Behind the Green Bushes
author: Karen Owen
My husband and I have had several opportunities to see these ladies perform in person and they are both incredibly talented. We love this album and I'm buying it for the second time, in CD format. We've also bought it as a gift for several family members, some of whom also had the pleasure of hearing live performances, some who have only heard the album and this is a favorite with them as well. You will love their album Shule Aroon, as well as Urban Celtic and Mary Kay's album Celtic Daydreams.
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Incredibly beautiful
author: Anne Watson
I'm used to Celtic music--there are Celtic performers in my family. What I'm not used to is being astonished by a performance. This CD is astonishing--incredibly beautiful.
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delicate instrumentation and a gentle, well-polished voice
author: Tom Knapp, Rambles - A Cultural Arts Magazine
The band's name, HeartSounds, caused me to predict an album of wispy, sentimental, neo-Celtic new age tripe.
The album's title, Behind the Green Bushes, led me to expect a bawdy, perhaps even raunchy recording of songs to make a pub wench blush.
But Behind the Green Bushes by HeartSounds is neither. Rather, it's a recording of delicate instrumentation (harp, flutes and whistles) and a gentle, well-polished voice rendering a diverse collection of Celtic slow and lively traditional tunes.
HeartSounds is Mary Kay Mann (flutes and whistles) and Janet Jackson Biely (Celtic harp). Mann is also the duo's vocalist, and she sings with elegance and presence. (The band occasionally slips into graceful vocal harmonies, which are executed so well I have to wonder why there aren't more of them.) The music is always soft, better suited to a parlor than a pub, but the performance is sheer pleasure to hear.
The selection is largely traditional, including the likes of songs "Scarborough Fair," "Green Bushes," "My Lagan Love," "Blow the Candles Out" and "The Water is Wide," and tunes "Roving Galway Boy," "I Wish I Were on Yonder Hill," "Morrison's Jig," "Black Nag" and "Haste to the Wedding." The pair has also selected some favorites from Irish bard Turlough O'Carolan ("Carolan's Concerto," "Sheebeg and Sheemore" and "George Brabazon") and Scottish bard Robert Burns ("My Dowrie's the Jewel").
Biely also contributed one original tune to the mix, the waltz "Bittersweet," a stately and lyrical dance which fits in well with the traditional works around it.
Behind the Green Bushes might not be what you expect, but it certainly delivers a worthwhile package and is worth checking out.
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