SHASKEEN
Walking Up Town
CDFA3515
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Track
Listing:
1. The Three Little Drummers/Have a Drink on Me. (jigs) 2. The Old Pidgeon on the Gate/Imelda Roland's/The Boy in the Gap. (reels) 3. The Roseville Fair. (song) 4. Walking Up Town. (breakdown) 5. Knocknagow/The Templehouse/Kiss the Maid Behind the Barrell. (reels) 6. All for Me Grog. (song) 7. Fitzmaurice's Polka 8. Dinny O'Brien's/The Corner House. (reels) 9. Angel's Whisper. (song) 10. All Around the Fairy Fort/The New Broow. (barndances) 11. The Hovering Kestrel/The Hunted Pheasant. (reels) 12. The Haunted House/An Rogaire Dubh/The Humours of Ennistymon. (jigs) 13. Anderson's/Tom Ward's Downfall/The Mountain Road. (reels) 14. The Linnet's Chorus/The Beautiful Goldfinch. (Waltzs) 15. The Bucks of Oranmore/Rakish Paddy/Come West Along the Road. (reels) 16. The Jail of Clonmel. (song) Click on underlined titles to see You Tube clips and MP3 sound samples. |
We
are delighted to announce our release of this brilliant CD.
SHASKEEN
Walking Up Town
CDFA3515
Tom Cussen on banjo,
Patsy McDonagh on box
Geraldine Cotter on Piano
Eamon Cotter on flute
John Donnellan on bodhran,
Tony Howley on sax,
Pat Costelloe on banjo,mandolin and guitar
Pat Broderick onpipes and whistle.
Guest artists:
Sean Conway and Sean Tyrell
This is the latest and 15th album from Shaskeen
This CD is concert based with many arrangments of tunes & songs. With 16 tracks on the album this provides a huge variation of tunes & songs.
We
hope you enjoy the music and that you can experience some of the fun and mischief
that prevailed while we were creating it.
We leave you with an expression of affirmation by our good friend and mentor
PJ Curtis; the Grand Master of production; who has made a wonderful contribution
to this recording.
"The band has earned a well deserved international reputation for performing
traditional music and song with style, passion and authority. There are few
bands playing traditional music today that can claim such a history or heritage.
Like a good wine, there is a maturity laced with a palpable sense of celebration,
a musical richness played by a band at the zenith of their career. Enjoy!!"
PJ Curtis.
Press
Reviews
Irish Music Magazine
Formed in London in 1970, at a time when Irish Traditional Music was at its
peak, Tom Cussen responded to a request from the owner of the Oxford Tavern
in Kentish Town to put a band together to play on Friday nights. Now hundreds
of Friday nights later they are still a force in live music.
Its not easy to sum up the thirty-nine years of music making and entertainment
that Shaskeen have been at the forefront of Irish Traditional Music. Listening
to their new CD, Walking Up Town, it is clear they are going to
be leading the way for quite a while yet.
Having been caught
up, like many musical groups, in the whirlwind of the set-dancing era, Shaskeens
last four albums were of music for the sets. Now they are making a change to
concert style performances.
At the core of the band are Tom Cussen on banjo, Eamonn Cotter on flute, Patsy
McDonagh on accordion, Johnny Donnellan on bodhrán, Pat Costello on banjo,
mandolin and guitar, Pat Broderick on pipes and whistle, Tony Howley on flute
and saxophone and Geraldine Cotter on piano. Geraldine accompanied Shaskeen
on all their recordings for the sets and is now a regular in the band. Pat Costello
has a long involvement with Shaskeen having produced many of their recordings
before becoming a regular band member.
This CD is produced
by P.J. Curtis and engineered by by Martin OMalley/Paul Mulligan in the
west of Ireland (Kinvara and Miltown Malbay). The band welcome guests Seán
Tyrrell and Seán Conway on board for some songs but, at the heart album,
number fifteen marks a return to their original musical formula. Its an
album for listening to and features a generous collection of jigs,
reels, waltzes, polkas, barndances, and songs. The title tune Walking
up Town is an American breakdown, a fun rag-style tune. Its
probably the best summing up the band could ask for. Ita
Kelly
The Irish World
Shaskeen celebrate forty years with original member, Tom Cussen
Tom Cussen one of the original members that formed Shaskeen in 1970, taking their name from the great Michael Coleman reel. Theyre still going strong and the road to that meeting of musical minds was varied and stood them in good stead for the years of musical partnership ahead. Who would have thought that, four decades later, they would still be at the forefront of traditional Irish music, as vibrant as it ever was.
