Browsing Category

Music

Music

Sylvia Platypus: A Musical Chemistry Experiment That Works

Sylvia Platypus, from left, Bill Barone, Michael Southerton, Charlie Rutan, Rosealba Gallo, Janet Bressler, and Ruchama Bilenky.

If it hadn’t been for an intriguing ad on Craig’s List, the indie group Sylvia Platypus might not have been a Celtic band.

The ad that band founder, Cheltenham’s Janet Bressler, saw was from a professional bagpiper named Charlie Rutan.

Rutan is well known in bagpipe circles—and beyond. He owns and operates Bagpipes FAO (for all occasions) and has piped for everyone from President George H.W. Bush to Rod Stewart. He’s played at the Smithsonian, as principal bagpipe of the Reading Symphony Orchestra, on the John DeBella Show, and, of course, for countless funerals.

“Basically, the ad said that he was looking for gigs where he wasn’t wearing a kilt and playing bagpipes standing in a cemetery,” explained Bressler, a tiny, stylish woman who was wearing feather earrings, a stingy brim fedora, and an artfully ripped blazer when we met recently at a Starbucks in Flourtown.

Bressler, who has founded half a dozen other musical chemistry projects over the years, was looking for someone to replace a musician who didn’t work out.

“It was a 400 pound baritone sax player,” said lead guitar player Bill Barone, who contributes some historical chops to the group (he was once the guitarist and only American in the ‘70s symphonic “krautrock” and cult band, Wallenstein). “He didn’t weigh 400 pounds,” scolded Bressler. Barone, sporting a Grateful Dead t-shirt that he probably didn’t buy as “vintage,” paid no attention. “We didn’t think he would fit on stage,” he added, chuckling.

Enter Rutan, who is considerably smaller. “This all came about from one St. Patrick’s Day, I was asked to come on the John DeBella show on WMGK because they wanted to run a contest to see who could identify rock songs played on the bagpipe,” explains Rutan. “So I spent a lot of time learning a lot of rock songs. Then I thought, why waste all this effort. It was another way to be creative and I wanted to see where I could go with it. So I put some tentacles out there.”

Tentacles, as in Craig’s List. Now, Sylvia Platypus is on Rutan’s resume and this oddly named group, which is not a Sylvia Plath tribute band (“I was looking for something literary,” explains Bressler. “When people ask me about it, I just say it’s a duck-billed suicide”), can bill itself as a psycho-celtic glam-blues band. And as their recently released EP illustrates, that’s a pretty accurate chain of adjectives.

“Like a Vampire,” sung with earthy fullness by Bressler, who has been likened to Edith Piaf, is rock at its best, with some hot guitar from Barone with a surprisingly delicate underpinning of bagpipes from Rutan. Then, they set rock on its ear with their cover of the Stones’ “Paint it Black,” where Rutan’s pipes take center stage.  “Raggle Taggle Gypsy,” a standard for Celtic bands, is  re-imagined wildly and with passion by Bressler’s raw vocals. And there’s the haunting “The Seagull (An Faoileag), my back button favorite, which sounds traditional but was written by Bressler and Rutan, who now write many of SP’s songs together. (Several have been picked up by a company that markets music to movies and TV shows.)

Only two years old, Sylvia Platypus have already brought its rock opera, “LeMirage/Dead City Philly” to the Philly Fringe Festival and will be doing a reprise on February 2 at The Rotunda at 40th and Walnut in Philadelphia. Bressler penned the whole thing, which is based in part on Georges Rodenbach’s 1892 novella “Bruges La Morte.” Members of the band—bass player Ruchama Bilenky, founder of the DysFUNctional Theatre Company (and Bressler’s daughter) and Michael Southerton, an English and drama teacher at South Philadelphia High and founder of the band Song Dogs and the Night Jar—both act and play, while the band plays the role of Greek chorus in this multi-media show.

They’ve also appeared twice at World Café Live and at the Tin Angel, a notoriously difficult gig to get in the city.

Bressler gives credit for their early success to her years in the business and the musicianship of her band, which also includes noted drummer Rosealba Gallo, who also plays with a group called The Non-Domestiks. Although the pipes were initially a hard sell, “we all hit it off musically,” says Rutan, who plays nine different pipes, including the rare Italian double chantered zampogna pipes. (“There are only a few in the country and mine are the only ones that are working,” he jokes.)

