| REVIEWS
SHIPS
IN THE FOREST
Irish
Times feature article
Sing
Out
BBC.co.uk
Irish
Times review
Irish
Echo
Billboard
USA
Today
folking.com
The
Bluegrass Special
irishcultureandcustoms.com
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Irish
America Magazine
George
Graham, WVIA
LIVE
Irish Echo
CHASING THE SUN
Songlines
Living Tradition
Folk Roundabout
Lira
DISTANT SHORE
Washington Post
Sing Out
Boston Globe
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Irish Music Magazine
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Bangor Daily News
Sing
Out, R. Weir
Three quarters of the way through her latest solo album
Karan Casey slips into a glorious cover of Joni Mitchell's "The Fiddle
and the Drum," her voice accenting poignant lyrics atop the steady
drone of Cillian Vallely's bagpipes. It's an altogether appropriate moment;
the song came from Mitchell's 1969 album Clouds, which won a Grammy and
stunned critics with its poetry and maturity. Maturity would also be an
apt descriptor for Ships in the Forest, which finds Casey confident and
in command, an artist bent on coloring each selection in ways that draw
attention to the song rather than the singer. Having made her mark as
a mighty mite, Casey now feels comfortable dialing back her performance;
her take on "Black is the Colour" is deliberate, dark, and somber,
a minimalist piano arrangement that would be at home on a June Tabor release.
In like spirit, Casey offers a mournful version of "Johnny I Hardly
Knew Ye" that opens with voice and a pipe drone before it's lightly
textured with piano (Caoimhin Vallely), guitar (Robbie Overson), and concertina
(Niall Vallely). Casey still has plenty of energy, as she demonstrates
on "Town of Athlone," but she's now become a complete singer,
one equally at home with hoppy Celtic material, an a capella Gaelic song
such as "Maidin Luan Chincise," or a moody, semitragic rendition
of a classic like "I Once Loved a Lass." One of the great voices
in contemporary music has just gotten even better.
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BBC.co.uk,
Mel Ledgard
For one reason or another, the profile of this great Irish
singer lurks slightly under the British folk radar. It's probably down
to her busy US/European touring schedule plus a collaboration habit to
rival the Chieftains: lately she's worked with artists including Lúnasa,
Solas, Buille, Mícheál Ó’Súilleabháin,
Peggy Seeger and Liam Clancy.
Karan Casey's fifth solo album might change all
that, though how the first listen grabs you may depend on the mood you're
in. Her stated intent to ''tackle the big songs within the traditional
repertoire'' inevitably involves big themes of emigration, conflict, love
and loss, and demands a certain amount of gravitas. Where 2005's Chasing
The Sun included six originals and was light in tone, here stripped-down
arrangements and a sense of melancholy prevail.
Much of the mood of understated spaciousness
is generated by Caoimhín Vallely's luscious piano work, with help
from the sonorous cello of Kate Ellis. Casey's intimate voice expressively
unfolds each song, whether it's a delicate version of Robert Burns' Ae
Fond Kiss or a heart-rending tale of Ireland's political history (Dunlavin
Green, Johnny I Hardly Knew Ye). An abstract, protracted Black Is The
Colour is the killer track, its phrasing owing more to Billie Holliday
than Cara Dillon, while Joni Mitchell's 1969 anti-war song, The Fiddle
And The Drum (one of the CD’s two contemporary numbers), floats
on the haunting, eerie wail of Cillian Vallely's pipes.
Not all is dark and sombre though: Kris Drever's
upbeat, melodic guitar drives along Martin Furey's Town of Athlone, and
other top musos judiciously fill out the sound here and there: more guitar
from Robbie Overson, bodhran from Martin O'Neill, things with keys from
album producer Donald Shaw and – you can't swing a cat without hitting
a scion of the ferociously talented Vallely family – the left-field
(though here restrained) concertina playing of Karan's spouse Niall.
The first of Casey's albums since the passing
in 2005 of her mentor, singer/collector Frank Harte, Ships In The Forest
shines with unsentimental emotion and moments of rare beauty. He'd be
proud.
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Irish
Times ****, Siobhán Long
There's enough space in Karan Casey's new collection to accommodate
the deepest breath, the most complex storylines - and, fittingly, her
bare-boned lonesome voice. Casey's unhurried account of the murderous
betrayal of Dunlavin Green, with little more than Caoimhín Vallely's
foreboding piano for company, reflects a singer who knows she has nothing
more to prove than the health of her appetite for a great song. Gracefully
acknowledging her debt to the late Frank Harte, Casey offers a delicate
assembly of likely and unlikely choices. The unlikely songs are epitomised
by her musical and geographical transformation of Joni Mitchell's The
Fiddle and the Drum, the likely ones by her reinvention of the hackneyed
Johnny I Hardly Knew Ye. Donald Shaw's minimalist production
is pitch perfect,as is Casey's partner, Niall Vallely's spare, white-knuckled
concertina.
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Karan
Casey Sings Songs of Conscience and Heartbreak
Her New Solo CD Is a Double Label Debut
By Earle Hitchner
[Published on May 7, 2008, in the IRISH ECHO newspaper, New York City.
Copyright (c) Earle Hitchner. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission
of author.]
In 1969 the most popular song on Joni Mitchell's
second solo album, "Clouds," was "Both Sides Now,"
with which Judy Collins had a huge stateside hit the previous year and
the Johnstons (featuring Mick Moloney) had a hit in Ireland. The other
popular song on the album was "Chelsea Morning," which would
later inspire Bill and Hillary Clinton's naming of their daughter.
But also on that album was "The Fiddle and
the Drum," an anti-war song by Joni Mitchell that was sung unaccompanied.
It was topical then, during the Vietnam War, and her lyrics were unmistakable
in their meaning: "What time is this / To trade the handshake for
the fist" and "We have all come / To fear the beating of your
drum."
This 39-year-old song took on renewed topicality
in 2007 with the release of "The Fiddle and the Drum," a 55-minute
film in which Canada's Alberta Ballet Company danced to Jean Grand-Maitre's
choreography set to several Joni Mitchell songs, including the title one.
Mitchell and Grand-Maitre directed the film, depicting through his choreography
and her music and artwork (projected on a large stage screen) their combined
concerns about rising militarism and environmental heedlessness.
