The
Mighty Box
Luke Daniels
WRCD2011
with
Seamie O'Dowd
Dennis Cahill
Junior Davey
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Track
Listing:
1. South of the Grampians / Laurel's Reel / The Siesta. 2. Raogha an Ghabha / Jolly Tinker / Gan Ainm. 3. Australian Waters / Langstrom's Pony / Gan Ainm. 4. Gan Ainm / Carmel O'Mahoney Mulhaire / President Garfield's HP. 5. The Jug of Punch / Eddie Kelly's / Black Pat's. 6. Gan Ainm / Dooley Dooley Dank is it's Name / If I Had A Wife. 7. Cailleach an Airgid / Return to Burton Road / The Cordal Jig. 8. Little Johnie's Hame / Fisherman's Island / Dinkie Dorrian's / Gladstone's Reel. 9. The Lone Bush / Gan Ainm / Hand Me Down the Tackle 10. Good Morning Mr Magpie / The Crooked Priest / Dow's Wager. 11. The Iron Man / The Swan/ Milton. 12. Maggie's Hornpipe / The New Century / The Factory Smoke / Lad O'Beirne's. CD 2 1. Anne Lacey / Bean a Ti ar Lar / Wes & Maggie's Ceili Croft. 2. Gooseberry Bush / The Rainy Day/ Spike Island Lasses. 3. Larry's Favourite / Gan Ainm / Roddy McDonald's. 4. First Day of Summer / McDonagh's Reel / Lucy Campbell. 5. Gan Ainm / Patsy Geary's / The Doberman's Wallet. 6. Paddy Fahy's / Gan Ainm / Never Was Piping So Gay. 7. Brendan Ring's / Ronan Ryan's / Richard Dwyer's. 8. Finnegan's Ascent of Dhaulagiri / The Big Dipper 9. Gan Ainm / A Parcel of Land / The Bag of Money. 10. Martin Wynne's #4 / Andy McGann's / The Ivy Leaf. 11. The Banks 12. Mary Mac's / The Night Flight to Chile / History of the World in 100 Objects. Click on underlined titles to see artist perform on You Tube an dhear P3 sound samples |
Copperplate
is pleased to announce the release of a remarkable new recording from one of
the world's finest accordionists,
The
Mighty Box
Luke Daniels
WRCD2011
with
Seamie O'Dowd
Dennis Cahill
Junior Davey
The Mighty Box is a collection of seventy-one tunes compiled from traditional Irish music archives, sessions and my own compositions.
Since releasing my first solo album Tarantella in 1994 I have made many different recordings but began to feel the need to make another record of my accordion playing after starting to explore the interesting possibilities of an A and B flat tuned keyboard. I have not changed any of the keys of the tunes on this record but instead, have enjoyed using a range of new fingering patterns thrown up by thinking a tone higher than normal to produce the old notes.
I recorded the tunes with Junior Davey over two days at Doolittle recording studios Co Sligo in a playing marathon I am unlikely to repeat. As a result the playing is raw, spontaneous and full of life. Im especially grateful to the contributions of Seamie ODowd and Dennis Cahill whose accompaniment and musicianship helped turn this feast of Irish accordion playing into a wonderful listening experience.
Press
Reviews
The
Living Tradition Jan/Feb 2012
The title is a suitable description for the elegantly constructed white box housing
the two CDs constituting this amazing magnum opus from accordionist Luke Daniels.
The statistics themselves are astonishing to anyone familiar with recording work.
71 tracks (compiled from traditional Irish music manuscript collections, other
contemporary musicians' sessions and recorded output, and eight of Luke's own
compositions) amounting to almost 110 minutes of music recorded over two days
at a studio in County Sligo in, as Luke self-confessedly, and perhaps unsurprisingly,
puts it, "a playing marathon I am unlikely to repeat!"
The wide assemblage of tunes embraces strathspeys, reels, jigs, slip jigs, hornpipes,
slides and
other Irish tunes spanning over three centuries and resonant with wider Celtic
echoes, Cape Breton in particular. The pieces, each of which is described in detailed
tune notes based on research at the Traditional Music Archive in Dublin, are organised
in an array of 24 tune sets that must assure Luke's perpetual place in the pantheon
of great box players.
Consistent agility, fluidity and dynamic sense characterise his playing of a button
accordion with the keyboard tuned to A/Bb allowing him to present the traditional
tunes in conventional keys but using intricate fingering patterns that provide
a refreshing originality. His playing forms the foreground of a beautifully balanced
soundscape with, equally consistently, excellent and empathetic accompaniment
from, in the main, Seamie O'Dowd (guitars - steel strung, 12 string and resonator;
harmonica and fiddle), Junior Davey (bodhran) Dennis Cahill (guitar and cittern)
and Rick Foot (double bass). The recording has a very live feel and is of such
a clear quality as to suggest the musicians are in the room playing for you!
This album is a truly great achievement by this ever imaginative, interesting
and versatile player imbued with an innate sense of Irish traditional music and
the wider Gaelic tradition but open to contemporary ways of reinterpretation and
arrangement. Personally, I've a modest interest in the button accordion as an
instrument but found myself in no way tired or distracted at relentless exposure
to so much instrumental tune music. The intricate melodic detail and rhythmic
intensity of the music is both magnetic and compelling; indeed I challenge anyone
to listen to it and sit still! Kevin T Ward
Irish Music Magazine
There's so much to absorb in the latest release from the highly accomplished box
player Luke Daniels. The Mighty Box encompasses a staggering seventy one tunes
in its double CD format that are an amalgamation of his own compositions, session
derivatives and tunes sourced from traditional music archives. His Doug Briggs
crafted accordion tuned to A/Bb explores intricate fingering structures that toy
with the traditional in a fresh and invigorating manner.
This successful experimentation is strengthened by the able accompaniment of guitar
stalwarts, Seamie O'Dowd and Dennis Cahill, Junior Davey on bodhran, bass player
Rick Foot, percussionist, Gigi Bioclati and Victor Nicholls on tuba.
Each a master in their field, the album illustrates their ability to enunciate
with precision whilst ensuring each tune flows to its own pace. A great example
of this being the Australian Waters set where strings, percussion and box merge
together with rhythmic clarity. Style and range are a standout in the Doodley
Dank set where slip jigs surge into a slide taken from the playing of Sliabh Luachra
box player Johnny O'Leary. I'm drawn to the variation in tracks ranging from the
use of harmonica which, along with all the instruments, provides a funky introduction
to the Rainy Day set contrasted with the subtleness of instrumentals partnering
Daniels expertise on a lovely set entitled Patsy Geary's Doberman's Wallet.
The standout of this double CD is the fact that with so many tunes to immerse
yourself in, with one instrument as the common thread, your attention could dissipate
yet Daniels engages with a variety of style, ornamentation and contrasting instrumental
accompaniment whilst showcasing his obvious expertise on the box throughout.
The Mighty Box is the work of a mighty box player. Enough said! Eileen
McCabe