Day 1 @ Other Voices 10: The Frames, St. Vincent, The Coronas, Little Green Cars and Triur

December 2nd, 2011

The opening night of Other Voices‘ tenth year was marked by homecomings to the remote Atlantic peninsula town of Dingle. The place has become a haven for music fans over the last ten years every December. The musicians themselves are drawn to this place regardless of the now annual Other Voices gatherings finding refuge and a conductive atmosphere for creativity at other times of the year. Of the first night’s lineup, The Coronas call it their second home during their performance, Little Green Cars recently visited to try out the acoustics for a radio broadcast in the intimate setting of St. James’ church where the TV recordings take place (a capacity of 80), The Frames’ Glen Hansard recounts how the nearby town of Ventry has given the band space and time to record songs such as ‘Santa Maria’, which draws inspiration from the shipwreck of the Santa Maria de la Rosa of the Spanish Armada in 1588 at Dunmore Head.

The sense of history is obvious in the night’s first guests Triúr. Peadar Ó Riada, Caoimhín Ó Raghallaigh and Martin Hayes are versed in the traditional of Irish music. Yet their compositions speak a modern language through the virtuosity and delicate weave of their playing. I often think of trad as another language that you have to learn and grasp but there’s something very universal in what Ó Riada, Ó Raghallaigh and Hayes do with a concertina and two fiddles that’s easy to understand. It produces elemental outcomes: gentle foot taps and heartswelling melodies run their way through slides, jigs and reels as the three players (Triúr being Irish for three) lightly create substantial tunes. Iarla Ó Lionáird joins Ó Riada for a harmonium-accompanied emotive song to finish their set. That the inherently reverential music of trad works so well in a church is not that surprising but how well it fits in with the rest of tonight’s lineup is genuinely exciting. As Hayes remarks “well I guess we’re living in a post-genre world”.

As series producer Philip King refers to in his introduction, music is “the heart of the matter” and a stripped-down set from Annie Clark as St. Vincent gets right to it. Far removed from the impressive stage lights and intensity that burned at her recent Dublin gig, her Other Voices set is a stark exposition. Accompanied by Cate Le Bon on backing vocals, the striking Clark guitar with organ effects and reverb suit the setting and produce billowy versions of songs from recently released album Strange Mercy. Clark always manages to inject an extra note or beat between the verse and chorus of her songs which create a beautiful sort of tension and release and give her set a loose-limbed atmosphere.

Before the ultimate homecoming and headline set from The Frames, we were treated to Irish bands both new and established. Little Green Cars have impressed many with their ear to the ground in Irish music this year as a burgeoning talent. At an average age of 19, their easy ability to harmonise together is a skill that would normally be associated with those much more experienced. This band have been playing together for over four years though, so they come across as old souls in young and slightly nervous bodies. There’s an air of Win and Regine dynamics in the main singing duo of Faye O’ Regan and Stevie Appleby but make no mistake, Little Green Cars are a unit, a talented ensemble with a bright future and songs like ‘My Love Took Me Down to the River (To Silence Me)’ that reach for big folk-rooted band and make it there easily.

From the school of pop rock come The Coronas whose frontman Danny O’Reilly worried that they were “not a cool enough band to play here”. In their own sphere though, the Dublin band are dominant with six sold out nights in the Olympia Theatre coming up this week. While they readily admit that their fans are mostly in their late-teens, they showcase their pop persuasions with new songs from their just released third album Closer To You including a song written 10 miles from the church and an Irish version of their hit song ‘Heroes and Ghosts’ which demonstrates what would make those Olympia audience members go weak at the knees. Echoing Philip King’s introductory remarks once more, the band say the Irish version, entitled ‘Taibhsí nó Laoich’ also gets to the heart of the matter more directly as Gaeilge than it does in English.

