Hot Topics Percolating Through the Cafe


Got any newsy tidbits?
Let us know. E-mail them to: bernadette@celticcafe.com

We started the "Buzz" section here at the Celtic Cafe as a means of sharing some of the news and information posted to our associated mail lists, which are devoted mostly (but not exclusively) to Irish dance and Celtic music. For more detailed information, and to join in the discussion about "anything Celtic," please sign up for our main list, large and very international. Click on the following: Celtic Cafe Yahoo Group

• • •

Please note:
A new page for Cafe Buzz items will appear approximately every two weeks.

Access current Buzz items through the main page at celticcafe.com

To see our Buzz for June 8-June 21, click here.
To see our Buzz for May 25-June 7, click here.
To see our Buzz for May 11-24, click here.
To see our first page of "newsy tidbits," click here.

• • •

July 5

MAIREAD NESBITT JOINS AFROCELTS ON TOUR

What a thrill to find out that some of our favorite musicians are teaming up with each other, in unexpected ways! Former Lord of the Dance fiddler Máiréad Nesbitt is joining the AfroCelts (formerly Afro Celt Sound System) on their upcoming U.S. tour in support of the new album, "Seed," and we couldn't be more excited. (Check her own site to make sure which of the dates she'll be on their tour.) Since the debut a few days ago of RadioCelt, the Internet Radio webcast at RadioCelt.com, we've had the pleasure of hearing a lot of the AfroCelts' "airplay." They are incredibly good, and Iarla Ó Lionáird's vocals are close to being "revered" at the Celtic Cafe... indeed, he and "I Could Read the Sky" were featured at the Celtic Cafe back in our early days, and we love his sean nós style of singing on his solo CDs as much as with the AfroCelts! Check out his "Seven Steps to Mercy." That voice is simply awesome!

From the AfroCelts site today... it looks like we have more reason to celebrate beyond the upcoming tour! "Congratulations to Iarla and Emmer O'Lionaird on the birth of their 2nd child, 11 a.m. today, a baby girl. She came out singing. Welcome to the world Eavha O'Lionaird, may you be blessed with the creativity and grace of your parents. By star, stone, sun and moon may your path be guided. From us all we wish you peace, love and light. Nice one, Emmer! Nice one, Iarla! We'll sink a pint or two tonight and toast you all."

The Celtic Cafe joins in with those sentiments, including that toast tonight!

Click here for the AfroCelts' tourdates page (they are adding dates, so check back with them periodically) to see when you can catch them and Mairead in your neck of the woods. Her site is at MaireadNesbitt.com and the AfroCelts at AfroCelts.com

Want to hear them via that great "airplay" on Internet Radio? Zip on over to RadioCelt.com

• • •

July 4

THE CHIEFTAINS ON PBS' CAPITOL FOURTH

America's biggest birthday party, the PBS television event A Capitol Fourth, airs live this evening from 8:00 to 9:30 p.m. Eastern Time (check local listings) from the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol. The brilliant evening of musical entertainment includes The Chieftains, and is topped by a dazzling display of fireworks over the Washington Monument. What's even more exciting to those of us who saw the recent PBS broadcast of "Down the Old Plank Road," is that we get to see the Pilatzke Brothers dancing again! Tim O'Brien will also be appearing with the Chieftains, and they will be in the very first 10 or 15 minutes of the program, so don't tune in late, or get those VCRs programmed -- the Pilatzkes alone would be worth making sure that you have a fresh videotape! Click here to see a very nice photo as a sneak preview from our upcoming feature on them, and click here for our previous Cafe Buzz item about them and the Chieftains, and about Jon's Pilatzke's band Quagmyre. Click here for our feature on Tim O'Brien. Also appearing with the Chieftains will be Earl Scruggs, Jerry Douglas, Jeff White, Marshall Wilborn, and David McLaughlin (on snare).

The concert, hosted by veteran actor Barry Bostwick, features performances by some of the country’s best-known and award-winning musical artists, including country music superstar and American icon Dolly Parton, R&B vocalist James Ingram, Grammy award-winning Irish musical force The Chieftains, Tony award-winning Broadway sensation and television star Kristin Chenoweth, bluegrass legends Earl Scruggs and Jerry Douglas, and Broadway, television and film star Craig Bierko, among many others. Leading the internationally renowned National Symphony Orchestra is America’s premier pops conductor, Erich Kunzel. There will also be a special tribute to John Williams, the legendary composer of so many film soundtracks you are sure to be familiar with!

