25 Şubat 2013 Pazartesi

Music: a new video from Luka Bloom

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How It's New York: Luka Bloom used to live in NY and play at The Red Lion.
How It's Irish: Luka is Irish, and often writes about Irish subjects.

Here's the latest video off of Luke Bloom's transcendant CD This New Morning.

On Luka's website, lukabloom.com, he writes:


‘You Survive’ ‘You Survive’ 
‘You Survive’ is a story of survival in the face of a possible ending of one’s life. It came to me from a friend in West Cork, who bravely shared with me her story. She also suggested I needed to write a song, as there is such an epidemic of people ending their lives in Ireland these days. Having heard her story, I decided to write a song about survival and love. A song about reaching out; hanging in.Not an easy song to write, or to get right. I loved recording it with Brian Masterson; love the strings and Frankie Lane’s sublime pedal steel playing.
Mia Mullarkey had filmed a nice video for Dignity and Backbone last summer. 
I invited her to do a film for another song. She chose You Survive. I was surprised and delighted. I asked her to do what she felt, and left her at it. My only condition was that I not be in it. Just singing the song in the background.
Mia is a great artist with a great heart. I love the way she films. In this little film, she has felt all the lonesomeness of the song, as well as the love and determination. And brought this to the screen with the grace and goodness in her nature.
I never ‘plug’ my songs in any big way. I just let them off and whatever happens happens. But I really hope people see and hear this. 
And if it shines a little light in one person’s darkness then it’s job is done.

                                      

Theatre: Malachy McCourt Is a Blaguard Yet!

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How It's New York: Frank and Malachy McCourt conceived the piece A Couple of Blaguards after a party in NYC, when Frank was still teaching at Stuyvesant. These performances at Irish Arts Center are a benefit for Breezy Point victims of Hurricane Sandy.

How It's Irish: Both Frank McCourt and brother Malachy are from Limerick, and this piece is about people there. "People in Ireland do die," he says.


A Couple of Blaguards is at Irish Arts Center this weekend, Saturday, Feb. 16 at 8 and Sunday, Feb. 17 at 3.

This article was first published in Irish Examiner USA, Tuesday, Feb. 12.


For a long time, Malachy and Frank McCourt performed their show "A Couple of Blaguards" without notes. The impersonations and stories about priests, politicians, teachers, drunkards, relatives and friends back in Limerick grew out of the brothers' topping each other at a party, Malachy recalls.

"We started remembering people, characters, teachers, priests, tyrants, the various women and the storytellers, and all of that, and we were imitating everybody, and we amused ourselves no end. While we were going home Frank said, 'We should put that on the stage.' I said, 'Who'd be interested?' He said 'I tell them to my students at Stuyvesant, and you tell them to people on the radio...'"

So they did. At first they did it in a small venue on the East Side. Eventually, they did write it down, and "it's been going ever since," Malachy says.

They took it to Chicago, where it ran for seven months, then to San Francisco, and performed it on cruise ships.

This weekend, Malachy and Mickey Kelly will perform the autobiographical piece at Irish Arts Center, as a benefit for victims of Sandy in Breezy Point, New York. They will perform on Friday, Feb. 15, and on Saturday, Feb. 16, at 8 p.m., and on Sunday, Feb. 17, at 3 p.m. All proceeds from the performances will go to Breezy Point victims to help with rent, accommodations, building supplies.

The audiences have not only been Irish people. In Chicago, Malachy remembers, there were a lot of black people in the audience. "The thing had a family appeal," he says.

"Everybody has grandmothers, aunts, uncles; everybody had teachers, some of whom were good, some bullies."
Malachy talked with Frank about copyrighting it when Frank was in hospice in 2009. Samuel French was reluctant at first, because they thought it might be too local, Malachy says.

"A lot of it is in a book that a brother of mine wrote, about a very local town, about a local family, poverty-stricken, with death and disease. I said I quite agree with you. That book only got one Pulitzer prize and it only sold 10 million copies. I said, yeah, you're right." He laughs.
"In about 10 minutes they got back to me."


