Mike Vass : String Theory

This is track no. 5 It’s a Bar from String Theory

http://www.mikevass.com/

I love looking at sleeve notes. That’s one of the things I look for when I buy a CD or purchase digital downloads.  It lets you see the talents involved in creating the recording and also the instruments used in the process. String Theory, a new album by Mike Vass has all that and so much more. With the sheer talents shared by both twins- Mike and sister Ali along with other musicians in the album, something like that makes you wonder. Who are these people and what is String Theory?

String Theory :A current favourite among scientists in search of an all- encompassing hypothesis is super string theory, according to which elementary particles are likened to the notes sounded by a violin string under varying tension.

String Theory opens with  Cavers of Kirkcudbright  , a jig that sways and enchants you with its clarity and high pitch piano hammering courtesy of sister Ali. It is a luminous track brought about by bright chord patterns and a time signature that reminds me of waltzing the green Scottish countryside.  Anna Massie provides that smooth guitar strums and every instrument in this track really go together. Continents Apart is a relevant track for these times. Kind of reminds you of long distance relationships. I love the way  Steve Fivey beats those drums. He really got me into the groove. Man’s Search is an interesting track because according to the info : inspired by Viktor Frankl’s best-selling book, was described as ‘utterly compelling’ and ‘one epoch-making composition’. ‘Man’s Search’ was subsequently featured by the Victor Frankl Institute in Austria to commemorate Frankl’s birthday. It is a track rich in atmosphere and almost trip hop sounding although this is purely acoustic. Here, the bagpipes of  Calum MacCrimmon stands out. Ali also provides that hypnotic piano in the background. The song moves from one structure to the next and like is never repetitive.

We move to the fourth track in the album called Fairholm Road, a slow tune showcasing the elegance of  James Lindsay on double bass and the Rhodes of  Angus Lyon. It almost have that 70’s vibes. The track moves from the spare quiet space into the expressive fiddle playing of Mike.   I had a great time closing my eyes and rocking my body to this one. It’s that moment when the music takes you over like a big hug.  It’s a Bar opens with a banjo and a minute later explodes into a full band set that just hammers into your mood with tis positive vibes. It changes pace in the middle then gallops into the brightness of the whistle. We hear the background vocals of  Megan Henderson and the rest of the band doing an onomatopoeia driven by a Jazz inspired beat. The next one is called  The 35 Year Waltz  which has that bright tin whistle coming in and out of the tune while other instruments embellish it like curtains bellowing on a sunny and windy day. Here Ali’s playing is very instinctive and instead of competing for the brightness of the whistle she settled for the laid back gentle playing that reminds me of deep water under. This track is written for Mike’s and Ali’s parents.

We move to Waking Life (Inspired by Richard Linklater’s film ‘Waking Life’) and its traditional style once again showcases the clarity of the fiddle.  I have been tapping my feet to this one since the first time I heard it.  The Shoemaker is one tune that makes you smile with the beauty of its simplicity. Here we hear a duet between Mike on fiddle and Anne on tenor guitar. I like the fact that most traditional pieces are named after people like for instance this ninth track called  Calum James MacCrimmon . Everyone here spars each other playfully with their style of playing and yet everything is held together tightly. This song is like a celebration of life if you really listen to it again and again it tends to get addictive. The album closes with  Three Trumpeter’s Waltz which embraces you with its solemn piano playing. It is one of the most beautiful piano pieces I heard for ages. Here we hear Mike contributing his vocals. His voice sounds like the breeze.
String Theory has all the elements of an excellent album. And it is truly a rewarding listening experience that makes you want to listen again and again.

String Theory on iTunes http://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/string-theory/id416694806

Mike Vass : String Theory

Mike Vass: Fiddle, Vocals

with

Steve Fivey: Drums, Percussion

Megan Henderson: Fiddle, Vocals

James Lindsay: Double Bass

Angus Lyon: Accordion, Rhodes

Calum MacCrimmon: Whistle, Bagpipes

Anna Massie: Guitar, Tenor Guitar, Banjo, Vocals

Ali Vass: Piano

All tracks written by Mike Vass (mcps/prs)

Produced by Mike Vass

All tracks arranged by Mike Vass and the String Theory band

Recorded by Angus Lyon and Keith Byrd at Gran’s House

Mixed by Iain Hutchison at Glo-Worm

Mastered by Brad Blackwood at Euphonic Masters

Sleeve concept and design by Louise Bichan

Biography

 

Winner of the inaugural Neil Gow International Composition Award, Mike Vass is fast gaining a reputation as one of Scotland’s foremost tunesmiths. His compositions frequently appear in the recordings and performances of some of the UK’s top name acts; most notably luminaries such as Brian Finnegan, Corrina Hewat, and Mairearad Green.

Mike is regarded as one of Scotland’s finest fiddle players, in great demand as a performer, composer and teacher. He has toured extensively in the past few years with leading Scots Song band Malinky, in a duo with twin sister Ali, and with International super group Fiddle Rendezvous, featuring Bruce Molsky, Maryann Kennedy and Gerry O’Connor.