The Public Broadcasting Station is at PBS.org. Catch the Chieftains' upcoming tour dates at this site: www.irish.com/chieftains.html and information and videoclips of Jon Pilatzke's band Quagmyre at: Quagmyre.ca

• • •

July 3

FINBAR FUREY'S CHASING MOONLIGHT

What is it about that man's voice? It's very difficult to listen to Finbar Furey's new CD "Chasing Moonlight" without wondering how "addiction" happens -- you just don't want to stop listening to him sing! It's more than just that great Irish accent... there's a certain quality that just reaches deep within -- and considering that "Chasing Moonlight" is a CD of "Love Songs of Ireland," that's a very good thing! The album, produced by Nick Patrick, whose previous work includes Marvin Gaye, The Gypsy Kings and Russell Watson, features beautiful new versions of such classics as “The Fields of Athenry,” “Carrickfergus,” and “Sweet Sixteen” alongside Finbar's own lovely new songs “Do You Remember,”“Dreams In Your Eyes,” and “Connemara.”

And it's not just his vocals that hook you... he plays guitar, banjo, low whistle and uilleann pipes on "Chasing Moonlight," and indeed, he's hailed by many as Ireland's "Prince of Pipers." (All-Ireland Champion Piper on three occasions.) He and The Fureys helped to guide the evolution of Ireland's traditional folk music over the last four decades. They became folk legends across the continent, winning the International Folk Award in 1966, and introducing a whole new generation to the wonders of Irish music. With a string of hit records across the world, they helped pave the way for the new wave of Irish traditional and contemporary bands that were to follow.

Finbar is featured in Martin Scorsese's film "Gangs of New York," and if you haven't seen it yet, check out the video or DVD, released in the U.S. on July 1st. The single off "Chasing Moonlight" is "New York Girls" -- part of the film soundtrack (Bono and Peter Gabriel were also involved). See the official film site at: GangsofNewYork.com

Finbar's site is at FinbarFurey.com

• • •

July 2

ERIN HART'S "HAUNTED GROUND"

When was the last time you read a mystery novel where the main characters take you along to Pub Sessions?! Erin Hart, the author of "Haunted Ground," happens to be married to Paddy O'Brien, Irish button accordion virtuoso, and "walking encyclopedia of Irish music." The book sounds like great reading for the international Celtic Cafe community members, especially since it has garnered rave reviews, and is being published simultaneously in the U.S., Canada, Britain and Ireland, and has also been translated into German, French, Dutch, Spanish, Catalan, Italian, Portuguese, Norwegian, and Swedish. The novel combines archeology, forensics, and the author's love of Irish music and culture, and was inspired by an intriguing tale about a beautiful red-haired girl and a desolate Irish bog. Erin Hart says:

“People often ask why I chose Ireland as a setting, and I have to say that I think Ireland chose me,” Hart says. “It’s a place I’ve been drawn to more than any other ever since I was a child. There’s something about Ireland’s complex and contradictory nature, all those layers of history one on top of the other—that lends a particular resonance to the kinds of stories I feel compelled to tell. In the course of writing the first two books, I’ve had the good fortune to meet all kinds of fascinating and wonderfully generous people working in the fields I’m most interested in, and that’s been incredibly stimulating. One of the things I love best about being a writer is that it’s a really great excuse to keep learning.”

From her bio page: "...Hart says she felt drawn to traditional music — particularly Irish music — and traditional forms of singing and storytelling from an early age. She became interested in the highly ornamented, unaccompanied singing style the Irish call sean nós ('old style'), and started performing around 1980. The following year, she traveled to the west of Ireland to study the Irish language, and met her husband, accordion player Paddy O'Brien, on the day she returned home; they were married in 1987."

Click here for Paddy O'Brien's bio page at Chulrua.com for some very interesting reading, including about "The Paddy O’Brien Tune Collection: A Personal Treasury of Irish Jigs and Reels, an unprecedented undertaking for a single player. The collection was released in July of 1995, and has been hailed as a priceless and indispensable resource by Irish musicians on both sides of the Atlantic."

