| |
||||
|
||||
| “Virtuosic, fascinating,
dramatic, original, inspired, gloriously adventurous, dazzling, brilliant,
stunning, impassioned, electrifying, bewitching, moving, achingly beautiful,
influential, revered, unique...” MÁIRE is one of Ireland’s most important and influential traditional musicians, described by the late Derek Bell as “the most interesting & original player of the Irish harp today”. She grew up in a well-known West Cork musical family who were active in the Cork Pipers' Club and was already proficient in a variety of other instruments by the time that she began to play the harp at the age of eleven. Using her knowledge of the idiom of the living oral Irish tradition, she developed a variety of new techniques, particularly in relation to ornamentation, with the aim of establishing an authentically traditional style of harping - “a single-handed reinvention of the harp”. Her originality was quickly recognised and she made a number of TV and radio broadcasts as a teenager, going on to win the All-Ireland and Pan-Celtic Harp Competitions on several occasions. Her live performances had been creating a stir since 1978, when she first toured Germany as part of the hugely-influential and commercially-successful Irish Folk Festival tour. Her very first recording was made for the live compilation album released to commemorate that tour; other artists featured were Liam O'Flynn, Andy Irvine, Dolores Keane & John Faulkner, Mick Hanly and Máirtin O'Connor. In 1985 she recorded the first harp album ever to concentrate on traditional Irish dance music, The New-Strung Harp, described by The Irish Examiner as "an intensely passionate and intelligent record… a mile-stone in Irish harp music”. Her approach has had a profound influence on the new generation of Irish harpers and she was awarded Gradam Cheoil TG4 (Irish Traditional Musician of the Year) in Ireland in 2001 - a very public national recognition of her pioneering work. “If Máire wasn’t around, Irish harping would be so much the poorer: her work restores the harp to its true voice." - The Irish Times Her “celebrated virtuoso partnership” (The Daily Telegraph) with Chris Newman, “one of the UK’s most staggering & influential acoustic guitarists” (Folk Roots), made its début at the 1987 Cambridge Folk Festival. Their performances have been described as “music of fire & brilliance from the high-wire act in traditional music” by The Irish Times, they've made many appearances on TV and radio and their busy touring schedule has brought them to twenty-one countries on five continents. Click here for their latest news. Of their five albums together, The Living Wood (1988) was the Daily Telegraph’s Folk Album of the Year, Out of Court (1991) was "stunning... one of the most refreshingly innovative releases in recent years" - Folk Roots, The Carolan Albums (1994) was “a masterpiece of virtuosity” - The Daily Telegraph, Live in the Highlands (1995) was “One of the best live albums I’ve heard for a long time... captures the essence of these remarkable performers in a rare and priceless way. Absolutely essential.“ - Folk Roots and Dialogues:Agallaimh (2001) was “Terrific: brilliant, beautiful, rich, virtuosic, delightful, classic, perfect!” Their new duo album FireWire will be released on January 29th, 2007. The unique atmosphere of their live concerts as a duo continues to generate some extraordinary reviews. “Their virtuosity leads them on: Máire chomps on the bit of the harp's respectability, playing storming jigs & reels...” - The Irish Times “This celebrated duo took the place by storm. Stately Carolan tunes, jazzy Django-ish numbers, dazzling flat picking fliers, driving Irish dance tunes - this pair can nonchalantly do the lot. Guitar players applauded & went sadly home to burn their instruments!” - Belfast Telegraph “Their blinding technique and sizzling Irish reels brought an extended standing ovation...” - The West Australian “A truly electrifying combination" - The Stage "The audience were charmed and dazzled by the speed, the deftness, the emotional range of their playing... Máire's clear, warm and expressive voice... Their stagecraft was masterly and their introductions informative and funny..." - Christchurch Press (New Zealand) “Newman led us on death-defying sprints while Máire confirmed her status as one of the world’s greatest harpists” – Edinburgh Evening News "It isn't every day one gets to hear musicians whose playing and singing are so moving, so wonderfully executed with such technical brilliance and beauty, that