Reviews of Silvery Moon

A New generation of Clancys embrace
folk
The Clancys are at it again.
More than 40 years ago, Patrick, Tom and Liam Clancy, later joined
by Bobby, became world famous as the Clancy Brothers. The group
did more than any other ensemble to ignite the still-thriving revival
of Irish music.
Today, a new generation from Erin's first family of folk is on the
front lines of Celtic music, including Massachusetts based singer
Aoife Clancy, Bobby's daughter. She is staking out a solo career
after a successful tenure with the popular ensemble Cherish the
Ladies. With a beautiful, smart, and warm-hearted new CD, "Silvery
Moon" (Appleseed), the 35 year-old mezzo sounds as if she is
coming into her own-in no small part because she finally seems comfortable
with the Clancy mantle she has often worn uncomfortably, if not
unwillingly. Clancy said her stint with Cherish the Ladies helped
reconcile her struggles with the family legacy. Audiences loved
to hear her sing familiar old ballads, whether or not they were
part of the Clancy songbag. She also learned how effective a performer
she is; whether it gets dubbed the Clancy charm or the Aoife allure,
she is an irresistibly amiable entertainer. Now, she says, she eagerly
pores through the songs her father taught her, and the hundreds
he collected in his travels throught Ireland before joining his
brothers' group, and is planning a CD devoted to those songs. She
could not embrace the Clancy legancy more directly-which, she says,
is just the point.
"As ive gotten older, I've realized how much
my father has given me and how much he still has to offer",
she says. "He's influenced me so much, whether I've noticed
it or not. The songs he gives me, now that I've started asking for
them, are always ones that are suited to the way I sing. I'm so
lucky to have that, I really, really am. I know that now".
In the fog of memory, the Clancy Brothers are often
falsely blamed for popularizing the faux-Irish pop songs ( often
called stage-Irish) that actually originated in American vaudeville
and came to be accepted by many Irish-Americans as genuinely Irish.
Aoife Clancy says that, in fact, her uncles and father restuffed
the Irish-American songbag with the real folk music of Erin.
"They showed the world what real Irish
folk songs sounded like, and opened the door for other musicians
who wanted to play authentic Irish music. Even for those who might
say what they did isin't their style, they opened the door for them
as well"
--SCOTT ALARIK
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