Bodhran
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Dave Sheridan and Company – Sheridan’s Guest House
Dave Sheridan
“Every musician playing on this album. It was an absolute privilege to play with you. I would like to thank all of the local musicians who I learned tunes from over the years. Thanks also to the John Me Kenna Society, Nancy Woods, John Regan, Meaiti Jo Sheamuis, Tom Mulligan, Fiachra 0 Torna, Liam Kelly, Damien Stenson, Sean Me Cague, all the lads in Monaghan, Galway, Leitrim, Sligo and Dublin for their musical friendship over the years, Jimmy Mc Kee, Gaye Mc Donagh, Sister Anne, Donal and Eithne in the Mater Dei Music Department and all the staff in St Michael’s College,
I would like to thank Mam, Paddy, Gerard, Marian and of course Miriam, as well as my extended family for the support they have given me over the years. A special thanks to Brian Mc Donagh who recorded the album. Even though he is one of the most laid back men I ever had the pleasure of meeting, the amount of work he did on this recording was phenomenal.
I would sincerely like to thank two men who, without their influence, I may have never played music. They are Sean Gilrane and My Father Joe. Sean is playing the Flute on track 10 and was a huge encouragement to me down the years. He also composed Enya’s Fancy, the first tune on this track. Dad would always bring me to local sessions, classes and Fleadh Ceoil’s
and wait, sometimes into the early hours until the session was over. I could have played music until my ‘heart was content*……thanks lads”!
Although this fine recording is over 2 years old, we at Copperplate believe it too good to have fallen throught the cracks of the torrent of good recording of traditional music coming out of Ireland in recent years. We will be undertaking a full scale mail out to retail and media, in the hope of helping this brilliant recording to achieve it’s full potential. We are delighted to add this title to our roster.
Press Reviews
The Folk Diary
Dave is a very talented young flute player from County Leitrim and he plays in that breathy straight-ahead fashion that is quite reminiscent of Matt Malloy. In fact a lot of the ensemble playing here – Dave surrounds himself a total of fifteen musicians at various places on the album – sounds like an updated Bothy Band, particularly when the flute is heard in tandem with fiddle or pipes and a bouzouki is providing accompaniment.
He is probably at his best playing reels and though there is that exhilarating flat-out feeling to them, it is clear that he is always playing within himself and allowing a feeling of space in the music. Strangely enough, the most interesting track is probably the one where Dave plays different instruments; he doubles on low whistle and button accordion on Johnny Allen’s and Paddy Gavin’s before bursting into one of Scotland’s most popular session tunes and it is fascinating to hear the slightly different emphasis that the Irish put on The Easy Club Reel.
Vic Smith.
Taplas
ALTHOUGH predominantly an Irish flute album with many opportunities to hear solo flute, Dave Sheridan’s feast of jigs and reels are considerably augmented by a large group of friends. Pipes, low whistle, fiddle, piano accordion, guitars, mandola, bouzouki, keyboards, electric bass, percussion and bodhran help to keep the music varied by playing in different combinations.
It’s driving, lively and upbeat The arrangements keep the music ever changing. It defiantly doesn’t sound ‘all the same1 as some uninitiated sceptics may sometimes accuse Irish music of being. The sound is often very full and padded out, setting it apart from other more typical trad CDs.
The one song is surprising, because it sounds more like a Broadway production than a traditional song. It’s very polished, nonetheless!
There’s a lot going on here, but it’s not overwhelming and in-your-face, but full of treasures to be unearthed as you return to it time and time again. Imogen O’Rourke
The Living Tradition
Co. Leitrim people never seem to shout about their musicians. OK, we know about Joe McKenna, Ben and Charlie Lennon, the MacNamara family, but 1 don’t understand why so much talent isn’t boasted about. Maybe it’s because Leitrim’s overshadowed by its next-door neighbours, Donegal and Sligo?
Dave Sheridan is a young Leitrim flute player, now teaching in Dublin, who deserves to be more widely known and appreciated. He has a fine drive about his playing with discreet ornamentation that still allows the basic tune to shine through. He’s laid down fifteen tracks, most of them around 3′ 30″, of ‘standard’ jigs and reels with a few less well-known tunes. Sixteen musicians, plus a singer, are on just about everything from accordion to uillean pipes. Not all of them play at the same time, so there’s a great variety between tracks. A special round of applause for track 3; Brian Rooney’s outstanding fiddle sets fire to The Maid on the Green and the Humours of Drinagh. He reminds me of the older fiddle style of players like James Morrison. One of Sheridan’s old mentors, Sean Gilrane, plays flute on his own composition, Eania’s Fancy, on track 10 then follows on with Captain Kelly’s and The Salamanca.
There are discreet and sensitive bodhran players, in spite of the base lies you’ve been told. The secret is playing so that musicians are aware of it without noticing it. Neil Lyons plays bodhran on most of the tracks, with Liam Cryan, Junior Davey and Hugh Sullivan picking up the rest. Track 2 (Christy Barry’s, King of the Pipers/Michael Dwyer’s) gives a valid answer to the spoilsports who insist that no more than one bodhran should be played in a session. Lyons and Cryan both play but don’t overpower the set.
Sheridan’s cousin, Conor, sings Sheridan’s own composition Our Beautiful Tradition, a song about older musicians wondering if the younger ones will carry on the well-loved old traditions. I liked the song immediately because it’s the first one I ever heard on this thorny subject. The answer is the latest crop of musicians; the tradition’s safer now than it’s been for decades. As well as the song, Sheridan’s own polka and reel, Enjoy Your Stay/In Sheridan’s Guest House start the final track. The last reel, Safe Home, makes a logical ending to the whole CD. I only wish that all sixteen had gone out in a blaze of glory on this track.
