Posts Tagged ‘ celtic music

Tuesday Tunes: Sara Banleigh & Ashley Davis

Tuesday Tunes is a new weekly feature that I’ll be hosting here at Read All Over Reviews in order to offer more music content. There’s nothing I like better than discovering amazing music (save perhaps discovering a great book). Tuesday Tunes will appear every week on Tuesday, obviously, and will showcase favorites of mine as well as recently discovered wonders. This week I’ll be featuring folk singers Ashley Davis and Sara Banleigh.

Ashley Davis

I’ve been listening to Ashley for well over a year now. I can’t really remember how I came across her music, but I do remember that “Down By the Sea” (offered for free on her website) was the first song of hers I heard and it was pretty much love at first listen after that.

So far Ashley has released two albums, Closer to You (2005) and Down By the Sea (2009), with her latter album being available via eMusic for those not wanting to shell out over $20 through Amazon or are only looking for single MP3 downloads. Ashley began writing Closer to You when she was 26 and as thus it is a very intimate album of multi-layered original songs. Her rich alto voice is soothing, sensual and is like a siren’s call, flirting with Celtic and Eastern European sounds. Ashley reminds me a great deal of Loreena McKennitt with this album. Songs that standout to me are “Rhiannon’s Lullaby”, “Come With Me” and “Coming Home”.

Down by the Sea, however, is much more organic and simple. It features a good many traditional Celtic songs (“Raglan Road”, “Doire Cholm Cille”, “Mannanan Song”, “The Flower of Magherally O”, and “Ná Fataí Bána”) as well as some penned by Ashley (“Rathlin Rant”, “Down by the Sea”, “This I Do”, “Sea Blue Eyes”, “Lessons in Irish”, and “Beannachtaí”), giving it a great balance of traditional and modern. What this album has that Closer to You didn’t is help from some amazing names in Irish folk music (Moya Brennan and Joanie Madden to name a couple) as well as showcasing the languages Gaeilge (Irish) and Gaelg (Manx). “Mannanan Song” and “Down by the Sea” still remain my favorites.  Read more

Teresa

Teresa (nom de plume: Torrance Sené) is a self-proclaimed geek, a Janeite, a lover of werewolves and bad-ass angels, an aspiring novelist and an avid book reader who freelances as a web designer. You can follow her on Twitter at @eireannoir.

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Review & CD Giveaway: Julie Fowlis ‘Uam’

** Contest located at the end of my review. **

I cannot recall where I first came in contact with Julie’s music, but I believe it was through a friend in Wales who sent me her second album ‘Cuilidh’ back in 2008. Since then, I’ve been following her career and was quite happy to see her new album, ‘Uam’, listed on eMusic one day in January especially since it wasn’t scheduled for release in the states until March 9th. Needless to say, I snatched it up without delay.

‘Uam’ is Julie’s third album as a solo artist, and is probably her best yet. The title of her junior endeavor translates as ’from me’, and that is exactly what we have here—incredibly rich renditions of traditional Gaelic tunes (and even one written by Julie and Éamon for a family wedding), in which Julie’s beguiling voice never fails to enchant. The listener gets the feeling that these songs are ones that mean a lot of Julie and in that sense are from her, a gift held dear and shared with us. Read more

Teresa

Teresa (nom de plume: Torrance Sené) is a self-proclaimed geek, a Janeite, a lover of werewolves and bad-ass angels, an aspiring novelist and an avid book reader who freelances as a web designer. You can follow her on Twitter at @eireannoir.

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