they actually bring tears to one's eyes; they did to mine, and that evening in Tallaght will remain a lasting and unforgettable memory." - Irish Music Magazine “Managed to do things I have never heard a harp do before… The gasps from the audience, particularly from the other harp players, made one realise that here was a very special performer indeed… I was alternately astonished and delighted with the entire concert: the skills with which they interacted, and the beautiful music they performed left a lasting impression on me and surely anyone else who was privileged to witness this extraordinary event.” - Classical Guitar Magazine Máire has perfomed at many harp festivals around the world, most recently the Ninth World Harp Congress held in Dublin in July 2005, where in addition to participating in the opening concert in St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, she gave a rare solo concert as part of the Celtic Highlights series. (The concert she shared with Gráinne Yeats at the 1993 World Harp Congress in Copenhagen marked the first occasion on which the Irish harp was featured at the Congress - primarily a classical music event.) She's also performed at the World Harp Festival (Cardiff) and Festivals held in Belfast, Dublin and Boston to commemorate the bicentennial of the 1792 Belfast Harp Festival. Solo performances by Máire happen very rarely. Prior to her World Harp Congress concert in July 2005, her most recent solo concert was for the 2002 Birmingham Early Music Festival - having been coaxed into it by an old University friend (Dr Mary O'Neill, Director of the Festival and head of Birmingham University's Centre for Early Music Performance and Research)! Máire holds an honours B.A. degree in Celtic Studies from University College Cork. Two books of her harp arrangements, The Irish Harper Voume I and The Irish Harper Voume II have been published by Old Bridge Music. Máire contributed two articles about the Irish harp and modes in Irish music to the Companion to Irish Traditional Music (Cork University Press) & is profiled in Celtic Women in Music (Mairéad Sullivan, Quarry Music Books, Canada). She's also profiled in the Rough Guide to Irish Music. Máire now concentrates primarily on performance. However, she’s always placed a high priority on passing on her knowledge & techniques to the next generation, with the aim – now largely achieved - of re-integrating the Irish harp into the mainstream of the living oral Irish tradition. She has been giving masterclasses in Europe and the USA since the mid-1970s with the result that her ideas and techniques are now very widely disseminated. 2005 was her twentieth year as senior tutor at An Chúirt Chruitireachta, the Summer School/Festival organised by Cairde na Cruite (The Irish Harp Society) in Termonfeckin, Co Louth, where harpers come from all over the world to study with her. (See www.harp.net/cnac/cnacfest.htm or contact the Secretary of the Society and Director of the Festival, Aibhlín McCrann, at mccranna@eircom.net for further details.) She has taught in the past at the Cork School of Music (where she developed the first ever examination syllabus for non-pedal harp) and at the Leeds College of Music. She’s currently principal harp tutor for Newcastle University’s Folk B.Mus. course and has been a guest tutor for the University of Limerick's B.A. and M.A. courses. Chris and Máire are featured on the major BBC 2 TV series on Irish music Bringing it All Back Home - the associated BBC book features a large photograph of Máire on the front cover – and on Polygram USA’s major 1998 Celtic harp album and associated PBS TV special Celtic Harpestry. They’re also featured on Irish rock legend Rory Gallagher’s posthumous 2003 album on BMG, Wheels within Wheels. Máire is harp and voice soloist with the New English Chamber Orchestra and the Choir of New College Oxford on John Cameron's major work Missa Celtica, released by Erato Disques, Paris. (Further information at www.johncameronmusic.com) The Goldcrest film Driftwood features her singing, and her harping and compositions feature with Dónal Lunny, Sharon Shannon, Máire's sister Nollaig Casey and other luminaries of the Celtic music world on Dan ar Braz's Gold Disc-awarded album for Sony France Finisterres. Máire is now sponsored by William Rees Harps of Rising Sun, Indiana, www.traditionalharps.com William makes wonderful, sweet-toned but powerful instruments and Máire is currently recording another solo album on a specially modified version of his Aberdeen model.