Paddy will accompany Erin on the upcoming book tour for Haunted Ground, and set the mood with traditional tunes at several of the bookstore readings. Click here for the U.S. schedule at Erin's site, and you can even read a book excerpt at ErinHart.com

• • •

July 1

ASHLEY MacISAAC AT CANADA DAY

Canadians in Toronto can celebrate the nation's 136th birthday on July 1, Dominion Day, with a Celtic concert capped by dazzling fireworks. From the official Toronto Special Events site:

"Nine-year-old opera singer Aria Tesalin kicks things off with a roaring rendition of the nations' anthem. Explosive Celtic rock unit Enter the Haggis will continue the energy with their combination of traditional highland bagpipe and fiddle with a powerhouse rhythm section. Enter the Haggis will be followed by Juno Award and East Coast Music Award-winning The Irish Descendants. The concert will close with the explosive sound of Canadian fiddle icon Ashley MacIsaac," who was the Celtic Cafe's Featured Artist of the Month in May.

Learn more about the Canada Day events by clicking here. Ashley MacIsaac's site is at ashley-macisaac.com

• • •

June 30

ANNOUNCING THE LAUNCH OF RADIOCELT!

AccuRadio has just given Celtic music fans a VERY big present: RadioCelt! Thanks to former Riverdance singer Michael Londra, we can hear 24 hours a day so many of the great artists we've been privileged to feature at the Celtic Cafe, including Michael himself! See our focus on him as April's Celtic Cafe Artist of the Month by clicking here, and see his own website at MichaelLondra.com.

We are SO thrilled. Celtic music occupies such a tiny niche, as fantastic as the music is... and RadioCelt is a free Internet radio station that will no doubt be a big boon to both fans and traditional musicians alike! It features the best of today's Celtic artists from around the world, both well-known and some independent recording artists who are no doubt soon-to-be-well-known. AccuRadio.com is one of the Top Ten Internet sites in the world, and they offer several other music channels -- RadioCelt is simply the latest (and best!) addition, offering five "substations" -- Male or Female Artists, Traditional and Progressive, plus a main channel. The best part is that it's so easy to "tune in" - just click and listen!

Please check it out and give Michael your feedback at Michael@AccuRadio.com. He's very much interested in your suggestions for artists you'd like to hear at RadioCelt.com

• • •

June 29

FOLKEST FESTIVAL IN ITALY - July 3-27, 2003

Another significant festival of interest to the Celtic Cafe community is Folkest, in the Friuli Venezia-Giulia Region of northern Italy, taking place from July 3rd to 27th. Alan Stivell performs on the 4th, and Máiréad Nesbitt, former Lord of the Dance fiddler, on July 11th. See the festival website for many more artists scheduled at all the beautiful and interesting venues.

Folkest has been around for 25 years, and even has UNESCO sponsorship! Click here for some interesting information about the culture of that region.

From the website's English translation: "Folkest is a festival dedicated to cultures from all over the world, to the music of different ethnic groups which meet each other in search of future peaceful cohabitation. Having set itself up, artistically, as an expression of the latest interesting trends, this festival offers to spectators music which defies all boundaries and definition, a fascinating mixture of experiences in which it is quite possible to see, performing side by side (or improvising a session), a sacred Indian dancer and the British group Fairport Convention, a performer from Resia and Miriam Makeba, Australian performers and Donovan, Arabian music and Fossati, Alice and reggae, Irish and Hungarian folk music, Bob Dylan and Loreena McKennitt, Joan Baez and our own local groups... This uncompromising choice of artists has for many years made Folkest famous throughout Europe, confirming it as an ideal platform for revealing new talents to the people of Europe.

See the festival website at: folkest.com

• • •

June 28

FESTIVAL INTERCELTIQUE DE LORIENT - August 1-10, 2003

One of the most significant Celtic festivals in the world is held every August in Lorient (Brittany, France), the Festival InterCeltique. From the first Friday to the second Sunday in August, the ten days of festivities attracts 4,500 musicians, singers, dancers, artists, university professors and film-makers from Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Cornwall, The Isle of Man, Galicia, Asturia, Brittany, the USA, Canada, Australia, etc. The audience expected this year is 350,000! The twelve entertainment spots throughout the town will include such stellar performers as the Chieftains, Eileen Ivers, Sharon Shannon, Alasdair Fraser and Skyedance, Capercaillie, Carlos Nunez, Giles Servat, Hevia, Gaelic Storm and many more.