Angela's Ashes, of course, Frank's 1996 memoir of a miserable Irish childhood, and meditation on his mother Angela, was hugely successful, and turned into a film in 1999 starring Emily Watson.

A Couple of Blaguards was conceived in the 80s, and portrays some of the same people and events, with some stories not in that book, including an attempt to reunite Angela with their dad, who got an "Irish divorce--he disappeared."

And of course, there's a lot more of what happens to Malachy in this piece. Frank has said that it was this show that led him to think that his stories might have a wider appeal. 

Now that the play has been published, other people have performed in it besides the McCourts. There was a production in Buffalo recently at the Irish Classical Theatre Company. It has also been at the Keegan Theatre in Virginia, the Irish Heritage Center of Greater Cincinatti, and Cinnabar Theatre in California.

Mickey Kelly, says Malachy, is a Union organizer and actor that used to do plays at the Irish Arts Center during Jim Sheridan's time. It was Jim Sheridan who encouraged Frank to take his stories and put them in a book, Malachy says with a laugh.

Irish Arts Center has a long association with Frank, then, and doing it as a benefit for Breezy Point has a personal connection too.
 "Frank, the brother, had a house in Breezy Point, mainly for his young daughter. It's a very insular place. He almost didn't make it in there because of me! Because I had a radio show at that time and I am very left-wing, and they always said I was some kind of a rotten Communist." 

But because Frank was a respectable schoolteacher, they let him in, Malachy says.

The show blends sad memories with laughter.
"People in Ireland do die. They don't die here. They pass away, are with the lord..." 
says Malachy with a chuckle.

On the other hand, "Death is not always fatal," he says.

"We keep 'em alive, talking about them and singing about them."

Theatre: The Luck of the Irish is pretty but flawed

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How It's New York: Playwright Kirsten Greenidge is a member of New Dramatists, the New York-based center for new plays and playwrights. At intermission, members of the audience could be heard discussing their own issues with surreptitious home-buying in the bad old days.

How It's Irish: In the play an African-American family hire an Irish-American family to front buying a house for them.

An earlier version of this review was published in Irish Examiner USA, Tuesday, Feb. 12.

Home ownership is a big part of the American Dream. in her new play The Luck of the Irish, playwright Kirsten Greenidge looks at what happens when possession and ownership may not be the same thing. 

Home is where the title is.

 Despite good writing, the play falters due to logic issues and stereotypes.

The Luck Of The Irish

Having a home is part of the American Dream. A home with a yard, maybe a swing, a picket fence, a refuge, dominates the emotional landscape of freedom. 

Kirsten Greenidge's new play "The Luck of the Irish," running at Lincoln Center Theatre's Claire Tow Theatre, the small theatre above the Vivian Beaumont, investigates the way a house, an actual structure in a real neighborhood, represents home, identity, a feeling of belonging. The play runs through Sunday, March 10; see www.lct.org.

Dashiell Eaves, Amanda Quaid, Victor Williams and Elsa Davis (Erin Baiano)
Greenidge looks at an African-American family in a suburb of Boston who inherit a house that grandparents bought in the early '50s, using an Irish-American couple to front the deal, during a time when refusal to sell based on race was illegal, but not uncommon.

Greenidge invents the term "ghost-buying" for the practice. That's a play on the term "ghost-writing," but there are also ghosts in the play as it exists both in the '50s and in the present. Characters from both worlds are sometimes onstage at the same time. And the daughters who inherit the home are haunted by their grandmother Lucy Taylor (Eisa Davis), a highly educated woman who collected buttons.

Nessa (Carra Patterson), the younger daughter, thinks there is a real ghost in the house.
Hannah (Marsha Stephanie Blake), who has moved in with her husband Rich (Frank Harts) and her offstage hyperactive son Miles, is haunted by the idea of her.

That's all fine, as is Greenidge's compare-and-contrast look at the upwardly mobile, highly educated African-American family buying a house and the down-on-their-luck, hardscrabble Irish-American couple who take a fee to pretend to buy the house.