Mike’s New Voices Commission ‘String Theory’ debuted at Celtic Connections in 2010, and was described as ‘the most direct and honest since the idea was first conceived … precision, subtlety and attention to detail’. One of the highlights, the avant-garde piece ‘Man’s Search’ inspired by Viktor Frankl’s best-selling book, was described as ‘utterly compelling’ and ‘one epoch-making composition’. ‘Man’s Search’ was subsequently featured by the Victor Frankl Institute in Austria to commemorate Frankl’s birthday.

Mike was nominated as ‘Best Up and Coming Act’ in the 2007 Scots Trad Music Awards, along with pianist/singer twin sister Ali, and won ‘Best Folk Band’ with Malinky in 2010. A runner-up in the 2007 BBC Radio Scotland Young Traditional Musician of the Year competition, Mike was subsequently invited to tour with the 2008 finalists as an accompanist. Although barely 5 years into his career, Mike has already featured on more than a dozen recordings, including Volume 1 of The Complete Songs of Robert Tannahill, produced by Dr Fred Freeman, and Malinky’s acclaimed fourth album Flower and Iron.

Atmospheric Beauty and Top 10 Trad Albums

Sinead O’Connor  Image Credit: Neal Preston/Corbis

I am a big fan of atmosphere. Atmosphere is another piece of a puzzle that every recording has. People who work with sound are masters of these by incorporating effects like reverb, echo, delay and attack- things that we refer to as ‘wet sounds’. Not all atmosphere is achieved inside a studio. Most of the great things you hear can be reproduced outside in enclosed spaces like churches or a small space with walls and ceiling aligned perfectly to create that bounce of sound. Most of these songs I featured here are either live performance or recorded songs but they all have one thing in common-they create atmosphere.

Today’s play list is all about traditional sessions held in open as well as enclosed spaces like churches. The beauty of live music plus the spiritual atmosphere that surrounds these performances are your perfect getaway to the stressful surroundings that mark day to day relationships at work and outside. So journey with me today as we both explore the music and the people who play these tunes.

Dave Sheridan playing the flute, Michael McCague playing the bouzouiki & Donal McCague playing the fiddle in a concert which took place as part of the Steeple Sessions 2011 season at the Unitarian Church on St. Stephen’s Green in Dublin on September 20th. The tune is called The Independence Hornpipe

Donal is one of our guests before and it is great to see him continue to win fans in the traditional scene. Check out my interview with him here:    https://celticmusicfan.wordpress.com/2011/09/05/donal-mccague-this-fiddles-on-fire-interview/

Donal O’Connor playing “Tune for Rose”, a tune for his grandmother and fiddle teacher Rose O’Connor at the Steeple Sessions on August 11, 2011 at the Unitarian Church in Dublin.

Laoise Kelly playing a piece called “Sliabh na mBan” on the harp at the Steeple Sessions on August 23, 2011 at the Unitarian Church in Dublin.

Ali gets a go of a Steinway Grand at Colchester Arts Centre! Filmed during our UK tour April 2011. Mike and Ali play 42 Beech Avenue and Cavers of Kirkcudbright.

Twins Mike and Ali Vass performing together. I am posting my own review of String Theory which is a new project by Mike Vass so watch for it .

Been a big fan of Iarla since his work with The Afro Celts Sound System. His voice is as exquisite and the heavenly lights of the Aurora Borealis. It stops you on your tracks and grabs you. I can close my eyes while listening to him and I feel like I am in a different place. To have a beautiful voice like that and to move souls…that’s got to be something! I think I am having an epiphany now LOL!

More about this recording here : http://realworldrecords.com/catalogue/foxlight/

This is a tragic piece about lost love. This song was written in 1909 although the original pre-dates this. But a song collector and publisher named Herbert Hughes heard the melody while in County Donegal and approached the song writer Padric Colum with the last two lines of the song and asked him to write a version.

Iarla Ó Lionáird Dublin mbac bac Bhaile Baile Brian Kennedy Átha Cliath teilifís teilifis TG4 Gaeilge TG4Gaeilge Celt Celtic Ireland Irish Ceol Gael Gaelic Folk Eire Traditional RTE World television programme Mick O’Brien TG4.ie Dubliners

Sinéad left out some of the song.
Usually the third verse is
“The people were saying no two were e´er wed,
But one has a sorrow that never was said,
And I smiled as she passed with her goods and her gear,
And that was the last that I saw of my dear.”
and the last verse should start:
“last night she came to me, my dead love came in”
This is where the young man denies that he murdered his young love.

In the last verse we hear the line, I dreamed last night my young love came in. The original line is, I dreamed last night that my dead love came in (implying she haunts him for what he done).

The song has been used in several movies including Brave Heart.

Siոeаd O’Cοոոοr oո іTuneѕ http://tinyurl.com/6c5v8b8

I don’t think any playlist is complete without the beautiful voice of Sinead O’Connor. In a way I totally get her. The passion and intensity she place on her songs and the emotional force in which she lives her life is something that speaks to me. We all have our little Sinead’s in us all..

 

Top Ten Traditional Albums – March 2012(TradConnect).

Find out more here: http://tradconnect.com/profiles/blogs/top-ten-albums-march-2012