Copperplate Distribution believe this CD is ‘too good to fall through the cracks’, so they’re publicising this two-year old recording. I’m glad they have; it’s a real treat. For all it’s a studio recording, this has an impromptu feel because of the different line-ups on each track; I don’t think any two sets have the same musicians playing together. Copperplate’s blurb says, ‘Imagine a friendly hostelry somewhere in the Irish countryside…’ I don’t want to do that, because this isn’t a bit like a pub session; that would be full of the usual distractions. This feels more like a spontaneous gathering of musicians in someone’s house and you’ve been honoured by being invited. Welcome to Sheridan’s Guest House. Mick Furey
LiveIreland.com
Sheridan’s Guest House by Dave Sheridan from Ireland is a joy of a thing. He has about 16 guest musicians on the album. He is a wonderful flute player out of Leitrim, we believe. A massive talent, and there is such a sense of joy in this album as he generously shares the spotlight with his musical friends. This is just flat-out wonderful. Rating: Four Harps
Bill Margeson
www.netrhythms.com
Here’s another great recording that but for the kind auspices of Copperplate Distribution would have fallen through the cracks and remained largely unheard in the UK. It was made over 2 years ago, but has all the timeless appeal of the best of Irish traditional music.
Co. Leitrim-born Dave is a fine flute player who gathered together an assortment of his musician friends to partake of a session in that metaphorical guest-house-cum-caravan somewhere in the Irish countryside. The 15 tracks, mostly jigs and reels, may be carefully planned as far as arrangements are concerned, but they’re played with all the spirit of the convivial session and the varieties of texture Dave and his accomplices conjure up is quite miraculous. Dervish’s Brian McDonagh, who’s recorded the album, has given the sound a unified bloom that’s full and attractive, yet lets the individual contributions breathe within the total sound-picture. I don’t think I’ve ever enjoyed a flute-centred record quite as much, in fact, for the spirit of the music-making is so infectious; even though the whole affair’s obviously a studio production rather than a live recording, there’s a great feel of different musicians dropping in for each set and being accommodated and allowed free rein.
This accentuates, but in a thoroughly nice way, the degree of contrast between individual tracks, and makes for some imaginative touches — as on the Johnny Allen’s set (track 5), an isolated instance of Dave forsaking the flute for the button accordion and bringing in Seamie O’Dowd on dobro alongside Padraig McGovern’s uilleann pipes and some excellent rhythmic underpinning from Neil Lyons and Keith Kelly. This set forms a real contrast with that preceding, a more strict-tempo approach to a pair of jigs (Maid On The Green and Humours Of Drinagh) where Brian Rooney’s spirited fiddle steps it out with Dave to Kevin Brehoney’s lively piano vamping. That sort of points up the glory of this album — that it’s emphatically not just another series of ‘more jigs and reels’ in ‘OK, so what?’ performances, but a pleasing and often intriguing sequence of inventively varied renditions. And when you glance down the list of musicians (apart from those mentioned, there’s Oliver Loughlin, Damien O’Brien, Michael McCague and Padraig O’Neill to name but four), you just know you’re in for some scintillating musicianship.
After all this positive commentary, however, I feel obliged to voice my one reservation regarding the disc: the inclusion of a song, a composition of Dave’s own (Our Beautiful Tradition), the admirable sentiment of which rather fails to light my candle on account of the smooth yet overwrought manner in which it’s sung by Dave’s cousin Conor. No such problem besets Dave’s self-penned polka and reel on the final track — the only other exception to the exclusively traditional source material used throughout this classy record. David Kidman
The Irish Democrat
GIVEN THE ongoing popularity of all forms of traditional Irish music and a seemingly never-ending stream of high quality recordings from both new and established musicians and groups it’s not surprising that the odd album falls through the cracks of critical recognition.
Sheridan’s Guesthouse would appear to be one such album. Originally released in 2006, this collection of traditional tunes has been put together, arranged and produced by Leitrim flautist and Dublin-based teacher Dave Sheridan.
Assisted by sixteen musician ‘friends’ of the highest calibre, including Dervish’s Seamie O’Dowd (guitars) and Brian McDonagh (mandola), they combine to deliver a delightful and varied set of traditional music with a distinctly upbeat, though not frenzied, feel.
The album ably showcases Sheridan and co,’s musical talents and passion for the tradition. On Johnny Allen’s and Paddy Galvin’s, Sheridan demonstrates that, in addition to being a fine flautist, he’s no slouch on the button accordion, while O’Dowd’s splendid rhythmic guitar playing is a particular joy, providing the drive behind many of the tunes.
The one song on the album, Our Beautiful Tradition, is sung by Dave’s cousin Conor Sheridan. A celebration of traditional Irish music, it is written from the standpoint of an older musician and questions whether it will survive and flourish amongst the younger generations. Given the opening paragraph of this review, I would say that the answer is fairly obvious.
However, while I approved of the song’s sentiments, the arrangement and slightly breathless vocal delivery leaned a bit too far in the direction of MoR for my taste – a bit too Daniel O’Donnell and not enough Christy Moore, if you like.
That minor criticism aside, this is an excellent album, which deserves a wider audience. So, take a break and check in to Sheridan’s Guesthouse. You’ll be sure to have a pleasant stay. David Granville
Hot Press Magazine
In the liner notes for his debut CD young Leitrim flute player Dave Sheridan thanks his Dad profusely for all the hours he spent waiting to drive the fledgling musician home from trad music sessions that continued late into the night. Listening to the aptly named Sheridan’s Guesthouse, you get the feeling that you’ve happened upon such a session-and a damn fine one it is too. An ever changing cast of players join in for a tune or two, anchored by the crack string team of Brian Mc Donagh (mandola) Seamie O Dowd (guitars) and Michael Mc Cague (bouzouki); but always at the centre of things is Sheridan, with his fluid, unflashy style, sound technique and solid ryhthm. A beautiful album throughout! Sarah Mc Quaid
Froots Magazine
It’s easy to have a soft spot for Leitrim, that gentle-paced Irish country whose traditional music seems to match the rises and rolls of the landscape and the tone of the flute players is as clear as the glassy waters of Lough Allen. Dave Sheridan is one such instrumentalist and comes from the tiny village of Killargue, halfway between Manorhamilton and Drumkeeran, but he’s not just a dab hand on the flute, but the button accordion and low whistle too, as Sheridan’s Guesthouse amply illustrates.
For any recording debutant it’s always a boon to be surrounded by inspirational companions, so Dave has corralled the doyen of local accompanists, Sligo’s Séamie O’Dowd, into the studio as well as the ex-Dervish man’s string-plucker in arms, mandola-player Brian McDonagh, and a host of other musicians from his musical stomping ground.