LOGIC


But the engine of the play, the "what if," is a mess. Greenidge, whose own grandparents bought a house in Arlington, Mass., using a white couple to buy it, wonders "what if" the couple who bought it never turned over the title. If you've ever bought a house, you know that's not possible. Taxes are assessed based on the title. Unless the couple had gone on fronting ownership for 50 years, this cannot happen.


In an article in Boston.com, Greenidge says her grandparents kept up the ruse "until the closing." Yes. Title transfers have to be notarized. So it makes no sense when, after the elderly Joe Donovan (Robert Hogan) Hannah scours the house for the title. Elderly Mrs. Donovan (Jenny O'Hara), whom we'll meet in Act II, sends notes, Craig's List listings, suggestions, trying to nudge Hannah and her family into moving..

It's one thing to suspend disbelief. It's another to be asked to enter an alternate universe, where tax rolls are not, as they are in real life, public documents anybody can look up in a minute.
Apparently nobody in the world of the play has ever heard of the words "title search," let alone "real estate lawyer."I don't blame Greenidge as much for this mistake as I do the team at the Huntington Theatre in Boston, where the play was first performed, the critics there, and the team at Lincoln Center.

What the hell has happened to decent fact-checking and editing?
In ten minutes, the "title, title, who's got the title" issue could be resolved, especially by the highly educated African-American family she's conceived.

POETRY


Early on, I found myself wondering what separated the play from a slightly better-written TV movie, with its suspenseful premise and its artful dialogue. There are two factors. One is that a TV movie, with its teams of fact-checkers, would have caught this logical error and come up with solutions.
Greenidge is creative enough to have come up with another way to keep the two families connected, or to explore the scars that having to use a white family to buy a house might have left. 

But the other thing that separated her play from a TV movie is positive: it's art. Greenidge is a true playwright, with an ear for dialogue and an eye for observation. 

It's compelling to watch competent Hannah fall apart, in denial about her son's issues, becoming agoraphobic and not leave the house. Hannah, once a spitfire in college, now describes herself as
"that girl who moved to 'Leave It to Beaver's neighborhood' when she should have stayed where there was decent Chinese food."
At intermission, people in the audience were talking about their own family histories, with home-buying, with neighborhoods. The poetry underneath the prosaic and faulty premise was touching nerves.

 ACTING

The acting is very solid, and Amanda Quaid, as young Mrs. Donovan, Patty Ann, demonstrates the yearning that is making her bitter at her poverty. She's a bit of a shrew, but she shows an awareness of that that makes you want to reach out to her. Joe, played by Dashiell Eaves, is a dreamer, and proud of it. 

There is a wonderful scene at the center of the play, when Joe visits Lucy Taylor in the middle of the afternoon in the house in Billington.
Robert Hogan, Dashiell Eaves, Marsha Stephanie Blake, and Jenny O'Hara  (Erin Baiano)

We'll learn later that he was sent there to ask for more money to turn the title over, but he can't bring himself to bring it up with the woman of the house. Instead, they talk about poetry.
Joe finds common ground with a bored, isolated woman who is trapped into her role of housewife as much as he's trapped into his role as provider. 

Davis shows a warmth underneath a brittle aspect of superiority, and when she is surprised by evidence of Joe's intelligence, it's beautiful to see. They touch hands and one wonders if they might even become involved. That would have been fascinating.

Throughout, director Rebecca Taichman stages the scenes quietly and often delicately, carefully overlapping the eras so that it's clear what is happening but the resonances linger. As family histories tend to do.

 STEREOTYPES

But the scene doesn't lead to another one like it. Instead, we just have a scene of Joe being bullied by his desperate wife.  Joe is feckless, literate, and can't keep a job: "I can't punch in and punch out," he says. Add that he's a drinker and the stereotype would be complete. Greenidge does not go there, fortunately, although there is a moment where Patty Ann complains about smelling liquor on him.Eaves does well with the stereotype, but his Boston accent slips all over the place. He's not alone in this.

Patty Ann, with her disdain for language and literature, contrasts the eloquent Lucy. But it's as bizarre for an Irish person to sniff at words as it would be for a Jewish mother to sniff at education.