Whether inspired by Mitchell's song on "Clouds"
or by the limited-circulation film of the ballet, Waterford-born, Cork
resident singer Karan Casey gives a fresh interpretation to "The
Fiddle and the Drum" on her new solo album, "Ships in the Forest."
Lunasa's Cillian Vallely, Casey's brother-in-law, opens the song with
some stark playing on the uilleann pipes, and the drone of those pipes
sets into equally stark relief Casey's haunting, spare vocal.
Released last month in the U.S. on Compass Records, this new solo CD from
Casey follows four previous solo albums recorded with Shanachie between
1997 and 2005. "Ships in the Forest" will also be released this
month in Ireland and France on Crow Valley Music, Casey's own label, launched
in Glenville, Cork, where she lives. In that sense, it is a double label
debut for her.
To try to boost sales, especially for her fledgling
imprint, Casey could have opted for don't-worry-be-happy or latte-angst-sprinkled-with-cinnamon-anger
songs heard on many commercial and noncommercial radio shows today. But
she's smarter and more sincere than that, preferring to draw on the more
durable folk-trad legacy of songs with an edge, bite, or earned sadness
to them.
Like Dick Gaughan, whose new live album I reviewed a few weeks ago, Casey
is neither timid nor intimidated in her choices of music. The songs on
her new album are dark, not dainty; candid, not candied. Genuine honesty
carries hope and the possibility of redemption, and both, however fragile,
subtly inform these beautifully brooding renditions of honest songs from
one of Ireland's most passionate and probing vocalists.
On her website Casey states, "I think it
has taken me all my years as a singer to come to the point of feeling
confident enough to tackle the big songs within the traditional repertoire."
But she slightly shortchanges herself in that remark because she has consistently
tackled substantive, noteworthy songs within the traditional repertoire,
such as "Shamrock Shore," "An Buachaillin Ban," "The
Snows They Melt the Soonest," "The King's Shilling," "Eirigh
Suas A Stoirin," "The Four Loom Weaver," and "Jimmy
Whelan," which span her four prior solo albums. Those aren't small
songs, and her versions of them aren't small either. Granted, many of
the songs on "Ships in the Forest" are familiar within the folk
and traditional repertoire, yet she brings them up to newness through
her ability to get inside them and tap their emotional core.
In pianist Caoimhin Vallely, another brother-in-law,
Casey has an ideal accompanist who can initially set the right mood and
then react instantly and deftly to the nuances of her voice. That's rare,
and it can be heard to stirring effect on her masterly, sensitive interpretation
of "Black Is the Color," a folksong chestnut if ever there was
one. Possibly sparked by Nina Simone's quietly smoldering version on her
1959 album, "Nina Simone at Town Hall," Casey uses the shaded,
jazz-like sensibility of Vallely on piano to deliver her own memorable
vocal full of feeling. The arrangement is inspired, and the entire track
lingers in the mind after the last delicate keyboard note is sounded.
Another folk staple, "Johnny I Hardly Knew
Ye," is imbued with new tension through Caoimhin Vallely's piano
playing, which employs spot-on accents to complement Casey's singing.
Husband Niall Vallely expertly provides support as well on concertina,
with Robbie Overson adding his own guitar hues to the portrait painted
in this anti-war song of a returning soldier maimed almost beyond recognition:
"Ye haven't an arm, ye haven't a leg / Ye're an armless, boneless,
chickenless egg / Ye'll have to put a bowl out to beg / Oh, Johnny I hardly
knew ye." The challenge of this folksong is to convey both sympathy
and ire without sliding into sensationalism, sullenness, or sermonizing,
and Casey succeeds magnificently.
"Dunlavin Green," a song about the tragic outcome of a 1798
rebellion by the United Irishmen, begins with Caoimhin Vallely's piano
and Kate Ellis's cello, which frame Casey's pensive, poignant vocal that
manages to uncover deeper layers of meaning. Vallely's piano and
Ellis's cello also gently gird Casey's equally persuasive singing of the
traditional "I Once Loved a Lass" and Robert Burns's "Ae
Fond Kiss," while piano principally threads through her moving rendition
of the traditional "Love Is Pleasing."
No accompaniment appears on "Maidin Luan
Chincise," a sean-nos song in Irish that Casey sings with melismatic
brilliance and absolutely owns by the time it ends. Martin Furey, Finbar's
son and now a member of the High Kings, wrote "Town of Athlone,"
and Casey infuses it with an animated fervor. The remaining album song,
"Erin's Lovely Home," is also a slightly more uptempo arrangement,
in this case, of a song about Famine-motivated immigration.
When I attended Karan Casey's concert in a double
bill with Lunasa at Manhattan's Highline Ballroom on March 13, I was greatly
impressed with the way she tightly linked four songs, including "Dunlavin
Green" and "I Once Loved a Lass," to form a larger story
arc. In my review I pointed out that melancholy can be mesmerizing when
it is approached with imagination.
Karan Casey has plenty of imagination, along
with the vocal range and coloration to put an unhackneyed, unforgettable
stamp on venerable, unfrothy songs. "I feel that this is by far my
most ambitious album to date," she said on her website about "Ships
in the Forest," whose title comes from the line "How many ships
sail in the forest" in "I Once Loved a Lass."
I agree with her, and I'd add one sheepish wish: a live album displaying
her impressive, newfound, no-safety-net inventiveness in closely connecting
powerful songs to create a more powerful, sweeping narrative.
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Billboard.com,
Chris Nickson, All Music Guide
You have to admire Karan Casey for being willing
to take chances with her material. Certainly, she doesn't have to prove
herself as a singer, since she's already at the top of the tree, so instead
she seems to have set herself challenges. There's very much a bleakness
to some of the songs, with a couple falling squarely into the anti-war
camp ("Johnny We Hardly Knew Ye" and a dark, droning version
of Joni Mitchell's "The Fiddle and the Drum"), but the feeling
is of sorrow rather than anger. There's a track in Gaelic, and a gorgeous
Martin Furey song, "Town of Athlone," which holds its own against
any traditional ballad, as well as some heartbreak on "I Once Loved
a Lass" and "Love Is Pleasing," deftly and delicately handled.
