them to cassette.

The duo’s first CD, “Greatest Hits,” is a collection of well-known and traditional songs from the Celtic genre. Their newest CD is roughly half original material and half traditional. The songs range from jaunty singalongs from Newfoundland to Irish playground taunts, to original songs about larger-than-life seafaring heroes and sailors looking for ladies ashore.

“Up Jumped the Dancers,” a song penned by Bennett, describes the joyous effects of a fiddler and his instrument. It’s an uptempo number, but conveys a sense of sadness mixed with revelry as the fiddler brings happiness while his own remains out of reach.

Rowe and Georgia songwriter Dennis Goodwin tell a true tale of kindness in a new song called “The Stranger.” In 1862, a family in Gray waited for the body of their son, who died of wounds suffered in the battle of Cedar Mountain, to be shipped home to them. When the coffin arrives, they find the body of a young Confederate soldier in his place. Rather than send him back, they bury him as their own.

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