While Dave’s flute takes on lark-like qualities, not least on the effervescent opener Mulhaire’s/Kiss the Maid Séamie proves a bedrock throughout this utterly enjoyable album. However, the sparks truly fly when Dave hooks up with with long-time London-based fiddler Brian Rooney for Maid on the Green/Humours of Drinagh, while the thoroughly foot-stomping set of reels kicked off by Johnny Allen’s sees his accordeon trading notes in remarkable rapidity with the uilleann pipes of Patrick McGovern.
Elsewhere, there’s a flute duet to die for, Enya’s Fancy, featuring Dave’s cousin Seán Gilrane, and two tracks revealing the talents of fiddler Pádraig O’Neill from Dublin (clearly revealing himself as one of Ireland’s greatest wasted talents — as for why, the story’s too long to tell).
So book yourself a room in Sheridan’s Guesthouse, the rooms might need refurbishing, but the house band is a killer. James O Donnell
Gordan Turnbull
Hailing from County Leitrim, this impressive debut album features a large number of guest musicians (hence the title), with the flute playing being the central thread running through it all.
The flute playing is highly accomplished, dynamic and in a modern flowing style rather than the rhythmic style traditionally associated with Leitrim (such as Packie Duignan). The guests are too numerous to mention in detail here, but notably include Brian Rooney (fiddle) on one track, Junior Davey (bodhran) on several others and Brian McDonagh and Seamie O’Dowd from Dervish providing backing on all but two tracks. Some of the arrangements are inventive and forward-looking, but still very much within the tradition.
This is a delightful and exhuberent recording that reminds me of Jimmy Noonan’s The Maple Leaf in the sheer joy of playing that comes over to the listener.
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Eilis Kennedy – Time to Sail
Press Reviews
Mike Harding, BBC Radio 2 presenter 18.9.02
I think this is one of my albums of the year so far, because it’s got some of the finest versions I’ve ever heard of Crazy Man Michael, Lord Franklin and the Nic Jones song, Canadeeio. I want to play now what I think bar Sandy Denny’s version of Who Know Where The Time Goes. I think this is 100% gold.
BBC Radio 2 Folk Web Site
Kerry-born Éilís (say Aylish) Kennedy comes of an Irish family where both music and the Gaelic language were part of everyday life, a happy fact reflected in this debut album. Time To Sail was recorded in her home town of Dingle and features, apart from her own pure, natural voice, a ton of top Irish artists including Máire Breathnach (fiddle, viola), William Coulter (guitar), Virginia McKee (clarinet), Bruce Abraham (slide guitar) and Séamus Begley (vocal).
Subtle and lush arrangements woven around traditional songs in two languages are the order of the day. Most of the ten tracks have been round the block many a time but Kennedy reworks them with a freshness that belies any qualms of pastiche. The Factory Girl, bouncing along on Gregg Sheehan’s funky percussion, dives into two slide guitar and kalimba-drenched barn dances; gorgeous layers of cello and clarinet drive away any echoes of Sandy Denny in Crazy Man Michael and Who Knows Where The Time Goes; Black is the Colour’s characterful phrasing and spooky slide guitar/woodwind soundscape prevents it neatly from stepping on Cara Dillon’s justly acclaimed version. Of the less familiar material, two Gaelic songs in particular tug the heartstrings – Amhrán na Leabhar (The Song Of Books), an 18th century poet’s lament for the loss of a boatload of beloved books to the sea and a song of loves’ tribulations, Tá Mé ‘mo Shuí.
Whatever it is, that indefinable quality that raises one singer above the many in these days of talent glut, Éilís has it. A great debut from a major new talent, Time To Sail is making big waves on both sides of the pond. Let’s hope some UK gigs are in the offing – I hear she’s really stunning live. Mel McClellan – November 2002
Live Ireland Web Site Nov 02
What a discovery Eilis Kennedy is! We have been stunned by her debut album, Time To Sail.
Eilis lives in Dingle, Co. Kerry and runs a music bar with her husband John. Also a high school teacher, Eilis is currently on a career break. We are the lucky ones.
This album showcases a major new voice in Irish traditional music. Some of the country’s best musicians have gathered around to appear on this album. The guest list includes the likes of Maire Breathnach, William Coulter, Seamus Begley, and Bruce Abraham on a great slide guitar.
There are more. Here’s the point. This woman can sing. Really sing! A lot of the female voices currently heard in Irish music are very similar, and they must be listened to closely to hear any difference. The great ones–Triona and Maighread ni Dhomnaill, Cathie Ryan, Maranna Mc Closkey and Fionola o’ Sciochru can be identified by voice in a storm! Different. Clear. Strong.
And, now, we add Eilis Kennedy to that very special list. This is a wonderfully produced album, with a really striking cover. Lovely. Also on offer here is the definitive version of “Franklin”, the song about the 19th century explorer, Lord John Franklin, lost in a polar expedition in 1845. We heard Altan and others do this, but Eilis’ version stopped us dead in our tracks.
A gob- smacking stunner. Great other tunes–uptempo, ballads, airs, a really lovely mix. Get your mitts on this one! and be prepared to listen and fall in love.
This is an incredible new talent on the international scene following recent tours with William Coulter. WOW! Bill Margeson
Pay The Reckoning Web Site Review
A major new talent emerges!
Kennedy’s debut is a thoughtful, intelligent and well-balanced collection of songs (and the odd tune), delivered by a singer whose control, phrasing and ability to communicate are a delight and whose backing musicians provide tasteful and sympathetic arrangements which complement her approach perfectly.
Kennedy evidently has an affection for the material which emanated from the folk revival in England in the 60s and 70s, as four of the tracks on offer attest. Her version of Sandy Denny’s often-covered “Who Knows Where The Time Goes?” in our opinion manages to surpass the fragile beauty of the original. Her rendition of “Crazy Man Michael”, another song which will be forever associated with Denny from her performance on Fairport Convention’s “Liege and Lief”, is yet another case in point.