And it possibly wouldn't be a real Irish album without an emigration ballad
("Erin's Lovely Home") or one of nationalism ("Dunlavin
Green") -- but Casey has picked songs that are outside the common
mold, for all that they're traditional. She's developed into a singer
or great and glorious subtlety who can communicate emotions with a dazzling
range, and these songs force her to do just that, but without any histrionics.
On "Black Is the Colour" you feel the awe and gentle love of
singer for subject, for example. With Ships in the Forest, Casey shows
herself capable of anything.
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USA
Today, Ken Barnes
Casey used to sing with Irish folk band Solas, who
mixed occasional superb traditional ballads with tons of jigs and reels
and other instrumentals that always impelled me to hit the skip button.
On her own, the balance is more favorably redressed, to my mind, toward
the ballads, and some of these are shiver-inducingly excellent.
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www.folking.com,
Mike Wilson
Ships In The Forest is a beautifully understated and intimate
masterpiece of an album. This is testament not only to the unadulterated
purity of Karan Casey's exquisite voice, but also to the unassuming arrangements
of producer, Donald Shaw -- arrangements that float elegantly in the background,
giving the songs and Casey's voice due prominence.
The album begins with the tender fragility of
"Love Is Pleasing," here given an achingly reflective makeover
and instilled with a raw sentiment that Casey sings with unnerving realism.
When I noticed "Black Is The Colour" on the track list, my first
reaction was "Oh no, not another one!" It was foolish of me
to write this off in such a manner, because here for once is a truly inspired
reinvention of this popular traditional song -- revelling in dark, chilling
undertones that reveal a much more anguished sentiment than many other
equally accomplished readings. This may well be the best adaptation of
"Black Is The Colour" that you will encounter, it will certainly
be the most intense.
"Erin's Lovely Home" is blessed with an intricate guitar arrangement
courtesy of Kris Drever, impeccably interspersed with Casey's flawless
vocals. Here and elsewhere, the cello of Kate Ellis adds depth and resonance,
whilst the sparing accordion of Donald Shaw is employed with utmost sensitivity.
It is however, the piano playing of Caoimhín Vallely that stands
out, adding a stark elegance throughout, and chiming with a clarity that
is only surpassed by the voice of Casey herself.
Alongside the seven traditional songs sit three judiciously
selected covers -- Martin Furey's "Town Of Athlone" sits seamlessly
alongside the traditional offerings, there is also an indifferent outing
of Robbie Burns' "Ae Fond Kiss," but perhaps more surprising
is a stirring rendition of Joni Mitchell's anti-American "The Fiddle
And The Drum" (from her 1969 album, Clouds), sounding here like it
had been written precisely for the tradition-soaked adaptation that it
receives here, with Cillian Vallely's uilleann pipes heightening the tension
perfectly.
Ships In The Forest makes for an utterly enchanting
listen from start to finish, lovingly and meticulously assembled -- you
really will struggle to find a finer album of Irish song.
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The
Bluegrass Special, Billy Altman
Lest anyone think there's even an ounce of hyperbolic blarney
to the statement that singer Karan Casey is one of the brightest lights
on the contemporary Celtic music scene, then perhaps the best way to begin
discussing her latest CD Ships In The Forest is to say that her renditions
here of "Black is the Colour (of My True Love's Hair)" and "Johnny
I Hardly Knew Ye" will have you re-thinking songs you were sure you
never wanted hear again in this and maybe even a few yet-to-come lifetimes.
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www.irishcultureandcustoms.com,
William Ramoutar
Well, sadly Frank Harte is gone, but he will never be forgotten
if Karan Casey and her like have anything to do with it. Frank passed
many songs on to Karan and she sure made some of them her very own. There
is no one who will ever outdo her version of “She is Like the Swallow.”
But on this brand new cd of hers, it is unlikely anyone will ever surpass
her ladyship’s rendering of Martin Furey’s superb song, “The
Town of Athlone.”
She has the most stunning voice anyway. Yet some songs
fit her like the proverbial glove but, with oh, so much more, sparkle
and downright presence, it is hard to think of anyone else having the
boldness to attempt a go at it when how could you……..
That song, by the way, sounds like it has been around
for hundreds of years and more power to Martin Furey, for writing such
a moving song of love and travelers. The opening track is, “Love
is Pleasing” and sung by this diminutive lass from Waterford, you
get the feeling right away, she could sing the label off the jam jar and
you’d be happy.
She started singing with American Irish band, Solas,
fourteen years ago and when she left after about five years to pursue
a solo career, I was devastated. In fact, Solas, or the members of the
band, taught me that there is life after the moving on, or breakups! Karan
Casey has done very well, thank you very much, and it is in her superb
choices of songs that she puts together these marvelously crafted works
of hers.
Of course it probably helps that on this one,
she has the backing of three of the Vallely boys. Piper, Cillian, pianist,
Caoimhín and button accordionist, Niall. Without doubt, some of
the tastiest players on the scene and a little bit of input from some
other outstanding musicians, namely ex-Scullion guitarist, Robbie Overson
and the producer is none other than Capercaillie’s keyboardist,
Donald Shaw. It was recorded in Karan’s house in Cork and there
is a homey feel to it, but more importantly, it is a work of standing.
You get the meaning behind the songs because she sings with such expression
and yes, probably tradition is the word to use here. Because I cannot
think of anyone, more deserving of being admired by her peers. She is
an icon in the purest sense of the tradition, but with the ability to
sing contemporary tunes and have them sound like the traditionalists would.
Then give them a second listen...and maybe a third.
Don’t forget, in what was known as real
Irish music, we still have the purists who don’t like the “new”
singers playing around with the tunes. Instrumentally, if there is added
ornamentation (or in layman’s terms added notes), the tunes are
not regarded, as being in the true tradition. My argument is and has always
been, that to pass many of these tunes on, they sometimes have to appeal
to younger generations, or to people who might never have heard Irish
music. Some over the years have turned what we thought were standards,
into rock songs or indeed pop tunes. The old statesmen are turning in
their graves no doubt. But do listen to Karan’s “She is Like
the Swallow” on her “Songlines” release. Frank Harte
gave it to her, as I said and John Doyle, her partner from Solas days,
added volume pedal acoustic guitar, Winnie Horan, also from Solas, fiddle,
and cello from Michael Aharon. At once, beautiful, majestic and heartbreaking
Irish music. Also on “Songlines” is the most wickedly worded
“Roger the Miller,” in which a young man comes courting his
only love but presses the father of his soon-to-be bride for a grey mare
as well, and loses the lot! John Doyle’s fantastic accompaniment
gives the song its jaunty edge and Seamus Egan, a founding member of Solas,
drives the melody with his haunting flute.
