domingo, 22 de mayo de 2011

Michael McGoldrick & John McSherry - At First Light (2000)




Blimey. This comes roaring out of the blocks at a rare ol' pace and barely stops for breath during the entire duration of the album. Then again, Manchester's Mr McGoldrick is clearly a man in a hurry. He needs to be with the numerous different projects demanding his multifarious skills, from Lunasa to sessions for every Irish album in christendom. The 2001 Radio 2 folk instrumentalist of the year duly delivers a full exhibition of his dazzling and flowing repertoire, through whistle, pipes, bodhran and flute (the natural way he makes it all sound so easy is the real killer). But this time, egged on by the audacious piping of one of the most dynamic of the current breed, John McSherry, you get the feeling this album touches the very heart and core values of what McGoldrick is about. There's some heavyweight talent among the supporting cast, too, including Dezi Donnelly and Aidan O'Rourke on fiddle, Manus Lunny on bouzouki and guitar, Paul McSherry on guitar and even a cameo appearance by Donald Shaw of Capercaillie, also a co-producer with the two main attractions. Together they exude that rare ability to switch mood and tempo at the merest nod, maintaining all the spirit and atmosphere of a bar session within a studio structure. Many have tried, most have failed and it's perhaps no exaggeration to say the whole thing elevates them into the realms of modern inheritors of the mantle provided by the greats in Irish music. There are plenty of outstanding Celtic bands around right now, from Kila and Lunasa to Dervish, Danu and Old Blind Dogs, but the two Macs display the instinctive character to make this a benchmark selection of tunes--covering the whole range of jigs and reels and beyond--in its own right. A dip into Pierre Bensusan here, a nod to Liz Carroll there, but otherwise it's down the line traditional Irish music played with both passion and guile. Phew, what a scorcher. 
Colin Irwin, october 2001.
© fRoots Magazine all rights reserved

Here's a dream team for you: flutist Michael McGoldrick and piper John McSherry, both of them founding members of the great trad band Lunasa and both of them world-class players in the traditional style who nevertheless don't mind tweaking tradition once in a while. The wooden flute and the Uillean pipes are a lovely combination: Whereas the Scottish highland pipes are a battle cry, the Uillean pipes are a mournful wail, and their sound blends beautifully with the throaty, woody tone of the Irish flute. McGoldrick and McSherry make the most of that compatibility on this wonderful album, whether galloping headlong through thrilling sets of reels ("Farewell to Connaught," "John Nee's") or echoing each other plaintively on a lament like "Doinna." On several tracks they abandon their primary instruments to play the tin whistle in joyful unison, as they do on the excellent "Donald Blue/Ornette's Trip to Belfast" set (which also features a strange and wonderful guitar solo by Andrew White). Highly recommended to fans of old and new Irish music alike.

1. Farewell to Connaught
2. Rolling Waves
3. Doinna
4. Ornette's Trip to Belfast
5. Lucy Campbell's
6. Lady Lane
7. Trip to Ireland
8. The Bloom of Youth
9. Lacey's Jig
10. The Graf Spee
11. Road to Taynuilt


Michael McGoldrick: Flutes, whistles, pipes.
John McSherry: Pipes, whistles.
Paul McSherry: Guitar.
Andrew White: Guitar.
Ed Boyd: Guitar.
Manny Lunny: Bouzouki.
Dezi Donnelly: Fiddle.
Aidan O'Rourke: Fiddle.
Donald Shaw: Keyboards.
Ewen Vernal: Bass.

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