Duets

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  • Geantrai DVD

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  • Gerry Hanley: In The Middle Of It

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  • Hanz Araki & Kathryn Claire – A Winter Solistice Celebration

    A Winter Solstice Celebration.

    The longest night of the year is made bright with the light of music, storytelling and wonder. Ancient carols and winter songs of the Celts are given new life with stunning harmony, and the collection of brisk dance-tunes are sure to keep you warm even on the coldest nights.

    ‘Each of us bring to the table a varied collection of songs and stories that reflect the same themes of longing, love, loss, beauty, and celebration. These concerts give us the freedom to explore some of these experiences thoroughly through the music that has arisen from the last several hundred years of human existence,’ said singer and flautist Hanz Araki.

    www.thecelticconspiracy.com

    Press Reviews

    The Living Tradition June/July 2013

    This is one of four CDs by these two Americans reflecting the music of the seasons. They have good lyrical knowledge and love of Celtic music. The longest night of the year is made bright with the light of music, storytelling and wonder. Ancient carols and winter songs of the Celts are given new life with stunning harmony and the collection of brisk dance tunes is sure to keep you warm on the coldest nights.

    From I Heard A Bird Song, The Sussex Carol,Seven Joys Of Mary and Christmas Eve, to In ‘Dulci Jubilo, Coventry Carol, Pat-a-Pan, Apples In Winter and The Wexford Carol, the CD then finishes with the glorious Ring Out, Wild Bells by Alfred, Lord Tennyson.

    Hanz and Kathryn come from a background of music ~ Kathryn’s family were all musicians and singers and Hanz’s father was a professional musician and master of the shakuhachi(bamboo flute). The album is mostly recorded live, with very little overdubbing. They bring old tunes to life with impeccable flair ~ a magical treat to your spirit. Kathy and Bob Drage

    netrhythms.com

    Hanz and Kathryn may not be household names over here in the UK, but on the Pacific Northwest coast of the US they’ve acquired a healthy reputation for their interpretation of Irish traditional music. He is a flute player par excellence, specialising in the wooden flute (his Japanese ancestry placed him ideally for an early career playing the shakuhachi), whereas she’s a classically trained fiddle player who also plays guitar; both of them sing too (and really well). They make a fine musical partnership indeed, and have become popular on the US touring circuit, presenting a choice of theme-based concerts that examine elements of the Celtic tradition.

    In that connection, they’ve recorded and released no fewer than four studio CDs within the space of one year, the first of these being A Winter Solstice Celebration, which serves up a spirited, warm-hearted and intelligently realised half-hour-long menu of ancient carols, winter songs and brisk, sprightly dance tunes. Many of the selections turn out to be favourites of Kathryn’s from her childhood, and the genial affection with which they’re played here bears ample testament to this. The disc’s various medleys are creative conjoinings of fondly remembered tunes: particularly successful I thought was the Jeanette Isabella/Sussex Carol set, and there’s also a nicely paced version of In Dulci Jubilo for us to savour midway through the CD. Of the several vocal items, the highlights are probably The Wexford Carol and the duo’s haunting a cappella rendition of The Coventry Carol; and the disc opens and closes with a (very) brief snatch of poetry recited by their friend Finn MacGinty. Other contributors to the mostly-live recording sessions are special guests Cary Novotny (guitar), Joe Trump (percussion) and Suzanne Taylor (piano). And the inserted liner note sheet contains some intriguing (if occasionally rather odd) details regarding the duo’s sources (for instance, we learn that the song Remember O Thou Man was learned from a video of Richard Thompson singing it in a taxi cab).

    The whole musical experience is attractively harmonious and pleasing (if over rather too soon), and should bring an appropriate measure of comfort and joy to the purchaser. David Kidman

    Folkwords web site

    The timing is perfect. Forget the rampant commercialism. Concentrate on the tradition. And if Celtic winter traditions are your delight then ‘A Winter Solstice Celebration’ by Hanz Araki and Kathryn Claire (collectively part of The Celtic Conspiracy) should make it on to thousands of Christmas lists.

