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25th Anniversary Celebration (with the R.T.E Concert Orchestra)
 
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25th Anniversary Celebration (with the R.T.E Concert Orchestra)

AltanMP3 Download
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

Price: $8.99
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  • Original Release Date: March 2, 2010
  • Format - Music: MP3
  • Compatible with MP3 Players (including with iPod®), iTunes, Windows Media Player
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  Song Title Time Price  
Play   1. Is the Big Man Within?/Tilly Finn's Reel 3:53 $0.99 Buy Track  - Is the Big Man Within?/Tilly Finn's Reel
Play   2. Cití na gCumann 4:04 $0.99 Buy Track  - Cití na gCumann
Play   3. The Roseville 2:20 $0.99 Buy Track  - The Roseville
Play   4. I Wish My Love was a Red Red Rose 3:44 $0.99 Buy Track  - I Wish My Love was a Red Red Rose
Play   5. Dónal agus Mórag 4:28 $0.99 Buy Track  - Dónal agus Mórag
Play   6. Mo Ghaoil 4:19 $0.99 Buy Track  - Mo Ghaoil
Play   7. Bog an Lochain/The Margaree Reel/The Humours of Westport 3:34 $0.99 Buy Track  - Bog an Lochain/The Margaree Reel/The Humours of Westport
Play   8. A Tune for Frankie 3:24 $0.99 Buy Track  - A Tune for Frankie
Play   9. Molly na gCuach Ní Chuilleannáin 2:39 $0.99 Buy Track  - Molly na gCuach Ní Chuilleannáin
Play 10. Soilse na Nollag 5:17 $0.99 Buy Track  - Soilse na Nollag
Play 11. As I Roved Out 4:02 $0.99 Buy Track  - As I Roved Out
Play 12. The Sunset 3:47 $0.99 Buy Track  - The Sunset
Play 13. Gleanntáin Glas Ghaoth Dobhair 3:37 $0.99 Buy Track  - Gleanntáin Glas Ghaoth Dobhair
Play 14. Comb Your Hair and Curl It/Gweebarra Bridge 3:54 $0.99 Buy Track  - Comb Your Hair and Curl It/Gweebarra Bridge
Play 15. Dún Do Shúil 3:34 $0.99 Buy Track  - Dún Do Shúil
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7 Reviews
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3.6 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Big Disappointment, March 11, 2010
By 
MJK (Arlington MA) - See all my reviews
For those familiar with Altan, either from live performances or previous recordings, this new CD will come as a surprise and, if you are at all like me, a big disappointment. I heard the first concert of Altan's current (March 2010) American tour. In live performance it is the same band so many have come to love. Of course they were pushing this new CD, and many of us bought it then and there. I was one. In their banter during the concert, there were references to the "orchestra" on the new CD. That did not sound good to me. And now that I have heard the CD, I can say that it ruins the CD for me. The tracks start out like the good old Altan, but before long the orchestra enters and from that point on it is downhill. The actual performances by the members of Altan, both singing and playing, are the same as you would expect from everything in their past. But the total effect is completely different with the orchestra. I am groping for the right characterization. For now I will call it the "Celtic Womanization" of Altan. I don't know why they have done this, but my best guess is: money. Altan is big in the traditional Celtic music scene. But "Celtic Woman" is so much bigger in the broader Irish music scene. So why not try a CD with crossover appeal? It just might sell well, but it is bound to disappoint many of Altan's old fans. As long as the band continues to perform live in their old way, I will continue to go to their concerts. But I know I can no longer buy a new CD without hearing it first, because I don't want to listen to this one again, and I won't buy another one like it. For some, Altan can do no wrong. Or because they like the band so much, some will give them a pass on this one. But I think their future is better served by letting the band know this is not the direction their fans want them to go in.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not Exactly "Sketches of Donegal", March 8, 2010
By 
o dubhthaigh (north rustico, pei, canada) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
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And David Brophy isn't exactly Gil Evans. I am always concerned when non-classical artists opt for the full orchestra treatment. Occasionally, as with Miles Davis' "Sketches of Spain" or "Porgy and Bess", all the dials are reset and new ground is broken in the home discipline (in Miles' case, jazz). Those works radically changed perceptions of how an improvising soloist of considerable strength could interact with a more structured ensemble and both play to their strengths. The soundtrack for "Mise Eire" is an extraordinary example of an orchestra taking on traditional vernacular and evoking a strong sense of place, environment, dialect, culture. In each of these examples, it took a director who was keenly focused on what could not be compromised by either discipline for the project to work. Liam O Flynn has effected very arresting takes on the tradition with orchestral accompaniement, but even he doesn't like every one of those efforts. Back when we presented him for Project H.O.M.E., he said at lunch that by and large those records were noble failures inspite of the efforts he and Shaun Davey put into them.

More often than not, this kind of cultural success doesn't happen, and you end up with movie music, bad pops orchestral muzak, failed experiments, or bloated efforts that do no service to anyone. The examples are endless. Micheal O Suillebhain gave it as brilliant a try as anyone and had the advantage of being the composer. Still, by the second and definitely on the third disc, the music was dull. While not as soporific as a Phil Coulter Tranquility record, the music swung and missed at its goals of advancing a traditional classical form. Harp players are particularly given to a stilted expression of O Carolan that drives me, for one, absolutely crazy. They seem to be coming from that same sense of self importance as Elvis Costello (remember the Juliet Letters?) and thus suck the very life out of O Carolan's genius. I recall sitting in the Park Hotel Kenmare and at the fourth go `round of "Down By The Sally Gardens" I finally understood the Pogues. I kept thinking that were Turlough alive he'd no doubt run a darning needle through his eardrums.

