Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Boston Celtic Music Festival on the way


Ireland, Scotland, Cape Breton -- the Boston area has long been a place where these Celtic traditions not only flourish on their own but meet each other. All that is celebrated in the Boston Celtic Music Festival, coming up this year on January 8 and 9. Two events on the Friday kick things off, a concert at the historic Club Passim in Harvard Square, and the Boston Urban Ceilidh, a sort of Celtic dance meets mosh pit high energy fling that’s become a legendary evening of fun, held this year at Springstep in Medford Square. The ceilidh will still be going when the concert’s done, so no need to choose if you’d like to check out both. The festival continues on January 9 with day time performances and workshops at four stages located in Club Passim and at nearby First Church of Cambridge. First Church will also host the BCMFest Finale Concert on Saturday night, which will include performances by Irish singers and players the Makem and Spain Brothers and Cape Breton fiddler Kimberley Fraser.

Over its six year history, BCMFest has emphasized differing themes, ranging from music about the Boston area to Celtic dance to rising young musicians. This year, core traditions is the central idea. In keeping with that, at the Boston Urban Ceilidh one of acts will be a special one-of-its-kind ensemble that will recreate the classic Dudley Street Boston Irish Dance Hall Era from the 1930s to 1950s -- and you can also expect Scottish fiddle meets rock from Laura Cortese and friends. Both of those, in a way, are quite in keeping with the core tradtions of how Celtic music grows and changes.

During the Day Fest on Saturday, there will be plenty of opportunity to participate, with Irish and Scottish music sessions, a performer makeover session for artists seeking advice, and several singing sessions. At these sessions and at workshops and at the concerts, you will hear many fine performers including guitarist Flynn Cohen, the trio Triptych which includes fiddler Laura Risk, bodhran player Paddy League, and dancer Kieran Jordan, Adirondack style fiddle player Cedar Stanistreet, Irish singer Bridget Fitzgerald as part of the recently formed group Bento Boxty, and Cape Breton style band Tri.

BCMFest sprang from a conversation between fiddler Cortese and flute player Shannon Heaton. "During its first six years, BCMFest has reached out to the area's Celtic music community, through the festival as well as events during the year, such as the monthly Celtic Music Monday series at Club Passim and our annual music cruise in Gloucester,” Heaton says of the artist run festival. “Every year we've seen more and more musicians, singers and dancers come up with great ideas and collaborations.” Every year, too, the festival has seen growing audiences and increased appreciation for the music and traditions the artists share.

There’s more information about schedules, tickets, directions to venues, and performers at the festival's web site.

you may also wish to see
Another Fine Winter's Night: Matt & Shannon Heaton

Boston Celtic Music Festival on the way

The Boston Celtic Music Festival, 2008

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Monday, December 28, 2009

Best Music, 2009





Haunting music of the American and Canadian West; the infinitely flexible music of Ireland paired with music from Thailand, Norway, and India; polka played on trumpet, violin , and digeridoo; Scottish traditional fiddle tunes next to a tune from China; Robert Burns songs and a song that references Pablo Neruda and Wendell Berry; tunes and songs from the highlands of Scotland, the American south, and all across Ireland from Donegal to Down and Belfast to Clare, and from the plains of South Dakota to Music Row in Nashville are all here. along with some of the best voices and best playing around. What these albums have in common is grace, creativity, vision, and heart, along with knowledge of and respect for tradition and heritage. Take a listen.



Matt and Shannon Heaton Lovers’ Well
songs and tunes from the Irish tradition reflecting on love’s many facets
Gretchen Peters: One to the Heart, One to the Head a trip through the American west in legend and reality
Hanneke Cassel For Reasons Unseen
Scottish style fiddle with fire and grace

Dakota Lullabyy: Albert & Gage
a treasure trove of Americana songs
Claire Lynch Whatcha Gonna Do faith. love. heartbreak, bluegrass, and trains, from one of the best singers around
Tommy Sands: Let the Circle Be Wide Danny Boy traced back to its ancient roots and the future of Ireland imagined, among other things
various artists Darwin Song Project the scientist in context of his family and his world, as seen by eight top songwriters from England, Scotland, and the US

