Cross-pollination in Music

Feat. Nick Burbridge, Jamie Smith’s Mabon, Luthier, Ailie Robertson, Timothy Des Roches, Photography G, Kevin Burke and Cal Scott.

Just Water, written by Nick Burbridge, read by Gerard Murphy, directed by Andy Jordan, first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 – 25.2.1998.

Here is one of the best presentations I have ever heard. One must not narrate a story alone but he must bring the emotions to the fore. I don’t have to know what the story is all about because Gerard Murphy has a way of getting into your heart with his delivery. But yes it is important to note that this is written by this week’s featured artist Nick Burbridge.

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Jamie Smith’s Mabon is now on the second edition of their Windblown tour. Here is a shot of their gig last night.

“Thanks to all who came to the show in Abergavenny tonite.You were a Fantastic crowd. see you again in the future.” Click to enlarge.

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If you are in Denver Colorado and if you are looking for a photographer to take an awesome photo of your band then check out Photography G. So what is Photography G? G stands for the photographer by the name of Garrett. So who is Garrett?

“Garrett stands out among Colorado photographers because of his ability to “cross-pollinate” from one style to another, bringing a fresh and lively approach to all areas of his repertoire. Garrett’s remarkable ability to anticipate and capture moments instinctively and artfully gives the viewer a natural and organic experience of the real feelings and moments in our lives and world.”

Cross-pollinate. I like that term. That photo below is Damien McCarron of Celtic rock band The Indulgers. I think Garrett captured the spirit of Damien’s music.Or should I say Damien posed the spirit of his music!

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67 Music presents this exclusive chat with Kevin Burke and Cal Scott! This is really worth checking. ” Sometimes it’s interesting how life works. In this particular scenario, a certain fiddler from England & Ireland making his way in the world serendipitously meets an American traveling through Ireland.” I love that intro. Yes amazing thing happens when you really do something with what you’ve got. I love the rhythmic tone of Kevin Burke’s voice as he narrates his experiences. Cal Scott tells an interesting story about how he met  and collaborated with Kevin Burke.You might also take note of the topic around 20:00 about selling through niche market and about the economics of releasing though  a major label. There is also a this polarity between the classical and traditional world. This proves that something really exciting happens when two artists of different backgrounds work together to create something fresh. Still in the spirit of cross-pollination. Really worth your time. The interview is presented by Steve Behrens. Good job Steve!

Read more here: http://67music.net/features/kevin-burke-and-cal-scott-an-exclusive-67-music-interview/

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Ailie Robertson: Some hornpipes from her gig in the Netherlands on Saturday night. I think the beauty of music such as this one really shines when played at such an intimate venue that way it has always been played hundreds of years ago. The warm ambiance of having the audience huddled closer is really appropriate than the arena type that now dominates a lot of music today.

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Luthier Timothy Des Roches on the new harp he is working….

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Huzzah!

Yes you have noticed the thread running through this post today. It is all about cross-pollination of culture.  The merging of two opposite ideas to create something remarkable. In some cases it doesn’t have to be total opposites but a sense of relatedness. I remember that my venture into the realm of trad music could not have been possible if there was not something in me that likes Celtic music. Sometimes the ‘style on the side’ can play a role in getting the music out there because it is part that makes the music universal. That is why there are certain types of music that we can consider as having ‘universal appeal.’ Examples are that of Enya and Clannad.

While traditional music concentrates more on the specific regional style, Celtic music as a whole looks more into the continental aspect of that style. Thus incorporating every sound around it. Artists like Loreena McKennitt and Connie Dover and Alan Stivell have incorporated this kind of approach. It is through the general sometimes that we discover the specific of vice versa. Such is covered in the interview with Kevin Burke and Cal Scott by 67 Music.

There is also something powerful when one becomes an expat musician. There are great numbers of London based Irish musicians who are able to create an amazing combination of urban sophistication and tribal appeal. I have covered them in my past posts. And there are artists who continue to break barriers by fusing different genres as in the case of The Big Fat Electric Ceilidh led by Dave Martin. And the list goes on as in the case of Welsh band Jamie Smith’s Mabon that released a very important record late last year called Windblown. There are more coming our way. It is really a fascinating time to be in the music. If only the passion pays off because I still see  a lot of musicians releasing albums through their pockets.