Regrettably, this is not Altan's shining moment. On the one hand, I am happy to see that they are still a going concern. But I've listened to this disc a half dozen times and with each pass, I don't get why they did it. Where they genuinely stuck for an idea? Altan is, like Miles' great quintets of the 50's and 60's, a scary beast, not to be trifled with, in a live setting. Their studio efforts are at their best when they approach the drive and dynamics of their live shows. Dragging the RTE orchestra along with them plays to none of their strengths. For my money, there is no better rhythmic engine than Ciaran Curran. Pair him with either Mark Kelly, or especially Daithi Sproule, and Ciaran delivers a rhythmic punch matched only by Andy Irvine and Donal Lunny. Dermot Byrne's concertina and accordion work is a thing of subtle grace as well as dexterity. Byrne has done an admirable job filling in a musical slot left open with the passing of Frankie Kennedy and is a prolific composer in the tradition. Ciaran Tourish and Mairead Ni Mhaonaigh are the two most dynamic fiddle players in Irish music today and their place among the greats of the driving Donegal tradition is assured. Among the signature strengths of Altan is the dialectical interplay engaged by these two. Top all this off with that voice...... No one, absolutely no one in any discipline, sings with the emotional and spiritual authority of Mairead Ni Mhaonaigh. What you hear in her tone comes from the soul.

Collectively they get washed out to sea by the orchestra. I don't know whether Brophy hadn't a clue where to take the orchestra with Altan's music (Evans knew exactly what he was after and had to convince Miles that it was something Miles didn't even know he wanted), or whether for him, Brophy, it was just a reverential pops outing, but RTE, whatever its other merits might be, slows down the drive, flattens the dynamics, and smothers the subtleties that are Altan's stock in trade. It's not that it's a bad album, if you like this sort of thing, and maybe it's just aimed at an aging audience that wonders what happened to the Chieftains, but I know a thing or two about Donegal music, and this aint it. And sadly, it could be anybody playing with the orchestra. And that's criminal.

Joni Mitchell did an orchestral reading of her hits for which she got critically raked. It was not that it was a bad orchestra, or that she sang poorly, but the songs themselves had such an iconic place in people's hearts and souls that the orchestral reading missed the mark. Mitchell got pissed at the reaction, but the truth is, it really isn't her shining moment. And for a woman who blazed an extraordinarily creative trail, it seemed an odd indulgence or retreat. 25 years into a career, and while I can understand the interest in taking a fresh look at one's canon, this Altan CD misses the mark as well. I would have thought that among the 5 or 6 of them, depending on who is in the studio, that there would have been enough drive and creativity to recast some of the material in different settings, combinations, whatever. Had they really sought an orchestral reconsideration, they might have been better served by an orchestra or, better, a chamber group with an edge not unlike their own. It's a dangerous thing looking back. Satchel Paige served notice to everyone. Miles resisted until the last year of his life. For Mitchell, the disappointment brought her career to what has been a very long hiatus (unless the Olympics performance augurs a return).

It's been a while since Altan stepped into the spotlight. I am going to see them in Bethlehem on March 13 and I am relieved to see that they are not dragging the RTE along. No one is looking for a Celtic version of Emmerson, Lake and Palmer. I'm hoping that the orchestra isn't even on a loop of tape. If inspiration were at issue, Altan has an incredible back catalogue of brilliant shows, and it remains a mystery to me why they don't release a box set of live shows, or offer for download any of the performances in their career that really did change the music's direction and vitality. My own discs from the shows we did are favourites, but I have seen them live in so many settings that, warts and all, that is the genuine Altan, the pure drop. What happened on any given night was a thing of wonder, and things of wonder are nearly impossible to effect with an orchestra playing as background. If I were you, I'd pick up Mairead's solo record, IMEALL. It is compelling, beautiful, passionate and dynamic. Dedicated to Frankie, in honour as well to her brother and father, this is coming from a very intensely sacred well. Whether Altan still has access to that well we'll all find out in time. They deserve better than what they've done to themselves here. They are a better band than this. No one is looking for Altan Lite. And it pains me to write this. I just never thought......
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A nice new album, with the band taking a few risks, April 7, 2010
Altan
"25th Anniversary Concert"
(Compass Records, 2010)
---------------------------------------------
One of the great Irish trad bands of the last thirty years, Altan is a showcase for fiddler-vocalist Mairead Ni Mhaonaigh, who took the craggy, rough-hewn fiddling style of Donegal to an international stage. Here the band celebrates their twenty-fifth year(!) with a new album, the core band bolstered by the RTE Concert Orchestra, led by David Brophy. Predictably, the classical-pop orchestrations may not be to the liking of many fans, particularly trad purists, but as with many long-lived, trad-oriented ensembles, I'm sure Altan feel the need to try something new from time to time. Actually, I don't find the added orchestrations all that intrusive -- mostly they just add emphasis to the traditional Celtic motifs, building on Altan's music, rather than distracting from it. The rich, traditional core of their music remains, and Mairead's voice is still absolutely gorgeous; both the instrumental and vocal tracks are quite lovely.

Perhaps you can take the harsher reviews of this album with a grain of salt -- if you're new to Altan, this album is certainly worth a try and if you like what you hear, there are many, many earlier albums that may be even more rewarding. Older fans may be pleasantly surprised as well, particularly those who are willing to hang with a little bit of flowery ornamentation on top of a solid Celtic sound. (DJ Joe Sixpack, Slipcue Guide To World Music)
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