    Released for the first time in the UK, this album is integrated within a quartet of CDs under the Celtic Conspiracy banner – but back to ‘A Winter Solstice Celebration’ – these are tunes and songs designed to grace the longest night of the year. From the depths of tradition half-whispered within ancient carols, through the long-established discourse of time-honoured narratives, to scintillating tunes that hold the promise of light returning after the winter nights — this is a winter solstice celebration to savour.

    The rich tones of Finn MacGinty open and close the album with two short spoken exhortations — one from Oliver Hexford to open, ‘I Heard A Bird Sing’ and to close ‘Ring Out Wild Bells’ by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. The old carolling tradition is well-represented by such stalwarts as the devotional ‘The Seven Joys of Mary’ the 12 th century Irish nativity carol ‘The Wexford Carol’ and the 16 th century mystery play carol ‘The Coventry Carol’ . To dance your way through the solstice night there are classic tunes from ‘In Dulci Jubilo/Drops of Brandy/Three Sea Captains’ to ‘Apples in Winter/The Frost is All Over’. Seeking their music and songs from England, Ireland and Scotland, Hanz and Kathryn, accompanied by an acclaimed group of musicians, have delivered a perfect seasonal package.

    Performing on the album are Hanz Araki (flute, whistles, vocals) Kathryn Claire (violin, guitar, vocals) joined by Cary Novotny (guitar) Joe Trump (percussion) Suzanne Taylor (piano) and Finn MacGinty (spoken word). Reviewer: Dan Holland

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  • Hanz Araki & Kathryn Claire – As I Roved Out: Songs of Spring

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  • Hanz Araki & Kathryn Claire – Songs of Love and Murder

    Biogs:

    Irish flute player Hanz Araki is the quintessential world music musician. After six generations, the name Araki is synonymous with the Japanese shakuhachi (an end-blown bamboo flute) which Hanz mastered making his professional debut in 1988.

    After four years of concert appearances and teaching at the prestigious Keio University in Tokyo, Japan, Hanz returned to his hometown of Seattle, WA and found himself drawn to the world of Celtic music. The penny-whistle and the Irish flute became his single-minded focus, and jigs and reels became a second language. His unique style and passion were soon recognized and met with high praise.

    Hanz also discovered his voice was well-suited to the songs of Scotland, Ireland, and England and is highly regarded for his interpretation of folk songs in what is one of the most exciting living traditions.

    After several tours across the US, Canada, and the UK (first with the Juno Award winning Paperboys, then Casey Neill) as well as a return to Japan, now as a well-respected Irish flute-player, Hanz moved to Portland, OR in 2006. This move proved to be most fortuitous as it led to the musical partnership with Oregon-native

    Kathryn Claire.

    A self-taught guitarist and accomplished vocalist and fiddle-player, Kathryn has asserted herself in a new generation of traditionally-inspired musicians. Early classical training gave her a strong foundation, but naturally gave way to her own creative inclinations. Her violin-playing exhibits a technical grace which is matched only by her truly captivating voice. While she possesses the rare ability to move seamlessly across genres, her love and deep respect for traditional music has long been a driving influence, and those roots can be heard in her own original music, as well as her own distinctive take on folksongs.

    Kathryn and Hanz quickly discovered a shared love of harmony — and a well-matched work ethic — and a creative process began that has produced a tremendous body of work. Their shared passion for traditional music is magnetic and they have become a favorite at music festivals and venues in the US and abroad. Frequent collaborators include Cary Novotny, Joe Trump, and Cal Scott (US); Takeaki Nagahama, Hirofumi Nakamura (Japan) and Aiko Obuchi (Japan).

    Press Reviews

    R2 March/April* * *

    Songs Of Love & Murder is the fourth CD recorded in just one year by the proli?c American duo, Hanz Araki and Kathryn Claire. It’s a collection of well-known murder ballads and related tunes.

