‘Canvas’ is a truly remarkable piece of work. It could be step dancing, a horn section counterpoint fiddles. The song opens with fairly traditional fiddle stylings and builds with rock bass and drums before a Hammond break leads into an outrageously over-the-top wah-wah guitar solo from the album’s producer Elmer Ferrer that sums up the album you really don’t know what’s coming next. ‘The Case of the Mysterious Squabbyquash’ is another kitchen sink production that gives a nod to the great Irish folk-rock fusion band, Horslips. ‘So You Love’, featuring classical cellist Yo Yo Ma which starts with a solo piano, builds through a combination of Gaelic and Eastern European styles, string ensembles and a cello solo before speeding up into a huge string section with counterpoint fiddles and releasing the tension with a slow finish it’s a symphony in miniature. ![]() That was definitely one of the smiley moments. The other James Scott Skinner to appear on the album, ‘The East Neuk of Fife’ begins its journey as a traditional fiddle piece before Natalie’s variations on the theme take over and the slap bass kicks in. If you’re not admiring the quality of the musicianship, you’ll be smiling at the audacity of some of the fusion arrangements. Of the album’s thirteen pieces, two have lyrics (‘Woman of the House’ is sung by Rhiannon Giddens in Gaelic while ‘Wish You Were Near’ is sung by its author, Robyn Cunningham), three have backing vocals and the remaining eight are instrumentals ranging from the plaintive traditional James Scott Skinner tune ‘The Laird o’ Bemersyde’ to some absolutely bonkers (in the best possible way) fusions with other musical traditions. And they are very interesting combinations. It’s a sketch that introduces atmospheric banjo and fiddle with some ethereal backing vocals and a bit of synth bass, hinting at some of the interesting combinations yet to come. ![]() The title track and exposition is a very short piece priming the canvas for the rest of the album. All the way from Scotland in the nineteenth century to Spain and Latin America in the 2020s that’s a broad and sometimes weird canvas. ![]() The response of Natalie MacMaster and Donnell Leahy was to take the opportunity to go back to basics and start all over again with a tabula rasa, or a blank canvas, fusing their traditional musical roots with a huge variety of influences from across the globe and across the ages. And still the pandemic albums keep coming it took a while to adjust, but the adversity of 20 was a genuine mother of invention.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |