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Author Message
25 new of 226 responses total.
krj
response 130 of 226: Mark Unseen   May 19 21:50 UTC 1999

News, mostly for Twila:
 
Blue Horses has replaced one of its women fiddlers and they have a new
studio album due out this summer.  (We don't even have the live album
yet, sigh.)
 
I just saw a usenet ad for an album called WOLFSTONE 7, with a claimed
release date in the UK of 31 May.
anderyn
response 131 of 226: Mark Unseen   May 20 02:01 UTC 1999

Want want want. (Am going to have to figure out a way to get the
first Blue Horses album.)
krj
response 132 of 226: Mark Unseen   Jun 17 22:56 UTC 1999

New here are the new albums from pop-celtic bands Wolfstone (SEVEN) and 
Afro-Celt Sound System (RELEASE), plus the new Kila album.
Kila was originally more on the trad side, but the new album has a 
sticker on it billing it as "acid ceili tribal groove" music, so we'll
see...  
lumen
response 133 of 226: Mark Unseen   Jun 18 01:10 UTC 1999

Heard some of the Afro-Celt Sound System CD riding with Ken and Leslie--
pretty interesting stuff.
orinoco
response 134 of 226: Mark Unseen   Jun 19 21:28 UTC 1999

I've been listening to Boiled In Lead a lot recently - I've had the library's
copy of "Orb" checked out for the past month, but that's the only CD of theirs
the library has.  Do any of you more knowledgeable types know anything about
this band?  Any reccomendations for an album to buy?
anderyn
response 135 of 226: Mark Unseen   Jun 20 23:49 UTC 1999

Oh my. I think I have everything of theirs, well, except for the vinyl,
and the *ahem* expensive copy of "Alloy". What particularly did you
like on "Orb"? That'll help me figure out what you might like next. The
lead singer changes after that, btw, though both "The Gypsy" and "Antler
Dance" are cool, I don't like the lead singer quite as much. 
orinoco
response 136 of 226: Mark Unseen   Jun 21 17:35 UTC 1999

My favorites on "Orb" were Harout, Siege of Delhi, Klezpolka, and Cunovo Oro.
In general, I like their Eastern-European-sounding stuff better than their
Celtic-sounding stuff, although both are pretty cool.  

Actually, just yesterday I found a copy of "Thy Gypsy" in one of the listening
stations at Borders.  On first listen, I didn't like it nearly as much, but
who's to say it wouldn't grow on me?
anderyn
response 137 of 226: Mark Unseen   Jun 21 23:18 UTC 1999

"The Gypsy" is a concept album, from a book by Megan Lindholm and
Steven Brust. One of the members of the band is Jane Yolen's son, and
they often use songs by Brust and Yolen in their sets. "Antler Dance"
has more Eastern-European sounding things on it, as well.
jor
response 138 of 226: Mark Unseen   Sep 15 18:44 UTC 1999

        Anyone see Loreena McKennit last night on CBC?

        I was impressed. Evidently she's become quite
        a businesswoman running her own record company.

        I think this might have been taped a couple years ago.
otaking
response 139 of 226: Mark Unseen   Sep 15 19:39 UTC 1999

Loreena McKennit was on CBC? Did anyone tape it?
eeyore
response 140 of 226: Mark Unseen   Oct 7 02:16 UTC 1999

I didn't know that it was even on...darn!

Well, in other Loreena news, she had a live, double-disc, best of cd come out
last week....if you like Loreena, you *MUST* get this cd....between me, my
roomie, and my boss, we've not had the discs out of the player yet!!!  :) 
For the most part, the songs sound mostly the same, with some variation.  It's
a little less snoozy and a little more  driving.  Almost everything that I
ever wanted to hear live by her is on this album.  (BTW, it's called Live in
Toronto and Paris).  The only thing I don't like about it is that it has
absolutely nothing from her first two albums.  But I think that they do sound
completely different from the more recent three, so I do kinda understand it.
But anyway, to make the whole thing short, if you like Loreena McKennit, the
disc is worth every penny to buy.  Even songs that I was getting irritated
with (Like Lady of Shallot and Bonny Swans, which are right next to each
other!), I really enjoyed, because they were just different enough to not be
the same boring song.

Just go get the cd!
anderyn
response 141 of 226: Mark Unseen   Oct 17 22:37 UTC 1999

Seconded.
eeyore
response 142 of 226: Mark Unseen   Oct 19 04:46 UTC 1999

I'm glad to see that I'm not the only one hooked on it.  :)

Actually, my set just went missing....I'm going nuts trying to find it, so
that I can play it constantly again....:)
krj
response 143 of 226: Mark Unseen   Feb 20 23:52 UTC 2000

Lansing folk-ish radio stations are playing an interesting-sounding new 
CD by a local Irish music band called Pub Domain.  Their live album
comes out for St. Patrick's Day, of course.
katie
response 144 of 226: Mark Unseen   Feb 21 00:28 UTC 2000

They play in Chelsea at the bar pretty often.
krj
response 145 of 226: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 19:28 UTC 2000

It's St. Patrick's Day 2000.  Tower and Elderly Instruments are having 
big sales on Celtic music -- even the stuff which isn't Irish!
I paid $11 last night for the new CD by the Scottish band Ceolbeg.

