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As anyone who listens to much
Steve Earle knows, Steve spends a lot of time in Ireland. Going
all the way back to "Copperhead Road," Earle has regularly
included Irish musicians and Irish sounds on this records. On
his most recent record, "Transcendental Blues," Earle
recorded several cuts in Galway, Ireland, where he was holed
up working on a book of poems and occasionally writing songs.
Accordionist Sharon Shannon was a central figure in those recordings.
Earle has simply described Shannon as a virtuoso of her instrument,
the button accordion. During this year's Houston International
Festival, Shannon played several engagements in Houston and was
asked to perform with another ensemble of European virtuosos,
Bela Fleck and the Flecktones, at one of the event's premier
showcases.
In 1989 while in the initial stages of recording the album,
she was asked by Mike Scott, who was present at the session,
to join the internationally popular band The Waterboys. Shannon
put her album on hold until The Waterboys broke up over a year
later. After a tour with Irish traditional legend Christy Moore,
Ms. Shannon again struck out on her own. With a diverse group
of Irish traditional players, she finished her project begun
in 1989, producing fifteen soaring, soul-lifting examples of
instrumental music in what might best be described (quite oxymoronically)
as a neo-traditionalist style. Most of the music is "traditional"
sounding, although some of the tunes that are included were recent
and some were "non-Irish." Ms. Shannon's record became
the top selling Irish traditional album ever. It was also a
source of much debate within Irish musical circles as to just
how traditional it was. For her part, Ms. Shannon has always
avoided that sort of debate, preferring to let her accordion,
her arrangements, and her ensembles do the talking. She has
moved further and further from "traditional" with her
newer albums.
After the smashing
success of "Sharon Shannon," she joined other standout
Irish female musicians Frances Black, Dolores Keane, Eleanor
McEvoy, Mary Black and Maura O'Connell in an ensemble named A
Woman's Heart. Their 1992 album became the top selling Irish
record of all time. Ms. Shannon became so renowned and revered
in Ireland that she was given an entire program of "Late,
Late Night," Ireland's most popular TV variety show. To
realize the magnitude of this, consider that it took The Chieftains,
probably the Irish traditional band most familiar to Americans,
25 years to get a "Late, Late Night" show for themselves.
Now ten years after its original release, Compass Records
has re-released Shannon's self-titled 1991 record. Through her
own records plus the international attention and exposure she's
gotten through her association with Earle's record, her name
is now much more widely known than it was in 1991, where few
beyond the shores of Ireland were aware of her.
The album is a wonderful set of tunes that are not only enjoyable
but that are highly educational for those of us not familiar
with Irish musical forms. Shannon and her cohorts perform slides,
hornpipes, waltzes, jigs, reels, airs, Cajun tunes, and even
a Portugese corindinio (traditional dance tune), and they nail
them all. It is all played with a wonderful spirit and zest,
and the aura is completely and totally green.
Shannon's energy and playing skill are mesmerizing. The woman
simply has the magic of leprechauns in her fingers. The intelligence
it takes to play the complex melodies and rhythms of these tunes
is comparable to that of symphony musicians. While the music
is joyous and occasionally borders on blissful insanity, it is
a serious and complex music that demands a listener's attention.
This album is a thing of beauty and it has many echoes that
Americana music fans will find quite recognizable from American
country music. If you like peaceful music for the head or mad,
wild music for the feet, music that truly brings joy and pleasure,
you can't go wrong with Sharon Shannon.
* Buy Sharon Shannon's self-titled album at www.compassrecords.com
and be the center of attention next Saint Patrick's Day.
Contact William Michael Smith at: wms-at-rockzilla.net
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