However Denny is not the only troubadour of that era to inspire Kennedy. She manages to knock us for six with a poignant reading of the classic “Canadeeio” (which puts the versions by both Nic Jones and Bob Dylan in the shade). And still she finds time to resurrect, dust down and polish to a high lustre “Lord Franklin” – a song which John Renbourn and Jacqui McShee placed their stamp on many years ago.
Elsewhere you’ll find yourself tapping your foot along to the sparse (but dramatic!) “Factory Girls” – a nod to the song tradition “across the pond”. And you’ll be captivated by the Australian song “Andy’s Gone”.
Her version of “Black Is The Colour” invites comparisons to the recent revival of the song by Cara Dillon. The critics went wild over Dillon’s rendition on its release. However they hadn’t heard Kennedy at that stage and we respectfully suggest that anyone who rates highly Dillon’s reading of the song ought to give Kennedy a listen. Perhaps they’ll agree with us that Kennedy’s version is a much more characterful rendition.
Three songs in Irish complete the set. “Nead na Lachan” is a jaunty jig which serves as a great introduction to the album. “Amhran na Leabhar” and “Ta Me ‘Mo Shui” on the other hand are much more complex and moving numbers which show off Kennedy’s voice to great effect.
A mighty album, then! One which will find its way to your CD player time after time and whose nuances and subtleties will become more revealed on each playing.
Net Rhythms Web Site
I know next to nothing about Éilís, aside from the facts that she hails from Dingle in County Kerry and that Time To Sail is, astonishingly, her début album. It is a very fine collection, mixing traditional and contemporary material in a thoroughly engaging manner and with an equal affinity for either category of song.
Admittedly, the track-list contains some over-familiar titles — Lord Franklin, Black Is The Colour, Canadee-I-O and two associated with Sandy Denny (Who Knows Where The Time Goes?, Crazy Man Michael) — but it’s to Éilís’s credit that her versions of the vast majority of these turn out to be among the finest available (notwithstanding my personal hobby-horse about some spurious words in CMM); and I’d even rate Éilís’s version of Black Is The Colour (which closes the album in fine style) above Cara Dillon’s then-matchless reading of only a year or so ago.
Éilís is an exciting singer, who is clearly inspired by the texts she sings. She has a real flair for communicating expressively but not over-ornately, and possesses an enviable control of phrasing and dynamics. Her degree of accomplishment is uniformly impressive, on slower and faster material alike — her lightness and vocal control on the jig-paced opener Nead Na Lachan and the energetic Factory Girls contrasts well with the emotional impact of the Henry Lawson setting Andy’s GoneA-Droving, forinstance.
All of which makes it all the more surprising that her name was not previously known to me. She manages to be both moving and tasteful in her interpretations, and to this end she is aided considerably by her choice of supporting tone colours and accompanying musicians, which includes Máire Breathnach (fiddle), Virginia McKee (clarinet), William Coulter (guitar), Barry Phillips (cello) and Bruce Abraham (slide guitar).
This is a superb album, with a well-defined character and a stamp of real lasting quality, and a credit to all concerned. David Kidman
Folk Roots Magazine
Eilis Kennedy from Dingle Co Kerry is a quietly growing presence on Irish singing circles. Her debut album Time To Sail unveils a massively underrated vocal talent with a quiet mastery of her craft. Her voice is a thing of gentle sublime beauty, the like for which mothers would be sold and kings ransoms exchanged.. Her sweet, clear, and flowing tones make short work of demanding songs in both English and Gaelic. The material chosen includes some demanding songs from traditional epics Amhrán Na Leabhair and Ta Mé Mo Shuí, Canadee I O and Lord Franklin both hallowed pages from the Nic Jones and Martin Carthy songbook and Sandy Dennys seminal Who Knows where The Time Goes. While some of these approach standard status , Eilis not only handles these songs with care but also infuses them with a fresh buoyancy and relevance. . Two classic examples are Who Knows Where The Time Goes, a hard choice baring in mind the mighty shots Sandy, Judy Collins and Mary Black have had at this simple yet sublime allegory to Trevor Lucas. With William Coulters steel string guitar and Barry Phillips mournful cello, Eilis supple voice exhibits a steely yet reserved emotional strength. Likewise, Ta Mé Mo Shuí is equally minimalist in approach with her vocal performance shining in the quiet majesty of comfortable songs and arrangement. Its not all heavy weather though as Nead Na Lachain skips merrily along on waves of enthusiasm and a feisty percussive treatment of The Factory Girl mixes afro-American idioms with Irish vocal nous. Exhibiting a sense of restraint and care she brings a freshness to her performances suggesting comparisons with Kate Rusby, Bill Jones or closer to home Mary Black or Cara Dillon. Time To Sail is a work of gentle yet firm vocal majesty and adroit choice of material a sweetly beguiling affair the like of which falling in love with is not only just possible but inevitable.
The Irish Times December 2001
Without a lick of paint or a blast of fanfare, Eilis Kennedy ( one time member of the Melting Pot from Baile na nGall) has released a spectacular solo debut. Kennedy, a singer whose vocals need neither searchlight nor scaffolding to bore holes into the soul, belongs to a select company of singers (alongside Karan Casey and Virginia Rodriguez) possessd of the finesse of a seamstress and the precision of a neurosurgeon. Tá Mé ‘Mo Shuí straddles the folk/trad divide effortlessly, Kennedy’s guileless vocals hammocked by Barry Phillips’ perfectly-judged cello. Her re-working of The Factory Girl , funkily imbued with a new-found hip-swivelling optimism, gels startlingly with a pair of barndances that lift and seperate the sentiment and rhythms as though they were genetically engineered for one another. A magnificent collection. “. Siobhán Long, The Irish Times
Irish Music Magazine
Every once in a while, an album comes along which heralds a potentially, major yet underrated vocal talent. My first exposition to Eilis Kennedy and her debut album Time To Sail was through hearing Nead na Lachan sail through the radio waves, her clear sparkling voice and a clever arrangement made me want to checked out this Dingle based native. Now having listened to Time To Sail several times, my thoughts are unchanged Eilis Kennedy is an untapped major vocal talent waiting for the moment to shine. Why? For starters, she has a soft yet lyrical voice, which clearly sails through the albums ten, tracks and is equally at home with traditional and contemporary material. Some of the latter chosen is quite daunting including Sandy Dennys classic Who Knows where the Time Goes, Fairport Conventions Crazy Man Michael and Nic Jones s Canadee -i-o.