Each year a different aspect of the Celtic nations is the focus of the festival, and this time it's Asturias in Spain, near Galicia. For more on that, click here for the festival's "Celtic Countries" page.

See the festival site at: festival-interceltique.com

• • •

June 27

REAL IRISH - MADE IN SWEDEN!

Christy O’Leary and Bert Deivert have just released Song’s Sweet Caress - the first CD by a major Irish traditional artist completely recorded and produced in Sweden. Christy O’Leary, originally from Kenmare, Kerry, spent 12 years with the Boys of the Lough as their front man, singing, playing whistle and pipes. Christy has also worked with John Denver, Andy MacKay and Phil Manzanera from Roxy Music, Connie Dover, and with Swedish artists Björn Afzelius, Roger Pontare, Ale Möller, Lena Willemark, and West of Eden. Christy’s last CD was a solo venture in 1997 - The Northern Bridge, released in the UK on Old Bridge Music. Steve Winick of Dirty Linen called it "one of the most listenable albums in Irish music history... perfectly balanced... containing seven songs sung in O'Leary's trademark rich, sweet voice... Nothing short of brilliant... as near to perfect as anyone could wish for." Well, a certain highly-regarded editor of an Irish music magazine just heard the new CD, and raved about it on the IRTRAD mailing list... "wow, great work and wonderful recording quality, very bright. First impressions of its style reminds me of a combination of Andy Irvine, Cran and Ciaran Galbhain from Danu, (great sax on the first track, by the way). Not your father's traditional music, but extremely listenable, the bouzouki is melodic rather than percussive and the pipes crystal clear and it isn't infected with aspirations of world music as is much modern stuff coming out of Ireland these days... well done."

Click here to go directly to the page at the Deivert.com site where you can hear MP3 samples of the tracks on Song's Sweet Caress.

Check out the CVs at the Deivert.com site for both Christy and for Bert Deivert, who has worked since the early '70s as a singer/songwriter, producer, composer, and filmmaker. An Irishman and an American, connecting up in Sweden to produce a wonderful new CD... not THAT unusual, considering the worldwide spread of Celtic Culture, these days!

Christy and Bert will be at the Pomarkku Irish Festival in Finland at the beginning of August and at London's Return to Camden Town Irish Festival on October 29th, sharing the bill with Karan Casey. You'll find a full feature on them at the Celtic Cafe in the near future, but meanwhile, check out their site at: deivert.com/oleary.html

• • •

June 26

RIAA AND INTERNET PIRACY

As of today, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) will begin collecting evidence and preparing lawsuits against individual computer users who are illegally offering to "share" substantial amounts of copyrighted music over peer-to-peer networks. In making the announcement, the music industry cited its multi-year effort to educate the public about the illegality of unauthorized downloading, and underscored the fact that major music companies have made vast catalogues of music available to dozens of services to help create legitimate, high quality and inexpensive alternatives to online piracy.

"The law is clear and the message to those who are distributing substantial quantities of music online should be equally clear --- this activity is illegal, you are not anonymous when you do it, and engaging in it can have real consequences," said RIAA president Cary Sherman. "We'd much rather spend time making music then dealing with legal issues in courtrooms. But we cannot stand by while piracy takes a devastating toll on artists, musicians, songwriters, retailers and everyone in the music industry."

Read more at the Recording Industry Association of America website: RIAA.com

• • •

June 25

ZOUKFEST 2003

Taos, New Mexico, is one of those magical places on the planet, and it will be even more special from Sunday, June 29th through July 6th with the classes, workshops and concerts of the Taos Festival of World Music. In 1998 and 1999, founder and director Roger Landes hosted the first international gatherings devoted to the Celtic bouzouki, ZoukFest, and subsequently relocated the annual event to Taos.

This 5th year of ZoukFest includes classes in Balkan singing, Anglo-Celtic singing, Early English Song, Irish fiddle, Middle Eastern percussion, Irish flute and whistle, Celtic bouzouki, Celtic Mandolin, Irish guitar accompaniment, Middle Eastern instrumental music, Singer’s Lab, Fingerstyle guitar, and Old Time banjo.

The 2003 Staff includes Randal Bays, Mason Brown, Connie Dover, Dan Beimborn, Sonja Drakulich, Alec Finn, Gari Hegedus, Roger Landes, Grey Larsen, Kevin MacLeod, Angela Mariani, Susu Pampanin, Chris Smith, Rose Tan, Chipper Thompson. Click here to check out the Staff Bios and learn more about Roger Landes and what ZoukFest has done for the Celtic bouzouki!!