Anyway, March 17 means it's time to kick off the 
reviews of the annual, ritual Irish CD purchases.
 
First up: Cathal McConnell, LONG EXPECTANT COMES AT LAST.  
McConnell is a singer (reedy, cranky voice), flute player, and 
slightly wacky member of the band The Boys of the Lough.
The Boys, who have members from Ireland, Scotland and England, 
were one of the first bands playing Celtic music to regularly tour
the USA; they go back to the early 1970s.  McConnell's album
is in a much older style than much of what's marketed as Celtic
music these days: lots of unaccompanied singing or lightly 
arranged flute tunes.  And I suspect his voice is an acquired taste.
I'm enjoying this, but I think I enjoy it because it brings back
memories of 25 years of seeing perform live in the band.  
So I hesitate to give it a recommendation to the general audience.
If you know Cathal, though, I think you'll have some fun with this.
 
-----

I have not found any sign of the Pub Domain album mentioned in 
resp:143, which was supposed to be out now.
bmoran
response 146 of 226: Mark Unseen   Mar 23 17:11 UTC 2000

I've got a tin whistle instruction book/cd by Cathal. Very slow and
deliberate, the first song went very well. The 2nd piece is just a bit
ahead of where I feel comfortable. He sounds like a likeable guy tho.

My holiday purchase the year kept the theme going with Paddy Moloney 
and Sean Potts' Tin Whistles cd. Quit fun.
krj
response 147 of 226: Mark Unseen   Aug 15 20:08 UTC 2000

Finally found the Pub Domain album for sale at the Elderly Music 
tent at the National Folk Festival this past weekend.
 
I'll put a few words about last week's Carreg Lafar concert here;
this was at the Ark, Wednesday August 9.   Twila saved me a seat 
way down front, so there was a great feeling of being surrounded 
by the band.  Leader is singer/dancer Linda Owen-Jones, a small 
woman dressed all in red; the rest of the band included flute, 
fiddle, guitar, and a multi-instrumentalist who most often played
bagpipe, hornpipe and bodhran, and who also sang.  The band is from Wales,
and their style seemed closer to Brittany than to Scotland and Ireland.
 
After the show, Linda was mentioning that the band is not a professional
venture.  They record and tour for the love of the music, she said, 
and their goal is simply to break even on the tours.  They all have day 
jobs.

So far I haven't enjoyed their new album HYN as much as I enjoyed the 
live show.
krj
response 148 of 226: Mark Unseen   Aug 16 03:56 UTC 2000

Lunasa, the Ark, Tuesday August 15:
 
A core Irish trad trio -- flute, uillean pipes and fiddle -- with 
an acoustic guitarist.  What makes the band is Trevor Hutchinson
on upright electric bass.  I'm not sure what he's doing, really --
a little bit is jazz, more is rock -- but I listen to him for the whole
evening, he really powers the whole ensemble.  As I mentioned in the 
Ark item (item:70), I hadn't been too interested in this band until 
I saw that Hutchinson was in it; I remember him very well from 
previous Ark shows with accordion player Sharon Shannon.
 
Very enthusiastic crowd of (guess) 150.
eeyore
response 149 of 226: Mark Unseen   Aug 18 05:29 UTC 2000

Well, I finally broke down and got an Altan cd.  It's not bad, but not
something I'll listen to often.  But I'm glad that I got it.
happyboy
response 150 of 226: Mark Unseen   Aug 18 19:14 UTC 2000

which one?
eeyore
response 151 of 226: Mark Unseen   Aug 18 22:46 UTC 2000

The Best of with an attached 2nd disk of live stuff.
happyboy
response 152 of 226: Mark Unseen   Aug 19 09:09 UTC 2000

nice one.
eeyore
response 153 of 226: Mark Unseen   Aug 19 16:23 UTC 2000

Yeah...and I got it new for $10.  :)  I was a happy Meg. :)

I now need to get a new Chieftens cd....I have Tears of Stone, but I want to
get the one with the rock people too.  :)
krj
response 154 of 226: Mark Unseen   Aug 27 19:43 UTC 2000

A cd I have been enjoying a lot is Jack Evans' "Once Upon A Time In The 
North."  Jack Evans was in an 80s band called The Easy Club, which mixed
Scottish folk with swing-style jazz and which produced a couple of albums
which have been enduring favorites at our house.  Evans was the acoustic
guitarist who was chiefly responsible for the sound.
 
Evans has a web page, http://www.jackevans.net , and from there comes the 
news that the first Easy Club CD is going to be reissued on CD shortly.
Hooray!
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