In the case of Who Knows where the Time Goes where lesser hands would have made a histrionic meal, Eilis interprets Sandy Dennys wistful allegory to her then lover Trevor Lucas with a quietly impressive authority and Canadee -i-o emerges as a fresh delightful performance. Where Eilis Kennedy scores is in the subtle arrangements framing her sparkling vocal chords and a tasteful choice in material. Time To Sails success is due to taste on all fronts- a gorgeous record no more no less.
Hot Press
Currently on furlough from a teaching career, this fine singer has taken her time in releasing her debut album. It has been quite a while in the planning, but is well worth the wait. An engaging mix of the traditional and comtemporary, it showcases to strong effect a warm voice and also a talent for picking damn good songs. The opening track Nead Na Lachan sets the tone; bouncy and full of movement, it demonstrates an easy relationship to rhythm. The real test of an album such as this
£14.99 -
Fraser Fifield – Honest Water
- Dark Reel
- Softly Spoken
- Misnomer’s
- Lament
- Marjan’s
- Velvet Jig
- S — J’s Polka
- Horo
- Piece of Mind
- Psalm
- Honest Water
- Alone At Last
– all compositions by Fraser Fifield Low whistles, soprano and alto saxophones, small pipes, border pipes, highland pipes, keyboards, acoustic guitar, clarinet and various percussion instruments including, cajon, djembe, congas and bodhran. with Graeme Stephen, electric guitar on tracks 3, 8, 11 and Malcolm Stitt, (The Boys of the Lough) acoustic guitar on track 6.
Honest Water by Fraser Fifield Tanar Records TANCD001
Release Date 27.1.03 – Bar Code 5031200207024 For the past 5 years Copperplate has championed the niche market of Irish traditional music on CD. Last year we strayed into the singer songwriter genre, driven by the high quality of the releases by Tony Reidy, Kate Purcell and Eilis Kennedy. Now in 2003 we are delighted to announce our first release of this year sees us boldly go into Scottish fusion music with this wonderful new release, which heralds the arrival of a major young talent on the scene. The ground breaking Scottish band, Wolfstone, quickly spotted his talents, and he was off on the road, touring Europe and the US. After Wolfstone, Fraser began playing with the North East band, Old Blind Dogs, with whom he recorded the CD, ‘Five’ and spent the next two years touring Europe and the USA. His next musical adventure was with Salsa Celtica, an 11-piece band based in Edinburgh, who fuse Latin rhythms with Scottish instrumentation. Commissioned in 99 by Celtic Connections Festival he composed a suite for saxophone quintet, which reflected the different European folk traditions entitled, ‘Traditions’. Fraser is a highly sought after composer/ arranger/ musician in the radio and TV soundtracks market which along with many session dates keep Fraser busy and in the forefront of music today. We at Copperplate are delighted to have this title on our roster and will be supporting this release with a full-scale promotional campaign to media and retail.
Press Reviews
MOJO Magazine April 2003
“Essential Folk”. Unpredictable, nay even eccentric, sounds from the Salsa Celtica, and ex Blind Dog’s piper, whistle player and saxman. Occasionally meanders into the land of noodles, and the dreaded word, ambient sometimes rears it’s ugly head, but mostly this is a distinctive brand of jazz flavoured Celtic music with a real sense of purpose. At it’s best it’s exhilarating. Colin Irwin. 3 stars
Pete Fyfe’s Review
Straight in with the groove – and what a groove! This is a nicely paced (not too fast) tune titled ‘Dark Reel’ that will hypnotically draw the listener in with its combination of layered sounds. Fraser (for the uninitiated) was the multi-instrumental whiz kid from Scotland’s Old Blind Dogs. Drawing on his extensive knowledge of various pipes including small, border and highland he knows how to utilise them all without indulging himself adding saxophones, keyboards, clarinet, acoustic guitar and even percussion to the musical melting pot. I suppose in a way we’re moving into territory already broken by the likes of Moving Hearts, Nightnoise and more recently Capercaillie and as far as I’m concerned I can’t get enough of it. OK, so maybe I am into what many would say is ‘elevator’ music and if that is the case this one’s surely headed for Heaven but (and I know I’m not in the minority here) that would be seen as detrimental to the artist. You can’t put a label to this kind of music and maybe that’s where Fraser might find it a little daunting as regards his marketing. It’s just that as an ‘art form’ no one seems to know where to pigeonhole this style of music. Crossing several barriers including Jazz, Funk and Folk you can’t quite put your finger on it. Let’s just leave it that this is ultimately a recording of beauty that deserves a far wider audience than it will attain in the ‘folk’ market place. Considering there’s not a traditional track in sight, Fraser is a fine tunesmith and I for one hope he succeeds in achieving his own goals as a musician and if there were any festival organisers out there reading this review this music would be great for a late night session. Go on – take a chance and buy this recording. Pete Fyfe
The Herald:
“The saxophonist, whistle player and piper with Salsa Celtica and formerly of Old Blind Dogs steps out on his own and reveals himself as, for the most part, a one-man band. And it’s some band. Multi-tracking saxophone sections and choruses of whistles as well as keyboards, percussion, various bagpipes, and clarinet alongside tremendously creative solo playing, Fifield comes over as Ormiston’s contemporary answer to Storm-era Moving Hearts and dispels any fears of technological suffocation or overkill. Composed, constructed, and played with skill and ranging from Lament’s deeply felt Highland longing to Horo’s East European gambolling with African hi-life guitar (courtesy of Graeme Stephen), this is music with heart, emotion, and tunes that the “repeat play” button was designed for”.
Scotland on Sunday :
“There are pipes of all sizes and a kitchen sink full of percussion on this solo instrumental CD. Fifield also handles keyboard and acoustic guitar, but if even if the album is home-made (in his own studio) it’s leagues ahead of most Scots pro studio recordings. The quality of the playing, wide musical references, and the intensity of focus make it much more Garbarek than Gaberlunzie”.