Nick Burbridge:Between Literary Pursuits and Music(Interview)

Nick Burbridge

Nick Burbridge

You can’t imagine what an honor it is, to talk to one of UK’s music legends. I was actually controlling the hysterical enthusiasm while doing this interview. As a Celtic blogger, decorum must prevail no matter what! I owned the Levellers albums in cassette form in the 90s and I think I must have ran the tape head down listening to Dirty Davey which is an original by McDermott’s Two Hours. He released three books of poetry On Call, All Kinds Of Disorder, and The Unicycle Set following great reviews. I have a soft spot for literary people like Nick Burbridge who fuse the power of writing and music. So yes in this reflective interview, he reveals to us what it is to be a poetic soul amidst the burgeoning of the Celtic music tide. Every encounter is an opportunity to discover and learn.

I read a short bio about your early years as a musician in the UK. Do you sometimes miss that lifestyle?

I hope you don’t mind if there’s some elision between the first two answers, as they are closely connected questions. It was in the mid 70’s, playing in Germany, when I realised there was going to be a schism between my different pursuits. My band was staying in cramped quarters in Mainz, and I remember waking one morning, after a good gig and late night, with a sudden instinct that I didn’t really belong there. I could hear a voice calling me elsewhere. I went down to watch the Rhine, and realised it was crying out for solitude, where I could get working on the next project – at that time I thought I was going to be a novelist – and from then, as at several other junctures in my life, it was only a matter of time before I went off alone. The trouble is that the lifestyle of a musician is, indeed, something that’s easily missed. And I carried on acting it out, intermittently, most of the way through my first “marriage”, which had its roots in the German experience. I could be a thoroughly bad man, with appetites which life on the road readily answers. My infidelity, drinking, and selfishness I will always regret, for the damage that it caused. But does some part of me miss that Dionysian license to transgress? …Oh yes…

 How do you keep the balance between your literary pursuits and music?

The truth is that when I was first struck by a sense I might be a genuine writer, at about the age of eleven, it came simultaneously with my initial bout of clinical depression. Which sang the lead line, and which accompanied, or promised to compensate for what it would entail, I couldn’t say. The musical life always provided a kind of relief from the internal pressure of both these forces – though, as I’ve said, the pressure would always, eventually, become irresistible. These days, I keep the balance by restricting my musical life mostly to an Irish session on a Sunday afternoon (I am an Irish citizen, and my music is based in the idiom), writing songs and making albums. There was a brief phase not too many years ago when, through my good friends The Levellers, I went out and played the back catalogue of the band I’m perhaps best known for, McDermott’s Two Hours, to large crowds, and made sure I kept myself in check. This, then, didn’t pose a threat to the sense of home a writer needs, or has to create. But the literary life inevitably dominates now – albeit through books of poems, plays and stories. I long since gave up on my hopes of being a major novelist! And, just as inevitably, the depression which accompanied its first signals to me as a child, has plenty of scope to make itself felt.

 You are nominated as songwriter in this years Spiral Earth Awards. How do you in general feel about the importance of musical awards in today’s digital age where everyone can vote?

Normally I pay little mind to these things (though I review albums for R2, so I have a good idea of what’s going on. But when Iain Hazlewood of Spiral Earth (who, like The Levellers, and Sean McGhee, among many others, has been a staunch ally over the years) told me I had been nominated for Best Songwriter, I embraced the task of trying to win the award, as I would any other activity which might bring my work to a wider audience. I wouldn’t be in the least interested in expanding the ego, posing for the camera, or any of the circus that goes on at the BBC awards, for instance. That’s another thing about suffering from endogenous depression. Your world is perpetually turned upside down. Moments of pride or satisfaction are fleeting, replaced by an overwhelming sense of being exposed, or ashamed. Having said that, the fact that this is a truly democratic vote appeals to a profound political sense that runs through my core, and dominates my music. I have been deeply moved to find out just how many people believe in me, as the inveterate outsider.

 What are the top 5 albums you are listening now and why would you recommend them?

I was asked a similar question in the last issue of R2, and they haven’t changed at all since, as the book of poems I am currently working on has taken me into something of a time-warp, and these are my talismans: Blue, Joni Mitchell; Songs of Love and Hate, Leonard Cohen; Andy Irvine and Paul Brady (eponymous); After Hours, The Bothy Band; Bel, Gabriel Yacoub;

What’s cooking in the Burbridge musical kitchen right now?

A McDermott’s Two Hours’ folk-rock album, Besieged, has been cooking so long it may well be burnt by now. I wrote the songs before the last acoustic album, Gathered, and various people from The Levellers, Oysterband, and others, have been putting bits and pieces down when they have time. It’s being produced by the legendary Al Scott (in conjunction with my good friend, Tim Cotterell) – whose most recent triumph was Ragged Kingdom, with June Tabor and the Oysterband. Since all the albums we make are the result of others offering their time and facilities for free, I can’t complain that it’s taken an eternity to be realised. But I am promised it will emerge this year, a mighty beast, though not without finesse, or sensitivity – in contrast to Gathered, which was deliberately acoustic, and understated. My daughter Molly will be singing on it – and, beyond that, I’ve been hearing some very interesting, almost unaccompanied, songs on my nightly walks, which we might sing together. But one thing at a time!