Emily Smith and Jamie McClennan Adoon Winding Nith a lively take on lesser known songs from Robert Burns
Lauren MacColl Strewn with Ribbons fiddle that evokes the highlands of Scotland
Bill Cooley The Return Journey a guitar journey of insight and courage
String Sisters: Live a fiery combination of Nordic, Irish, Scottish, and American fiddle
Liz Carroll & John Doyle: Double Play
two of the best, Carroll on fiddle and Doyle on guitar, with songs and tunes from Ireland and Carroll’s fine originals. it’s nominated for a Grammy
Jerry Christmas: Jerry Douglas
master Dobro player’s soulful take on holiday standards
Jim Malcolm First Cold Day
original and traditional songs from highland Perthshire Malcolm’s a great singer too
Cherish The Ladies: A Star in the East
sparkling view of the winter holidays with Irish American flair
Ian Tyson: Yellowhead to Yellowstone
the real west in the weathered voice of a music legend
Alison Brown: The Company You Keep
banjo at its most creative

honorable mention
three very different and very refreshing aspects of Americana music, and polka as you’ve never heard it before
Caroline Herring: Golden Apples of the Sun

Sara Milonovich Daisycutter

Johnsmith gravity of grace

Polkastra: Apolkalypse Now

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Thursday, December 24, 2009

Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, and music


The fourth week in Advent: a time of preparation, a time for honoring connection, community, faith, friendship, and trust. A time for giving and receiving. A time for learning about and celebrating all that.

Nollaig Shona Diobh, Nollaig Chridheil dhut, Feliz Navidad, Merry Christmas



music to go along with these ideas






Music Road: listening to Christmas

Music Road: now playing: Best of Celtic Christmas

Music Road: Another Fine Winter's Night: Matt & Shannon Heaton

Music Road: Gretchen Peters: Northern Lights

Music Road: Cherish the Ladies: On Christmas Night



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Monday, December 21, 2009

Another Fine Winter's Night: Matt & Shannon Heaton





Music from the 12th century to the 21st filled the air as Matt and Shannon Heaton brought their mix of new and traditional holiday music to Club Passim in Cambridge, Massachusetts last week. Opening with the familiar carol It Came Upon the Midnight Clear and closing with a set that mixed Irish music and Elvis, it was a seasonal celebration well enjoyed by performers and audience alike.









The pair offered music from their holiday album Fine Winter’s Night, including the title track, an original by Shannon which invited thinking about the meditative quality of the season. First Snowfall of December is a song Matt wrote, painting a picture of a Christmas encounter in Boston in an earlier time. There were jigs and reels as well, including a set enlivened by the addition of dancer Nick Gariess. The gentle Julius the Christmas Cat paid tribute to an often unsung Christmas hero, while Fisherman’s Lullaby was an uplifting song of hope mixing African American and Irish traditions. The Wexford Carol reaches across time to Ireland in the twelfth century. Scottish songwriter Emily Smith’s Winter Song paired with an instrumental take on In the Bleak Midwinter proved a fine addition to this year’s concert. Then there was the Elvis connection -- Blue Christmas reinvented --as a lively closer



A fine winter’s night indeed. The Heatons are home from their holiday concert tour now, but if you couldn’t make one of the shows, there’s still the recording. It’s one of those seasonal albums that holds resonance long beyond the holiday, too.

more about the album here
Music Road: Matt & Shannon Heaton: Fine Winter's Night



and here is a video of another new song added this year, Matt's Christmas Eve with You



you may also want to see

Music Road: third week in advent

Music Road: 6 of the best Christmas Songs

Music Road: Shannon Heaton: Oil for the Chain

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Jerry Christmas: Jerry Douglas


Jerry Douglas

Jerry Christmas



Jerry Douglas was a bit hesitant when he came to recording Christmas music. The Nashville based musician has played on hundreds of recordings, been part of Transatlantic Sessions for years, and has many other fine musical credits, still, these are classics which many have recorded. Douglas needn’t have been concerned. Jerry Christmas lives up to its title because is just that -- this fine instrumentalist’s unique touch, ideas, and style in service of seasonal pieces, both sacred and secular.

Aside from Douglas doing a ‘scary Santa voice’ on Santa Claus is Coming to Town, there is only one song. Maura O’Connell, who has often worked with Douglas before, lends her voice to Boo Hewerdine’s quiet meditation on sadness and hope, New Year’s Eve, and offers a spot on reading of the bittersweet emotion of the song. Douglas does that too across the music he’s chosen, expressing varied emotion with no words at all on The First Noel, In the Bleak Midwinter, Christmas Time Is Here, and an especially lovely take on Mary, Did You Know? Luke Bulla, Todd Parks, Gordie Trapp, and Doug Belote do an excellent job of supporting and framing Douglas’s work on Dobro, lap steel guitar, and electric guitar. It’s a very fine collection of familiar music made new, played with creativity and grace.

you may also want to see


Music Road: Dave Carter & Tracy Grammer: American Noel
Music Road: Kathy Mattea: Mary Did You Know?
Music Road: now playing: Ottmar Liebert: Christmas + Santa Fe


Music is always a fine gift. If you're not sure just what someone would like, or if you're running a bit late with your shopping. there is still time to email or print out an Amazon gift certificate. Here is a link through which you may learn more about that

As an Amazon affiliate, Music Road receives a few cents for referring your purchase to Amazon. That helps keep the music and the ideas coming here along the music road, thank you. Editorial work here is always independent of affiliate or sponsor connections. There's more on all that in our disclosure policy, through the link to your right.