    The son of lrish and Japanese parents, Araki’s father is grandmaster of the shakuhachi Japanes flute. Claire studied classical violin and voice, but is also a self-taught guitarist and songwriter. Residents of Portland, together they have amassed an impressive body of award-winning albums.

    ln addition to singing, Araki plays flute and Claire plays fiddle and guitar. They are supported by Cary Novotny (guitar), Joe Trump (percussion) and Suzanne Taylor (piano). Araki plays a lyrical low whistle counter-melody to Claire’s lovely rendition of ‘Helen Of Kirkconnell’, while a simple but effective piano accompaniment underpins Araki’s singing of the haunting ballad, ‘The Banks Of Red Roses’.

    The songs are broken up with flute and fiddle tune sets accompanied by relentless percussion, which I found rather too intrusive, particularly on ‘Unlucky In Love’.

    Songs Of Love & Murder was recorded live, and the arrangements are simple but in keeping with the songs. It’s not going to set the world alight, but it’s well performed and is an enjoyable listen nevertheless. Keith Whiddon

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  • Hanz Araki & Kathryn Claire – The Emigrant’s Song

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  • Hughie Gillespie & Frank Kelly: The Sparkling Dawn

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  • John & Jacinta McEvoy: The Boyne Mist

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  • John Carty & Michael McGoldrick: At Our Leisure

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  • John Carty: At It Again

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  • John Keehan: The Humours of Scariff

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  • John McEvoy & John Wynne: The Dancer at the Fair

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  • John Wynne and John McEvoy – Pride of the West

    The combination of flute and fiddle has pride of place in traditional Irish music and many famous duos have used that classic combination — Peter Horan and Fred Finn, Josie Hayes and Junior Crehan, and Matt Molloy and Tommy Peoples, among others. Pride of the West draws on the immense flute and fiddle tradition of north Connacht and on the musicians’ strong Roscommon connections, and communicates the excitement, tension and tranquillity inherent in the combination of these two great instruments. The tunes on the album are mainly from the Sligo — Roscommon repertoire and include unusual local versions of tunes as well as some new compositions. Accompaniment is ably and subtly provided by Paddy McEvoy, John McEvoy’s son, on piano and Arty McGlynn on guitar.

    Both Wynne and McEvoy are excellent exponents of the north Connacht style of playing and are established musicians in their own right. John Wynne is from Roscommon and has a strong interest in the music of Sligo, Roscommon and Leitrim. He was a member of the band Providence and recorded two albums with them, Providence and A Fig for a Kiss. He also released a critically-acclaimed solo album, With Every Breath, in 2000 and he produced and played on the recent CD The Flute Players of Roscommon, Volume 1. John McEvoy was brought up in Birmingham of Roscommon parents. He recorded the album Bakerswell with the group of the same name in the late eighties. His solo CD, Returning, was released in 1998, and he recorded The Kilmore Fancy with his sister, flute-player Catherine McEvoy, in 2004.

    The album includes a CD booklet containing comprehensive background notes on the tunes. The album will be officially launched on 15 June in Spell’s Bar in Ballaghaderreen, Co. Roscommon and on 8 July at the Willie Clancy Summer School, Miltown Malbay, Co. Clare. The musicians will be playing several gigs over the summer to publicize the CD, including a performance at the Cavan Fleadh Cheoil on Sunday 3 June, a concert at the South Sligo Summer School on Tuesday 17 July and a concert at the Joe Mooney Summer School, Drumshanbo, Co. Leitrim on Sunday 22 July

    Press Reviews

    The Irish Examiner

    Roscommon man Wynne’s forceful flute-playing coalesces with McEvoy’s bright and nimble fiddling on a sweet collection of tunes, sourced mainly from the Sligo/Leitrim/Roscommon region.

    The combination of fiddle and flute is enhanced but never over-shadowed by Arty McGlynn’s guitar and Paddy McEvoy’s (John’s son) piano.

    Echoes of the classic duet by Fred Finn and Peter Horan, from the same region, are discernible yet this superb disc stands on its own as a celebration of impeccable taste and tight unison playing. Judicious tune selection combined with impressively uncluttered delivery means a joyous and festive spirit is projected from every one of the 14 tracks.