The Scotsman :
“Fraser Fifield’s debut album confirms that he is one the most exciting talents to emerge in Scottish Folk in recent times, as well as one the most eclectic. He is a multi-instrumentalist, playing pipes, saxophones, clarinet, whistles, keyboards, guitar, and ethnic percussion instruments on this almost-solo album (Graeme Stephen or Malcolm Stitt contribute additional guitar on four tracks). His ingenious fusion of Celtic, ethnic, jazz and other idioms is contemporary rather than traditional in feel, and includes a couple of excerpts from his “new voices” commission for Celtic Connections in 2001″.
Inverness Courier :
“Multi-talented Fifield covers most of the musical families on this self-produced album; pipes, keyboards, saxophones, clarinet, whistles and guitar along with various examples of European and African percussion. Fifield has more of an acoustic bent than the likes of Martin Bennet, but his diverse influences and writing skills provide a broad canvas. A touch of jazz here, pibroch and the precenting tradition of the Highland kirk there, and the Balkan sounds of ‘Horo’ all demonstrate the extant of his musical palette, making him sound like a one-man Moving Hearts”
The Sunday Herald :
“To call Fraser Fifield a multi-instrumentalist risks giving altogether too modest an impression. On his debut solo recording the 26-year-old — formerly of Old Blind Dogs, currently with Salsa Celtica — juggles more than a dozen different instruments including three varieties of bagpipes, soprano and alto saxes, whistles, guitar, clarinet, keyboards and an array of percussion implements, with just four tracks featuring guest accompaniment on guitar. This bedroom-produced, one-man-band methodology recalls Martyn Bennett’s first two albums. Its ambition is matched by Fifield’s choice of self-penned material. Honest Water’s adventurous, sophisticated fusion of traditional and contemporary idioms from Scotland and eastern Europe mixes well with religious, jazz, ambient and dance music influences. Its organic, unregimented feel, belying the level of technological wizardry involved, is similar to Bennett’s. Pipes, whistles and sax are Fifield’s main tools, the sax supplying a distinctive element in the mix, alternately in contrast and luminous harmony with the rest of the melody frontline. Repeated spins are required to appreciate the intricacies of these 12 soundscapes, some of which need a clearer sense of direction or overall structure. At its best, however, as in the opening, Arabic-tinged Dark Reel , the effervescent Horo and the brilliantly kaleidoscopic title tune, the album resoundingly endorses his fast- growing reputation as a brilliantly skilled and excitingly original talent. ”
The Herald :
(‘Traditions’, for saxophone quintet, commissioned by Celtic Connections Festival) “conceived in five parts, ‘Traditions’ described a journey through the Celtic lands of Galicia, Asturia, Brittany and into the tricky time signatures of Bulgarian dance before capturing the gospelly righteousness of Gaelic psalm singing. With the former Old Blind Dog and current Salsa Celtica player’s curved soprano set against and interacting with two tenor, a baritone, and alto saxophones, it featured some brilliantly observed writing, striking effective chords and drones, and a liveness of execution by all five players that brought to mind New York’s 29th Street Saxophone Quartet gone native. The Scandinavian finale, with its drones, foot stamps, and Fifield’s ducking, diving and dancing lines, brought to a hugely satisfying conclusion a commission from a writer whose onstage reticence hides an astute compositional sense and the ability to transfer private musical thoughts into a multicultural blast for the listener”.
The Scotsman
“a unique talent”
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Garry Walsh – Uncovered
Press Reviews
Folk World Web Site
Of Cork and Louth parentage, fluter Garry Walsh learnt his music from the Irish exiles around Manchester. He’s now returned to Ireland with a store of tunes which have been forgotten by the auld sod. Names such as Narrow West Street and Under the Tholsel refer to Drogheda landmarks, while Back to Skibbereen and Around Lough Ine are from the other end of the country. All the material here is played in a fine style which manages to be both fluid and rhythmic.
Among the jigs and reels, Garry has slid in a couple of hornpipes and an enchanting slow air. There are also three Walsh family compositions here. Garry’s grandfather wrote Eileen Fahy’s Reel, a lovely flowing tune. Garry himself wrote The Travelling Lamp, and his daughter wrote Ciara’s Reel. There are so many new tunes here that it’s hard to absorb them all, but my current favourites are Casey’s Jig, deep and meaningful on the Bb flute, and Robbie’s Welcome on the high whistle.
Garry’s flutes and whistles are joined by Dave Hennessy on button box, Clare Fitzpatrick on fiddle, Johnny Neville on guitars, Colm Murphy on bodhrán, and Ilsa De Ziah on cello. The overall sound is rich and varied, complementing the powerful earthy tones and high floating sweetness from Garry. Uncovered may be a little short on quantity, but its quality is never in doubt. An excellent debut, with more to come I’d say.
Alex Monaghan
TAPLAS, The Welsh Folk Magazine Aug / Sept.05 Adolygiadau / Reviews.
THIS interesting, if rather brief, album of tunes from Co. Cork and Co. Louth is well worth a listen. The unfamiliar material is the main source of interest as, excepting three (one by Walsh’s maternal grandfather, one by himself and one by his daughter), all the tunes are traditional and have been handed down from both sides of his family, seemingly preserved because of the family’s emigration to Manchester, as they appear not to have survived in their region of origin! They certainly deserve to survive and Walsh’s persuasive renditions of them will assure this.
Brought up in Manchester, but now living in Cork, Walsh is a fine player of flutes and whistles. His playing is assertive, without being strident or flashy, and his approach is well-judged; brisk and rhythmic enough for drive and excitement. But it’s unhurried and retains a sense of leisure and pleasure in the melodies, particularly in the jigs.
He is ably, and tastefully, supported by Clare Fitzpatrick on fiddle and Dave Hennessy on melodeon and restrained use of bodhran and cello, in addition to solid guitar backing from John Neville.