Malachy McCourt, whose two-man show written with his brother Frank, "A Couple of Blaguards," runs this weekend at Irish Arts Center, left school at 13. Didn't stop him from writing, reading, and being a raconteur. Poetry was often the one thing an Irish family did have. Maybe not shoes, but sure they had songs.

Even worse, when the older Patty Ann shows up on the doorstep 50 years later, to try to claim the house she owns, she rants that there is a "natural order to things."
I get that Greenidge wants to reveal Patty Ann's anger at a black family having more than she does, but then she has her say  "English first, then Irish, then Italians, then blacks."
English first? Really? Hard to imagine a Boston Irish person having that thought at all.  

It's problematical too that after 50 years, Patty Anne repeats almost verbatim a monologue she gave half a century before.

Greenidge is good at imagining what has happened in 50 years to her African-American family. For example, Nessa, who has three degrees in English and an unfulfilling job, reminisces about when crayolas were called "Indian Red," instead of "Burnt Siena," and her childhood daydreams of being an Indian maiden. Hannah can't convince her to say "Indigenous maiden."

But her Irish couple are unimagined and unrealized.  Joe's out of central casting, and Patty Ann is just a generic poor white woman.
There is a big Irish community in Boston. And after half a century, for them to be in the exact same situation they had before makes no sense and seems to be there just to make a point. Heck, even Angela McCourt got a Council house.

I realize that Greenidge is attempting to explore obsession, which defies logic, but in doing it through the specific lens of ethnic identity she missteps.

Despite some beautiful writing, "The Luck of the Irish" is a house with too weak a foundation to stand.

Music Review - Ireland's Dervish and Québec's Le Vent du Nord Storm the APAP World Music Showcase

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Photo of Dervish: Therese Cox
How it’s New York: The APAP (Association of Presenters and Performers) World Music Showcase, featuringDervish and Le Vent du Nord, took place last month at Drom in New York City’sEast Village.

How it’s Irish: Dervish hail from the West of Ireland and are one of Ireland’s premier trad bands; Le Vent du Nord play traditionalFrench-Canadian music with strong Celtic influences.
Therese Cox attended the showcase and writes a review of thenight: On a cold, drizzly January night, Dervish and Le Vent du Nord brought agust of rousing music, a swirl of storytelling, and bit of warmth to Drom onAvenue A.
Forget about the Eskimos’ fifty words for snow. The Irishhave just as many words for bad weather – and just as many ways for dealingwith it. It’s fitting, then, that both bands that played the APAP World MusicShowcase at Drom on this dreary January night – Ireland’s Dervish and Québec’sLe Vent du Nord (the phrase translates as “the North wind”) -- have names thatevoke a windswept, weathered landscape. Although the bands hail from differentparts of the world, the spirited energy they brought to their music andperformances acted as a perfect complement to one another – and a fittingantidote for the bitter weather.
Photo of Le Vent du Nord: Therese Cox
Call me a traditionalist, but I think the best way to enjoytrad music is huddled indoors while a storm rages outside. There should be anip of whiskey not far away and a peat fire burning. Hoots and hollers springup while musicians gather round and let loose on the tunes. For my turf fire this Monday night, I had to settlefor flickering votives. Instead of Ireland’s rugged landscape, there wasa distinctly East Village vibe to the black walls, deep-colored drapes, exposedbrick, and ponderous chandeliers, while servers in black and a bearded fella ina trompe l’oeil tuxedo shirt shuttled complicated cocktails to the tables.Fortunately, the music brought plenty of spark and warmth to the evening, making it easy to be sweptaway. I took to heart the warm, wry advice of Dervish’s Cathy Jordan, who told the gathered crowd to sit back and “Enjoy yourselves – for God’s sake!”
While Dervish’s melodies took the audience through therugged fields of the West of Ireland, Le Vent du Nord’s invitation was to the countryside of Québec. Both bands are heavy-hitters in thetraditional musical world, garnering praise and honors throughout North Americaand beyond. Both brought a vibrant, full sound to the stage, performingtraditional songs with contemporary energy, the chemistry among band membersevident and well-earned after many years of performing together. This showmarked the first excursion into New York City for Le Vent du Nord, and let us hopethey will come back soon!