    A pair of locally-sourced polkas, My Love is But a Lassie/The Lakes of Sligo, display a radiance and spirit that epitomises spontaneity, gaiety and deep-rooted tradition in equal measures. Pride of the West is indeed a gem. Gerry Quinn

    The Living Tradition

    John Wynne – a great technique and a grand ear for the tunes – has been a leading light in Roscommon flute music since his solo recording

    With Every Breath . John McEvoy, another Roscommon man many years in exile, is a fine fiddler who’s well used to playing with fluters as his sister Catherine is one of the best. The combination is powerful indeed, and continues the proud tradition of Roscommon flute and fiddle duets.

    Pride of the West opens with the title jig, followed by John McEvoy’s composition Kilglass Lakes, two gentle tunes which flow very sweetly here. The pumping jigs The Wandering Minstrel and I Will If I Can are much punchier, more like the rushing style for dancing. The nicely relaxed Fairy Reel starts slow and shifts up to a medium-paced swagger, then up again to full speed for Larry MacDonagh’s. In between there are some big tunes: The Strayaway Child in umpteen parts, The Maid of Mount Cisco, The Crib of Perches as a fiddle solo and the answering flute air Edward on Lough Erne’s Shore, and of course a classic set of reels starting with The Cedars of Lebanon by fiddler Sean Ryan. There are also some surprises here. A strong Scottish influence brings two marches, including the current favourite Auchdon House, and a polka version of My Love is but a Lassie. The set dance or hornpipe An Suisin Ban is a blast from Ireland’s past, and The Tooth Fairy is a charming jig by Mrs Wynne AKA Orla McAtavie. The rest of this recording is pretty much reels, stylish duets and occasional solos, at a collected canter with just a few brief gallops.

    Great playing, fine tunes, good sleevenotes and plenty of length at fifty minutes, Pride of the West combines quality with quantity. One thing to beware of if you’re thinking of playing along with the Johns: they base their music around Eb, so the fiddle is tuned up a semitone and the flute is a tad shorter than is usual these days. They do the same in sessions – so don’t be caught out. Not too much of a problem for whistles or accordions, and the drummers won’t even notice, but it must drive the pipers and concertina players mad. Alex Monaghan

    The Folk Diary

    This is an album of straightforward Irish traditional music; no frills; no extras, but the playing has such skill, verve and understanding of the

    form that the album is a complete delight from beginning to end. The music is mainly from the Roscommon/Sligo area where the flute is the dominant

    instrument and where so many traditional masters of that instrument come from.

    John Wynne is clearly one of this worthy heritage. He is clearly a master of the instrument and shows good empathy with the other John, a fiddler. Their playing has great clarity even when played at speed; the sets of reels produce excitement even though the players sound relaxed and

    are playing within themselves and are well- chosen to contrast one another.

    Two very fine accompanists are sparingly used; Arty McGlynn on guitar and Paddy McEvoy on piano and even where they are used, they are well back in the overall mix, allowing the glory of the tunes to come through. Vic Smith

    www.liveireland.com

    There are certain labels where you know. You just know. Anything that comes out on them will be fab. Clo-Iar-Chonnachta is one of them. Now comes, “Pride of the West” featuring the flute of John Wynne and fiddler, John McEvoy. It is in the north Clare style. That is not important. What IS important is that if you like trad, this one is a must-have. Accompanied by the legendary Arty McGlynn on guitar and Paddy McEvoy on piano, this is a delight. Tons of tunes, perfectly played. Perfectly. Great lift and ambience. There are 14 sets of tunes. We wanted 14 more. Many are rarely, if ever, heard. We adore this album. Rating: Highly Recommended. Bill Margeson

    Irish Music Magazine Aug 07

    Another excellent collection from CIC and we wouldn’t expect less which brings out a beautiful blend of flute and fiddle. It could hardly be otherwise when John McEvoy is brother to Catherine, who already has a notable flute CD of her own. The opening tracks are fine examples of musical understanding, with two instruments and two players totally together.