Barone agrees that “there’s a real chemistry of musicianship. There’s a desire to make everything work together so that everyone fits in and no one steps on anyone else.”

He also credits Bressler, with whom he’s worked in bands before, for giving the SP both its solid musical underpinnings and its charisma and glam on stage . “She’s the classic rock front person,” he says. “Her stage presence is incredible. People just can’t take their eyes off Janet. It makes it easier for us. For me, I’m more up there to be heard than seen. Plus, she writes great stuff. Fortunately, she writes like crab grass grows.”

Barone, whose stint in Germany with Wallenstein (“the ancestor of ‘Yes’” is how Rutan describes them) earned him a place in a Wikipedia entry  and some interesting spots on YouTube , almost abandoned the business. He hadn’t done music fulltime for years (he’s retiring soon from his job as heavy equipment mechanic at Giles and Ransom) then re-whetted his appetite with the cover band Classic Jurassic in 2008 (he is proudly 60, so doesn’t actually remember dinosaurs).  Bressler found him again a couple of years ago and drafted him into Sylvia Platypus.

“I had pretty much sworn off,” he admits. “She”—he nods towards Bressler—“got me back in and I’m focusing on the music fulltime.” And behind the graying ‘stache and beard, Bill Barone looked pretty happy about that.

Music

Making Music at Milkboy

A trio of McGillians ...John, Kevin and Jimmy

A trio of McGillians ...John, Kevin and Jimmy

Up in this lofty, factory-chic studio at 7th and Callowhill, you can practically hear the echoes of the soulful Al Green and Patti Labelle, who once recorded here.

On this cool Saturday afteroon in January, a very different sound is blasting over the speakers in the Milkboy Recording control room. It’s soulful in its own way. It’s not “Tired of Being Alone” or “Somebody Loves You, Baby,” but “Pigeon on the Gate” and “Over the Moor to Maggie.” Not tenor saxophone and Fender bass, but two-row button accordion and uilleann pipes.

With apologies to the immortal Gamble and Huff, whose shoes we would not presume to fill, this is the sound of Irish Philadelphia. Call us nuts—you wouldn’t be the first—but we are attempting to capture as much of our own Quaker City Celtic musical talent as possible. (In 12 tracks or less, anyway.) We want to bring you tunes from great players who have never been recorded before, or from groupings of musicians who have played together countless times in their lives but whose performances were not preserved. We want to show the world what a treasure we have here.

None of this is turning out to be easy. There’s a raw, untamed, spontaneously beautiful quality to the music played in pubs and house parties; we’re trying to harness lightning in a bottle. Time will tell whether it can really be done.

If our first three tracks are any indication, we think we know the answer. In the control room, you could practically smell the ozone.

Over the next month or so, we’re going to record more local talent, and then we’re going to bring it all together in a CD, which we hope to begin selling in March to help support the work of irishphiladelphia.com. The effort has no name so far–for which reason we are calling it Project Gan Ainm. (That’s “no name” in the Irish language.)

We’ve gotten things going with our own funds, but we expect to launch a modest fund-raising effort soon so we can finish things up.

For now, let us whet your appetite with photos of the session and a video featuring the great Vince Gallagher, playing an accordion that once belonged to the beloved Tommy Moffit. And while we’re on it, let us extend our thanks to the local musicians who are donating their time and talent to bring this thing off. We’re thrilled; we think you will be, too.

Music, News, People

Post-Christmas Pick-Me-Up

Modeling the latest in Wren Hats are Alexander Weir, his mother Katherine, and Haley Richardson. Photo by Carl Weir.

Every year in Ireland, on the feast of St. Stephen (December 26), the Irish celebrate in a way that has been handed down for centuries. They go out, hunt down a wren, kill it, put it on a stick and parade it around town while they’re dressed in funny costumes.

No, that’s not what they do. That’s what they used to do.  “Wren Parties” are still held, but they’re bloodless these days. People still get together, as they did December 26 at the Wren Party in Glenside sponsored by  the Delaware Valley chapter of Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann. They even wear costumes. Well, hats anyway. And they eat, drink, play music, sing, and dance.