What are the issues that you are passionate about, music or otherwise? And care to explain a bit?

This is the kind of question it’s always easier to answer with platitudes, than think about originally, and address from the heart. I’m beginning to look into old age, and I believe a point arrives when you come to terms with the fact that we are collectively, and individually responsible for the state we find ourselves in. My political beliefs, my personal commitments, and all I have to say, therefore, I try to encounter, now, firstly at a non-verbal level, in acts of meditation, or vision, penetrating the unconscious where the real work goes on; and from there, if I have to use words, I would say I am passionate about what it takes to be fully human, with a genuine awareness of a sense of justice, yet forgiveness, needful anger and the capacity to protect what must be protected, but in balance with the duty to nurture what is often called love, but therefore misunderstood. This is the fundamental creative instinct that forms us, drives us, and, when implored sincerely, releases us as we need to be released. Anything, and everything, that stands in its way, in the hands of politicians, corrupt religious orders, personal tyrants, or any other repressive force, is inimical. There is nothing quite like music as a weapon in this war.

What can you tell musicians who are doing a crossover into the “Celtic” genre? What are they supposed to prepare themselves with?

Giving advice about fusing other genres with the Celtic idiom is probably a bit like counseling a bodhran player. All kinds of people think they simply have to pick up basic rhythms, a sense of where parts begin and end, muscle into sessions, join bands, and that’s all that’s called for. Bodhran-playing is about rhythm and energy of course. But the expert knows the tunes themselves as well as any fiddler or flute-player. All accompaniments are sensitive, and serve the overall dynamic of the particular jigs, reels, hornpipes, polkas etc. Mark the average player by how much attention is diverted, or dissolved by the drum clacking and clumping away across both melody and subtle rhythmic variations, or repeatedly crying out, Listen to me! I think the same kind of rules apply for “crossover” projects. A real respect and understanding of the tradition will ensure whatever’s being grafted onto it augments, and not obscures the workmanship and inspiration that lies at its heart, which is, after all, what is being made use of; so the outcome is a marriage, not a forced surrender to inappropriate attacks. Ultimately, it’s all about “listening” – it’s the key word, surely, in playing music – a drop or two of Celtic blood, and raw experience of what endures within in the culture, helps of course! Above all, prepare by listening, learning, and not seeking to impose, until a natural cross-breeding takes its course.

 Where can fans buy your music?

The recent acoustic album, Gathered, is available now from Fish Records, specialists in singer-songwriter material. The first and last McDermott’s Two Hours albums (The Enemy Within and Goodbye To The Madhouse) are still on sale at www.levellers.co.uk – you can buy the others on Amazon, or from various distributors on the internet – or contact me at www.burbridgearts.org about any of the work and it will be taken care of.

Nick Burbridge

Nick Burbridge beatboxing?

Videos:

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Huzzah!

Good news. I will be making three posts a week. I used to trim down the posting to twice per week due to an old suggestion. I was told that I posted a lot that it was hard for them to catch up. This was during an old template where the full text was displayed in front. With the new template, it is much easier because one would know where to look for new posts.

Brian Cunningham is still touring round the United States with his Sean Nos dance. According to his latest post:

Atlantic Steps performs 2 shows in Nashville and 2 shows in Boston,check out our fb page or website for dates and info.Also if you are interested in purchasing ‘In The Blood DVD on sean-nos story and The Family,visit www.atlanticsteps.com
This man is creating legend reviving a kind of Irish dance that became quite rare. My interview with him will soon be up!
LiveTrad has also posted a video clip from a LiveTrad St. Patrick’s Day webcast. This will get you in the mood for the weekend.

Beautiful new video of Maura O’Connell performing ‘Feet of a Dancer‘ is out. According to her post “It’s cold out there – we’re warming ourselves with TradFest memories 🙂” Indeed. She is fantastic! Her voice is like no other. Enjoy!

If you love crafting and want to take a piece of Scotland with you..especially if you love maritime inspired art, take a look at this site. You would love many items 🙂
http://weebaydunure.wix.com/weebay-dunure#!about/c240r

Enjoy your week folks. More post up soon plus an album review on Qristina and Quinn Bachand.

Darren Lynch, Penn Du and Bobby Sands

Darren Lynch is Back! And he has now the title “novelist” on top of his being a musician.