Tony Howley, of
Monlea, Aclare, Co. Sligo, picked up the sax at aged 12, inspired by local talents
Mike Marron, Martin Higgins and Mick Delahunty. He played with J P Boland band
and then the Tommy Rowley band, coming to London in 57, where he became
a well-known figure on the Irish music scene playing with acclaimed musicians
such as Martin Burns (fiddle) Raymond Roland (accordion) and others.
Tony made
the move to Manchester in 1965, when he had the opportunity to play with the
late Desi Donnelly on the Irish trad scene there. He went on to form his own
band and is still a familiar face on the music scene in and around the North
West.
Bandmate Tom Cussen,
from Broadford, Co. Limerick was always interested in Irish traditional and
ceili music. His interest intensified frequenting Ceili Dances and listening
to bands like the Tulla & Kilfenora.
Tom headed
across the water to London in 1968. and during this time truly immersed himself
in the music, buying his first banjo. He said, I learned most of my music
in London among great players like Johnny Clifford, Sean McDonagh, Jimmy Power,
Bobby Clancy, Maureen Minogue - to name but a few.
He played a host of sessions and gigs with ever-evolving line-ups while in London, and at one point played with The Sugawn Folk Group, before starting the Shaskeen group in 1970 playing every Friday night in the Oxford Tavern, Kentish Town, North London. He returned to Galway in 1971 and now resides in Clarinbridge where he continues to play and make his famous Clareen Banjos.Tom still leads Shaskeen as they enter their 40th year on the road, while the line up has changed over the years the enthusiasm & fire in the music still lives on.
Tony Howley now plays on regularly with Shaskeen, and performed in the bands latest CD called Walking up Town with other members Patsy McDonagh, accordion,Eamonn Cotter, Concert flute, Pat Broderick, Uilleann pipes, Geraldine Cotter, Piano, Johnny Donnellan, Bodhran & Patt Costello, Vocals, guitar & banjo.
The latest and 15th album from this brilliant band reflects the long and exciting journey they have made since forming all those years ago. A concert-based collection (moving on from a series of set-dancing albums) with a wonderful variety of arrangements of songs, hornpipes, jigs and reels within its 16 tracks, plenty of music to get your dancing shoes on to.
The title track is a joyous, American rag-style tune, and its what this band is all about. Much of the album is instrumental, with classic old drinking songs such as All For Me Grog and The Jail of Cluain Meala, but what each has in common is a real sense of fun; it makes you want to seek out a good session.
Indeed, it might even remind a few old hands who saw the group in action in the 70s, when they played Tuams Shamrock Bar every Monday for years. An album which conveys some of the fun and mischief the pair confessed to having while making it, Waking Up The Town is a great showcase of trad played with panache and great authority.
These guys seem
to only get better with age and their love for their roots and the music
of their homeland shines ever brighter. Shelley
Marsden
"Tuam Herald" newspaper
IN the mind's eye many may remember the memorable music sessions with Traditional group Shaskeen in Tuam's Shamrock Bar (now Geoghegan's Bar) in the early 1970s.
Those delightful,
though perhaps now dusty memories, may be rekindled by listening to the new
album Walking Up Town which is the 15th by the group since Shaskeen were formed
in London almost 39 years ago. "We played every Monday night in the Shamrock
Bar for over two and a half years from 1973. "I came back from London in
late 1971 and we restarted the band in Galway in '72.
Some time later we started to move out of the city area and Tuam's Shamrock
Bar was to become a regular great gig for us," says founding member Tom
Cussen. While Tom says that Shaskeen have made a number of excursions into other
musical enclaves over the years they have never strayed too far from their Traditional
roots and most of the tracks on this new album reflect those roots very well.
