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Moya Brennan

Music

Review: Moya Brennan and Cormac De Barra at the Sellersville Theater

Cormac De Barra and Moya Brennan

Cormac De Barra and Moya Brennan

The last time Moya Brennan appeared in concert at Sellersville Theater, there was a frog in her throat the size of a Volkswagen Beetle. In short: She was not in good voice, and she canceled all concerts on the tour after that.

Appearing in concert this past Saturday night, she admitted, she felt bad about that concert, and she greatly appreciated the audience’s forbearance at the time.

No vocal amphibians appeared to sabotage the act Saturday night. In fact, Brennan’s performance was a spot-on demonstration of how wondrously well the voice can continue to serve a singer when well tended, even after 40 years.

Brennan’s voice is truly one of a kind, a blend of airy delicacy and barely restrained power, with resonant lows and tremulous, silvery highs. Her vocal range seems to have lost nothing at either end.

Brennan was joined in the performance by harper Cormac De Barra, one of Ireland’s most acclaimed performers on the instrument, with whom she released  choice little CD, “Voices & Harps,” in June. Accompanying the two was Brennan’s 19-year-old daughter Aisling Jarvis, playing guitar and whistle and singing harmony.

Brennan and De Barra set the tone for the night with the traditional Irish folk standard “She Moved Through the Fair,” the first track off “Voices & Harps.” Brennan shimmering high notes were a perfect complement to the soft strings of the harp, masterfully played by De Barra. (Brennan occasional joined in on a harp of her own.)

In many ways, this was a very different Moya Brennan than the Maire Brennan who fronted for the pioneering Irish band Clannad. Indeed, the trio performed several old Clannad tunes, including “Dúlamán,” from the 1976 Clannad album of the same name, “Theme From Harry’s Game,” a tune released by the band in 1982, and the encore “The Two Sisters,” from the 1975 Clannad album “Clannad 2” and the 1998 “An Díolaim (The Collection).” Several tunes from Brennan’s long solo career also made an appearance: “Against the Wind,” Brennan’s first solo single, released in 1992, as well as “Tapestry” and “I Will Find You” from Brennan’s 2006 recording “Signature.”

In this concert, all the old tunes were stripped down to their bare, acoustic essentials, absent the reverberating multi-layered harmonies, drums and synthesizers. It was like being re-introduced to old friends who had mellowed with age and yet have held up surprisingly well. Brennan acknowledged as much. Speaking of “Harry’s Game,” she said, “If you can sing a song and it can stand up to any style, then it’s a good song.”

So it went through the night… a blend of old Clannad and Brennan’s solo hits, coupled with several tunes from “Harps & Voices,” including “My Match Is a Makin’,” “An Seanduine Dóite/The Burnt-Out Old Man,” and “Carolan’s Concerto.”

On the latter, De Barra showed why, as Brennan insisted, he is possibly the best harper in all of Ireland. The “Concerto” is a complex old tune in the Baroque style, and it takes a gifted hand to play it with expression, bringing forth all its subtle beauty. DeBarra accompanied Brennan on harp all the night, but the word “accompanied” doesn’t really do him credit. The performance was a marriage of equals. De Barra also has an expressive tenor voice, his harmonies a strong counterpoint to Brennan’s breathier vocals.

De Barra showed off his stuff on another Carolan standard, “Miss McDermott,” paired with a perky piece, written by De Barra, called “Hobnobs”—after the chocolate biscuits he and Brennan munched in the studio while recording their CD.

And let’s give a round of well-deserved applause to Brennan’s daughter Aisling, a budding guitarist whose light, bright harmonies proved a lovely addition.

Let there be no doubt: Brennan’s Sellersville fans got their money’s worth this time around.

Music

The Musical Evolution of Moya Brennan

Cormac De Barra and Moya Brennan

Cormac De Barra and Moya Brennan

When we called singer Moya Brennan the other day, her husband, photographer Tim Jarvis, had to put the phone down for a few moments while he went to get her. “She’s up a ladder,” he said.

A minute or two later, Brennan was on the phone, laughing, and explaining that she’d been off in her son Paul’s room painting when the call came in. “I wasn’t just putting on my wings,” she said. “I was decorating. I love DIY. It’s so different from what I do in my life.”