Thanks to Carl Weir, whose son, Alexander, was one of the performers and hat-wearers, we have photos from this year’s event (the 13th  Wren Party the Comhaltas has thrown). And here they are.

 

Music

An Afternoon of Magic

Donie Carroll and Gabriel Donohue at The Shanachie.

For the CD, “Irish Musicians for the Mercy Centre,” nearly 20 musicians and groups donated tracks to help raise funds for the Mercy Centre, which provides services for orphans, street kids, and children and adults with HIV/AIDS in Bangkok Thailand. So, appropriately, last Sunday some of the top Irish musicians in the Philadelphia area came to the Shanachie Pub in Ambler to help launch the CD with an afternoon of musical magic.

Musician Donie Carroll, who produced the CD, came down from New York to join Gabriel Donohue who mastered it, as well as local talents Marian Makins, Timlin and Kane, the Jameson Sisters (Teresa Kane and Ellen Tepper), Kitty Kelly Albrecht, Mike Albrecht, and Paraic Keane on stage for an afternoon of Irish music. Marianne MacDonald, host of the WTMR 800AM “Come West Along the Road” Irish radio show, helped organize the event.

We were there and, of course, took photos, which you can see here.

Arts, Music

CD Review: “Another Side of Town”

Seamus Kelleher

When Seamus Kelleher left what’s arguably the best gig on Philly’s thriving Celtic rock scene—lead guitar for the SRO band, Blackthorn—it was for a rite of passage only those of a certain age can understand.

In the 1990s, he and wife both worked at the World Financial Center. When  the towers fell on 9/11, six people from their town, Cranford, NJ, never came home. Then, a little more than four years ago, Kelleher tumbled down a steep staircase, fracturing his skull and suffering a traumatic brain injury.

Apologies to Emily Dickinson, but when death stops for you, even if it’s only as a reminder of your mortality and not, mercifully, the last ride, you pay attention to everything you’ve left undone. Kelleher had some musical wings he needed to stretch and working fulltime, being the father of four, and gigging with Blackthorn didn’t allow much time for writing and singing the songs he knew were in him.

So he took off on his own. His first solo CD, “Four Cups of Coffee,” was not just a musical autobiography, it was a revelation of the eclectic roots of a musician who is equally at home with Irish music—he’s from Salthill, Galway—as he is with folk, rock, black blues, Irish blues (think Rory Gallagher) and the finger-picking guitar style of Chet Atkins.

And while “Four Cups of Coffee” was smokin’, it nearly pales by comparison to Kelleher’s latest offering, “Another Side of Town,” which was recorded at Cambridge Sound Studio in Newtown, PA.

People who know me know that I almost never write music reviews because, frankly, great music tends to leave me virtually speechless or, at least, inarticulate. I turn like rote to just a few words, “wow” being the most common. In fact, if I were to review music for a living, I’d have to use the “wow” the way movie critics use stars and restaurant reviewers use spoons or, like the Inquirer’s Craig LeBan, bells, but without the insightful commentary.

From the first track of “Another Side of Town” to the last, I was wowing all over the place. The first wow was for Kelleher’s voice. Like his guitar playing, honed by years of studying with the masters like finger-picking all-star Pete Huttlinger, Kelleher has polished and perfected his voice until it’s as smooth as a single malt. He sounds a little like Willie Nelson—if Willie had stopped smoking, drinking, and taken a few singing lessons early on. The soul and heart are there, but the roughness is gone. It makes songs like “Reno Winter’s Sky,” about an encounter with a soldier at the baggage claim in Reno, all the more poignant.

“Did he leave behind a sweetheart? Did he leave behind a friend? Did his mother stay awake at night? Did his daddy ever cry?” Kelleher sings in this heart-touching story song.

If you’re a back button hitter like me, you’re probably going to have a hard time getting past the first, eponymous track, “Another Side of Town,” about Kelleher’s brush with death (and why he’s not going there again any time soon). Beautiful melody, great lyrics, that new, improved voice—to me, it’s the single that ought to be getting play on mainstream radio.