Remember the duo The Feekers that released  Tarbolten?  I blogged about them before. Well looks to me that Darren Lynch is doing great musically on his own. He is really blossoming  and getting his music out there. I had a memorable Q&A with the Feekers which you can read here.

Darren Lynch is both  a folk musician and author. He is based in Dublin, Ireland. His repertoire is kind of extensive.They are f folk songs from Ireland, Scotland, England and America. The Instruments played are bouzouki, banjo, mandola, harmonica and bodhran.
His  has played in such bands as The Broadside Merchants, So-Ranna, The Feekers and currently plays solo. His first novel, The Man You Don’t Meet Everyday, is due to be published this year, 2013!

Darren Lynch has a fantastic voice along with being a fine instrumentalist. I am looking forward to his novel.

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Breton Rock with Penn Du

If you are in the mood for some feet stompin’ Celtic rock then listen to Penn Du. I came across them through Google+ I love the clean recording of the bagpipes. I also like the full energy that the band provides all throughout their tracks. There is something about their chord progression. It gives their sound a kind of metal appeal. I usually associate these minor chords with black metal but yes this style is also predominant in Breton music. The band knows how to knit sensual grooves over their big sound. This is definitely a crowd pleaser. More appropriate for arena setting than small venues. Elements of ska and jazz also sneak in and out seamlessly. What a joy it is to listen to something energetic that is Penn Du!

More here:

http://www.penndu.fr/

http://www.myspace.com/penn.du

http://www.facebook.com/penn.du

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Huzzah!

A lot of people in my network are posting about the late Bobby Sands. So I guess this is the Bobby Sands awareness day. I am aware that actor Michael Fassbender has portrayed the life of Bobby Sands. There are tributes floating out there. I am going to pick one up. It is by my friend The Wild Irish Poet a.k.a. Alan Cooke. We joked about his voice as gold. I said I should steal him now and place him inside a safe with complex number combination. Then sell him off for lots of $$$$! Oh the crazy things we talk about sometimes. He made this video. He is fund of making video presentations. His book Naked in New York is out now. I am advertising it on the right side of this site. Check it out, buy it and then read it. I already did and I love it!

Description:

A beautiful poem by Bobby Sands..’ The Rhythm of Time’ a poem that has echoed around the world. Read by Irish Emmy winning writer actor and filmmaker Alan Cooke aka Wild Irish Poet go to www.wildirishpoet.com

Ok if you haven’t yet, I recommend the EP of NUA. Yes I praised them in this blog and I got quoted in their site:

“Confidence, experimentation and cohesiveness are traits of what a good album should have-and they are all here. If they are able to come up with a sound so full in this 4 track EP, just imagine what a complete album would be like. You would be missing a huge part of your musical life if you don’t get this EP!”

“NUA came up with an auspicious debut in a form of an EP. It gives us the taste of what this trio can offer not just today but also in future releases. These are clean, crisp tunes that sparkle with precision and showmanship. The audio quality is something get excited about. The surface sound of every instrument is captured giving us a degree of nuance and atmosphere.”

“Jacob McCauley’s bodhran becomes emotive, giving us an impression that this percussion has finally reached its tonal height and is capable of being a lead instrument.”

It feels good to be quoted! You should check out what Tony Lawless wrote about them via TradConnect. You know these artists, those that I met and yet to meet…they make my world do the boogie. If only I own The House of Medici then I’d be a patron of the arts.

Enter the Haggis-The Modest Revolution

Featuring: Book review:Naked in New York, Nolwenn Leroy, Mandolin Improvisation in A minor track, Karen Marshalsay, Clannad 70s flashback and John Breen‘s new track.

ENTER THE HAGGIS

ENTER THE HAGGIS

The Modest Revolution by Enter the Haggis is courting mainstream listeners. The songs are all catchy with pop hooks and definitive Celtic sound. The style has always been part of the band’s emblem since they formed in 1996. The songs stick like bread and maple syrup. And I mean stick immediately after hearing the first track Year of the Rat. Strings and uilleann pipes hug the chorus- verse -chorus structure. It is  a tune that is also radio friendly.

I mentioned about maple syrup hinting that they are from Canada. Yes a nation that has contributed amazing acts in all genres all over the world including Celtic  music. Now we move to the second track Can’t Trust the News. Yes who does these days? Everything seems to be filled with agenda. This song has a chorus that’s really easy to remember and also great to sing.

“trust your eyes
they will follow the light
it’s a new tragic story
trust your heart
it will swallow the dark
it’s a mecca of heartache and doom
you can’t trust the news.”

You bet I am singing along to this part raising my voice the way lead singer  Brian Buchanan does. Craig Downie knows how to make a listener smile with his trumpet playing. There are lots of great arrangements all over The Modest Revolution.

Down the Line is straight ahead alternative rock with hints of ska and blues. I like that part that starts at 2:50, where the drums create these beats of anticipation amidst the teasing bass lines of Mark Abraham, only to explode in a harmonica driven instrumental riffs around 2:56. I encourage you to check that part out and tell me if I am wrong. These guys know how to start the fire!

Scarecrow is upbeat with a touch of cajun, bluegrass and even melodic style reminiscent of American band Gin Blossoms.

“if you fall
fall with grace
don’t let ’em see the fear upon your face
if you break
break the reins
it’s better up in lights than down in flames.” Yes another great singalong chorus that never fails to please listeners across genres.

Balto has that Celtic fiddling that will temp you to do step dancing. Trevor Lewington  gets listeners on their feet. This is also made solid by Bruce McCarthy’s drumming. After the adrenaline rush of the previous tracks, we are greeted by the gentler Letters.

your love is a compass rose
steadfast through this sand and stone
wind, carry these letters home to Joan
old memories come to life
a last dance in this amber light
wind, carry these letters home tonight

By this time one can notice the beautiful lyricism that wraps around Enter the Haggis. The guitar riffs are contained during the verse part which sets the mood for the song. Instrumental bonanza near the end part of this track along with the rolling drums that make up an ecstatic listening experience. Pardon is another alternative rock driven track. It is an ok song for me. But Hindsight pulls my interest due to its unique arrangement. It almost sounds like a hymn.

Footnote is groovy with a pop rock kind of vibe.  Copper Leaves in a little bit country.The kind of track you would be glad to play in your car when you are driving long distance. Blackout dips into a relaxing mood in the first verse only to build up into an emotional release in the chorus part.

Up in Lights closes the album with a spiritual vibe. I think it is a perfect placement of the track. kind of serenade after the energetic arena rock vibe of the entire album. Yes this is Celtic rock with a top 40 appeal. This is likely to be embraced by old and new listeners…even those who are not familiar with the genre. Actually it sounds hip. Very urban, sophisticated and can fit anywhere. But the Celtic vibe is definitely there. The band just made sure that part is accessible to all.

Credits:

Mark Abraham – bass guitar, vocals
Brian Buchanan – vocals, electric guitar, acoustic guitar, piano, accordion, fiddle, banjo
Craig Downie – trumpet, flugelhorn, bagpipes, whistle, glockenspiel, harmonica, vocals
Trevor Lewington – vocals, electric guitar, acoustic guitar, banjo, octave mandolin, B3, Farfisa
Bruce McCarthy – drums, percussion, vocals

Guest vocalists: The Adam Ezra Group, Erin “Izzy” Griffin, Catherine Wiegand, Kelly Elvin, Claire Rayton

Uilleann Pipes on “Year of the Rat”: Tyler Duncan

Additional Piano and B3: Joel Goodwin

Additional Percussion: Tim Price, Dave Wallace

Meaty claps and thunderous stomps: Matt Elvin, Kelly Elvin, Ellen Griffin, Erin “Izzy” Griffin, Dave Wallace, Catherine Wiegand, Claire Rayton, Patty Volpi

Cello: Michael Olsen

All music and lyrics copyright Enter The Haggis, 2012 (SOCAN/ASCAP.)
All arrangements by Enter The Haggis. Published by Firebrand Entertainment Inc.

Recorded at Saint Claire Recording Company in Lexington, KY – October, 2012.

Produced, engineered and mixed by Zach McNees

Assistant Engineers: Tim Price and Cailon Williams

Mastered by Leon Zervos at Studios 301 in Sydney, Australia

Photography by Rosco Weber

Album art and packaging design by Brian Buchanan

Gallery

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Book review:Naked in New York by Emmy Winning Irish actor/poet Alan Cooke.

A beautiful journey…

It seems that all great literary pieces of the world always include a rite of passage. Of a story about leaving the familiar and walking into the unknown. Dante’s The Divine Comedy starts with

“In the midway of this our mortal life,
I found me in a gloomy wood, astray….”

Jack Kerouac also made the same allusion with his real life road trip that resulted to a book On the Road. Now I am not going continue quoting tall literature or set a serious tone because I am just an ordinary reader like you. So what’s a blogger thought after reading Naked in New York by Irish multi Emmy nominated actor writer and film maker Alan Cooke?

Well, to start with, the book reads like music. He writes in a distinctive rhythmic pace. This isn’t the 3-minute-pop-song you-hear-on-the-radio kind of style. Think of a symphony. And though readers might miss the fact that this is an artistic writing using autobiography as vehicle, the sad scenes in Naked in New York are embellished by defining moments.