My sole reservation about this album is its short duration. Otherwise, highly recommended. Jem Hammond
www.netrhythms.com.07.05
Perhaps the biggest clue to the principal intended selling-point of this release lies in its title – the uncovering of a number of tunes which have either never been recorded before or are rare or almost forgotten (many previously existing only within the confines of Garry’s own family). The “old music from Counties Cork and Louth”, learnt from Garry’s parents over the years, indeed. The only exceptions to this are three individual tunes composed by family members, including one by Garry himself. But then again, Garry himself is only just being “uncovered” – ie discovered – as a musician, for this is his debut release.
Manchester-born but with strong family roots in Counties Louth and Cork, Garry plays flute – and superbly too. But as well as the D flute, he also plays the B-flat and E-flat instruments which are less often heard in the tune repertoire. His playing style is at once fluid and highly rhythmic, and sometimes possesses a wonderful quality of lonesomeness in tone that is often remarked as associated with parts of Counties Clare and Galway.
Garry’s excellent playing is complemented on this release by some equally excellent musicianship courtesy of Clare Fitzpatrick (fiddle), Dave Hennessy (melodeon), former De Dannan-ite Colm Murphy (bodhrán) and Johnny Neville (guitar). These extra musicians are used variously and sparingly, and each track has a different instrumental complement, making for a stimulating variety of texture and atmosphere.
Highlights for me were the set of reels (track 8) which team Garry’s D-whistle with Colm’s bodhrán, the hornpipes (track 7) on which Garry’s accompanied by Clare and Dave, and the sets on which Garry plays the B-flat flute (notably the jigs on track 11), where the eerie deep quality of the flute itself is given a beautifully mellow counterpoint by Ilsa De Ziah’s guest cello contribution.
The final set brings the whole ensemble together on stage for a relaxed pair of reels. It’s great to be able to hear so many new tunes on an album for a change. My only criticism of this fine CD is its criminally short playing time (37 minutes); why oh why?
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Gerry Diver – Diversions
Press Reviews
Live Ireland Web Site
THIS is a young fiddler!!! Wow! Joined by a myriad of guest stars, this Manchester-based fiddler is overwhelming! All the energy, all the drive, all the talent!!
This may well be our favourite album out of all these, and he is a serious contender for Newcomer Of The Year, or Musician of the Year! Now, go find this album. Get on it, and you will be rewarded.
All the influences, Mc Goldrick, Carty, Mairin Fahy, this boy has done his homework, practiced and practiced and come up with his own deal! We are blown away. (God help us, he also plays a great banjo and a passable bass!!) Lots of diversity. Let’s repeat. Wow!! Bill Margeson
Net Rhythms Music Web Site
Donegal-born, Manchester-based fiddle player Gerry presents a very eclectic mix of tunes indeed on this his debut album.
Opening with a stirring set of reels, followed by a Grappelli-style Hooley (mm, that tasty jazzy shuffle!), a fairly laid-back version of Bonnie At Morn (with vocal by Lisa Knapp, who also sings The Blacksmith later on), then a set of Roumanian Hora. Get the picture?
Sure, Gerry excels himself instrumentally as you’d expect (principally on fiddle, but with occasional excursions onto banjo, guitar or bouzouki), always the musical virtuoso but without being over-flashy, and sometimes he’s multi-tracked.
Variously, he enjoys instrumental support from Ed Boyd, Tim Edey, Ollie Blanchflower, Gino Lupari, James O’Grady and Richard Pryce (to name but a few), and there’s even a Pete Townsend credited on double bass on one track!
Taken individually, each track is a gem; Gerry has the knack of pulling together disparate musical strands into a seamless whole, at any rate within the compass of each of the individual tracks; the drawback is that in the final analysis I can’t help feeling that the very Diver-sity of styles and material weakens rather than strengthens the album’s overall identity – but you may well disagree. David Kidman
Froots October 2003.
Belfast fiddler Gerry Diver’s debut album lives up to it’s name, with everything from Jazz, Western swing and homegrown traditions. While his approach is cheeky and competent, it struggles as times to make a definitive personal statement.
However, its victories outnumber its defeats; potentially a major border crosser in embryonic form.
Hot Press. Sept 2003
This is a grand jolly debut CD. No slouch on the fiddle and banjo, Donegal’s Diver also plays guitar, bazouki, bodhran, bass, shaker and is a dab hand at writing new tunes, several of which feature on the album notably, Hot Summer Hooley, a bouncy tribute to the swing jazz style of Stephane Grappelli. A pair of Rumanian horas and two Peter Ostroushko tracks add an international element to the mix and Lisa Knapp sings a Northumbrian lullaby called Bonnie at Morn as well as an interesting waltz tempo version of the classic The Blacksmith. Sarah McQuaid
Pay The Reckoning. Music Web Site September 2003
Diver (fiddle, banjo, guitar, percussion, bass) is a major talent. No two ways about it. You don’t even need to listen to the album to know that he’s in the first division. Simply check out the list of people who’ve gone out of their way to guest with Manchester’s maestro. Lisa Knapp (vocals, fiddle), Tim Edey (guitar, accordion), Lucy Randall (bodhran, bones), Gino Lupari (bodhran, bones), Ed Boyd (guitar, bouzouki), Ollie Blanchflower (double bass), Jo May (djembe), James O’Grady (pipes), Ben Clark (drums), Edel Sullivan (fiddle), Pete Townsend (bass), Johnny Hennessy-Brown (cello), Les Hill (pedal steel) and Richard Pryce (double bass) contribute their various and varied talents to a smorgasbord of an album.
Diver’s tastes are diverse. Eastern European influences feature at various points on the album, as does a Western Swing/country jazz aesthetic on the epic “Hot Summer Hooley”.
However Irish traditional tunes form the album’s bedrock. Some quality sets here, grounded in the “pure drop” approach, but accommodating more than a little experimentation. “Ferny Hill/Rakish Paddy/Christmas Eve” is a real corker and leads into the compelling “The Orthodox Priest/Charlie Lennon’s/The Sailor’s Bonnet”.
“Henry’s Jig/Calliope House/The Munster Buttermilk” gets our vote for the highlight of the album. The first jig was composed by Diver himself as a tribute to his dad. The closing jig is the first tune he ever learned. There’s a very real sense of the forces that drive Diver in this set; that, despite his love of exotic musical forms from other places, his roots are very much in the Irish tradition. A modern classic. Utterly contemporary and yet solidly traditional.