What Brennan does, when she’s not laying down masking tape and slathering on primer, is sing wonderfully, beautifully, expressively, passionately—in Irish, English and at least once in Mohican. And that’s just for starters. Starting in 1970, she made her mark as the lead singer for the pioneering Celtic band Clannad. The Grammy-winning, Donegal-based ensemble, which Brennan formed with her brothers Pól and Ciarán and her mother’s twin brothers Noel and Pádraig Ó Dúgáin, was one of the first to take bold liberties with traditional music. The sound of Clannad is unlike any other, effortlessly and seamlessly blending elements of Irish, folk, rock, chant, jazz, New Age and world music. Clannad never found a genre it could not bend to its will.

Brennan launched her solo career in 1992, with the release of the eponymous CD Máire. (Moya is the phonetic pronunciation of her name.) She has performed all over the world, collaborated with performers as varied as the Pogues’ Shane MacGowan and Bono. She has recorded 25 albums, and has performed for popes and presidents. And as if Brennan’s not busy enough already, lovers of Clannad will be gratified to hear that she and the rest of the band are recording a new album, to be released in 2012.

More about that in a moment.

Next Saturday, she’ll appear in concert with friend and world-class harper Cormac De Barra at Sellersville Theatre.

Brennan’s collaboration with De Barra is just one of many intriguing turns in her 40-year musical career. Looking back on her career, she said she has always craved challenging new creative opportunities.

“I’ve matured so much in the way I sing and the way I know I can carry my voice and use it to the best of its ability, and in the way I have shared musical spaces with so many different artists,” Brennan explained. “There’s so much great music out there—great genres, great young acts coming up. It’s great to brush up with them at festivals or in a session. You have to be open to creativity at all times. There’s so much to be had out there. I’m in the middle of so many different projects. That’s what I love about it. That’s what keeps me going.”

Brennan’s quest for the new and experimental has its roots, of course, in Clannad. The band’s constantly changing perspectives, she recalled, sometimes perplexed fans who couldn’t understand why they didn’t just stick to one particular sound and keep pounding away at it. But Clannad’s members knew no other way. The band just kept evolving.

And soon, fans will get to hear and judge the latest stage in Clannad’s evolution. The band had played together from time to time in recent years, and a new album was promised. Toward the beginning of the new year, the band will make good on that promise.

“We started recording at the beginning of the summer,” Brennan said. “Because of all our different commitments, we’re not in the studio all the time, but we hope to be finished by the end of November, to be released at the beginning of the new year, and we’ll go out and do a bit of touring. It’s exciting because we haven’t been doing the same thing for years.

“This is going to be a very interesting album. I think it’s going to be our strongest album ever. It’s to do with all the different influences we’ve gained and surrounded ourselves with over the last 15 year. We’re coming to the table with different takes and new ideas. When I go into the studio, I’m just very excited about it.”

In between recording sessions, Brennan continues to maintain an active and varied touring schedule. She’ll be at the Dublin, Ohio, Irish Festival this weekend, then back to Ireland for the Kilkenny Arts Festival on Tuesday and to Lorient, France, the next day for yet another festival.

And then, at last, to Sellersville, which has nothing in common with the south coast of Brittany, but it’s a pretty nice town all the same.

The last time Brennan performed at Sellersville Theatre, she had a terrible cold, and felt bad about not giving the audience her best. This time, health permitting, will be a different story, she said. She’s especially excited about sharing the stage with De Barra, with whom she released a CD, “Voices & Harps.” Also on stage, playing guitar, singing and playing whistle, will be Brennan’s 19-year-old daughter Aisling Jarvis.

“We (Brennan and de Barra) had been around and playing together for years,” she said. It’s been kind of a nice gradual thing. He’s the best harper in Ireland. We always knew we’d do an album together. It just fell into place at the right time. It’s really special doing this project with Cormac—old songs, new songs, but creating a different sound from our harps and voices. Cormac is a lovely singer as well. I do a little bit of harp; he does a little bit of singing. It’s kind of nice, you know.”

You can hear for yourself. Learn more about the Sellersville Concert here.