 Altan
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| May 2004 Feature: Altan |
Gaelic music stars team up for Tune
Up |
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As Irish band Altan prepare to launch a tour with Cliar
on both sides of the Irish Sea, KENNY MATHIESON charts their recovery from the
tragic loss of a founder member to remain at the forefront of Irish
music
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THE TOUR THAT will take Altan and Cliar around small venues in the
Highlands and Islands this month is undoubtedly one of the most eagerly awaited
events of the year. Altan were last seen in these parts in the main auditorium
at the Eden Court Theatre, and it is only the funding made available by a
combination of the Scottish Arts Council’s Tune Up scheme and The Columba
Initiative in Ireland that has made the project remotely possible in venues of
this size. |
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Cliar’s Mary Ann Kennedy has been fundamental in pulling the tour together.
The idea went back to discussions when the two bands met during filming for a
Gaelic television programme in Stornoway several years ago, but always seemed a
pipedream until the Tune Up scheme suddenly opened a
door. |
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A subsequent application to The Columba Initiative in Ireland allowed the two
bands to add a full week of additional dates on both sides of the Irish border
to their schedule, as well as an imaginative outreach project in which four
young professional musicians (two Scots and two Irish) will visit schools and
community locations ahead of the main bands, supported by additional aid from
Bòrd na Gàidhlig, Iomairt Cholm Cille and Live Music
Now! |
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The chance to catch Altan in such intimate settings is a
mouth-watering prospect. They been one of the leading forces in Irish
traditional music for well over a decade now, and survived the tragic loss of
their co-founder, flautist Frankie Kennedy, who died from bone cancer in 1994.
“I'm so glad we did keep going, because I think
it helped us all get through what was a very hard time. I think we all took
strength from carrying on his work, and anything else would have been an insult
to his memory."
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They emerged from that grief with renewed strength and purpose. Frankie
formed the band with his wife, singer and fiddler Mairéad Ní Mhaonaigh, in the
late 1980s. The pair met as teenagers when the Belfast-born flautist was a
regular visitor to musical gatherings in her native Donegal. They trained
together as teachers, but eventually were able to concentrate on the band, which
had grown from their original duo into a five or six-piece line up, led by the
twin fiddles of Mairéad and Ciarán Tourish, sometimes augmented by a third
fiddler, Paul O Shaughnessy.
The combination of the fiddles with Frankie's flute gave the band a highly
distinctive sound, as did the northern bias in their material, drawn from both
sides of the border. They were riding high when his illness was diagnosed. He
continued playing whenever possible while undergoing treatment, but eventually
was unable to carry on. He died in Belfast in 1994, and was buried in Donegal. I
asked Mairéad if the band had considered anything other than carrying on at that
low point. |
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"No, there was no thought about that. It was an unsaid thing, but I don't
think any of us considered stopping, and I think if we had it would have been a
betrayal of what Frankie put into the band. I'm so glad we did keep going,
because I think it helped us all get through what was a very hard time. I think
we all took strength from carrying on his work, and anything else would have
been an insult to his memory."
Altan took their name from a lake in the shadow of Mount Errigal, near
Mairéad's home in Gaoth Dobhair (Gweedore). She comes from a family rich in
music. Her father is a fine fiddler in the Donegal style, her mother plays
accordion, and her grandparents were also musicians. |
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The current line-up of the band still reflects their
strong Donegal roots. Accordionist Dermot Byrne (now married to Mairéad) and
fiddler Ciarán Tourish are also from the county, while bouzouki player Ciarán
Curran hails from nearby Fermanagh. Guitarist Dáithí Sproule is originally from
just across the border in Derry, but has been based in the USA for many years,
and the other guitarist, Mark Kelly is a Dubliner.
“It's very spontaneous, and I think it keeps it
exciting.”
Their repertoire is a characteristic mix of traditional tunes and their own
material, instrumental sets and Mairéad's lovely singing. The interplay of the
two fiddles remains central to Altan's sound. Mairéad and Ciarán Tourish have
developed their own distinctive approach, but the idea is very much rooted in
the tradition.
"That was very definitely part of the Donegal tradition,” she confirmed, “and
also in Kerry. It was mainly a solo tradition, but two fiddles were used to
augment the sound and complement the main fiddle, but one of the fiddles would
always play harmony, or octave. What we do is basically a variation on that
idea, where the second fiddle will play around a bit more with the melody. It's
very spontaneous, and I think it keeps it exciting. |
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"We had the three fiddles when Paul O Shaughnessy was in the band, but Paul
had a job and a young family, and wasn't able to tour when we started going to
the USA and so on. He still plays quite a bit, and if he is in the audience, we
always have him up. Mind you, we can't just do that with anybody – Paul knows
exactly how to play with us, and he knows the nuances of the music."
The band are eagerly looking forward to this unique visit to Scotland.
Playing these small Highland venues is a long-cherished aim, and a far cry from
venues like the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall. Altan's visits to Scotland have not
been as frequent as they (or we) would like in recent years, but the band are
fully occupied on the world circuit, playing frequently in Europe, the USA, and
Japan.
"There has been a huge interest in Celtic music in Japan in recent years.
We've been over a good few times now, and it felt like the audience had doubled
each time we went. We were told they wouldn't react that much, but we found them
like any other audience we play for. I think when they like something they
really take it to heart, and go full blast on it!"
Altan and Cliar play the following dates in the Highlands and Islands:
- Farr Hall, Strathnairn, Wednesday 26 May 2004
- Southend Hall, Daliburgh, South Uist, Thursday 27 May 2004
- Talla Shomhairle @ Aros, Portree, Isle of Skye, Friday 28 May 2004
- Aros Hall, Tobermory, Isle of Mull, Saturday 29 May
2004
- Bowmore Hall, Bowmore, Isle of Islay, Tuesday 1 June 2004
- Arainn Shuaineirt, Ardnamurchan High School, Strontian, Wednesday 2
June 2004
© Kenny Mathieson, 2004
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| December 2008 Editorial |
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Posted by Commissioning Editor, Kenny Mathieson, on
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