Thursday, September 30, 2010

Musical imagination: Matheu Watson


You can hear the sea and the wind and the light of the Western Isles through Matheu Watson’s music, whether he’s playing a tune he composed himself, one from the tradition, or one he has met on his musical travels.

Those travels have been fairly extensive, taking him from the Baltic states to Spain to Ireland, and seeing him travel in company of folk including innovative piper Fred Morrison, Scottish Latin fusion band Salsa Celtica, and the always surprising Treacherous Orchestra. It was to Berneray in the Western Isles that he went, though, to record the tracks for his self titled album..

It was an inspired choice, and one close to home for Watson, who attended school and college on Skye and Benbecula. His first instrument was the fiddle, and for this recording he offers especially intriguing and insightful work on fiddle and guitar, and plays tenor banjo, whistles, mandolin, bouzouki, and a few other things as well. He brought along gifted friends to sit in with him, too, and listening to the result you have to think they had a very fine time working out Watson’s vision on jigs, hornpipes, and slower tunes.

Ali Hutton, late of Back of the Moon and now of The Old Blind Dogs, played highland bagpipes, practice chanter, and an improvised on the spot Highland Bombard. Legendary artist Martin Simpson added slide, banjo, and ebow to several cuts. Sean Og Graham played button accordion, always creative percussionist Martin O’Neill anchored the beat with bodhran, and Kris Drever added his thoughtful style on guitar. These men have all held center stage on their own, deservedly so, and they well know when support and collaboration is called for, too. That’s what they offer here. A nod too, to engineer Will Lamb, who gives space and presence to the men and their music.

It is Watson’s imagination and style which center things here, though. You can hear those western seas crashing on the opening tune, Maggie the Rafter, which Watson wrote, and he pairs it well with a French Canadian tune called Homage, which he learnt from flute player Brian Finnegan.

Well constructed parings are a hallmark of the dozen sets on the album. Especially worth noting in addition to that opening pair are the Picnic set, which finds Fred Morrison’s The Incredible Journey set alongside two of Watson’s tunes, The Picnic Waltz and Picnic in the Sky. Another standout set is Drying Out, a reflective set which sees a tune from Castile, in Spain, paired with a piece composed by Irish American Liz Carroll. Glencalvie, another quiet piece, is also a real standout. It was written by Watson’s father Douglas, about a place in Sutherland which, he says, holds history.

All of the sets are equally well thought out and well played, making a project worth repeated listening. It is Matheu Watson’s debut recording, a fine and forward looking album of itself, and one which surely sets the stage for more good music to come.

you may also wish to see
Music Road: Scotland & Cape Breton: tradition and innovation
Music Road: Shannon Heaton: The Blue Dress
Music Road: Dual: Julie Fowlis & Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh


Are you an artist or musician who needs a professional biography for your website, or liner notes for your recording project? I can help.

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Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Music Road Trip in North Dakota & South Dakota

Plains, grasslands, rugged hills, wide open spaces -- North Dakota and South Dakota are both all of that, each in their own way. As the Great American Road Trip winds through these states which are both Northern and Western, take a listen to three albums by artists connected to this land.

Celeste Krenz hails from North Dakota. Though her musical career has taken her to Colorado, Nashville, and points beyond, to a partnership in a record company and to a duo project called The Rhythm Angels, it was to North Dakota that her thoughts returned while working on the music for what would become her album My Mother and Me. Her mother, who has made a career in business, had written lyrics years ago and brought them along on a visit to her daughter. At Celeste’s kitchen table, they worked out a batch of songs that contains elements of country, blues, folk, and swing. A tinge of that western sky and wide open prairie thread through he songs, too.



Becky Schlegel grew up on a a farm, but she also spent much of her young years traveling across South Dakota playing in her family band. The love of music stayed with her, as she followed her musical path into bluegrass and a move to Minnesota. She’s won just about every bluegrass and country award the northern plains are have to offer, and is beginning to make her mark on the national scene, both as a songwriter and and singer. Her latest album is called Dandelion. If you enjoy the way Alison Krauss and Lee Ann Womack approach their music, you will want to give Schlegel a listen. Dandelion is a fine place to start, and it’s a good soundtrack for South Dakota, too, as Schlegel opens with Anna, a song inspired by her grandmother, and includes songs such as Colorado Line and I Never Loved You Cowboy.