Oh yes, we are right at the top of the tree with
Karan Casey. This is her first cd without the gentle guiding hand of Frank
Harte, but his spirit is no doubt with her. She has yet again picked songs
that he must have told her, as Mary Rafferty’s (that marvelous accordion
and whistle player, ex- of Cherish the Ladies) father, Mike, used to tell
her, “learn this one”. “Dunlavin Green” was one
of Frank’s. It is a song about unbelievable treachery and slaughter
and yet in her hands becomes a gorgeous witness to history.
She has no rivals; only smart people who admire
what she can do with a song.
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www.musicroad.com
On her new solo album, Ships in the Forest, Karan Casey offers
songs of love, song of politics, songs of Irish history, and songs which
touch on all of that together.
Irish music is marked by a select handful of very distinct female voices,
Dolores Keane, Mary Black, Maura O’Connell, Susan McKeown, and Cathie
Ryan among them. Casey stands in their company. Both her singing and her
song choices on this project show a growing maturity and thoughtfulness
added to what was already a strong set of musical choices, choices informed
by her insights at moving back to her native Ireland after living in America
for some time, and by watching her children explore the world as they
grow. She takes on several of the big songs of the tradition, including
Black is the Color, I Once Loved a Lass, and Johnny I Hardly Knew Ye,
and adds her own colors to them. She also takes on Robert Burns with Ae
Fond Kiss, and in what may be the heart of the album, reinvents Joni Mitchell’s
The Fiddle and the Drum as a song which encompasses both the sweep if
Irish history and the uncertainties of contemporary political and moral
choices. It’s a set of songs. Casey says, which she feels all her
other work has been getting her ready to take on. “It is by no means
for the faint hearted but I think it’s worth a long listen,”
she adds. It is.
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Irish
America Magazine
Karan Casey has just released her first CD on the Compass
Records label, Ships in the Forest, and as always, her rich, honeyed voice
is set against the finest of traditional Irish instrumentation, including
husband Niall Vallely on concertina and Kris Drever on guitar. Much like
her English counterpart June Tabor, Karan is drawn to the dark side of
traditional music — songs of futile wars, lost loves, and okay,
found loves too. A deeply melancholic, haunting set, it includes the great
Joni Mitchell’s “Fiddle and the Drum” and Karan’s
original settings to classics such as “I Once Loved a Lass.”
Karan, as she herself notes, has balanced the joy of raising her two small
children with her ongoing musical career, and with this CD remains Ireland’s
leading chanteuse.
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As broadcast on WVIA-FM 4/9/2008, George
Graham
The Celtic music scene continues unabated after its revival of popularity
back in the 1980s. And one of the artists who emerged as part of the scene
in the 1990s is vocalist Karan Casey, who was the founding lead singer
with the group Solas, one of the innovative young bands in the genre.
Ms. Casey left Solas amicably to raise a family and maintain a solo career
at a somewhat slower pace, but that has not stopped her from releasing
a series of fine solo albums, starting in 2001 with The Winds Begin to
Sing. Now she is out with her fifth solo recording, which she describes
has being her most ambitious, called Ships in the Forest.
Calling it "most ambitious" might be
a bit surprising at first to the casual listener, since the album features
very spare instrumentation, and ostensibly simple arrangements. The material
largely consists of traditional songs -- some quite familiar. But the
39-year-old Ms. Casey says "It has taken all my years as a singer
to come to the point of feeling confident enough to tackle the big songs
within the traditional repertoire." And she provides distinctive
treatments with superb, subtle vocal performances, with the accompaniment
putting an even greater focus on her singing. The result is a memorable,
often plaintive-sounding album that is largely melancholy in mood.
In fact, this is quite a bunch of sad songs, several of which are about
war, and its losses, along with downright tragic love songs, and a song
about the hardships the Irish endured in their emigration to America during
the famine of the 19th Century. The material also includes Robert Burns
and Joni Mitchell, along with a new contemporary song that sounds a couple
of hundred years old.
As the great English folk artist June Tabor has
been doing, Karan Casey performs the many of the songs with piano accompaniment,
rather than guitar or other so-called "folk" instruments. To
be sure there are bagpipes and guitars, but for a Celtic album, the dominance
by the piano is unconventional.
The recording was made in Ms. Casey's home in
Ireland, with Caoimhin Vallely on the piano, along with Kate Ellis on
cello, another prominent and unconventional instrument, Robbie Overson
and Kris Drever on guitars, among others. Ms. Casey is credited with at
least co-arranging the traditional material on the album.
Leading off is one of the sad songs about love.
Love Is Pleasing tells the story of a woman losing her lover to another,
and the ruing the situation to the point of wishing never to have been
born.
The first of the songs about war and violence
is Dunlavin Green, ostensibly about a massacre of 36 wrongly accused men.
Ms. Casey's performance accompanied by only the piano gives the song extra
poignancy.
One of the most familiar pieces Ms. Casey does
on Ships in the Forest is Black is the Color, which was a standard folk
song back in the 1960s. It's one of the most positive on the album lyrically
-- it's basically a love song -- but Ms. Casey's stark performance gives
it a distinctly melancholy aura.
With a more upbeat musical setting featuring
guitar is The Town of Athlone, one of several song about war and its consequences.
In this case, it's the story of a young mother, the widow of a soldier
killed in war. Though it sounds traditional, it's actually a contemporary
song written by one Martin Furay.
Also on the subject of war, is another relatively
contemporary song -- from 40 years ago, rather than 200 -- Joni Mitchell's
The Fiddle and the Drum. Ms. Casey gives it a haunting treatment accompanied
by a set of bagpipes, played by Cillian Vallely.
