Irish fiddle – AcousticMusicScene.com https://acousticmusicscene.com Sat, 29 Jan 2022 16:57:39 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 St. Brigid’s Day Concert Livestreams on Feb. 1 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2022/01/29/st-brigids-day-concert-livestreams-on-feb-1/ Sat, 29 Jan 2022 16:37:54 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=11911
Irish fiddle phenom Eileen Ivers performs during the Milwaukee Irish Fest (Photo: Tim Reilly)
Irish fiddle phenom Eileen Ivers performs during the Milwaukee Irish Fest (Photo: Tim Reilly)
A wide array of female Irish musicians will participate in a free, online St. Brigid’s Day Concert on February 1, 2022 at 8 p.m. EST, in celebration of the Irish patron saint and Celtic goddess. Presented by the Association of Irish & Celtic Festivals, with support from the Embassy and Consulates of Ireland in the U.S., the concert will be co-hosted by noted artists Eileen Ivers and Joanie Madden.

“St. Brigid was a light in the darkest of times, a peacemaker, a woman who provided sustenance and a safe haven for all,”” notes Ivers, a Grammy Award-winning Irish American fiddler. “I’m thrilled to be joining other female artists as part of a livestream concert honoring this beloved Irish saint. May the perpetual flame that St. Brigid ignited so long ago, which still burns in Kildare Town’s Market Square today, live in our hearts and shine through the gift of music and community.” The livestream concert can be viewed on The Association of Irish & Celtic Festivals’ Facebook page.

Along with Ivers and Madden, a flutist and tin whistle player who has been at the helm of the New York-based all-female Irish music ensemble Cherish the Ladies since its inception in 1985, the following artists will be showcasing their musical talents:

The Bowtides (a trio of fiddlers who spent 14 cumulative years – never at the same time – in Gaelic Storm), Ashley Davis (an eclectic American singer-songwriter), Goitse (a multi-award-winning traditional Irish ensemble), Dani Larkin (a singer-songwriter and folk musician from the Armagh-Monaghan border whose music is inspired by the folktales she was raised with, intertwined with elements of traditional melodies and rhythms from around the world in a timeless tradition), Susan O’Neill (SON, an enigmatic singer-songwriter who fuses traditional Irish folk with rock, soul, gospel and blues), Cathie Ryan (an award-winning Irish-American vocalist and songwriter who was the original lead singer with Cherish the Ladies), Clare Sands (a versatile Cork-born fiddler, multi-instrumentalist, composer and singer-songwriter with deep family roots in Northern Ireland and County Wexford, whose sound is rooted in Irish traditional music), and Aoife Scott (a Dublin-based folksinger-songwriter who is part of the legendary Black Family).

St. Brigid's Day Concert 2022The Association of Irish & Celtic Festivals (AICF) is a collective of more than 170 festivals throughout The United States and Canada that aims to bring the Irish culture – via music, education, food and dance – to those not in Ireland in the hopes that those traditions are never lost. Referring to the concert as “a celebration of the female spirit,” Erin O’Rourke from Indy Irish Fest in Indianapolis and an AICF executive board member, said: “We hope that by highlighting this Irish patron saint and her holiday and stories, we can entertain and educate audiences with a program that celebrates her, and some of the best female Irish musicians and dancers across the world.” More information about the St. Brigid’s Day Concert and AICF may be found at irishcelticfestivals.org.

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Martin Fay, Original Member of The Chieftains, 1936-2012 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2012/11/17/martin-fay-original-member-of-the-chieftains-1936-2012/ Sat, 17 Nov 2012 06:27:29 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=5912 Martin Joseph Fay, an Irish fiddler and bones player who was a founding member of The Chieftains, died Nov. 14. He was 76 and had been ill for some time.

Martin Fay
A native of Dublin, Ireland, Fay was a classically-trained violinist. whose initial interest in music was inspired by “The Magic Bow,” a romanticized 1946 film about Nicolo Pagganini featuring Yedudi Menuhin. Fay played in the orchestra of the Abbey Theater, Ireland’s national theater, early in his musical career. Sean O’Riada, the orchestra’s musical director, recruited Fay, who had little interest in Irish music, to be part of the chamber-folk instrumental ensemble Ceoltoiri Chualann. Also in that group was uilleann piper Paddy Moloney, who launched The Chieftains in November 1962. Moloney is the sole remaining founding member of the Grammy Award-winning group that helped to revive and popularize traditional Irish music worldwide and was named as Ireland’s official musical ambassadors.

Fay “had a serious face but would have the rest of us in stitches,” Maloney told Irish newspapers. The Belfast Telegraph quoted him as saying: “As a player, he was fantastic. For instance, the theme music for Stanley Kubrick’s Barry Lyndon, the first fiddle you hear is Martin. That’s the kind of magical music he leaves behind.” It was The Chieftains’ work on the soundtrack to that 1975 film that helped catapult the group to international stardom. Fay stopped performing with The Chieftains just over a decade ago, having reduced his touring commitments in 2001 before retiring the following year.

On The Chieftains’ official website, his former bandmates posted the following message shortly after his death was announced: “Martin’s memory and music will be with The Chieftains always. He will be dearly missed.”

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