Tom Peterson puts eloquent words and melody to the landscape and lives lived in the northern plains, as well. He doesn’t sing on Dakota Lullaby: Christine Albert and Chris Gage do that, and a fine job they make of it. Gage grew up in South Dakota and got to know Peterson’s songs, and carried a few of them with him as his music took him on many paths. He’s a fine songwriter himself, as is his wife and duo partner, Christine. When someone gave them an old tape of Peterson’s songs, “I felt as though I’d found gold in the Black Hills,” Christine says. They recorded a whole album Peterson’s songs. The songs range from the funny to the somber to the passionate, all grounded in the heart of the northern plains and yet universal in meaning.


you may also wish to see:
Music Road: now playing: Christine Albert: Paris, Texafrance
Music Road: Ian Tyson: Yellowhead to Yellowstone
more music from the road trip

This is part of The Great American Road Trip, in which I’m partnering up with A Traveler’s Library to add musical ideas to the book and film suggestions for journeys through the regions of the United States which you’ll find there. Stop by and see what the Library has in mind to inspire travels through North Dakota, and check back to learn the Library's favorites for South Dakota, too.

For more about the road trip (and a look at some great road songs) see Great American Road Trip: Music begins

Are you an artist or music professional who needs a professional biography for your website, or liner notes for your recording project? I can help.


UpTake Travel Gem

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Thursday, September 23, 2010

The Last Star: Heidi Talbot

There are several quite lovely threads that weave through Heidi Talbot’s recording The Last Star. Talbot’s voice and her gifts as a musical storyteller form a bright skein bringing together songs from past and present, tales of humor and sorrow, and characters foolish and wise.

Each of those characters is somehow involved with love: that’s another thread. It might be of the rambling and funny sort, in the song Bleecker Street, for example, or a traditional tale that starts out one way and ends in quite another, in Willie Taylor. On the other hand, it could be a tale of love, loss, family, and change, as in Cherokee Rose, or a quiet bit of reflection as in The Last Star.

Another bit of the tapestry Talbot offers is the fine arrangements and excellent support from backing players including Kris Drever, John McCusker (who produced the album), Eddi Reader, Michael McGoldrick, and Karine Polwart. There’s no doubt that Talbot can well center a project which includes such a range of top notch musicians; there is equally no doubt that they bring out fine talents to support her, offering contributions which reveal more with each listening.

As does the whole album itself. Talbot, who spent five years as lead singer with the top Irish American band Cherish the Ladies, has been building her solo career for some while now -- this is her third solo disc -- and with each project she becomes at once more adventurous and at the same time more focused in her song choices and in her way of singing them. This time, these choices have led her to a strong helping of music from the tradition, as well as several well chosen contemporary songs. The centerpiece of the album, both musically and emotionally, could well be the title track, The Last Star, which is a thoughtful, mature reflection on some the harder lessons of love and change. Talbot wrote this one herself, and the very spare arrangement fits the quiet mood of the song exactly. Another stand out, on the quieter side of things, is Scottish songwriter Karine Polwart’s Start it Over Again. If you are looking for a lively bit of style that’ll have you singing along, Talbot weaves the sea chanty Sally Brown into the mix, and you can waltz along to Tell Me Truly, which is one of those songs which contrasts sad lyrics with happy melody.

The Last Star is a fine recording altogether, one which leaves you feeling as though you’ve just had an interesting, at times funny, at times thoughtful, always engaging conversation with a friend, a conversation to which you will choose to return again.

Talbot, who is from Ireland, is based these days in Edinburgh. She tours often in the UK and Ireland, and in December she and McCusker will be appearing at several concerts in New England as part of the Christmas Celtic Sojourn program. If you should have the chance to see them live take it. You’ll be well rewarded.



you may also wish to see
Music Road: heidi talbot: in love+light
Music Road: Voices: Cherish the Ladies
Music Road: Julie Fowlis:Uam

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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Road Trip Music : Iowa

To understand the heartland state of Iowa, you almost have to listen to the music of Greg Brown. His dad was a preacher, and his mother was an English teacher who played electric guitar. They lived in the Hackleblarney region of southeastern Iowa when Greg was born, and crisscrossed the state, and the midwest, as he was growing up. Brown followed his musical muse through stints in New York City, Portland, Los Angeles and :as Vegas, but after a few years of that decided to return to Iowa. More than twenty years on, he’s still based there.

