Beautiful guitar playing and a sweet mix of traditional Irish tunes
author:
Dan Carollo's guitar playing is beautiful, melodic, flowing & soulful. Other tracks with fiddle, bass, drums rip through traditional Irish jigs and reels to carry me along. The Morrison's Jig into Drowsy Maggie is terrific.
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Celtic Grass is some very good stuff.. man
author: Shaun Lehman
From the first celtic melody through Amazing Grace throught the last Farewell Reprise, CeltoGrass embraces the ears, feeds the soul takes you to a very happy place. I really love the whole CD, and what I love most is the smooth blend of Bluegrass and Celtic - its a original and new sound. One of my favorite songs is 'nothing I desire' a vocal track that stuck in my head all day the first time I heard it. I absolutely recommend CeltoGrass
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Fun, and kids love to dance to it
author: Susan
This CD is fun and upbeat with great fiddling and intricate guitar.
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Carollo is a wonderful guitarist
author: Victory Music Review (Accoustic Music Magazine)
Carollo is a wonderful guitarist whose style incorporates the techniques developed by many of today's finest folk and new age players while at the same time hewing to traditional fingerpicking and Celtic and American sources. "The name Celtograss describes Dan's eclectic blend of Celtic, old-time American, gospel, bluegrass and original folk music," Dan writes.
You may find him in various local venues, either solo or playing with bandmates as Celtograss. Especially strong is the fiddle work of Ted Yuen, whose mastery of tone shines clearly in a superb reading of Jay Ungar's "Ashokan Farewell", The repertoire here includes traditional reels and jigs, sweet contemporary compositions, and Yuen and Carollo originals, which always have a spiritual foundation. For example, the second song, "St. Peter's Hot Rod," weaves together Windham Hill-like spaciousness with witty uptempo work. It is Carollo's delicately-complex solo version of "Amazing Grace", though, that wins my allegiance. The CD's one vocal, "Nothing I Desire," doesn't quite fit in this set, but it makes Carollo's Christian underpinnings very clear. The following song, "Instrument of Peace," with its catchy djembe (played by Travis Coster) and guitar and mandolin rhythms (both played by Carollo), is the second highlight track -- though all the music on the CD is uniformly catchy, moving, impeccably produced, and spirit-lifting. There are even a few guitar runs that make this listener shout for joy.
--Bill Fisher. Victory Music Review , August 2004 (Accoustic Music Magazine)
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