He even does a remake of his “Four Cups of Coffee,” from his first solo release, a rocking improvement spiced with harmonies provided by singer Charlene Holloway, a native Philadelphian who has recorded with Patti Labelle, Anita Baker, Teddy Prendergass, Lou Rawls, and Luther Vandross. That you’re not seeing any Irish singers in there is a testament to the risks Kelleher is willing to take to make the music better and better.

Irish country dancers are going to love Kelleher’s take on “Galway Bay,” while Eric Burdon is going to be wondering why he didn’t record “The House of the Rising Sun” in the soulful way Kelleher does it.

Where Kelleher shines—and always has—are the instrumentals. “Guitar Dreams” and “Huttlinger’s Rag” will be the first places where my CD is eventually going to start skipping. The things are plastic. There’s just so many times you can hit that back button.

“Another Side of Town” is available at iTunes and CDBaby.

Music

Irish Musicians Launch a New CD to Benefit Mercy Centre in Bangkok

Gabriel Donohue

Gabriel Donohue

Gabriel Donohue won’t soon forget his visit to the Mercy Centre in Bangkok, Thailand.

A couple of years ago, Donohue joined fellow Irish musicians Mick Moloney, Athena Tergis and Niall O’Leary to play for—believe it or not—the Asian Gaelic Games, which were being held in Bangkok. Mick Moloney, well-known folklorist and multi-instrumentalist, has had a long association with the Centre, which provides services for orphans, street kids, and children and adults with AIDS, so he asked his traveling companions to join him there in an impromptu concert.

“Mick made sure we got down to the orphanage to play for the kids,” Donohue recalls.”I saw the work Father Joe (Maier) was doing there in the slums. It’s an amazing place. It’s in the worst neighborhood in Bangkok. It’s the Slaughterhouse District, which is a Catholic neighborhood. Buddhists won’t kill animals, so Catholics run the slaughterhouses. These kids have lost their parents to AIDS, and they have it too. Father Joe just wants to make sure they have a good quality of life.”

Donohue is far from the only Irish musician to come away impressed by Father Joe and his mission. A few years ago, he says, fellow musician Donnie Carroll met Father Joe at a benefit, and he resolved to raise funds for the Centre. The project that emerged from that resolution is a new CD, “Irish Musicians for the Mercy Centre,” produced by Donnie Carroll and mastered by Donohue. Nearly 20 Irish musicians and ensembles, including Donohue and partner Marian Makins, Moloney, Tergis, Joanie Madden, Larry Kirwan and Black 47, contributed tracks.

If you want to get a sampling of the tunes that made their way onto the disk, you can attend a CD launch party Sunday, December 11, from 2 to 6 p.m. at the Shanachie Pub, 111 East Butler Avenue in Avenue. Music will be provided by Timlin & Kane (Gerry Timlin is one of the pub’s owners), Donnie Carroll—and out own Donohue and Makins. Copies of the CD will be on sale, of course. Every CD purchase benefits the Mercy Centre. There will be a raffle, with special prizes donated by the musicians and Marianne MacDonald, host of “Come West Along the Road” Irish radio show.

And hey, remember Christmas is coming. An all-star Irish music CD makes a great gift.

Arts, Music

Craicdown 2011

Martyn Wallace, your emcee.

Martyn Wallace, your emcee.

The upstairs stage at World Cafe Live regularly shines the spotlight on talented musical artists. The actors, singers and musicians who headlined the 2011 Craicdown benefit for the Inis Nua Theatre Company on Tuesday night had to have been among the most creative.

Inis Nua presents plays from Ireland, Wales, Scotland and England. The performers who took the stage Tuesday night were in one way, shape or form associated with the theatre company.

Some of the musicians, like actors Jake Blouch and Damon Bonetti, seized the opportunity to claim rock star status, replete with shredding guitar solos. Others, like New Zealander Rosie Langabeer, took a much more theatrical approach, at times verging on cabaret. (The Proclaimers’ “I Would Walk 500 Miles” on accordion—whoda thunk it?)

Presiding over the night’s festivies was actor Mike Dees in the guise of character Martyn Wallace from “Dublin by Lamplight.”

