Caladh Nua: "Cad É Sin Don Té Sin" HD
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- Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024
- [Best w/ Earphones] "As she finished an a capella passage during the first set of Caladh Nua’s Troy Savings Bank Music Hall show Wednesday night, lead singer Lisa Butler looked slowly, wonderingly up from her microphone, apparently delighted by the legendary acoustic quality of the Capital Region’s most under-appreciated venue. Though she probably couldn’t see it, staring back at Ms. Butler was an audience equally delighted with the performance put on by one of Ireland’s best young traditional music ensembles.
Midway through a tour of the Midwest and Northeast, quintet Caladh Nua became the latest installment of the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall’s yearly pre-St. Patrick’s traditional Irish music concert which has, in recent years, seen the likes of the Chieftains and Danú play the Capital Region’s most under-valued venue. And while Caladh Nua - which translates roughly to “New Haven” - may lack the stateside name-recognition of those other acts, that takes nothing away from their playing, which was as technically good as it was stirring - by turns lilting and melancholy, contemplative and rousing. Everything, in short, traditional Irish music should be.
Hailing from the south of Ireland, Caladh Nua combines the multi-instrumentalist talents of button accordion player Derek Morrissey, singer/fiddler Lisa Butler, fiddler/ bodhrán player Paddy Tutty, guitarist (and, for one song, flautist) Caoimhín Ó Fearghail, and banjo player/tin whistler Eoin O’Meachair (who bore, to my mind at least, a striking resemblance to Geddy Lee, bassist and lead screecher of Rush).
Early into the show, it was evident that something a bit different was on tap for the evening as the band eschewed a repertoire of better-known trad music, and opted instead for tunes sourced from Nova Scotia, Maine (“The Cruel Lowland Maid”), and, most significantly, Counties Kerry, Cork, and Waterford in Ireland. Refreshingly, when introducing their numbers, Morrissey took it as foregone that the audience knew the difference between hop jigs, reels, polkas, and barn dances. And while, so often, traditional acts seem unwilling to play anything written after, say, than Irish independence, Caladh Nua offered up a selection split almost evenly between old and new, kicking off the second set with a song written by Lisa Butler’s brother (“Farewell to You”).
The crowd, though not overwhelming in number, certainly made their appreciation known to the band, whooping and applauding in all the places a crowd ought to - though never with more fervor than during Tutty’s ripping bodhrán solo. True, it took a few songs for the audience to snap out of its hibernation and despite the band's encouragement, dancing never quite broke out in the aisles. But there was no mistaking the people’s enthusiasm, when, during the several dozen lively instrumental numbers on offer, the bass thrum of a thousand feet tapping at once combined with the admirably rhythmic clapping of the entire crowd, apart from a few apparently joyless (or arthritic) curmudgeons.
Yet the band was at its finest during what Butler called “songs” - the tunes with singing in both English and Gaelic. In those moments, as Ó Fearghail’s delicate guitar lines married with O’Meachair’s tin whistle and Butler’s powerful, plaintive voice, it was not difficult to find oneself transported to a place where the beauty of the music embodies so completely the beauty of the land. No song encapsulated this better than the haunting “Banks of the Lee.” Introducing it, Butler admitted to the crowd that it was her favorite tune of the night, before worrying aloud that, after six years of playing “Banks of the Lee” show after show, “the lads might be getting sick of it.”
That doesn’t seem likely". [by Brett Williams]
Live at the Troy Music Hall, March 11, 2015. Please support Caladh Nua [ caladhnua.com ] and the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall [ www.troymusicha... ]. Captured with a huge, handheld 400mm Nikon lens, there is some camera shake.
Link to the still concert photographs: flic.kr/s/aHsk...
Besides her sweet lovely voice and her beautiful smile and amazing vibes, besides the powerful beautiful lyrics with a very strong and firm message, besides all that, she made the audience sing with her and being active, and at the end of the performance she applauded the audience with gratitude for singing with her. I'm sitting in my house in Israel and I find myself humming and singing a song in Gaelic, with her and the audience. I can almost feel that I'm there with them!
I'm in Utah, feeling the same way. Quite empowering!
Same!!!
This is better heard with earphones to help appreciate the natural hall echo.
Loveley. I really liked her beautiful voice and expressive performance. And the band.
legit got chills at the very last part where the audience sings the last line. talk about atmosphere, that was absolutely rad
Прекрасно! 💗
Such an amazing voice ❤
Truly breathtaking voice.
Lovely voice!
Que l'Irlande soit unifiée !! Vive le Peuple d'Irlande !!! Per tots los oprimats ! libertat !!
Amhránaí den scoth agus bean álainn💕
translation: Excellent singer and beautiful woman
@@TimRaabNorthern Díreach!
Seen them Live a few times?
They seem like a lot of craic + their giotár player is fine, excellent musician.
They are all excellent but I am a giotár player too and it’s rare to see one who can play really well.
Cailín go deas! Is brea liim é freísin. Ta go maith. Go raibh maith agat de hAustralé! 'Chuig mé un aoinine 's dhíol mé mo bho.'....ba maith chugam, ba maith chugam.