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Monday, December 14, 2009

third week in advent



The sort of happy anticipation you have when you're getting ready to be with someone you love is the idea behind the readings and celebrations of the third week in Advent. Gaudete Sunday, the third Sunday is often called, from the introit in the Mass of the day - gaudete -- rejoice.

Music that especially goes along with this idea is a recording by the Ireland based group Dordan called The Night Before. Dordan is Mary Bergin on whistles and flute, Dearbhaill Standun on fiddle, Kathleen Loughnane on harp, and singer and guitarist Martina Goggin. With seasonal tunes and songs they create an atmosphere by turns hushed and joyous, and in many ways very Irish too, all leading to Christmas eve, and then the celebration of Christmas. Music includes Draiocht na bOiche, Oiche Nollag, Don Oiche Ud i mBeithil, and March of the Dreoilin.

You may find The Night Before as a stand alone recording, but a better way to look for it is as part of the two disc set
Narada Presents: The Best of Celtic Christmas. More about the other disc to come -- it includes music from Bonnie Rideout, Kathy Mattea, Cathie Ryan, and Natalie MacMaster among others.



you may also want to see
Music Road: first week in advent

Music Road: Eileen Ivers: An Nollaig

Music Road: Alasdair Fraser & Natalie Haas: In the Moment

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Friday, December 11, 2009

Almost Christmas: Del Suggs and friends






It’s almost Christmas -- and in north Florida that means the continuation of two decades of music making by Del Suggs and friends. Those talented friends include songwriters, singers, and players Mimi Hearn, Pierce Pettis, Danica Winter, Jerry Thigpen, David Murphy, and Pete Winter, and often a guest or two as well. Suggs is known for his Jimmy Buffet meets James Taylor style of laid back music, infused with a tang of Gulf Coast flavor, and that runs through the carols and new and old holiday songs shared at the concert, too.

This year, the troupe gathered at the Warehouse in Tallahassee over two evenings in early December to share We Three Kings reinvented with rockin’ rhythm and ukulele, a handful of Pettis originals including Miriam, his song about Mary as a saint and as a young Hebrew girl, Danica Winter’s classy pop ballad Santa Bring Me Love, and Hearn’s powerful take on Beautiful Star of Bethlehem. The musicians had good seasonal fun through a whole evening of carols and seasonal standards, and closed things out with that southern roots rock classic of a holiday song, Cadillac of a Woman.

This season marks the debut of a recording that shares the spirit of the shows: Almost Christmas





















you may also want to see
Music Road: Cherish The Ladies: A Star in the East

Music Road: saltwater music: del suggs

for a range of interesting photography, visit
Delicious Baby's Photo Friday

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Wednesday, December 09, 2009

second week in advent




During the second week in advent, the focus of reading and prayers is on peace, and also on reading and meditating on the written word. One of the things I’ve been reading this week is Mosaic, by musician Amy Grant. It’s a memoir of sorts, by turns funny and thought provoking. There’s more about what I think of the book and suggestions for listening to Grant’s music through the link.

As for peace,
here are suggestions for music to go along with that idea, especially this time of year


Music Road: Cherish the Ladies: On Christmas Night
Music Road: winter music
Music Road: Gretchen Peters: Northern Lights

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Sunday, December 06, 2009

6 of the best Christmas Songs


Six tradtional and original songs for reflecting on Advent and Christmas. Though several of these songs may be familiar, you'll not have heard them quite in the way these artists do them here. Check out the albums beyond these songs, too.





It Came Upon a Midnight Clear Cathie Ryan Narada Presents: The Best of Celtic Christmas

The Coventry Carol Gretchen Peters Northern Lights

Straw Against the Chill Kathy Mattea Joy for Christmas Day

The Castle of Dromore Heidi Talbot with Cherish the Ladies On Christmas Night

A la Nanita Nana Tish Hinojosa From Texas for a Christmas Night

Fine Winter’s Night Matt and Shannon Heaton
Fine Winter's Night



you may also want to see

Music Road: Gretchen Peters: Northern Lights

Music Road: holiday gift list: Irish music

Music Road: winter music

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Friday, December 04, 2009

Cherish The Ladies: A Star in the East


Cherish the Ladies

A Star in the East


The ideas of stars, and of homecoming, and of connection, weave through and into the tunes and songs the members of Cherish the Ladies offer here, from Joanie Madden’s march Dash for the Presents, flowing into Joy to The World and then into Parnell’s March to start things off, to Boo Hewerdine's song New Year’s Eve paired with the Scottish tune on which Robert Burns based his music for Old Lang Syne to bring things to a close. It’s an hour of very fine music, ranging from the lively to the quiet, from dance tune to ancient carol.