Folking.com Music Web Site
Gerry Diver brings to mind a young Kevin Burke from the opening track ‘The Shepherd’s Bush Reel/Goldhawk Road/
The Procrastination Reel’ and it’s bound to set the listener in mind of The Bothy Band on heat (!) with its driving rhythm
and soaring fiddle.
The only problem I have with it is that all of the musicians seem to have a problem in keeping up and unfortunately nobody seems to have a chance to draw breath such is the unrelenting speed. There are quite a few clipped notes in order to attain
the speed which is a shame really as Gerry is without doubt a fine musician.
The second track, a more evenly paced Grappelli style jazz infused number called ‘The Hot Summer Hooley’ really swings
and collaborator Tim Edey’s “Django” guitar is the ideal compliment but why, oh why the inclusion of the pedal steel guitar – more than a bit jarring for my tastes I’m afraid.
No, I must admit that although I know the album is supposed to focus on the instrumental talents of Gerry it is on the songs
that I am most impressed. The simplistic approach taken on bouzouki backing the delicate (but delicious) vocals of Lisa Knapp is a real coup.
‘Bonny At Morn’ has long been a favourite of mine and Lisa gives it depth without making it insipid. It has to be said that when he’s not going for gold in the speed stakes this talented multi-instrumentalist proves his worth either leading the field or accompanying.
For me, Gerry has a lot of potential but it appears at the moment it’s a case of trying a bit too hard although hopefully by
that all important second album he’ll achieve his ultimate goal. Pete Fyfe
The Irish Post 19.7.03
You’re unlikely ever to find yourself thinking: now, what I’d really like to listen to is some Irish traditional music mixed in with a bit of Stefan Grappelli/ Northumbrian/ Rumanian/ English/ Ukraine music. But should that mood ever descend upon you, I have the very album.
Diversions contains all the above — plus a few self penned numbers as well.
Of these, The Shepherd’s Bush Reel and The Procrastination Reel put me in mind of the old joke: How do you tell one Irish tune from another? Answer: by their names.
The thing is there’s about 6,000 pieces in the Irish national store of traditional music stretching back these last 300 years or so.
Now we’re talking here about a very precious music, the best in the world as far as I’m concerned, and I seldom listen to anything else.
But one would have to say that being a fairly rudimentary music, as all folk music is, 6.000 pieces is really all we need.
Everything you can do with the ‘ould music’ has more or less been done — and there’s nothing about any of the self-penned music on this CD to persuade me otherwise.
Let me say here and now: there’s some absolutely terrific musicians on this album, not the least Gerry Diver on fiddle himself.
There’s some exceptional accordion playing from Tim Edey, and of course, you can’t really improve on Gino Lupari on the bodhran.
But by the end of the album you feel with all that musical firepower as his disposal, Gerry might have been better visiting just one or two places in the world and confining his musical style accordingly. Malcolm Rogers
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Gerry O’Connor – No Place like Home
Press Reviews
On this aptly titled “No Place Like Home.” his third solo album (“Time to Time” in 1991 was his first, and “Myriad” in 1998 was his second).
Gerry honours the music of his home county on successive tracks, The first is “Thomond Bridge/The Cuckoo’s First Call,” with the latter tune coming from the great Newtown fiddler-composer Sean Ryan.
The second is a medley of reels, “Iniscealtra/Town Teine/Ormond Sound,” all written by Paddy O’Brien. In addition. Gerry pays homage to his father’s native county by performing “Trip to Killarney” and “Tom Billy’s.” named after the blind Sliabh Luachra fiddler Tom Billy Murphy.
Those tunes and others such as “The Bag of Spuds/The Copper Plate.” two peels he learned in sessions at the Barge Inn in Garrykennedy. peppesent both musical milestones and biogpaphical touchstones for Gerry. They summon up memories of places and people that shaped his approach to the music heard here. “I tried to
play within myself and focus on tempo.” he explained. “I hope listeners will discover more atmosphere than technique on this album.”
Even in full service to that atmosphere. his technique is formidable
especially on four-string banjo, which he plays with unsurpassed brilliance. Gerry took informal banjo lessons from Limerick’s Larry Ryan who used the same tuning he did C-G-D-A. He also absorbed some of the style and music, including “Colonel Fraser” off Clare tenor banjoist Kieran Hanrahan. Another early influence on Gerry’s banjo playing came courtesy of American television: the soundtrack to “The Beverly Hillbillies” series broadcast in Ireland during the
1970s. “That music really captivated me.” he said, citing Earl Scruggs’s “zippy, high, cross-picking” prowess on five-string banjo.
Some of that American bluegrass flavor certainly seeps into Gerry’s tenor banjo picking on “Billy in the Lowground/The Temperance Reel.”
He learned me first tune off the Kentucky Colonels’ classic bluegrass album of 1964. “Appalachian Swing.” featuring the innovative guitar playing of Clarence White, while the second tune. a bluegrass and old-timey standard, is better known in the Irish music tradition as “The Teetotaler.”
Over the years the skill and soulfulness of Gerry’s playing have distinguished several bands: Tipsy Sailor, Wild Geese, Arcady, and Four Men and a Dog (1993-present). He’s also worked with the Waterboys. Luka Bloom, Chris Rea, Bonnie Tyler, Moya Brennan, and THE Band’s Levon Helm, Rick Danko, and Garth Hudson.
This superb solo album, which includes a beautiful banjo solo on the lullaby-like “Ruby’s Birthday.” one of three melodies he wrote, will only add luster to Gerry O’Connor’s growing global reputation. It proves there’s no place like home-and no talent quite like his. Earle Hitchner, The Wall Street Journal & Irish Echo
The Stillwater Times Reviews Star Rating: ****
This is another traditional Folk album from Ireland that once again showcases the depth of talent that exists in the Emerald Isle. Gerry O’Connor is a master craftsman when it comes to playing the banjo, his music is highly infectious and with the assistance of Brendan O’Regan, Tommy Hayes & Damien Evans, “No Place like Home” has fast become an instant classic of the genre
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