The great Irish exodus of the mid 19th century
has been the fodder of many a song over the years. Ms. Casey does a rather
well-known example, Erin's Lovely Home, whose lyrics tell the story of
a family who made the trip to America, but only some of whom survived
the trip.
Perhaps the most intriguing track to American
audiences is the song Johnny I Hardly Knew Ye, which shares a tune with
the American Civil War song When Johnny Comes Marching Home. This is a
traditional song from the other side of the Atlantic about a solder who
returns from war a badly injured amputee.
The CD's oxymoronic title Ships in the Forest
comes from a line in the closing song I Once a Loved a Lass, written from
a man's point of view. He apparently let his love slip from his hands,
and she marries someone else. In his despair, we wants to do himself in.
For such a beautiful-sounding album, Karan Casey's
new CD Ships in the Forest is a collection of really sad songs, ranging
from love lost to wars, tragedies and massacres. Of course, that is the
stuff of old folk songs, and that was her aim, in plunging into the traditional
material on this album. And with the stark, spare accompaniment, the songs
are in a way, made more powerful by Ms. Casey's superb performances: poignant,
but never maudlin, achieving their impact through understatement, and
irony through the beauty of the music.
Our grade for sound quality is a one of our relatively
rare "A's." Ms. Casey's vocals are nicely recorded, with a good
balance between intimacy and atmosphere. The dynamic range is also decent,
by contemporary standards.
This may or may not be the kind of album to play when you're feeling blue.
The lyrics can bring a tear to the eye, but at the same time, one can't
help but derive great pleasure from these memorable performances by one
of the great voices in contemporary Celtic music.
(c) Copyright 2008 George D. Graham. All rights reseved.
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LIVE
High-Level
Music at Highline Ballroom
Irish Echo, Earle Hitchner
[Published on March 26, 2008, in the IRISH ECHO newspaper, New York City.
Copyright (c) Earle Hitchner. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission
of author.]
It had been a while since I last saw Waterford-born
vocalist Karan Casey perform, so on March 13 I came to the Highline Ballroom
on West 16th Street in Manhattan's Chelsea area with the expectation that
I would hear something similar from her: uncommonly skilled, sensitive
singing with proficient accompaniment.
By chance I met Casey inside the club a half-hour before showtime, and
she told me of an ordeal she had suffered on March 8 in Calgary. While
performing on stage there, she was robbed. The thief absconded with her
Irish passport and a five-figure amount of cash that she and her bandmates
had earned halfway through their North American winter tour. She had to
go to Ottawa in subfreezing weather to sort out a new passport, and by
the time she got to Manhattan for the March 13 performance, she was fighting
a chest cold.
On top of that, two of her regular bandmates
were absent: cellist Kate Ellis and guitarist Robbie Overson. Concertinist
Niall Vallely, with whom Casey has two young children in Cork, was filling
in for Ellis, while guitarist Ross Martin, a member of the Scottish group
Harem Scarum, was filling in for Overson.
So it would have been perfectly understandable
if the depleted Casey and her three colleagues--regular bandmate Caoimhin
Vallely on electric keyboard, his brother Niall, and Ross Martin--could
only muster a professionally workmanlike performance in the Highline Ballroom.
Neither my expectation for something similar
from her nor my expectation for just a serviceable performance were met.
Instead, Casey's performance was honed, assured, and adventurous. It was
more than courageous. It was stunning.
She opened starkly with the antiwar ballad "Johnny,
I Hardly Knew Ye" and followed with "Black Is the Color of My
True Love's Hair." Casey's setting for the latter song may have been
inspired by a live rendition from one of her idols, Nina Simone (1933-2003),
on the 1959 album "Nine Simone at Town Hall."
Still misunderstood and under-appreciated (especially
by critics) in the U.S., North Carolina-born Nina Simone had a strong,
defiant personality and an acute sense of injustice. Both informed her
singing of such songs as "Mississippi Goddam," which she wrote
after Civil Rights leader Medgar Evers was murdered and which was widely
banned in the South, and "Strange Fruit," written by Lewis Allan,
the pen name of Abel Meeropol, a New York City schoolteacher who adopted
the two children of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg after their execution for
espionage in 1953. Casey acknowledged Simone's version of "Strange
Fruit" in a brief track note for her own rendition on "The Winds
Begin to Sing" album in 2001.
Like Simone, Casey bristles at bigotry and inequity
of all stripes. And like Simone, Casey knows that protest songs can sometimes
be more effectively delivered without shouting, as she demonstrated in
her singing of "Johnny, I Hardly Knew Ye."
Delicate keyboard playing was the instrumental
framework for both Casey's and Simone's versions of "Black Is the
Color of My True Love's Hair," and a soft, sultry, nuanced vocal
from each singer overlaid that backup. In the case of Caoimhin Vallely,
who may be the finest accompanist Casey has ever had, he brought a Bill
Evans-like touch to supporting Casey's vocal, which conveyed some of Simone's
smoky undercurrent.
But what stood out above all in Casey's opening
performance was a magnificently arranged medley of four songs linked together
with instrumental ligatures. This vocal medley included "Dunlavin
Green" and "I Once Loved a Lass," and all four songs, each
a separate story unto itself, formed an overarching narrative of mesmerizing
melancholy. During this segment, the window into feeling disappeared.
It was just feeling--naked, fragile, and impossible to shake off.
Casey said she wanted to follow with a "happy
song," and true to her nature, the "happy song" she sang
without accompaniment was Leon Rosselson's ferocious indictment of greed,
"The World Turned Upside Down (The Diggers' Song)."
For her encore, she sang without accompaniment
Jean Ritchie's "One, I Love," as direct and poignant a love
song as you'll ever hear. It concluded a set that also featured some deft
tune playing by the two Vallely brothers and Martin....
...Inside the well-designed Highline Ballroom,
a relatively new and promising venue for Manhattan concerts, the double
bill of Lunasa and the Karan Casey Band proved to be the right musical
antidote to the emerald-dyed kitsch customarily leading up to St. Patrick's
Day.
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CHASING
THE SUN
Songlines,
Geoff Wallis
****
Confident, sharp, and to the point" Casey gets the job done.
Karan Casey doesn't just wear her heart on her sleeve, it
sits there throbbing and pounding, suffusing her songs with a vigorous,
iron sense of purpose. The woman from County Waterford with the golden
voice has so far produced three impressive solo albums (not counting her
work with Solas) but Chasing The Sun is a massive leap
forward.