Photo of Dervish: Therese Cox
Dervish stormed the stage first. Featuring Brian McDonagh onmandola, Liam Kelly on flutes and whistles, Tom Morrow on fiddle,Shane Mitchell on accordion, Cathy Jordan on vocals and bodhrán, and MichaelHolmes on bouzouki, Dervish combined stirring traditional Irish music withtheatrical energy. It’s a thrill to watch a group at the height of theirpowers, and the easy chemistry that flowed from player to player made Dervish's set dynamic. Cathy Jordan’s strong stage presence anchored Dervish throughout the set,as she alternated between singing and bodhrán. Her ethereal yet earthyvocalizations provided ornamentation over a solid set that ranged fromtraditional Irish ballads to energetic hornpipes to a handful of slowed-downjigs that showcased the band’s impeccable musicianship.


Photo of Tom Morrow and Cathy Jordan: Therese Cox
Storytelling tookcenter stage as Jordan, between songs, led the audience through the narratives,from the tale of a crossdressing woman who joined the navy to a haunting lamentfor the unfortunate children in Ireland who were farmed away to other families.Jordan’s wry introductions lightened the heavy material, including the murderballad about a man who murdered his too-lazy wife. Quipped Jordan before theband launched into the lilting 6/8 ballad, to be featured on the band’s newalbum, out this February:To all you married people out there – beware.Make sure you get up and feed the hens.” Another highlight was the band’srendition of “Boots of Spanish Leather,” which was a passionate and quiethaunting of a song. The closing piece – a set called “The Cornerhouse” – showedDervish at their most energetic and rousing and ended the set on a high note.
Photo of Simon Beaudry: Therese Cox
Le Vent du Nord’s New York City debut was by turns raucousand nuanced, a beautifully crafted showcase of traditional Québecois music,seasoned with strong Celtic and Cajun flavors. The four musicians, who havebeen playing music together for over ten years, brought a charisma to thematerial that is unmatched, sharing their enthusiasm for the material with theaudience as they performed songs from their latest album, Tromper le Temps (which translates as "fooling time"). The words were in French, but their ability to communicate with theaudience transcended the language barrier. The audience did, I note, include ascattering of enthusiastic Francophone fans who gaily sang along with the bandon traditional rave-ups like “Au Bord de la Fontaine.” An emotional highlightof the show was the group’s moving a capella rendition of “Le Retour du FilsSoldat,” that held the audience spellbound.


Photo of Le Vent du Nord: Therese Cox
The band’s Simon Beaudry (guitar,bouzouki) and Nicolas Boulerice (hurdy-gurdy, piano) alternated main vocalduties, while Réjean Brunet’s charismatic accordion, bass, and jaw harpaccentuated the tunes with a full sound and Olivier Demer’s driving violin andfoot-tapping kept the energy level high. Boulerice’s hurdy-gurdy added a grindinggrittiness to the band’s sound, and by the end of the show, the crowd was onits feet, clapping and stomping along as the band smiled and plowed their waythrough the end of a fantastic set. The band’s energy is positive andinfectious. Did I add how hard it can be to bring a black-clad, East Villagecrowd to its feet, smiling and clapping? Not a problem for Le Vent du Nord.
Photo of Le Vent du Nord: Therese Cox
After the show, I spoke with Nicolas Boulerice about thematerial, interested to learn more about the storytelling. Fortunately, Le Vent du Nord’s website has full translations of many of the band’s songs, which iswell worth checking out. I also couldn’t resist asking Boulerice about thegenesis of the band’s name. Just as the band gathers much of their materialfrom their ancestors – their version of “Au Bord de la Fontaine” was inspiredby a version passed down from Boulerice’s father from the Richelieu Valley – sodo they borrow the phrase “Le Vent du Nord” from a phrase passed down fromBoulerice’s grand-uncle. “There is a phrase," Boulerice says, "That goes, ‘Le vent dunord est toujours frette, peu importe de quell bord y vient.’” The phrase translatesroughly as “The northern wind is always cold, no matter which direction it’scoming from.” Sounds like Irish weather to my ears.