    The reels like The Cedars of Lebanon/ John Egan’s are taken at a fair lick: so also are jigs like Happy to meet, Sorry to part. But there is no sense of anything rushed or forced. It’s delightful precision playing and very often the two instruments sound as so much as one that the only way you can tell there’s a pair is when you hear the breathing on the flute.

    The best track? A near-run thing, but The Stray-Away Child is a great jig that will repay repeated listening. Listen out, though, for The Crib of Perches. It’s a fine reel, and understandably a favourite. There’s strong and sinewy playing in the set of two polkas. For learners there’s a special value in having well-known tunes like The Mountain Top and The Maids of Mount Cisco, and showing how they can be shared. For a solo showing the characteristic vibrato of the Connacht style, John Wynne’s playing of the air Edward on Lough Erne’s shore is a model of lyrical restraint.

    The accompaniment is also thoroughly musical: you often have to listen for it, but it’s there doing a fine job even if unnoticed first time out. One lesson from this CD is that the music is about people. The fine bi-lingual liner notes normally trace the lineage of the tunes, even back a hundred years and more.

    Thus John Wynne has a couple of Scottish tunes, which come from his wife, Orla McAtavie, who comes from Ballybay in Co Monaghan. The primrose and blue may not be doing too well on football pitches these days, but there can be real pride in Roscommon for having produced music of this quality. John Brophy

    The Irish Times

    Regional accents are alive and thriving on this collection of north Connaught tunes. Roscommon flute player John Wynne and Birmingham-born fiddler John McEvoy make sprightly, uncluttered music: filigree playing that stitches the two instruments together seamlessly. Anyone whose flute and fiddle appetite was awakened by Peter Horan and Gerry Harrington’s sublime Fortune Favours The Merry will savour the local blas of the polka set, My Love Is But A Lassie and the wistfulness of the reel set, The Mountain Top. Although Arty McGlynn’s pristine guitar accompaniment never overwhelms, at times it veers too close to oblivion, buried too deep in the mix. John’s son Paddy lends equally subtle piano accompaniment, though: a perfect suitor for such refined musicians. SIOBHÁN LONG

    The Irish Echo 13.6.07

    North Connacht Clout from John Wynne and John McEvoy: “Pride of the West” Pairing Impressive

    CEOL COLUMN

    Several years ago a prominent Irish record company owner, who shall remain nameless here, surprised me by saying, “We don’t need any more albums of nicely played tunes.” In that owner’s mind, there were too many recordings by Irish traditional instrumentalists whose playing ranged from competent to good.

    So, are trad-heads really holding their breath for further pleasant iterations of such familiar tunes as “The Maid of Mount Kisco,” “Happy to Meet, Sorry to Part,” “The Mountain Top,” and “The Strayaway Child”? Haven’t they been done to death?

    All four of those tunes are on the brand-new “Pride of the West” album by flutist John Wynne, who’s from Roscommon, and fiddler John McEvoy, who was born in Birmingham, England, to Roscommon parents. It is one of the best albums of Irish traditional music I’ve heard this year and will certainly crack my top 10 list at the end of it.

    What distinguishes this “tunes” album is, at heart, a paradox. The liner note written by the two musicians claims that “the commitment to compromise, in blending one’s own individuality towards the achievement of something greater, is foremost” on the CD. In short, rein in virtuosity to better serve a more coveted, higher equilibrium. But in that “blending,” Wynne and McEvoy have given us both individual virtuosity and ideal balance. Tight flourishes and nimble nips of improvisation seep from the marrow of their bone-strong tandem playing. Reach and grasp are equal here, creating an Irish traditional performance all the more impressive because it doesn’t strive to impress.

    Twelve of the album’s 14 tracks are duets, all drawing on this rare ability to match temperament and talent without the slightest tapering off in separate originality. The jigs “The Wandering Minstrel/Happy to Meet, Sorry to Part/I Will If I Can” begin with unaccompanied flute and fiddle, each supporting and nudging the other, and soon Arty McGlynn gently introduces an acoustic guitar rhythm underneath the two melody players. Nuance, piquancy, drive, and non-showoff embellishment swell the fluidity of Wynne and McEvoy’s joint playing.