It's not just the finely tuned settings of Casey's
voice against the sparse backdrop of guitar, bouzouki or mandolin (supported
by Ewen Vernal's understated bass-playing) which puts this album on a
higher level than her previous releases. There are also the subtle injections
of Niall Vallely's concertina, for starters, and a sensitive use of overdubbed
vocal harmonies.
Key to it all is that, far more than its three
predecessors, Chasing The Sun successfully marries a
mix of traditional but sharp-tongued songs - such as the epic unaccompanied
ballad "Jimmy Whelan" - with contemporary material that reflects
Casey's rising status as one of Ireland's most politically-charged singers.
Her own compositions reveal increasing confidence
and incisive social awareness, not least "When Will We All Be Free",
which attacks Ireland's current policies on immigration. Above all, however,
the songs are invigorated by her gorgeous, sensual and utterly knowing
voice.
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Living
Tradition, Debbie Koritsas
‘Chasing The Sun’, produced by percussionist John
Anthony (who was behind Casey’s debut release, ‘Songlines’),
marks a return to a pure, acoustic recording style for this Waterford-born
singer-songwriter. Recorded at Casey’s home in Ireland, these 13
songs constitute an exquisite listening experience – subtlety seems
to be the name of the game here, both vocally and instrumentally.
The album has the potential to become overshadowed
by contemporaneous singer-songwriter releases such as Kate Rusby’s
‘The Girl Who Couldn’t Fly’, but this beautifully lyrical,
acoustic album should not be overlooked – this is traditional Irish
song at its best, and Casey’s voice is at once haunting and pure.
She now has 3 solo albums to her credit – ‘Songlines’,
‘The Winds Begin To Sing’, and ‘Distant Shore’
– and this fourth offering stands tall alongside its predecessors.
She contributes 7 of her own compositions here; I’ve found myself
listening time and again to self-penned numbers such as ‘When Will
We All Be Free’, with rhythm-defining guitar-playing from Paul Meehan
and Robbie Overson. Double bassist Ewen Vernal expresses himself sublimely
on ‘The Time Will Pass’. Niall Vallely’s concertina
playing underpins many songs very subtly. But it is Karan Casey’s
voice that draws you in from start to finish – this album’s
a real grower.
Flautist/piper Barry Kerr contributes three beautiful
songs, with discreetly expressed political undertones – there’s
nothing ‘in your face’ about this album. The two traditional
songs reveal Casey’s voice at its most haunting – her lone,
stark, ethereal voice has the power and grace to carry traditional songs
such as ‘The Brown And The Yellow Ale’ with strength and absolute
confidence.
This album has irresistible, addictive qualities
that make it very hard to switch off from.
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Folk
Roundabout
Karan, former lead singer of Irish-American band Solas, released
a wonderful third solo album Distant Shore only a short time ago; here's
its followup, which concentrates even more on Karan's own songwriting
talent. Six of the thirteen tracks are her own compositions this time
round, and rather lovely they are too. Two of my favourite tracks on this
CD happen to be among this half-dozen, in fact: the gorgeous opening (title)
track, and the atmospheric Bright Winter's Day with its gently choppy
rhythmic staccato. You'll probably think me crazy, but on at least two
songs (the title track and This Time Will Pass) I was rather reminded
– in a quite nice way, I hasten to add – of Kate Rusby, most
especially in the way the melodic line reflects a quasi-traditional idiom,
although I also detected a certain resemblance in Karan's tonal phrasing
and shaping too at times (though Karan's voice lacks the more overtly
girlish sweetness of Kate's singing). Aside, then, from Karan's own compositions,
Chasing The Sun contains three by Barry Kerr (a young
musician from Co. Armagh) and one by Robbie O'Connell, while there's also
a delicious arrangement of Burns' Lady Mary Anne, the remainder being
arrangements of traditional songs. Another feature of Chasing The Sun
which I really like is Karan's deliberate decision to keep the accompanying
instrumentation simple and acoustic, to achieve something very close to
a live sound; for this she uses just the members of her long-standing
band: Niall Vallely (concertina), Robbie Overson (guitar), Ewan Vernal
(double bass) and Paul Meehan (guitar, mandolin, bouzouki), with just
a couple of tracks adding Michael Aharon (piano) or Erik Johnson or John
Anthony (percussion). This was a wise decision, for the immediate yet
relaxed demeanour of Karan's singing is matched closely by the close,
neat sound (credit here to Niall in his role as Karan's co-producer).
But I can't end the review without mentioning my final choices for CD
highlights, the two traditional songs which Karan performs without accompaniment
– the delightfully poised The Brown And Yellow Ale and the more
sombre ballad Jimmy Whelan. The latter rounds off this lovely release
in fine fashion.
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Swedish
(roots) music magazine, Lira, issue 4/2005, Lars Fahli
Soulful. After making herself a name as the vocalist of Solas,
Karan Casey has established herself firmly as a solo artist, strong of
feeling and integrity. She interprets both traditional and modern material
with the same easiness and charm. Chasing The Sun is
her fourth album and consists mainly of original material, in traditional,
acoustic form. The album touches on well-known folk themes, like love
and oppression. Casey's voice caresses and enchants. It is a source of
restrained passion. As a storyteller she understates more than overstates.
The music (guitars, double bass, concertina, percussion) is flexible and
supportive but can occasionally seem superfluous. The six minutes long
a cappella version of Jack Whelan, which ends the album, says it all.
It can hardly be more beautiful than that.
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DISTANT
SHORE
Washinton
Post, Geoffrey Himes
Karan Casey's first three solo albums (1997's "Songlines,"
the 2000 children's album "Seal Maiden: A Celtic Musical" and
2001's "The Winds Begin to Sing") were dominated by traditional
Irish folk songs. As she did in the group Solas, she sang those tunes
in a silky soprano that always seemed to be holding back a little of its
power for the sake of intimacy. On her new solo effort, Casey shifts her
focus to contemporary folk-pop songs and emerges as the Irish equivalent
of Emmylou Harris.
