This is a Wikipedia user page. This is not an encyclopedia article or the talk page for an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user in whose space this page is located may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia. The original page is located at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Pdebee/Precious_Heroes. |
This is a draft article. It is a work in progress open to editing by anyone. Please ensure core content policies are met before publishing it as a live Wikipedia article. Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL Last edited by Pdebee (talk | contribs) 4 years ago. (Update) |
Precious Heroes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by Andy Irvine with Luke Plumb | ||||
Released | February 28, 2016 | |||
Recorded | November 2016, in Melbourne | |||
Genre | Irish and Australian folk music | |||
Label | Andy Irvine (Ireland) | |||
Producer | Andy Irvine & Luke Plumb | |||
Andy Irvine chronology | ||||
|
Precious Heroes is an album by Andy Irvine and Luke Plumb, of Irish and Australian songs recorded in Melbourne during November 2016. It was first released in Australia to coincide with the duo's concert at the Woodford Folk Festival in December 2016,[1][2] and then in the rest of the world on 14 February 2018.[3]
It was co-produced by Irvine (vocals, bouzouki, mandolin, mandola, harmonica) and Plumb (mandolin), who recorded it in a private house converted temporarily into a recording studio.[4][5][2]
Additional personnel includes: Michael McGoldrick (Irish flute, tin whistle, low whistle, uilleann pipes), John McCusker (violin, tin whistle, cittern, guitar), Ruth Hazleton and Kate Burke (vocals), and James MacKintosh (percussion).
Overview
editThe album opens with "Here's a Health to Every Miner Lad", ... .[4]
"Farewell to Ballymoeny", ... .[4]
"Níamh and Oisín", is the story of Oisín and how he became homesick while living with the beautiful, eternally young Níamh and how he travelled back home, never to return after setting his foot on the earth while helping a farmer.[4]
"Trip to Tír na Nóg", is an instrumental tune that Irvine wrote for Planxty in 1973 but hadn’t been recorded until now.[4]
"Champion at Keeping Them Rollin", is a truck driver’s song Ewan MacColl wrote for the BBC Radio Ballads series, with an additional final verse from Irvine.[4]
"The Appeal to Reason / The Fiddle in the Phones", ... .[4]
"Hard Times in 'Comer's Mines", ... .[4]
"Dunlavin Green", ... .[4]
"The Death of Ben Hall" is an Australian song about bushranger Ben Hall, which Irvine learnt from John Meredith’s recording of NSW singer Sally Sloane.[4]
"A Tune for Angus", ... .[4]
"Frank Ryan", ... .[4]
"Erin's Green Shore", ... .[4]
Critical reception
editIn his review at the secondlinemusic.com.au website, Peter Leman stated that "the album features original and traditional compositions and songs, and is already being heralded as one of the most exciting and iconic folk releases of recent times. Undoubtedly some of Irvine's finest work, this masterpiece has been beautifully embellished by Luke Plumb, and while the sound is very contemporary, the arrangements are reminiscent of the sounds of 70s folk revival; reminding the listener of artists such as Paul Brady, Nic Jones and Planxty themselves."[1]
Track listing
edit- "Here's a Health to Every Miner Lad" (Trad. arr. Andy Irvine) – 4:21
- "Farewell to Ballymoeny" (Trad. arr. Andy Irvine) – 4:08
- "Níamh and Oisín" (Andy Irvine/Luke Plumb) – 4:27
- "Trip to Tír na Nóg" (Andy Irvine) – 2:25
- "Champion at Keeping Them Rollin'" (Ewan McColl arr. Andy Irvine) – 4:27
- "The Appeal to Reason / The Fiddle in the Phones" (Trad. arr. Andy Irvine) – 4:00
- "Hard Times in 'Comer's Mines" (Trad. arr. Andy Irvine) – 4:47
- "Dunlavin Green" (Trad. arr. Andy Irvine) – 4:24
- "The Death of Ben Hall" (Trad. arr. Andy Irvine) – 3:38
- "A Tune for Angus" (Trad. arr. Andy Irvine) – 4:08
- "Frank Ryan" (Trad. arr. Andy Irvine) – 7:47
- "Erin's Green Shore" (Trad. arr. Andy Irvine) – 5:19
Personnel
edit- Andy Irvine – vocals, bouzouki, mandola and harmonica.
- Luke Plumb – backing vocals, mandolin.
- Michael McGoldrick – Irish flute, tin whistle, low whistle, uilleann pipes.
- John McCusker – violin, tin whistle, cittern, guitar.
- Ruth Hazleton – backing vocals.
- Kate Burke – backing vocals.
- James MacKintosh – percussion.
Produced by – Andy Irvine & Luke Plumb.
Recorded in Melbourne and Scotland.
Engineered by – ?
Mixed & Edited by Luke Plumb and Andy Irvine at ?'s studio in ?.
Remixed and Mastered by ?, in ?.
References
edit- ^ a b Leman, Peter. "Andy Irvine & Luke Plumb". secondlinemusic.com.au. Retrieved 23 February 2018.
- ^ a b "Andy Irvine and Luke Plumb – 'Precious Heroes' ". abc.net.au. ABC Daily Planet. 9 January 2017. Retrieved 14 January 2017.
- ^ Precious Heroes, by Andy Irvine & Luke Plumb. 'CD Announcement' Page at Andy Irvine's website. Retrieved 23 February 2018
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Sleeve notes from Precious Heroes – Andy Irvine with Luke Plumb, Andy Irvine AK-7, 2017.
- ^ "November News!". lukeplumb.com. Luke Plumb. November 2016. Retrieved 14 January 2017.
External links
edit