    Unaccompanied flute and fiddle start another medley, “The Mountain Top/Ciaran’s Reel,” where again the playing features spare, spot-on ornamentation wholly within the flow created by the two. This time, the able backing eventually comes from Paddy McEvoy, John’s son, on piano.

    Flute and guitar lead off the march, highland, and reel medley of “The Balmoral Highlander/Thistle and Shamrock/Thistle and Shamrock.” Wynne’s flute work is inventive and intricate, and McEvoy’s imaginative fiddling glides in beneath a flute sustain of a single note and assumes melodic responsibility. Then fiddle and flute join, gaining in pace as McGlynn complements on guitar. It is a superbly conceived and executed arrangement.

    A reel sometimes attributed to Sligo fiddler Paddy Killoran that cites a town in Westchester County, N.Y., “The Maid of Mount Kisco” is a session staple performed with distinctive verve and touch by Wynne and McEvoy, accompanied by Paddy McEvoy on piano.

    Paired with the album-titled trad jig “Pride of the West” is “Kilglass Lakes,” a jig composed by McEvoy as a nod to his ancestral turf of Kilglass and Kilmore in North Roscommon. Flute, fiddle, guitar, and piano blend stirringly in this track. (Finishing third in the Irish Echo’s top ten trad albums of 2004, “The Kilmore Fancy” also acknowledged the area and featured another exceptional fiddle-flute duo, John McEvoy and his sister Catherine, with Bronx-born Felix Dolan on piano.)

    The sole album track without any accompaniment is “The Strayaway Child,” a jig credited to Sligo fiddler Michael Gorman that the Bothy Band memorably covered on their “Out of the Wind Into the Sun” album in 1977. Wynne and McEvoy invest this jig with a litheness and buoyancy that set into relief the separate strengths of each musician. The same performance traits surface in “The Fairy Reel/Larry MacDonagh’s Reel,” which skillfully wends its way from flute, fiddle, and guitar, to just flute and guitar, to flute, fiddle, and guitar again, and finally to flute, fiddle, guitar, and piano.

    In an album chock-full of highlights, “The Cedars of Lebanon/John Egan’s/Doonagore” and “The Piper’s Despair/The Mullingar Lea” reels, as well as “My Love Is but a Lassie/The Lakes of Sligo” polkas (the second polka stems from a 1950s recording that included Joe Derrane), also stand out for flute-fiddle playing.

    In addition, Wynne and McEvoy take a solo track apiece. Backed by his son on piano, John McEvoy steps out on “The Crib of Perches/The Tinker’s Stick/Come Up to the Room, I Want Ye” reels, where his bowing is nothing short of mesmerizing. For his solo, John Wynne movingly plays an air, “Edward on Lough Erne’s Shore,” followed by “The Tooth Fairy,” a jig composed by his wife, Orla McAtavie, and the traditional “Fraher’s Jig.” McGlynn’s guitar provides light, rhythmic undergirding for those jigs.

    Recorded during Dec. 2006 and Jan. 2007 in Kinvara, Galway’s Open Ear Studios and in Ballaghadereen, Roscommon’s Spells Pub, “Pride of the West” avoids any trace of roteness by relying on near-telepathic communication between Wynne and McEvoy. Their fresh settings or regional variations of familiar tunes reinvigorate them, and their respect for the vaunted flute-fiddle tradition of North Roscommon-South Sligo informs every melody they play.

    “Flute music is all verb, and Matt Molloy conjugates it joyfully in all its moods and tenses,” poet Seamus Heaney noted on “Stony Steps,” a 1987 solo recording by Molloy, who hails from Roscommon. Heaney’s words also fit the flute and fiddle music on “Pride of the West.” In every sense, this is a win-Wynne-McEvoy situation. Earle Hitchner

    [Published on June 13, 2007, in the IRISH ECHO newspaper, New York City. Copyright (c) Earle Hitchner. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission of author.]