” History is littered with those that chose to never go outside of the familiar, men and women, dreamers that ached but refused a calling to another life and yet remained behind to toil a groove into a long weary existence.” Alan Cooke made a recurring theme along that line all throughout his book. Anyone who has undergone a personal awakening knows that this is the truth. We all want to know something behind this mundane existence. And we do unfamiliar things so that one day we may drink to that fountain of precious memory to say: I have done that. I know what it’s like!

The story takes off as he starts leaving for New York. ” My God are you mad? That place is burning.” Says the cab driver to him. Ah to be a poet in a huge city.

” As New York drew near, I look out the window and finally saw the skyline of Manhattan. I saw the ridges and jagged lines of America’s greatest city. It looks surreal. The plane veered towards JFK. I could not take my eyes off the city. It already had me in its gaze.”

There are patters of microscopic observations in passages like…

I walked down the steps and through the tunnel. The faces seemed mute and sullen. It was a sharp reminded of what had happened here. I had been above the earth in silence for many hours and now I felt the sudden rush of America.”

The thing about Naked in New York is that it is part commentary, part poetry and part autobiography. It is populated by interesting characters. Alan Cooke has this deep compassion for the lost and the forgotten :the old raggedy Ann dolls that got tossed because someone’s got a new toy to play with.

From a crazy landlady:

“I quickly found another place to live and confronted her with my deposit. But she wailed and screamed and made excuses, run out the door and did not come back.”

To being a victim of hit and run:

“…suddenly a car smashes me into an abyss. Death takes its aim at me and I am alone. This road where I lie in the Bronx is cold and full of treachery.”

His narration includes subway mad men, good friends, death of a relative an being broke, cold and sick: “My sanity vanished in these panicked moment yet something deeper was allowing this to happen, to strip away the primal essence in New York. I felt naked in New York in these moments, alone and exposed, a wire cut by a sharp blade.”

Naked in New York takes us on an emotional ride but never losing the theme in which the story revolves upon: The transformation of a poetic soul in a vast city called New York. And although this is a book about his own journey, it never fails to evoke a kind of universal familiarity in all of us. After all, we have taken the same decision through different roads. And we have either safely arrived or broken. But we know this feeling. We know this symphony of the soul that transforms us into better beings. A kinder and more profound version of ourselves. It is a brilliant book that reads like fine wine. I recommend it to everyone who loves Irish writers and also the great city, the capital of the world called New York.

Bio:

In search of a grand adventure, Alan Cooke decided to move to New York in 2001. Has has been an actor, writer and film maker in Dublin since the 90s. While there, he created artistic projects. One of them  was an improvised film about his life in the city as an Irish Immigrant called ‘ Home.’ It gave him an Emmy award.

to quote his Amazon bio:

“He got 6 A list stars to become involved in the project including Mike Myers Woody Allen, Susan Sarandon and Woody Allen. They all felt they needed to support a positive film about New York. Alan then went on to win an Emmy for his writing on the film. He continued his writing and acting and developed all his diaries thoughts and musings into what has become his debut literary memoir ‘ Naked In New York.’

‘ The Spirit of Ireland – An Odyssey Home’ is his follow up memoir.  He is currently trying to develop a documentary film of The Spirit of Ireland. He also has a radio podcast show called ‘ The Wild Hour Show’ which is a series of conversations with artists , actors, writers, singers and explorers from around the world.

Alan will also be releasing a thriller set in Ireland called ‘ Jack Tully and the Midnight Killer’. The first in a series about the life of a tough heroic small town cop who lives on the wild coast of southern Ireland and his pursuit of the criminal underworld in dark times.”

He currently lives near the epic Cliffs of Moher on the West Coast of Ireland.

SITES : www.wildirishpoet.com
www.thespiritofirelandfilm.wordpress.com
www.thewildhourshow.wordpress.com
www.homethemovie.com
Facebook : http:// www.facebook.com/wildirishpoet
Twitter : @wildirishpoet

Get your own copy of Naked in New York through Amazon.

Alan Cooke picture

Alan Cooke a.k.a. The Wild Irish Poet

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Huzzah!

Mama mia! You can’t believe the reaction I got after hearing Nolwenn Leroy‘s rendition of a Kate Bush classic Wuthering Heights. She nailed it! I tell you this woman is so amazing! If you haven’t heard of her then check out my database and type Nolwenn Leroy and you will get results from previous articles I wrote about her. In this Women’s Awareness Month Nolwenn Leroy certainly carries the flag with her achievements. More of this event here: http://www.mytaratata.com/Pages/EMISSIONS_voir.aspx?TvShowId=510

Traditional music meets futuristic online teaching

Online teaching has revolutionized the way Irish traditional musicians teach music. Read more of this interesting article by Martin Doyle. If you love mandolin music, check out this Mandolin Improvisation in A minor track by American musician Thomas McGregor. It really highlights the gentleness of the mandolin sound without the distraction of other instruments.