The arrangements are still acoustic but with
a looser, more impressionistic feel, accenting the lyrics more than the
pub rhythms. Casey's singing is, if anything, even more understated, as
if she were delivering these monologues close at hand. Like Harris, she
proves a terrific judge of songs, and she alerts American audiences to
several gifted Irish songwriters. John Spillane and Louis de Paor open
"The Song of Lies" with the striking couplet, "And her
mouth was as red as the fresh fallen snow," and Ger Wolfe details
the pleasures of a romantic walk through the Irish countryside down "The
Curra Road."
In recent years, Casey has recorded and toured
as part of "The Crossing," Tim O'Brien's exploration of the
links between Irish and Appalachian cultures. O'Brien repays the favor
not only by co-writing "Another Day," an absorbing, banjo-driven
contemplation of mortality, but also by singing and picking on several
other songs. Casey's political sympathies are revealed on Ewan MacColl's
anti-death penalty narrative "The Ballad of Tim Evans" and on
Mary Brookbank's sweatshop lament "The Jute Mill Song." Best
of all is Billy Bragg's title tune, an immigration song whose lovely melody
finally gets the lustrous vocal it deserves.
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Sing
Out, Rob Weir
Karan Casey's latest solo venture is a thing
of rare beauty. It should also dispel any lingering notions that the Celtic
genre can contain her. There are but two traditional songs on the eleven-track
CD, and she draws from an eclectic group of songwriters for the rest.
She opens with a cover of Billy Bragg's "Distant Shore" that
is as fragile as antique crystal. Casey's wispy vocals dance in mirror
lockstep with James Grant's acoustic guitar, while producer Donald Shaw's
accordion fills the background. Casey maintains this quiet balance, even
as electric instruments enter the mix. To signal her intent to offer a
varied brew, Casey follows by finding the seam between Irish and bluegrass
music on a cover of Tim O'Brien's "Another Day," O'Brien himself
lending backing vocals. Shaw once again keeps the instrumentation in subdued
check, though everything from bouzouki to Wurlitzer organ is feathered
into the score. Casey later returns to Appalachian stylings on "The
Jute-Mill Song," and her own "Quiet of the Night" would
be more at home at a hazy, mellow piano bar than a peat-smoked Irish kitchen
dance.
Casey does not abandon her roots, however. On "Lord MacDonald's"
she keens and croons in the finest traditional style. This piece is a
stunner, with Casey's tongue-twisting lead gorgeously backed by Capercaillie's
Karen Matheson, Dezi Donnelly's flying fiddle notes, and tasteful percussion
from James Mackintosh and Signy Jacobson. As good as this is, Casey surpasses
it on "Bata is Bothar," in which she uses a tape delay to echo
her own vocal and uses the cadence of the Gaelic language as its own percussion.
It is one of two songs written by John Spillane and Louis de Paor. The
other, "Song of Lies," is as heartbreakingly beautiful as "Bata"
is exciting. Special kudos go to Donald Shaw for his production work on
this album; it is among his best work in years.
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Boston
Globe, Alan Lewis
Karan Casey is well-known along the folk circuit for her
years as lead singer of the great Irish-American band, Solas. She has
since gone solo, and her last album, the essential "Winds Begin to
Sing," was one of the finest releases of 2001. Casey's voice is among
the loveliest in folk music, and she is a wonderful interpreter of both
contemporary and traditional material. Her use of grace notes and vibrato
has become remarkably subtle. Much of the music here is slow and pretty,
though the songs can be bittersweet, as when she takes the part of one
"So full of hope but prone to grief." The gentle "Quiet
of the Night," with a beautiful chorus, is typical of this disc's
sympathetic and uncluttered arrangements. Casey is often at her best on
songs with a quick pace. But here, she excels on a midtempo pastoral love
tune, "The Curra Road," with the refrain, "We won't worry
about the winter ... In the summer we'll go laughing, way down to the
river, down the dusty road." "The Curra Road" is a classic
of grace and simplicity and should become a folk standard.
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Sunday
Herald, Glasgow, Sue Wilson *****
Formerly a frontline attraction with the Irish/ American
band Solas, Karan Casey has long been regarded as one of Ireland's most
enchanting singers. Her third solo release is a wonderfully eloquent and
moving exercise in bridge-building, as Casey traces old and new connections
between musical traditions and eras, spanning both the Irish Sea and the
Atlantic.
The opening title track, for instance, is a Billy
Bragg cover, putting a contemporary spin on the classic emigration ballad,
while the Tim O'Brien/Darrell Scott song, Another Day, sounds like a halfway
stage in Celtic music's evolution into traditional country.
There's a delicate Americana gloss, too, on Mary
Brooksbank's The Jute Mill Song, conjuring the weariness of production-line
workers everywhere, while other Scottish material includes a forlorn version
of Matt McGinn's Just A Note, and a silky duet with Capercaillie's Karen
Matheson on the Gaelic ballad Lord MacDonald's, set to a subtle dancefloor
pulse.
Casey's sole songwriting contribution is the
delicate, meditative Quiet Of The Night. A stellar list of guests, including
O'Brien and John Spillane and on backing vocals, Dirk Powell on banjo,
concertinist Niall Vallely and Mike McGoldrick on whistles, is deployed
with consummate taste and restraint. The album's resulting air of understatement
further highlights the beauty of Casey's singing and the power of her
chosen material.
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Hot
Press, Sarah Mc Quaid (9.5/10)
Karan Casey is one of those rare singers whose voice is such
a beautiful pristine instrument that she could make the direst rubbish
sound heartfelt and poignant. Happily, such feats aren't necessary here:
for her third solo album, she's once again chosen material worthy of the
gift she possess, not least of which is a self-penned number, 'Quiet of
the Night' - the first she's recorded. Elsewhere, there are songs by the
likes of Tim O'Brien, Billy Bragg and the writing team of Louis de Paor
and John Spillane (who joins her for a duet, as does Karen Matheson of
the Scottish band Capercaillie). Multi-instrumentalist Donald Shaw, also
of Capercaillie, produced this CD, but the overall feel is more Tennessee
bluegrass than Highland thistle, thanks to the presence of five-string
banjo player Dirk Powell on a number of tracks.