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  • Macalla: Women of Ireland

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  • Marcas O Murchu – Turas Ceoil

    Turas Ceoil means a musical journey, a title that aptly captures the essence of this album which pays homage to the roots of the tradition, with tunes from as far back as the eighteenth century, while also looking to the future with new compositions by Ó Murchu. He is joined on the album by guest musicians that include Teada’s Oisin Mac Diarmada, Ben Lennon, Jose Climent, Sean Óg Graham, Gearoid Mooney, Seamus Kane, Ciaran Curran and Seamus Quinn.

    The colourful CD booklet includes 24 pages of information about the tunes as well as photos of the musicians.

    Ó Murchu is originally from Belfast but has been living in Derry for many years. He is a master of the rolling Sligo-Leitrim-Roscommon style of flute-playing. He is in constant demand internationally as a performer and as a music tutor. He teaches at many of the music schools throughout the country, including the Willie Clancy Summer School and the Frankie Kennedy Winter School. As well as being a musician, Ó Murchu also presents a music show on RTE Raidio na Gaeltachta every summer.

    Turas Ceoil is his second album. His first, Ó Bheal go Beal, was released in 1997.

    Copperplate is very proud to have this title on our roster and to help it achieve its full potential will be supporting this release with a full-scale promotional mail out to media and retail.

    Press Reviews

    “Marcas Ó Murchu’s flute and whistle bristle with exhilaration … he makes joyful music that never reveals signs of force or haste nor loses touch with his love of the tradition”. – The Rough Guide to Irish Music

    The Folk Diary

    It is now ten years since Marcas released an album, ‘Ó Bhéal go Béal’, which had a huge impact on the traditional music community in Ireland. Ten years later another album of his mesmerising flute playing is bound to have a similar impact. As a young man, he met and learned from the great rural flute players in the Roscommon/Sligo area that his family originated from, so that we can still hear the influence of the likes of Josie McDermott in his playing.

    One of the great things about his playing is that he is able to give the music a modern feel without in any way compromising the traditional lilt of

    the tunes. The album is very carefully programmed with solo items in different rhythms mixed with Marcus working with a variety of different

    settings, with the best track saved for the seventeenth and last; two delightful polkas.

    Every single tracks bubbles with vibrancy on an album that stands as a type example of what can be done to make an album of traditional music exciting. This is outstanding stuff. Vic Smith

    www.liveIreland.com

    Few labels guarantee a great album, but Ireland’s Clo-Iar-Chonnacta comes close. Here’s another winner. Marcas O Murchu’s Turas Ceoil is just the best. This flute player has gathered some of the tradition’s great players around him, ranging from Altan’s Ciaran Curran on guitar and Oisin McDiarmada on fiddle to Ben Lennon on fiddle, with the great Seamus Quinn on piano. There are more, but the trad buff gets the drift. This album is really filled with the northwestern style of flute—you know the deal— Sligo, Roscommon and Leitrim. Polkas, reels and jigs abound. One complaint. There are only two airs, with one thrown overboard too quickly in favor of adding a hornpipe. We have long argued against recording a gorgeous air, only to have it turn half-way through into an uptempo piece of business. It is as if the musician does not trust the audience to cherish the air, hold it close to the heart, and make it a part of their soul. Rather, it seems to say, ” Okay, we won’t bore you any longer with this. We know what you want, hear comes some faster stuff.” Shame. BUT–that is only nitpicking! This is a great, great album by a master musician. Flute players the world ’round know about, and respect, this brilliant interpreter of the staccato, yet flowing style that marks his geographic style of playing. We are rapidly losing the regionally stylistic features of Irish traditional music for a number of reasons frequently described here. The point is that these styles can still be found, thanks to labels like Clo-Iar-Chonnacta, and true-to-the-bone musicians like Marcas O Murchu. This is a great album. Not very good, mind you. Great. Bill Margeson. Rating: Four Harps

    £14.99
  • Michael Sheehy: The Cat’s Rambles

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