Now, if you are a harp student and you want to learn the instrument, Karen Marshalsay is taking advantage of online teaching as well:“I do skype harp lessons as do some other Scottish players – and I’ll be doing my first UHI lecture on Scottish harp from my home this month – looking forward to how that works out – with lecturer and students all over the highlands and beyond!” Check out more about her harp lessons and music via: http://www.karenmarshalsay.com/ and http://scottishharpmusic.wordpress.com/

Clannad 70s flashback

Before Clannad embarked in their huge musical success in th 80s, they sound like this in the 70s. I confess I prefer their 80s and beyond music; more than their earlier efforts. But like any listener one has certain mood swings in listening to music. So it is really great to be able to get back to the simpler audio recordings of the 70s  where everything was raw. No one was cheating in terms of effects. That video was taken during their live performance in Germany. German people really appreciate Irish music.

Before we close this episode, check out John Breen‘s new track uploaded via youtube. It looks like inspiration is boiling in the heart of our favorite Irish singer/songwriter. Have a listen to The Night Visiting Song.

Peter Purvis of Gaelic Storm:Titanic and Playing with big bands (Interview)

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Peter Purvis strikes me as a person who’d rather play than talk. But when he starts talking about music, it gets very interesting. I guess this is due to the part of him that loves teaching music. Growing up in the Ottawa valley immersed him to the culture of fiddle players, step dancers and yes even developing the love for maple syrup!

He picked up the Highland pipes at 12. He progressed to the Uilleann pipes and Irish whistle at 16. His musical upbringing provided him the great opportunity to be trained by the great musicians in the field.These lessons helped shaped his musical path to this day.

Peter joined the  Gaelic Storm in2004.  The band  brought  three albums to #1 in World music on the Billboard charts. Gaelic Storm have performed side by side, Goo Goo Dolls,Zac Brown Band,Lyle Lovett and Emmylou Harris at events such as the Telluride Bluegrass Festival and Milwaukee’s Summer Fest.  So let us welcome this week’s featured artist Peter Purvis!

Gaelic Storm’s tour calendar is busy until April. How is the American tour doing so far?

The US tour is great. We do most of our touring in the US these days. All of us are based here now. I’m engaged to a wonderful and beautiful girl from Chicago so that’s where I spend my days. We try to get over to either Europe, Asia or Australia at least once a year, but we typically do about 100-110 shows in the US every year.

The movie Titanic helped skyrocket the band to the American Top 40. What were the memorable things that you remember achieving such mainstream success?

Haha…..Well I has about 14 when that movie came out. My mother drove me to the theater because I wasn’t old enough to drive. That’s a question you would have to ask the other guys in the band.

When you are a touring piper, what do you need to remember in terms of comfort and getting ready for a gig?

Tuning, tuning, tuning…… Keeping a well-tuned bagpipe is a hard thing to do in perfect circumstances and my circumstances are anything but perfect. The climate on the road is always changing, making it difficult and time-consuming to stay in tune. Additionally, my pipes are being thrown around in road cases all day. Plus your instruments are in a freezing cold trailer in the winter and a boiling hot trailer in the summer.

Your first pipe instrument was the Highland pipe at the age of 12. What were the challenges learning those instruments at an age where everyone wants to pick up a guitar and be a rock star?

I think I hear this question everyday, and I still don’t have a great response. I had family friends and relatives that played, plus Braveheart had just come out. As a 12 year old a had a man crush on William Wallace (Mel Gibson) All those factors together got me interested and once I started I became obsessed and haven’t looked back.

You have an online bagpipe lesson page. Would you please tell me about that?

I love to teach and wasn’t able to do much of it because I’m on the road so much. So, I wanted to figure out a way to continue teaching with my schedule. Online seemed to be the perfect solution. I’ve created lessons on my website, www.bagpipelesson.com, and from there, I’m able to provide a month of lessons for people to work into their own schedules. These online lessons also cost less than in-person lessons. 

What I love most about it is that I’m able to offer lessons to people who don’t have access to good instruction and classes because of where they live or they simply can’t afford it. I have students as far away as Japan and as young as six years old.

What are the no no’s that one must remember when picking up a bagpipe as it differs from an Uilleann pipe?