Bringing it all back home to where it began nine years ago, Other Voices co-creator Glen Hansard and The Frames provide an intense end to proceedings with a set that includes some of the most-loved Irish songs of the last twenty years including ‘Fitzcarraldo’ , ‘Seven Day Mile’, ‘God Bless Mom’, ‘Stars Are Underground’ and a Blasketified version of ‘Lay Me Down’. The band’s gusto at performing ‘Revelate’ unravels as Hansard’s equipment fails prompting him to slam his pedalboard on the ground and a chain reaction means a mic stand physically collides with Colm Mac Con Iomaire’s 200 year-old fiddle (his playing tonight threads a line back to tonight’s opening act Triúr as well as keeping the Irish tradition alive and vital). All is recovered while they change pace into a twinkling wandering version of ‘The Aul Triangle’ with an audience singalong for good measure. They really pick up and deliver a rousing end dedicated to Mic Christopher and featuring members of his band The Mary Janes. Blaming the “wee people who unplug your shit” as the cause of the frustration Hansard hopes that the mistakes are left in so the end result is not so cosmetic but the truth is The Frames will endure even if the magic of television ultimately decides to erase the fairy-led detour.

Photos: James Goulden.

Other Voices on NBC Nonstop Sound

November 14th, 2011

Other Voices are currently featured on NBC Nonstop Sound. Check out an interview with Executive Producer Philip King

http://www.nbcnewyork.com/video/#!/blogs/nonstop-sound/Philip-King-Brings-Other-Voices-to-NYC/133712818

Annie Mac interview with RTE

February 14th, 2011

‘Other Voices’, the gathering that put Dingle on the rock ‘n’ roll map, is back on RTÉ Two for its ninth series, the third with Dublin-born BBC Radio 1 presenter Annie Mac as host. She tells Harry Guerin why it’s more than just a job for her – and more than just another TV music show for viewers.

Annie Mac – “I don’t think it’s ever going to be something that I don’t want to do”
Harry Guerin: This is your third year of stocking up on thermals and heading down to Dingle in the middle of winter – you’re an honorary citizen now.
Annie Mac: I absolutely love doing ‘Other Voices’. I don’t think it’s ever going to be something that I don’t want to do, for various reasons: it being Irish, me being Irish – and being Irish means a lot to me. Living in England and not actually getting to do a lot of work in Ireland and with Irish people means that when the opportunity initially came up I was like: ‘I really want to do this’. And then when I went [to Dingle], saw the calibre of the show, the calibre of the music, the line-up… It’s kind of hard to describe why it’s special, and I think the reason is because of the people who run it and are behind it are just really special people that you just don’t want to let down. It means everything to them.

HG: Not just to the makers of the show, but to the residents of Dingle as well.
AM: Dingle stops for ‘Other Voices’; it feels like a festival in the town. Everybody talks about it. The really wonderful thing is how Philip [King, series producer] has done it and how he’s made it part of Dingle – the way they stream every gig on high quality HD screens in about five of the key pubs. So the atmosphere you get in St James’ Church is kind of paralleled in each of these pubs. They’re packed, and everybody goes in and everybody acts like they’re in the church! They don’t say a word between the songs; they clap after every song like you would in a gig. You could hear a pin drop in these pubs; it’s absolutely amazing. The whole town feels really, really involved with the show, which is a really lovely thing.

HG: I think the atmosphere in St James’ Church is one of the big reasons why the show has such dedicated fans.
AM: I’ve worked in music TV before, and with a lot of music TV the problem is that it’s all about the cameras and the TV show and not about the actual atmosphere in the room. The amazing thing about ‘Other Voices’ is that you kind of forget about the cameras. It’s about being in this amazing church, it’s about the kind of electric atmosphere [there]. The people who go to that church are genuinely excited for every act equally. It’s not like ‘Oh my God, it’s all about this one big band’. Everyone is given the same welcome, the same treatment and the same kind of enthusiasm and anticipation when they play that church. You can really feel that when you watch it; it feels like you’re part of that atmosphere. It always feels like a gig rather than a TV show.