It was all good. Sorry to say we couldn’t stay for the whole show, but we’ve captured many winning moments.

Arts, Music, People

No Accident That She’s Supporting Inis Nua

Reagan Richards. Photo by Tonette Madsen

At Inis Nua Theatre Company’s fundraiser at World Café Live last year, singer Reagan Richards brought down the house with her finale—an a cappella version, in torch song style, of “Too Ra Loo Ra Loora”—after inviting her listeners to join in “if you know it, and if you don’t know it, I really think it’s considered a mortal sin.”

They knew it, which is how it ought to be when you’re out supporting the region’s only theater company producing contemporary plays from Ireland and the UK.

Richards will be making a return guest appearance at Inis Nua’s “Craicdown” on December 6, an evening of music mainly provided by actors, including some of Inis Nua’s regulars such as Mike Dees, who will be hosting the show in his character of Mr. Martyn Wallace from the company’s hit of last season, “Dublin by Lamplight.” (“Mr. Wallace” is an actor from the seedy “Irish National Theatre of Ireland” in the play, which marries Commedia dell’Arte and vaudeville. The play had a month-long run in New York as part of the city’s Irish Theatre Festival.)

Reagan Richards is the lone professional singer. She’s performed with the Les Paul Band, Lisa Loeb, and many other name acts. The Cranford, NJ, native has a powerful, emotional voice that would make her a tough act for even another singer to follow. But she’s the show’s closer—and worth waiting for.

One of her songs, “There Are No Accidents,” reflects her own “no coincidences” philosophy, which is how this non-actor got her annual “Craicdown” gig.

“I met Jared [Michael Delaney, Inis Nua’s associate artistic director] at a Duran Duran concert in 2007,” she explained in a phone interview this week from her home in New York, where she’s working on a new album. “He happened to be sitting next to me and we started talking. The thing is, we weren’t even supposed to be in those seats. The theater had some problems and the show was moved to Roseland. So he tells me he’s an actor and I say I’m a singer, and eventually we become the best of friends. So when he asked me to do the first year of Craicdown I got on board and I’m 1,000 percent on board.”

Last year’s Craicdown yielded more than just enthusiastic audience participation, which deepened Richards’ belief that everything happens for a reason. “Last year I walked in as the first or second act was on and I heard this girl and I thought, ‘I want to know her.’ PS, she’s now a backup singer in my band.”

That’s Jess Conda, who has served as actor, stage manager, house manager and casting associate for BRAT Productions, another Philadelphia-based theatre company founded in 1996 by Madi Distefano. Dublin native Fergus Carey, owner of Fergie’s Pub and several other local watering holes, is chairman of its board of directors. She’ll also be performing on December 6, along with fellow actors Stephen Lyons, Damon Bonetti, Jake Blouch, Jered McLenigan, Sarah Gilko, and Harry Smith.

Richards has been around the music business for many years. It’s part of her genetic makeup. “My mom was a big band singer and what gave birth to my involvement in music was hearing her and the music she listened to, like Bing Crosby and Judy Garland. Even when I was young I knew all the old standards. When my older sister started listening to the Beatles, I started singing them too. There’s nothing like hearing a 7 or 8 year old singing about ‘Father Mackenzie.’”

She warbled a few of the grim lyrics from “Eleanor Rigby”–“Father Mackenzie, writing the words of a sermon that no one will hear, no one comes near. . .”—then laughed. “Not the kind of thing you expect to hear coming from a child.”

Her own style defies definition because it’s evocative of all of her influences from her Big Band mother to Patsy Cline. “I’ve done alternative country,” says Richards, who recently moved back to the northeast from Nashville. “I do new wavey British pop. The truth is, an A-chord is an A-chord, no matter how you play it. Music is what takes me wherever I go and I feel lucky that I get to do it every day.”

Catch Reagan Richards and the actors-turned-singers at Inis Nua’s Craicdown event at 7:30 PM on Tuesday, December 6, at World Café Live, 3025 Walnut Street in Philadelphia. Tickets are available online or by calling 215-454-9776 for $20, or pay $25 at the door.

Check out Reagan’s video of her song, “OK,”  with Billy Burnette, formerly of “Fleetwood Mac.”