Music: APAP, part Two-- Solas and more!

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Dancing at Drom
How It's New York: The Association of Presenters and Performers (APAP) conference takes place at The Hilton, and the events described here took place at Highline Ballroom. I also went to Drom after to catch the second half of the APAP World Music Showcase (Therese Cox reviews that here!); and have some pictures from the night in this post-- spotted, Paul Keating, Tracy Crawford, Anita Daly, Réalta, The Young Folk.

How It's Irish: Most of the bands below were part of Irish showcases. And, people come from Culture Ireland, and from all over who are interested in presenting Irish music, to the conference.


What a showcase at Highline: Solas with their new CD, Shamrock City; The Duhks, Maria Doyle Kennedy, and  McAuley, Horan and O'Caoimh.

For more on APAP, see my "Captivating APAP" piece, a double-sized write-up of Saturday, Jan. 12 and Sunday, Jan. 13, including panels and music; and Therese Cox's  "Ireland's Dervish and Québec's Le Vent du Nord Storm the APAP World Music Showcase."

An earlier version of this article was first published in Irish Examiner USA, Tuesday, Feb. 5.

Continuing Our Look At This Year's APAP Week

As promised, here's a little more on what I saw during APAP week (the annual Association of Presenters and Peformers conference ).

Some showcases are open to the public. TG2Artists did a four-band night at Highline Ballroom (431 W. 16th St), which now has booths on the floor as well as on the sides.
It's always a comfortable venue and this made it more, although I do really wish venues would go easy on the lights bells and whistles.
Moving lights may work in a stadium show, but in a more intimate space it's annoying to have a light shine in your eyes.

I'm not a big fan of moving video as a backdrop, either, unless, as with Solas and their presentation of songs from their concept album Shamrock City, the video supports the music directly. And even there, less would have been more.

The four bands who played on Monday, January 14, were The Duhks, Maria Doyle Kennedy, Solas, and McAuley Horan & O'Caoimh, in reverse order.

McAuley, Horan and O'Caoimh

It was a little odd to see Winnie Horan and Mick McAuley in two sets back to back.
They make up two of the three in McAuley, Horan & O'Caoimh, Caladh Nua's Colm O'Caoimh is the third.

But it's an agency line-up, not what would be in "real life," and in fairness, the trio and Solas are different animals.

They played songs from their CD Sailing Back to You. In this line-up they are able to do French waltzes, they explained, which are not quite right for Solas.

Mick's accordion and Winnie's fiddle make these melodies a delight. Dermot Byrne and Floriane Blancke also recently released a CD with French waltzes on it. I think it's becoming a thing.
Colm joins them in singing and also plays the guitar.

Standouts from their set included Mick leading "The King's Shilling." Mick joked about James Taylor, and the funny thing is, now that you mention it, Mick does sound a bit like him.
I guess the sailing motif is why there was video of the ocean behind them... but enough of that.





Solas

Solas were up next with selections from Shamrock City.
This new CD tells the story of Michael Conway, who was a great uncle of Seamus Egan's, and who emigrated in 1911 for Butte, Montana.

Out there, where so many Irish ended up that Seamus said someone wrote a letter home saying "go directly to Butte, don't even stop in America," Michael became a miner, a boxer, and a tragic victim.
He refused to throw a fight, although the sheriff was betting against him, and crooked cops clubbed him to death.

The CD has graphics of newspaper clippings; in concert you see Michael Conway's face behind Mick as he sings the story. The original songs on the CD are by Seamus and Mick, though it's unclear who wrote music and who wrote words.



In any case, Mick's singing has become, quietly, really fine over the years, a bit like Robbie O'Connell, very soothing and also very clear.
Having a projection of the actual Michael Conway, as well as some video of Butte, helps tell the story. It's not told linearly - after Michael dies, in the beautiful ballad "Michael Conway," there are songs about the town and the ladies of the night there.