HG: And no matter how successful an act is, or how many gigs they’ve played, Dingle is one they don’t forget.
AM: It’s such a long way [to travel]. You really have to make the effort to go. It’s a mission, but at the end of the mission it’s so much fun and you’re so warmly welcomed and received. And the gig, from a band’s perspective, you can be so indulgent on the show. ‘Other Voices’ just gives you complete free rein. Usually on a TV show you get to do one song and have to do it four times so you can get all the different angles and you’re done. This year each band got to do at the very least three or four songs; some bands did about five. So it’s like a full gig; it really feels worthwhile for them.

HG: Who were your own highlights from the recording of the new series?
AM: There were so many. In terms of someone brand new, who I hadn’t really heard and completely fell in love with over the week, James Vincent McMorrow. I’ve been telling all my friends on [BBC] Radio 1 about him and he’s getting a good bit of play over here on Radio 1 now which is brilliant. I thought The National were great. I’ve always liked them as a band but I’d never seen them live. So seeing them live in that church was really mind-blowing.

Definitely the highlights of the week for me were Jarvis Cocker and Richard Hawley. When I was growing up in the Nineties I was always a Blur girl; I was never really that much of a Pulp fan. I was sitting in the church looking at Jarvis and saying to myself: ‘How did I not love Pulp so much?’ He just totally won me over in every way – the way he performed, the way he dealt with the audience, the lovely, self-deprecating attitude he had while being absolutely hilarious at the same time.

HG: Who would be on your dream ‘Other Voices’ bill?
AM: Oh wow. They always have a proper legend, don’t they? I’d love to hear Van Morrison; I think he’d be amazing. In terms of newer stuff? Adele would be incredible and I think she’d be the kind of girl who would go over there and fall in love with it and not want to leave. Arcade Fire? This is a pretty amazing line-up so far! I reckon Lauryn Hill – just her and a guitar. There’s a young guy called James Blake who I think would be absolutely amazing in that church. I would camp out to see him in that church. Oh my God, I want this to happen now!

HG: What do you hope people take away from the new series?
AM: I genuinely hope that more and more people watch it! I feel that it’s a really special show and a genuine public service. I don’t think there’s a show out there like it – in Ireland or Britain. I hope that people like it and realise the amount of love, sweat and tears that go into that show and I hope that they want to watch it again! Every year it’s kind of up in the air trying to get the funding, trying to get it together and we never know until really a couple of months before – less sometimes – that we have the go-ahead. It’s a uniquely Irish thing and the Irish hospitality and the Irish people behind ‘Other Voices’ are the ones who make it what it is. It’s the best advertisement for Ireland ever.

The new series of ‘Other Voices’ begins on RTÉ Two on Wednesday, 16 February at 11:45pm.

Day 5 at Other Voices 9: The IMRO Other Room

December 13th, 2010

On the final day of band filming, we are away from St. James Church and up to McCarthys, just up the top of the main street at Goat Street where nine Irish bands are recording one song each for the show in The IMRO Other Room. Filming begins early in the morning in the back room of the pub which is strewn with posters and has been gutted of furniture save for the red leather interview couch where Annie Mac will interview the bands post-set.

On the line up we had: General Fiasco, Planet Parade, Ciara Sidine, Lisa O’Neill, Daithí O’ Dronaí, The Danger Is, Jennifer Evans, Sacred Animals and The Man Whom.

Those who made an impression during their filming (granted we didn’t see everything – it was a long day): Daithi O Dronaí’s usage of Kaos Pad and Fiddle was a new one for many, Niamh Farrell from The Danger Is recorded her debut TV performance by showcasing her sweet jazz-inflected voice, Jennifer Evans impressed with a lovely duet with Caoimhe Hogarty and Darragh Nolan aka Sacred Animals fought the elements, particularly the sudden heavy rain on the roof to perform ‘Chosen Seed’ from his debut EP. It added a certain ambiance, a natural backing track to the performance.

Post-recording, a lot of the artists return to that same room later that night for a session. Lisa o Neill, Jennifer Evans, The Man Whom, The Danger Is, former Juno Falls man Myles O’Reilly and various members of the crew sing long into the night until there are no voices left, or until they are politely asked to leave, whichever came first.

Photos: James Goulden.

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