The Ladies know how to do this well -- flute player Joanie Madden has been at the helm of this groundbreaking outfit since the days, twenty five years ago, when most people were skeptical that women could play real Irish music. Cherish proved them wrong time and time and time again, over the years and over the miles, and over band changes which have seen the group be a seedbed for many of today’s top musicians. Eileen Ivers , Winifred Horan, Donna Long, Heidi Talbot, Aoife Clancy, and Cathie Ryan are among those who’ve helped shape Cherish’s history. Madden and guitarist/mandolin player/banjo player Mary Coogan have remained constant presences in the group. Currently the band also includes fiddler Roisin Dillon, accordion player Mirella Murray, pianist Kathleen Boyle, and the newest member of the group, singer Michelle Burke. Burke offers an especially nice take on the lively and funny song Home On Time for Christmas, which sees people traveling all over Ireland to reach their relatives [and maybe meeting Santa on the way], and shows she can handle quieter songs as well. Madden steps out take lead vocal on the African American spiritual Rise Up Shepherd and Follow -- which is done with a slight Irish twist thoroughly in the sprit of the song. She also does a spoken world piece, Irish poet Patrick Kavanagh’s A Christmas Childhood. These two make a nice linking of the idea of stars, too.

Coogan, Murray, Madden, Boyle, and Dillon offer outstanding playing and ensemble work on each cut, whether working on tunes or supporting the singers. Every track sparkles with the love and care they invest in the music. Coogan’s guitar shines especially brightly to begin the What Child Is This?/Greensleeves Jig/The Tongs by the Fire/The Frost is All Over set. Other tracks worth noting are the Christmas Eve/Road to Glountane set, Deck the Halls/John Clifford’s/Jingle Bells, and Kathleen Boyle’s original The Homecoming.

It’s a bit like a great session around the holiday hearth with a bunch of talented and welcoming friends, and as it’s a recording, you get to play it again as much as you’d like, and add your own holiday memories.

you may also wish to see

Music Road: holiday gift list: Irish music

Music Road: Cherish the Ladies: On Christmas Night

Music Road: Voices: Cherish the Ladies

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Wednesday, December 02, 2009

Shannon Heaton: Oil for the Chain


Oil for the Chain


If you’ve someone on your gift list who is interested in Irish music, Shannon Heaton’s book Oil for the Chain is a great choice. It works on several levels: there are well known and lesser known tunes to play, presented both on the CD which goes along with the book, and through notation. Heaton is a a flute player but, as she points out, it’s not a flute book. It’s a music book, with ideas about developing your skills, playing with others, practicing, taking a break, learning new tunes, and all sorts of other thoughts that both beginning and experienced players will find helpful. There’s information for melody players and for backers, as well. Heaton plays in a duo with her husband Matt, who is a guitarist and also plays bouzouki -- a jig of his sparked the title for this book in fact, and in addition to tunes from the tradition, there is a good selection of original tunes from both Matt and Shannon. There are tips for creating your own music, also.

Shannon Heaton writes in a lively style and with precision and clarity. That’s how she plays her music too. The CD which comes along with the book is fine to listen on its own, as well, whether you have interest in learning the music or not. That’s a good note for those who might be thinking of giving this book to a family member and being around while they practice...

Several of the more than two dozen tunes included are The Star of Munster, The Black Haired Lass, The Skylark, and Redwoods in Winter.

And about that title? “Just as bicycle chains need oil to function, Irish musicians need tunes to play,” Heaton says.



you may also want to see

Music Road: Matt & Shannon Heaton: Fine Winter's Night concert

Music Road: holiday gift list: Irish music

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Tuesday, December 01, 2009

first week in advent


Advent is a season which honors both moving into the uncertain and connection with the well known and well loved. The work of winter requires both reaching out and staying solitary. All of that is part of creative practice through the seasons, of course, but the four weeks of Advent and the holiday spirit at this time of year point those aspects up.

A time for reflection, a time for hope, a time for holding on and getting through -- and a time for celebration and connection. And contrasts.

music to go along with these ideas

especially look into The Farthest Wave and Lovers’ Well in this one
Music Road: holiday gift list: Irish music

Music Road: Voices: Carrie Newcomer: faith and laughter

Music Road: Matt & Shannon Heaton: Fine Winter's Night

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