The current lineup for Solas is is Seamus Egan (flute, tenor banjo, mandolin, whistle, guitar and bodhran), Winifred Horan (fiddle), Mick McAuley (accordion and concertina), Eamon McElholm (guitar and keyboards) and vocalist Niamh Varian-Barry. What a voice she has! She belts and croons on "Girls on the Line." 

Mick asked me and my friend, playwright/actress T. Cat Ford, whether this theatrical concert should be actually scripted. While the story is clear it would in fact be helpful to have more of it, although I appreciate in this too-short set they didn't want to spend a lot of time talking.
Acting out scenes might be cheesy, but a few well-placed bits of narration are a great idea.

 It is a theatrical experience, not just a concert.
While the story is clear it would in fact be helpful to have more of it, although I appreciate in this too-short set they didn't want to spend a lot of time talking. Acting out scenes might be cheesy, but a few well-placed bits of narration are a great idea.

Maria Doyle Kennedy

Maria Doyle Kennedy is better known as an actress than as a singer: she was in The Tudors, Donwton Abbey and The Commitments. I didn't know her work as a singer and will definitely look out for it now. She performs with her husband, Kieran Kennedy, whom she called her "partner in crime."

Like Julie Feeney, Maria is a very theatrical performer, who uses her hands and twists vowels around. Her appearance is both ethereal and grounded, and her voice sounds a bit like Norah Jones. There's whimsy in her use of colored bells onstage, too. "Hola Luna," a kind of Celtic fable, was particularly striking.

The Duhks

The evening finished with The Duhks, an Irish rock band who often perform with Solas. Hailing from Winnipeg, Manitoba, this rock Irish group were groovy and strong. 

The lineup includes vocalist Jessee Harvey, original lead vocalist of the band; fiddler Tania Elizabeth, Jordan McConnell on guitar, Scott Senior on percussion, and Leonard Podolak on banjo.

Jessee has a real rock belt, like Janis Joplin meets, I don't know, Susan McKeown, and her swaying adds to the vibe.

This is not typical Irish bar band rock, more like a kind of cross between French-Canadian, Appalachian and Irish with a strong beat. There's even a little zydeco thrown in, not to mention samba. Tania Elizabeth's doesn't just play the fiddle, she performs with it as a dance partner or lover. They energized the crowd.
Information on their website and others is a little confusing about current and past line-ups, but they are working on a new EP which should be out this spring.


Overall the "four for one" structure of the Highline showcase made for a musical banquet - but left me hungry for more.

24 Şubat 2013 Pazar

Saturday, Feb. 9 Weather Cancellations/Updates

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Check back during the day for updates as they come in.
  • Seven Angels Theatre in Waterbury is moving the Valentine's Comedy Night to Sunday, Feb. 10 at 6 pm. Champagne and Chocolates at 5 pm.
  • Long Wharf’s 3 pm performance of January Joiner hasbeen cancelled due to the storm. The box office is currently closed and willreopen as soon as it is safe to do so. Immediate ticketing questions pleaseemail boxoffice@longwharf.org.
  • Both performances of Stones in His Pockets at Yale Rep are cancelled.
  • Tonight's performance of Breath and Imagination at Hartford Stage is cancelled. If you had tickets for tonight's performance, the box office will be in contact with you in the next two days. The box office is closed today.
  • Concora's Modern Masters concert has been postponed until 7:30 pm Monday, Feb. 11 (from 4 pm Sunday, Feb. 10)



CONCORA Cancels Modern Masters Concert

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After careful deliberation, CONCORA has reluctantly decided to cancel the "Modern Masters" concert, originally scheduled for Sunday, Feb. 10 and moved to the snow date of Monday, Feb. 11.

Many area roads remain unplowed and impassable; one-third of the singers are unable to get to New Britain for rehearsal Sunday afternoon. And Monday's weather reports call for a great deal of rain, which will cause flooding in some areas, and will most likely freeze in the evening, making travel perilousfor both performers and audience members.

The Bach concert will be on March 24 at Immanuel Congregational Church in Hartford. The Modern Masters concert will be presented at the American Guild of Organists Convention on July 1 in Hartford, and again during the 2013-2014 season.