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The Best of / Sharon Shannon Dlcd 028
The Best of / Sharon Shannon Dlcd 028
Nuevo 23,31€Ahorras 14,12€
9,19€
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Folk inglés y célticoMúsica internacional (CDs y vinilos)
EAN |
0689232012380
Envío GRATIS
Devolución 30 días
¡Última unidad disponible!
Estado
Pago Seguro
Autor
Sharon Shannon, Kirsty Mac Coll
Descripción
DESCRIPCIÓN DEL PRODUCTO
DESCRIPCIÓN DEL PRODUCTO
Following the huge demand for 'The Galway Girl' single since the airing of the fantastic Magners advert across all TV and Radio channels, IRL is now making the track available on a new Sharon Shannon Best of album. This 13 track album includes a selection of classic Sharon Shannon favourites along with both versions of the hit single, The Galway Girl - the original version featuring Steve Earle and the newly recorded studio version with Mundy. Special guests also featured on the album include: Damien Dempsey, Dessie O'Halloran, Kirsty MacColl, Michael McGoldrick, Jackson Browne and Mike Scott of The Waterboys. The title track was written by Steve Earle while he was spending some time living in Galway writing a book. It was first recorded by Earle and Shannon in 1999 for Shannon's hugely successful 'Diamond Mountain Sessions' album. The song has been gaining in popularity ever since, reflected earlier this year when it won the most downloaded single for 2007 at the Irish Meteor Awards. Mundy has been performing the song at Sharon Shannon Big Band shows across the country in recent times and had the opportunity to perform it with Steve Earle at last year's Cambridge Folk Festival much to the festival goers delight.
OPINIÓN
Lista de canciones:
Disco 1
1. The Galway Girl (with Steve Earle)
2. Blackbird
3. What You Make It da,da,da,da (with Marvel & Lady K )
4. Gaffo's Ball
5. Courtin' In The Kitchen (with Dessie O'Halloran, Damien Dempsey & Mundy )
6. I've No Alibi (with Damien Dempsey live )
7. Tune For A Found Harmonium
8. A Man Of Constant Sorrow (with Jackson Browne)
9. Neckbelly
10. A Song Of The Rosy Cross (with Mike Scott)
11. Libertango (with Kirsty MacColl)
12. Bag Of Cats
13. The Galway Girl (with Mundy)
ARTISTA BIOGRAFÍA
Sharon Shannon is at the head of a list of Irish musicians spearheading a broadening of the traditional music horizons. Thoroughly versed in Irish music, she has not been afraid to mix her playing on accordion and fiddle (she's a double threat) with all manner of different styles -- from reggae to country. Growing up in North County Clare, long a hotbed of traditional music, she was encouraged by local music teacher Frank Custy -- her siblings Garry and Mary both played, too. By the time she was eight, Shannon was already performing in local group Disirt Tola, who released an album in 1984. That music seemed to be Shannon's real focus became evident when she participated in the Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eirann tours of the mid-'80s, which brought her in contact with piano accordion player Karen Tweed, from whom she learned a great deal about style. The next stop was a brief apprenticeship with traditional group Arcady, after which her friendship with Steve Wickham led to an invitation to join the Fisherman's Blues-era Waterboys. Being on the world tour for that album exposed Shannon to plenty she'd never imagined in music. But after 18 months and with the Waterboys becoming more rock-oriented, she took the plunge and quit to begin a solo career. While she'd appeared alone on the compilation Ceol Tigh Neachtain in 1989, the big step was her self-titled debut, recorded in 1990, with help from Hothouse Flowers member Liam O'Maonlai and U2's Adam Clayton. While largely in the more meditative County Clare style, it did offer a glimpse of the Shannon to come, with pieces from Louisiana and Portugal sneaking into the spare mix. A year later, she appeared on the best-selling compilation A Woman's Heart, which brought her much wider renown and precipitated widespread touring. But she didn't issue another disc until 1995's Out the Gap, which had several tracks produced by British reggae man Dennis Bovell and offered a completely fresh perspective on Irish music, with bits of dub, reggae, calypso, and more fitting organically into the sound. It was adventurous and highlighted Shannon's continually increasing skills on the accordion -- her main instrument -- and fiddle. Her musical maturity was cemented with Each Little Thing two years later, where she deftly moved between styles, ranging from a cover of Libertango, an Astor Piazzolla adaptation popularized by Grace Jones, to Kids, which paired a traditional piece with a Lindsay Buckingham song, and El Mercado Testaccio, where she musically went to Chile to cover Inti-Illimani. The sheer variety could have made it awkward, but her playing glued it all together. It was followed two years later by the typical contract-fulfilling The Best of Sharon Shannon, a 21-track compilation of her two prior releases, with an added a live cut and some previously unreleased material, making for a holding action while she decided where to go next. The answer came in 2001 and it was go west, young woman, both geographically and physically. Recorded in Galway on Ireland's west coast, The Diamond Mountain Sessions owed a great deal to American alt-country, as well as Celtic music, which had gone triple platinum in Ireland by the time it was released in the U.S. and helped bring Shannon two Irish awards for Folk Artist of the Year and Best Traditional Female. Featuring a host of guest stars (Steve Earle, John Prine, Jackson Browne, Carlos Nuñez, and Hothouse Flowers), it was a very relaxed affair of songs and sets, in contrast to the more formal Irish Gala, Live from the Kennedy Center, a TV special featuring Shannon. She seemed perfectly at home in both settings, but never more so than on a club stage as she toured America behind the record in spring 2001.
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