Check out the teaching videos and DVDs too... at the Zoukfest site, RogerLandes.com

• • •

June 24

FROMSEIER ROSE

The dynamic duo formed by Ditte Fromseier Mortensen on violin and Michael G. Rose on piano is named Fromseier Rose, and they perform modern acoustic Celtic music so very beautifully, in Copenhagen, Denmark.

From the Fromseier Rose website: "It was the middle of a late night session at the 2001 Copenhagen Irish Festival. Ditte launched into a lively version of Kitchen Girl and Michael joined in on the piano. It was the first time they played together and their chemistry was evident in the music. By the end of the tune it was obvious that they had to play together...

The music of Fromseier Rose is based on the Celtic tradition. Ditte draws on the heavily rhythmic Scottish and northern Irish styles. This is complemented by the swinging pulse from Michael's New England roots. These traditional sources are combined with their own compositions and a rich variety of musical influences. The result is a swinging and stimulating conversation between two talented musicians that appeals to a broad range of audiences."

They leave for Scotland on a short tour over the next couple of weeks, and if you're in that part of the world, hasten over to their website for the itinerary, starting on June 27th in Aberdeen, and continuing on to Mallaig, Tobermory and Inverness. Even if you're not in Scotland, check out their site for some real listening excitement. Their MP3s sound absolutely terrific! Click here to go directly to that page of sounds and see if you don't agree!

Their new CD contains three songs by Niamh Parsons, and based on what we hear on those MP3 samples and how much we know and love about Niamh's voice, it's sure to be an excellent addition to one's Celtic music collection!

Learn more about Ditte and Michael: FromseierRose.com

• • •

June 23

CELTIC WOMEN INTERNATIONAL

From one focus on Celtic Women (see Cafe Buzz item below) to another... Celtic Women International presents CELTIC ROUTES, a Cultural Conference and Celebration from October 3-5, 2003, in Toronto, Canada.
Music, Film, Theater, Art, Dance... all to honor and celebrate Celtic women and their heritage.

The name Celtic Routes was chosen because they wanted to focus on the development of the Celtic culture "when it followed one of its many routes across the sea to Canada, which has a rich Celtic heritage from coast to coast. The East coast of Canada is probably best known for its Celtic heritage. French settlers were the first to populate the region. Originally the whole maritime area was known as L'Acadie, and the people who lived there, Acadians. Political and social changes brought people of many different heritages. By the 1800's Newfoundland was largely settled by people of Irish heritage who have left their legacy to this day in songs, stories and customs. Cape Breton, the easternmost Island of Nova Scotia saw an influx of Scottish settlers during the Highland Clearances and after breakdown of the clan system. All of these different cultures, as well as the natives of the region, contributed to what is now a distinctive east coast culture."

This 6th Annual conference includes Canadian Celtic presenters:

Mary Jane Lamond, the foremost champion of the traditional Gaelic singing of Cape Breton; Tess LeBlanc, of Acadian heritage, who brings a vibrant and playful energy to her music; Anne Lederman, fiddler/singer/composer strongly rooted in several Canadian musical traditions, old and new – Metis and French-Canadian, Scots-Irish, Eastern European and African; Anita Best, considered to be one of the foremost authorities on Newfoundland culture; Brenda Stubbart, from a musical family that has kept alive the traditions of Cape Breton; Cari Buziak, whose current work includes TV and movie design work, book and CD illustrations, RPG graphics, rubber stamp designs, designing for Irish Dance dresses, jewellery designs and other commissioned works; and Debbie Quigley - hailing originally from Newtownards in county Down, Debbie is now at the heart of Toronto's vibrant Irish music scene. Inspired and taught by the late Chris Langan, Debbie is well known not only as a player, and a seisun leader, but as a teacher. "Debbie always leads the seisun with the same generosity, whether it's the Chieftains who join her, or a new player just learning the whistle."

Celtic Women International (CWI) is a worldwide non-profit membership organization dedicated to recognizing the contribution that Celtic women have made to the world. CWI honors these women by sharing their stories of success, which may inspire others to follow in their footsteps.