Tom adopted the name Shaskeen for the group when the original members first
got together in London in 1970.
"As far as I can remember it was in early May of that year which means
the band will be 39 years old next May. "I got the name from The Shaskeen
Reel as played by Michael Coleman, the band has been going more or less continuously
since then," says Tom. "But of course there have been many changes
of personnel over the years and sadly many fine musicians and singers who were
involved in the group over the years are no longer with us," he added.
Tom, who recently
retired from his day job with the Biochemistry Department of NUIG has been the
fulcrum around which the band has revolved, and evolved, over the years. He
is also a talented craftsman who is well known all over the world as the maker
of the Clareen Banjos at his workshop in Clarenbridge.
The Shaskeen line-up of today features eight musicians and the group has branched
out more into concerts and cabaret rather than concentrating so much on set
& ceilí dances as during some of the past decades.
"With eight musicians in the band we are more in it for the love of the
music and entertaining people at concerts etc, and with a few notable exceptions
we are now inching towards the geriatric twilight," says Tom with a smile.
On the album he acknowledges the contribution of special guests including Galway
city singer Sean Tyrrell who came up with the song Angel's Whisper for the new
album. This is a poem from the 19th century Irish poet Samual Lover which Sean
has set to music.
Another outstanding track on the album is the Folk song The Roseville Fair which
came from the pen of Bill Staines who was a veteran of the mid 1960s brief international
Folk boom.
On this album the song is given an arrangement which has shades of Bluegrass
music about it, especially during the intro. Pat Costello is in fine vocal form
on this track.
Sean Conway a former member of Shaskeen is the guest vocalist on a nice revival
of the old rousing ballad All For Me Grog Pat Costello is back on vocals for
the final track which is a popular old ballad especially
in Tipperary titled The Jail at Cluain Meala.
Apart from the few vocals it is mostly music on this new album by Shaskeen
and the group are in fine fettle as they play their way through a series of
jigs, reels, waltzes and barndances.
This is a fine production recordes at Paul Mulligan's Audio Monkey Studio in
Kinvara.
The album was mixed
by PJ Curtis in Martin O'Malley's Malbay Studio, Miltown Malbay. PJ has made
a great contribution to the way the music and songs flow so smoothly on this
album.
For many Walking Up Town will be a trip down memory lane, for some in North
Galway perhaps it will be a nostalgic look back towards the sessions in Tuam's
Shamrock Bar in the early 1970s.
Tom Cussen says the musicians hope those listening to the CD will experience
some of the fun and mischief that prevailed while Shaskeen were recording this
set of songs and tunes.
But Tom added that the group are also issuing a hilarious health warning with
the CD.
"If at any time it becomes distressful please stop the CD player and seek
professional help or else ring Joe Duffy," he concluded. - Tom
Gilmore.
Shaskeen Walking Up Town
In
the wake of heavily punk influenced Irish folk music, ala The Dropkick Murphys,
Flogging Molly or The Pogues, it is a rare treat to listen to some of the real
deal. Where the aforementioned bands have their place, and an amazing sound,
nothing quite drives home the brilliance of the roots of that music like hearing
the real thing done by people that love it and have done it for a long time.
Together in some incarnation since 1970 Shaskeen has a sound that can only really be defined as practiced and well seasoned. On Walking Up Town, their 15th album you can hear the level of experience and heart that is put into their music. With a mixture of Jigs, Reels, and Songs you have no shortage of music to dance to on this album.
A full two thirds of this album is just instrumentals, with a few nods to some of the classic Irish Drinking songs like, All For Me Grog, and The Jail of Cluain Meala, but no part of it is a let down. And seeking out the rest of their albums will become a must. There is just something about their sound that is undeniably fun spirited, and the kind of sound that you want coming out of the corner in your local pub.
If
you are a fan of the kind of traditional Irish Folk Music that has been a driving
force in a lot of popular bands these days, then you can do no wrong with Walking
Up Town. And if you want to expand your musical horizons and listen to
something that is pretty much guaranteed to put a smile on your face and a spring
in your step then Shaskeen is the choice for you. Gabriel
Llanas