Brown has recorded more than two dozen albums, helped found Red House Records in Minnesota, seen a tribute album of his songs recorded -- which, to honor a friend, he asked be a benefit for breast cancer research -- and received critical recognition from The Washington Post, the Boston Globe, and many other places. His music includes rock, folk, a hint of jazz now and then, gospel, and a lot of songwriting.

A good place to meet Brown’s gritty baritone and wide range of songs and melodies is Dream City - Essential Recordings Vol 2, 1997-2006. He opens with the title track, which rocks hard while maintaining an air of mystery. There are edgy electric songs including Living in a Prayer and Kokomo, bittersweet ballads including Rexroth’s Daughter, and a couple of traditional folk songs, too, including the gospel track Samson. It is a fine collection with which to make or renew the acquaintance of this heartland songwriter.




you may also wish to see
Music Road: Road Trip Music: Indiana
Music Road: Road Trip Music in Florida
Music Road: music and landscape: bluegrass, Ireland, New England


This is part of The Great American Road Trip, in which I’m partnering up with A Traveler’s Library to add musical ideas to the book and film suggestions for journeys through the regions of the United States which you’ll find there. Stop by and see what the Library has in mind to inspire travels across Iowa.
For more about the road trip (and a look at some great road songs) see Great American Road Trip: Music begins


UpTake Travel Gem

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Friday, September 17, 2010

early autumn: music and transition

As the season turns toward autumn here in the northern hemisphere, sometimes the transitions are quite subtle: a red leaf among the green, a shift from summer’s vibrant greenery to a golden hue that presages autumn’s color, a change in the slant of light.

Transitions in music, and in life, are often like that, as well: a slight shift in pattern, a different in angle of view, one small change that connects with what may come.



westchester autumn copyright kerry dexter
mournes autumn copyright kerry dexter
tlh autumn copyright kerry dexter



photographs are from Tallahassee, Florida, County Down, Northern Ireland, and Westchester County, New York. each is copyrighted by Kerry Dexter


Music to go along with these ideas:
season of change: music for autumn
creative practice: autumn: spaces between
Shannon Heaton: The Blue Dress

you may also wish to see
Delicious Baby's Photo Friday, where travelers offer new insights to the world each Friday

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Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Road Trip Music: Minnnesota

Lakes and big sky, prairie and open hearted cities, family ties from Norway to Germany to the Deep South to Asia to Ireland: those are just parts of the landscape in Minnesota. As the Great American Road Trip traverses Minnesota, the soundtrack includes the work of three very fine and very different songwriters.

Bob Dylan grew up in Minnesota, in Hibbing, and went on to change the face of contemporary songwriting, more than once. One of the ways he did that was to write songs including personal issues and ideas and experiences that resonated both with folk tradition and current times. A song of that of that sort which draws immediately from Minnesota is Girl from the North Country, which Dylan first recorded on his album Freewheelin' Bob Dylan in the 1960s. It has been covered many times. My favourite version is by Altan, which they’ve recorded on Another Sky.

Jon Vezner’s songs have been recorded by just about every top country artist there is. Sometimes his work is funny such as with the Lorrie Morgan hit Five Minutes, sometimes reflective, as in Where’ve You Been, recorded by Kathy Mattea, It is always insightful, whatever lyrical path he’s following. He has a relaxed and engaging delivery as a singer, too. A good place to explore the work of this Minnesota native is on his album Vezner & Songs.

Like Vezner, Sally Barris made her way from the north country to Nashville, where she’s written for and with top artists including Kathy Mattea, Irene Kelley, and Martina McBride. On her recent album Restless Soul she melds clear eyed Minnesota vision with her experiences traveling in Ireland. It’s a good place to meet her music, or to learn more about it.

you may also wish to see
Music Road: Music Road trip in West Virginia
Music Road: celebrating the USA: born on the fourth of July
Gather: Voices:Jon Vezner

This is part of The Great American Road Trip, in which I’m partnering up with A Traveler’s Library to add musical ideas to the book and film suggestions for journeys through the regions of the United States which you’ll find there. Stop by and see the Library's interview with a Minnesota mystery writer.
For more about the road trip (and a look at some great road songs) see Great American Road Trip: Music begins


Are you an artist or music professional who needs a professional biography for your website, or liner notes for your recording project? I can help.


