Sharon Shannon - Sacred Earth (2017)
Artist: Sharon Shannon
Title: Sacred Earth
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Celtic Collections Ltd
Genre: Celtic, Folk
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 42:31 min
Total Size: 103 / 248 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Sacred Earth
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Celtic Collections Ltd
Genre: Celtic, Folk
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 42:31 min
Total Size: 103 / 248 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Rusheen Bay
02. Sacred Earth
03. The Machine
04. Bas Pelles
05. Pull Out the Stops
06. He’ll Have To Go
07. Frenchie’s Reel
08. The Merry Widow
09. Let’s Go
10. Sea Shepherd
11. The Bull Fiddle
Well-known for her arrangements of traditional Irish tunes and Irish-influenced compositions, Sharon Shannon cheerfully mixed in with often unexpected styles from around the world, including – for the first time - Africa. Blues, North and West African music and reggae sit easily with Sharon's dancing rhythm in her new album Sacred Earth showing the ancient connections from South and East to West and back again. Shannon has always been eager to explore new styles, and to meet and work with other musicians. Justin Adams, who co-produced the album has long been an expert in African (and Middle Eastern) music styles. Justin played on Sharon's 2007 album 'Renegade', and she wanted to work with him again on this project both because of his African connections and because "he's such a generous musician and I love his fearless approach to music". According to Justin "ever since a latenight music session at her house in Galway, I've been aware of the joy and openness that goes alongside Sharon's rootedness in tradition. It's her free-wheeling approach that makes Sharon Shannon so exciting. And she puts it all down to the time she spent working with The Waterboys, when there were "no rules as to the type of music played…we could move very easily from a punk song to an old timey American waltz to Irish jigs and reels and onto New Orleans-type blues". As a soloist, she has continued that approach. Working with Denis Bovell on 'Out The Gap', back in 1994, she found that "the reggae rhythm lent a very groovy backing to an Irish reel". Since then there have been excursions into Argentinian tango, Breton music, American folk and country, and much more besides – including, of course, that massively-successful collaboration with Steve Earle on 'The Galway Girl'.