Search - Mick Moloney, Various Artists :: Far From the Shamrock Shore

Far From the Shamrock Shore
Mick Moloney, Various Artists
Far From the Shamrock Shore
Genres: Folk, International Music, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (17) - Disc #1

Mick Moloney was born in Limerick, Ireland, but makes his home in the U.S. As on 1995's Out of Ireland, his subject is the Irish in America, specifically how generations of desperate immigrants took ship, made landfall,...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Mick Moloney, Various Artists
Title: Far From the Shamrock Shore
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: Shanachie
Release Date: 2/12/2002
Genres: Folk, International Music, Pop
Styles: Traditional Folk, British & Celtic Folk, Celtic, Europe, Britain & Ireland
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 016351785022, 669910079355

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Mick Moloney was born in Limerick, Ireland, but makes his home in the U.S. As on 1995's Out of Ireland, his subject is the Irish in America, specifically how generations of desperate immigrants took ship, made landfall, struggled for their livelihoods, and, finally, achieved economic and social parity. He is a convincing storyteller, inhabiting the lives of railroad laborers, sailors, Civil War volunteers, and separated lovers. Backup singers Beverley Smith and Saul Broudy perform with rare empathy and grace. Fiddler Eileen Ivers, late of Riverdance, is rich toned and idiomatic, but Bruce Molsky and Marie Reilly are also remarkably fine players. Standouts include an affecting version of "Skibereen," a famine-era dirge describing the deliberate, relentless starvation of an entire village. And on "Sweet King Williamstown," a lad from steerage survives the sinking of the Titanic only to meet his fate during World War I. The accompanying book is sold separately. --Christina Roden

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CD Reviews

Passion, humor, tragedy, and music to match
Jerome Clark | Canby, Minnesota | 03/27/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Far from the Shamrock Shore is an ambitious, expertly executed treatment of the mostly forgotten tradition of Irish-American song. The accents here are as much American as Irish, and so are the musical settings, which owe more to 19th-Century string bands than to Celtic flute-and-pipe orchestras. No one, in other words, will confuse what he or she hears with an Altan or Chieftains recording. Instead, Celtic-revival pioneer and folklorist Mick Moloney highlights the varieties of music sung and performed by a people finding their way in a New World; though they have not forgotten where they came from, the old country is receding into fond memory and sentimental mist.The result is a wide-ranging selection of period folk ballads and popular songs. In those days, Moloney shows, these two genres often overlapped, and they freely plundered each other's lyrics and melodies. Though written by Dan Emmett (the Northern minstrel-show composer best known for "Dixie"), the terrific "Boatman's Dance" sounds as authentic a riverman's song as "Rock About My Saro Jane." Moloney, in fact, speculates that Emmett may have based "Dance" on a forgotten Ohio River song sung by African-American boatmen.More representative of a purer, older Irish tradition are "Green Grows the Laurel," "Paddy Works on the Railway" (done in a variant you probably have not heard before), "You Lovers All," and "Erin's Green Shore." Several powerful Civil War-era songs -- including the irresistible patriotic rouser and barroom bellow "The Irish Volunteer" -- attest to the significant role newly arrived Irish immigrants played in that great and bloody conflict. This is a splendid recording, an excursion into history full of the passion, humor, hard times, and wonderful music of those who lived it and made it."
Far From The Shamrock Shore
Philip J. Murray Sr. | Allentown, New Jersey | 04/27/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)

"As for fans of Trad...traditional Irish Music, Far From the Shamrock Shore by Mick Moloney, it just doesn't get any better than this CD. Each song will make you tap your toes and listen along to his musical story, "The Irish-American Story" in song. The first song, the Boatman's Dance, sets the tone for a great listen.



For fans of Irish Trad, this CD is a must!"