UpTake Travel Gem

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Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Shannon Heaton: The Blue Dress

The power of melody and love of story are two of the things which drew Shannon Heaton into a professional career in Irish music. Those are qualities which come through clearly on her album The Blue Dress. On this album, she carries the melodies and tells the stories through her flute.

It is an excellent and engaging journey, with new compositions balanced well with fresh views of tunes from the tradition. Heart, creativity, skill, and imagination are all in evidence as she invites listeners in with a set of reels and continues with an creatively arranged take on a pair of polkas. You can hear many stories in The Blue Dress Waltz, a Heaton original that is gracious and thoughtful, and offers a fine connection to a quite different bit of music, the lively Dennis Watson’s set of reels. Heaton generally has a particular person in mind when she’s composing a tune. Nights on Caledonia Terrace is a gently reflective slow air written for restorative conversations with friends at a festival in Ontario, and Frost Place was written for two musical friends, as Heaton writes in her notes, for “their winning combination of shannon fwn copyright Kerry Dexterstellar musicianship and good vibes to all those around them."

Though the Boston based Heaton is well known as a fine songwriter and a gifted singer, on this recording she speaks through her flute, offering her melodies, and her stories without saying a word. She is well supported in imaginative arrangements by usual duo partner Matt Heaton on guitar, bouzouki, and bodhran, Long Time Courting band mate Liz Simmons on guitar, Maeve Gilchrist on harp, and Paddy League on bodhran.

The power of connection to tradition, the quietness of reflection on slow pieces and the lively step of dance tunes, now and then a dash of humor and a bit of whimsy: these are all in the music Shannon Heaton offers here. Like the vintage satin and lace of the favorite dress which sparked her creative ideas for the project, it is music that will stand the test of time.

you may also wish to see

Music Road: Another Fine Winter's Night: Matt & Shannon Heaton
Music Road: kickstart an Irish music recording
Music Road: Shannon Heaton: Oil for the Chain
Music Road: Lovers' Well: Matt & Shannon Heaton

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Friday, September 10, 2010

Celtic Colours coming in October

It’s almost time for the Celtic Colours Festival.

Just about a month from now, musicians from Cape Breton, up in the far north of Nova Scotia in Atlantic Canada, will come home to the island, and welcome fellow artists from Scotland, Ireland, the United States and other parts of Canada to share and celebrate the land, its music, and its culture. It really is an event not to be missed. This year artists include Natalie MacMaster, Donnell Leahy, Tony McManus, KImberly Fraser, Rachel Davis, Catriona Mackay, Alasdair Fraser, and others you’ve met here along the music road, as well as many more whose work you will enjoy.

The festival runs 8 through 16 October this year. Concerts are already selling out. Even if you won’t make it this year, check out the festival’s web site for insights into Cape Breton music, and to what makes Celtic Colours an event fans and artists love to return to, year after year.

Several photos from Celtic Colours past, in Sydney, Big Pond, and Baddeck
kathryn tickell celtic colours copyright kerry dexter
c ryan celticcolurs big pond solo copyright kerry dextercathie ryna band big pond copyright kerry dexter
cape breton autumn leaves1 copyright kerry dexter


























you may also wish to see
Music Road: songs of place: Canada
Music Road: Manus McGuire: Fiddlewings
Music Road: Scotland & Cape Breton: tradition and innovation

and Delicious Baby's Photo Friday, where travelers offer new insights to the world each Friday

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Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Road Trip Music in Wisconsin


As the Great American Road Trip winds through the landscapes of Wisconsin, from the big cities to the farmlands to the university towns to the watersides, listen to the music of two Wisconsin artists who, in different ways, each have the landscapes of their native state embedded in their music.


Bill Miller is a member of the Menomonee Nation. He’s a writer, a singer, a player of the flute and a gifted visual artist. Though he has lived in Nashville for some years, his songs and his melodies often hold elements of his Native heritage in the land of the wild rice people, and he has won several Native American music awards. One good introduction to Miller’s work is Spirit Rain.

John Smith has that most everyman of names. To set that apart a bit, professionally he writes it johnsmith, but really it is his lyrics and his skill at painting pictures of small town life that reach beyond the bounds of the town that set him apart. Gravity of Grace is a good place to meet johnsmith, who lives in a Wisconsin town on the banks of the Mississippi River.

you may also wish to see

Music Road: looking toward Christmas: Bill Miller

Music Road: Tish Hinojosa: Our Little Planet

Music Road: Road Trip Music in Mississippi

This is part of The Great American Road Trip, in which I’m partnering up with A Traveler’s Library to add musical ideas to the book and film suggestions for journeys through the regions of the United States which you’ll find there. Stop by and see what the Library has in mind to inspire travels in Wisconsin.
For more about the road trip (and a look at some great road songs) see Great American Road Trip: Music begins


UpTake Travel Gem

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Tuesday, September 07, 2010

Scotland & Cape Breton: tradition and innovation


The Scottish band Old Blind Dogs and Cape Breton fiddle player Rachel Davis both have gifts for innovating while reaming true to tradition.

The Dogs’ new album, Wherever Yet May Be, takes its title from a line in the song Scotland Yet, written by Davey Steele. It is, as singer Aaron Jones writes in the liner notes, as relevant still today as the day it was written, a rousing and thought provoking song about the present, the past, and the future -- of Scotland, and other places too.

The Dogs have been a band for nearly two decades now. The newest member joining for this recording is piper and composer Ali Hutton, who has a stellar background of working with Back of the Moon and other musicians. There are several tunes he’s written in this collection, as well as tunes by rising Scottish star Mattheu Watson, groundbreaking piper Gordon Duncan, and top composer and piper Fred Morrison. There’s a fine helping of tradition as well, both of the tune and song variety, including Loch Erne’s Shore, St. Kilda, and the American folk song Copper Kettle. Jones, who also plays guitar and bouzouki, trades off on lead singing with fiddler Jonny Hardie, Hutton is on pipes, whistles, and guitar, and Fraser Stone handles percussion. It’s a well thought out, well played and sung collection which finds the band standing within Scottish tradition while moving it along as well.

The same is true of Cape Breton fiddle player and singer Rachel Davis. Though still at university, she’s no novice on the fiddle, and raised in Baddeck on Cape Breton, she’s been at the center of the island’s music most of her life. On her self titled debut album, she has a fine hand for interpreting tunes from Scotland and pieces from Cape Breton with grace and flair. In doing so, she shows a distinctive voice without saying a word. The one song, My Love Has Left the Harbour, which she sings in Gaelic, shows her to be a thoughtful and gifted singer as well, and the tunes she’s composed stand well in sets with distinguished company.
Davis lets her joy in music come through too, especially in a set where her guest is her grandfather, Clarence Long, who was her first fiddle teacher. She closes out the project in true Cape Breton fashion, by getting friends and family together to share a lively set of tunes. The Drive’ers, those dedicated, kind, and resourceful folk who, among other things drive artists all across the island during the Celtic Colours Festival, helped make this recording possible. It’s clear why Davis won their support.




you may also wish to see
Music Road: Music for St Andrew's Day: music of Scotland
Music Road: Emily Smith, Jamie McClennan, and Robert Burns
Music Road: Cape Breton music from a new generation: The Cottars

Are you an artist or music professional who needs a professional biography for your website, or liner notes for your recording project? I can help.

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Friday, September 03, 2010

late summer, early autumn, music, Ireland

cf mountian misy copyright kerry dexter
cf sunset ree copyright kery dexter








As the angle of light begins to change from late summer to a hint of autumn, the landscape at times calls for tunes such as Apples In Winter, and Hunter's Moon.

In Ireland (and elsewere) the mist begins to come down the mountain a bit more, and the colors of sunset begin to shift. It seems right to mention, too, the very often covered jig Mist Covered Mountain. There’s an interesting version of it on the pipes by Stephen Megarity, and Grainne Hambly offers a lovely version on the harp

Here is a set of songs well suited to this time of year, as well.

The photographs are from Slieve Foye in the Republic of Ireland.


you may also wish to see
while you are thinking about Ireland, will you help my mini guidebook to Irish music festivals advance in a competition? to do so, give it a star rating on this page - click on the stars and it will tell you how to sign in or sign up to do so. thanks for considering.

Music Road: Potato Music
and
and Delicious Baby's Photo Friday, where travelers offer new insights to the world each Friday

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