I have been playing both for so long now that I never get them confused when playing. There are a couple of highland pipes embellishments that I will accidentally do on the uilleann pipes. However, for the most part they are such different instruments it’s hard to get them confused. As soon as your fingers hit the chanter your brain goes into an autopilot and you always know which one your playing.

What suggestions can you give to anyone trying to pursue such musical path?

If you love music and you want to make it your profession, just go for it.  Who would have thought that a bagpiper from the small town of Merrickville, Ontario would be playing at some of the biggest music festivals, venues and musicians in the world?  Anything is possible, you just gotta go for it. It’s not all about practice and trying to be the best. It’s also about getting out there, meeting people and being social. Above all, you really have to love what you do. I’m grateful enough to be able to do what I love for a living. 

Are you doing studio work apart from the band right now? And care to tell me about it?

Currently, I’m working on two studio albums. One is a more contemporary Celtic/world/rock album and the other is new highland dancing album. I hope to have both out sometime in the summer. Gaelic Storm is filming a DVD on St. Patrick’s day in Milwaukee as well.

Who is Peter Purvis when he is not performing live or doing studio work?

It’s hard to ever really escape the bagpiper in me. When I’m at home, bagpipes are still a part of my everyday life. I give a lot of lessons and play in a pipe band. I do what all other Canadians do. Sit on my Chesterfield, watch hockey and eat maple syrup (the real Canadian sort) and poutine.

Since touring with Gaelic Storm, you’ve had the chance to perform with groups and artists like Sarah McLachlan, Hanson, the Barenaked Ladies, and Collective Soul.  How was it like?  What are some other highlights of touring and performing with Gaelic Storm?  

Playing with these big bands is incredible; it’s something I never thought I would be able to do. However, it’s not very different than touring with any other band. They are all very down-to-earth and always ready to have fun.  Some highlights in my time with the band include: performing at the Milwaukee Irish fest for a crowd of about 25,000 as well as playing at Telluride bluegrass festival with some of the best musicians in the world (Elvis Costello, Bella Fleck…..). Additionally, we do massive festivals in Europe that are just out of this world.

We also play music festivals on cruises around the Caribbean. “The Rock Boat,” one of the cruises that we’ve done, is the most fun that you could possibly have in just five days. If it weren’t on water, I’m sure it would be against the law to have as much fun as we have on it. Over the years, we have been joined on this boat by Sister Hazel, Collective Soul, Better Than Ezra, Hanson, Zac Brown Band, Barenaked Ladies, Sara McLachlan, Great Big Sea and many other great bands.  It’s an absolutely wild time.

While on tour, anything can happen – from our singer Patrick Murphy slugging Russell Crow (It’s true. Look up our song called “The Night I punched Russell Crow”) to skydiving.  Every day is different and more exciting than the last.

You can find out more about me at:

www.petepurvismusic.com

www.bagpipelesson.com

www.gaelicstorm.com

Videos:

Music video by Gaelic Storm performing Rag and Bone. (C) 2012 Lost Again Records

Gallery:

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Huzzah!

After the previous article’s experience, I find it hard to write something without getting personal or not mentioning any reference to that incident. But then again I make sure to keep a balance between being informative and humorous (that is if you even find some of my writings humorous). But I understand the value of really being true to oneself. Flaws and all. You know when you get to that point in your life when you think you have created every unimaginable faux pas, every grain of hopelessness that permeates the unbearable lightness of being, that’s when you stop caring and just let everything flow. And when you allow that feeling to flow then your fingers simply follow and the brain works at a speed that is comparable to ordinary speech.

The Celtic Music Fan celebrates along with the billions worldwide, March as the month of Women. So today I will feature all women artists that I think are amazing in their fields.  The first one in this list is Kyle Carey. I am amazed how she is able to maintain the balance between lightness and resonance in her singing.

I discovered the music of Heather Dale two years ago and once in a while she pops out in my status discussion.Musician Jim Wearne recommended her. Between funky sounds and spruce up renditions of classics, she maintains her vocal identity while highlighting the beauty of the Celtic harp  :

If you don’t know yet, Shauna Burns combines the beauty of Goth, Americana and Celtic atmosphere in her every song. To me she is the Celticky Tori Amos and the god child of Siouxsie Sioux in the fashion department. For those who are more into the spiritually driven music then Shauna will haunt you with her fascinating melodies.

We are also celebrating St Piran’s day in Cornwall! So what better way to celebrate than the music of Dalla and Sue Aston!

Sue Aston has the most haunting Celtic violin.

If I didn’t include other notable female artists, it means they were heavily featured in my other editions so it doens’t mean those who are not here aren’t great. Everyone always finds her way back here 😉