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Los
Angeles Times, Ute Lemper ***
Casey's soprano is best known from her recordings and performances
with the Celtic band Solas. In her third solo effort, she reaches out
from the traditional repertoire to include songs by folk-rock's Billy
Bragg and bluegrass' Tim O'Brien. But it is Casey's voice, as pure and
clear as the crystal from County Waterford, where she was born, that brings
an eclectic set of Celtic-related music to life.
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Irish
Music Magazine, Sean Laffey
Produced by Donald Shaw in Scotland it features a mixture
of contemporary and traditional material, (in fact mostly modern) with
only two of the tracks cited as traditional. The backing line-up represents
the young aristocracy of Celtic music, including vocalists Tim O'Brien,
Karen Matheson and John Spillane. Karan's regular band of Robbie Overson
and Niall Vallely are augmented by the likes of Dirk Powell, Michael McGoldrick
(who plays both flutes and a mean bodhrán), Dezi Donnelly, Paul
Meehan, James Grant and Cillian Vallely.
The contemporary songs come from the pens of
John Spillane & Louis de Paor, ('Bata is Bóthar' and the 'Song
of Lies) Billy Bragg (the opening Solas style 'Distant Shore'), Ger Wolfe,
('The Curra Road') Tim O'Brien & Darrell Scott, ('Another Day'), Ewan
McColl ('The Ballad of Tim Evans') and Karan adds one of her own with
('Quiet of the Night'). The Two traditional songs are the English radical
ballad 'The Four Loom Weaver' and the Scots 'Lord MacDonalds' which is
given a Donald Shaw waulking-rock blás. The overall sound is a
mix of Capercaillie meets Solas with enough of the distinctive trio that
is the Karan Casey Band shining through to let you know this is serious
talent at work. Her vocal abilities have been sung loudly before, here
she's joined by a crew of the most empathetic musicians, from the rollicking
jaunty band sound with the simple underplaying of Dezi Donnelly's fiddle
on 'Lord McDonalds' to the sparse banjo accompaniment of the 'The Jute
Mill Song', they know what to do, when to cruise, when to rev it up. This
album has variety without crass novelty and consistency without predictability.
Full of new songs that refuse to pander to a Mid-Atlantic singer songwriter
zeit gheist and old songs that have been kissed back to life. There's
nobody else doing this sort of folk thing at the moment, it's where Kate
Rusby ought to be, where Niamh Parsons sometimes briefly and loosely went,
Karan's out in front and from the looks of this will be for many years
to come.
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Birmingham
Post, Mike Davies ****
Former lead singer of Irish-American Celtic folk outfit Solas,
the County Waterford colleen's already carved out an impressive solo career
over the course of the two albums released since she left to start a family.
Unlike its predecessors, while there are traditional numbers such a and
Lord MacDonald's (sung in Scots Gaelic, a language Casey doesn't speak)
the emphasis is more on the contemporary. Here are songs by Billy Bragg
(the wearily beautiful title track), American bluegrass star Tim O'Brien
(Another Day), Mary Brookbank (The Jude Mill Song the female equivalent
of the preceding trad The Four Loom Weaver) and the great Ewan MacColl
(The Ballad of Tim Evans) nestling alongside contributions by Irish writers
such as Ger Wolfe (The Curra Road) and her self-penned, intimately delivered
Quiet Of The Night.
Love ballads, songs of homesickness, immigration,
sweat labour, and the miscarriage of justice paint the emotional landscape
in both personal and political colours, etched out in simple acoustic
arrangements making haunting use of fiddle, low whistle, flute, mandolin
and accordion in a manner that evokes Dolly Parton's recent return to
her Appalachian roots.
Name guests include O'Brien, Karen Matheson and
Donald Shaw from Capercaillie, and Balfa Toujours banjo man Dirk Powell,
but its Casey's pure voice that strikes the most resonant notes, forging
an album that while unassumingly understated slowly stakes a strong claim
as Celtic CD of the year.
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www.amazon.com,
Christina Roden
The Waterford-born singer Karan Casey has been on a highly
personal journey since she left the Irish-American supergroup Solas. Her
solo albums, of which this is the third, reveal a questing nature and
a deceptively fragile-sounding, vibrato-enhanced soprano. At times, Casey
brings the early Dolly Parton to mind, especially when she's essaying
modal ballads that recall the Celtic-derived American Appalachian tradition
and its tributaries. Her material ranges from Irish and Scottish folkways
to modern story songs, many of which deal with immigration and other forms
of displacement. The poignant opening tune, composed by British songwriter-activist
Billy Bragg, is a meditation about a frightened, uprooted newcomer dealing
with homesickness and hostile natives. The sensuous yet coolly ascetic
semi-acoustic arrangements feature prominent banjo, fiddle, low whistle,
and accordion vamps, plus an atmospheric solo piano. Guest artists Karen
Matheson (lead vocals in Capercaillie ), bluegrass singer-mandolinist
Tim O'Brien, and American roots player Dirk Powell all make indelible
impressions.
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LIVE
Bangor
Daily News, Tom Groening
(Live
review from National Folk Festival 2003 in Bangor ,Maine)
Thanks to Riverdance and the Boston-Ireland connection,
Celtic music can hardly be described as exotic here in New England. In
fact, most of us have heard enough Irish, Scottish and English ballads,
jigs and reels to be able to tell whether they're played well.The Karan
Casey Band not only exceeded that standard in its performance at the Railroad
Stage on Saturday, but successfully juiced up the traditional Celtic sound
with a splash of acoustic funk here and a dab of blues there.The focal
point of the four-piece band was Casey's voice. Silky, sensuous and with
the timbre of a well-played flute, its pitch-perfect trills on up-tempo
songs and long-sustained notes on ballads spanned the range from joy to
heartbreak that can be found in the Celtic tradition. The band - Robby
Overson on acoustic guitar, Niall Vallely on concertina and whistles,
and Steve Nayone on bass - was a worthy match, providing a strong groove
or a delicate coloring as needed in the 10-song set."The Madness
of My Heart" was a standout, as Casey alternated between English
and Gaelic lyrics, while Overson played insistent riffs on guitar and
Vallely added blues notes on - of all things - the concertina. Casey and
Overson scored points with the audience for keeping their cool as a hovering
helicopter competed with them, and later as gusts of wind knocked down
equipment on stage.
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