2006 HIGHLIGHTS: Festivals included South Eastern Harp Weekend, Asheville, North Carolina and Steve Kaufman's Acoustic Kamp, Maryville, Tennessee - Chris solo (USA); Folkest Festival, Celtica Festival and Andar per Musica Festival (all Italy); Cúirt Chruitireachta Harp Festival (Ireland); Halkaer Kro Festival, Denmark; Victor Hugo International Music Festival, Guernsey; Folk Festival on the Pier, Cromer, Norfolk; Beaford Arts Festival, Devon; Haverhill Festival, Suffolk; and Gillingham Festival, Dorset (all UK). Additional highlights for Máire included a 16-date nationwide lecture tour of the US in March / April 2006 at the invitation of the Irish American Cultural Institute (she is Ireland's premier traditional harper and an expert on the history and repertoire of the Irish harp). Broadcasts included a half-hour programme in the November 2006 Lay of the Land series on RTÉ Lyric FM devoted to an interview with Máire and discussion of her compositions. Several excerpts from the concerts Chris gave at the Acoustic Kamp in Tennessee can be found on YouTube.com: you can see video clips of some great duets with Steve Kaufman and Mark Cosgrove, among others. A profile of Máire and Chris appeared in the Summer 2006 issue of the Italian magazine Keltika, and interviews will be appearing in a number of other magazines over the next few months in connection with the release of their new CD.
2005 HIGHLIGHTS: Festivals during the year included Chicago Celtic Festival; Isolo del Liri Festival and Brindisi Festival, (Italy); Ninth World Harp Congress, O'Carolan Harp Festival, Nobber, Co Meath and Cúirt Chruitireachta Harp Festival (Ireland); Gosport Festival; Chesterfield Festival; Beverley Folk Festival, Belper Nailers Moot Festival, Wath on Dearne Festival, Wheaton Aston Festival and Whitby Folk Festival (all UK). Additional highlights for Máire included a prestigious solo recital at the World Harp Congress, held in Dublin in July 2005. (The concert she shared with Gráinne Yeats at the 1993 World Harp Congress in Copenhagen marked the first occasion on which the Irish harp was featured at the Congress.) She also played at the opening gala concert of the Congress (with Nobel laureate Séamus Heaney) held in St Patrick's Cathedral and broadcast live on Ireland's premier classical music station, RTÉ Lyric FM. (Last year Máire was Artist of the Week on the same station.) Other notable recent broadcasts were their very successful appearance on BBC Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour.
2004 HIGHLIGHTS:
2003 HIGHLIGHTS: Chris and Máire’s playing features on Irish rock legend Rory Gallagher’s posthumous album Wheels within Wheels (BMG, 2003), launched at a star-studded party at the Irish Embassy in London last March. Have a look at www.rorygallagher.com for further information. Máire was recently Lyric FM’s Artist of the Week: she gave five short interviews on each week-day in which she discussed her background, career and musical inspiration, and introduced her choice of music. (Lyric FM is Ireland’s premier classical music station, a division of the State broadcaster, RTÉ.) 2003 Irish TV performances included RTÉ’s Open House and TG4’s Geantraí Christmas Day Special. They received some amazing reviews for their performances in 2003. Of
a Dublin performance last April, Irish Music Magazine
said in the July 2003 issue “It isn’t every day one gets
to hear musicians whose singing and playing are so moving, so wonderfully
executed with such technical brilliance and beauty, that they actually
bring tears to one’s eyes; this extraordinary pair did to mine,
and that evening will remain a lasting & unforgettable memory.”
2002 HIGHLIGHTS: In addition, Máire gave a rare solo concert at the Birmingham Early Music Festival in November.
|
|
|||
| Back to Top of Page | ||||
| © 2003 - 2007 Old Bridge Music | ||||