Learn more at CelticWomen.org

• • •

June 22

MAIREID SULLIVAN'S CELTIC DREAMING

Irish-born traditional and contemporary singer, poet, writer Mairéid Sullivan is one of those people that we admire on so many different levels, professionally and personally. She first came to our attention as the writer of the book of interviews of Celtic Women in Music - A Celebration of Beauty and Sovereignty. As a performer herself, she was able to talk with these other music luminaries as a peer, and from the heart. The in-depth interviews include Maire Brennan, Karen Matheson, Delores Keane, Eileen Ivers, Maddy Pryor, Mary Jane Lamond, Mary Bergin, Kathryn Tickell, and many more.

Mairéid and her partner Ben Kettlewell, a multi-instrumentalist and editor of the excellent online music magazine, Alternate Music Press (alternatemusicpress.com), are currently living and doing amazing work in Melbourne, Australia. They have recorded a new CD, Never Drift Apart, (just launched in the USA and in Australia next month) described as "an imaginative musical journey through soulful ballads, soaring slow airs and mesmerizing dance rhythms - songs of joy, struggle and hope." MP3 samples can be found at her site, maireid.com, but that's not all! One can also find videoclips -- seven selected excerpts from a documentary film featuring fourteen of Ireland's top female musicians, representing a cross-section of the many streams of Irish music. These documentary film clips can be accessed directly by clicking here. The clips show the most breathtaking Irish scenery coupled with fascinating portions of interviews, including those of Maire Brennan, who "spoke of her journey as a musician, first with her Grammy award-winning group, Clannad, and now as a solo artist, pursuing her soul-searching which has brought her inner peace and a heightened sense of mission to share her love."

Another very special focus was on Noirin Ni Riain's and the spectacular home in Tipperary. "The house, which is on the historic register, is being lovingly restored to its former grandeur by Noirin and her composer husband, Micheal O'Suilleabhain. It has a grand entrance hall with a wide staircase, high ceilings, and large rooms including a warm family kitchen. There is plenty of land around the house, with two horses, two grazing donkeys, and a Tibetan goat. In the middle of the enclosed farmyard, surrounded by a few brown and white hens, guinea hens, a goose and a peacock, sits a huge iron cauldron from the sad time of famine era soup kitchens."

Another clip takes us to Paddy Quinn's pub, in Ennis, to film Siobhan Peoples' regular Saturday night session, where Josephine Marsh (accordion) joined in the session. Others include Ireland's most celebrated tin-whistle player, Mary Bergin, Irish Artist of the Year, 2000. Her group, Dordan, (Irish for drone or hum) includes Kathleen Loughnane on harp, Dearbhill Standun on violin and Martina Goggin on drum and voice. Click here to go to the videoclips section at Maireid's site to read about the others captured in this special way, and enjoy them as we did, so very much!

Celtic Dreaming - Music, Poetry and Multimedia

Mairéid and Ben have been working on film backdrop for their concerts, putting together footage from Ireland, the USA and Australia to show the chronological movement of the Celts from Ireland to the new worlds and the people they met there. This 80-minute film will show on the screen behind them as they sing songs and recite poetry and play music - that goes along with it - mostly traditional songs and poems with a few of Maireid's own.

The first concert appearances of Celtic Dreaming will be launched at The Judith Wright Centre of Contemporary Arts in Brisbane on 5 July, the new Byron Bay Community Theatre on 11 July, Djanbung Gardens Permaculture Education Centre in Nimbin on 13 July and Chapel off Chapel in Melbourne on 21 July. More dates can be found at Maireid's site: Maireid.com Ben Kettlewell's site: alternatemusicpress.com

Oh, those lucky folks Down Under are in for such a treat!

• • •

Read the first-ever Cafe Buzz items by clicking here.
Read the second page of Cafe Buzz items by clicking here.
Read the third page of Cafe Buzz items by clicking here.
Read the fourth page of Cafe Buzz items by clicking here.


Feature: Bernadette Price
Original Web Design: Alexander Servas

 
 
 
 
 
 
Máiréad Nesbitt
The Chieftains at A Capitol Fourth
Finbar Furey
Erin Hart's Haunted Ground
Ashley-MacIsaac
RadioCelt
Folkest Italy 2003
Festival InterCeltique
Christy O'Leary and Bert Deivert
Celtic Bouzouki
Celtic Women International
Celtic Women by Maireid Sullivan
 
 

 

 

 

 
 
© 2003 by CelticCafe.com