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Natalie MacMaster
Heartfelt
Onstage, Natalie MacMaster is a one-woman Riverdance, constantly
step-dancing, prancing, whirling, twirling, stamping, stomping, all
the while playing horsehair-sizzling tunes that most fiddlers
can't manage even while standing still. When she does play
sitting down, her feet continue clogging complex accompanying
rhythms. Her whole body exuberantly exudes her love of the traditional
Cape Breton music she has heard and played all her life, as well
as her joy in sharing it with others. And when she plays the slow
waltzes and airs of her tradition, the melodies are so poignant,
her playing so heartfelt, that lyrics are superfluous to convey the
feelings. It doesn't hurt that she also looks like Meg Ryan
and frequently flashes smiles that radiate all the way back to the
cheap seats.
MacMaster's music is grounded in Celtic dance rhythms
jigs, reels, strathspeys, and waltzes and she plays them all
with authority and authenticity, expertly managing the intricate
bow bounces, trills, turns, and ornamentations of the Cape Breton
strain of that genre. But she has also taken this centuries-old
music and brought it into the vocabulary of modern world music.
Nothing has been lost in the translation. Her arrangements of
traditional tunes, as well her own compositions an ever-growing
part of her recent repertoire retain the driving rhythms and
lyrical melodies of the originals, while seamlessly incorporating
elements from styles as far flung as rock, Latin, jazz, and even
flamenco. MacMaster has long collaborated with other masters of
diversity such as bassist Edgar Meyer and banjoist Bela Fleck, and
she's shared the stage with, among others, the Chieftains, Paul
Simon, Pavarotti, Santana, and Faith Hill. Hers is eclectic Celtic
for purists and radicals alike.
When you think of Natalie MacMaster you can't help also
thinking of family and dynasty. She is the niece of famed Cape
Breton fiddler Buddy MacMaster, who started her on the fiddle when
she was nine years old, and when she returns to the Ann Arbor Summer
Festival at the Power Center on Thursday, July 3, she will be
accompanied by her husband, Donnell Leahy, a brilliant fiddler in
his own right and frontman for the highly popular Canadian family
band Leahy. Quite likely, Natalie's mother will also be along,
as she often is on her tours, helping to care for Natalie and
Donnell's two young children while the couple are onstage.
If it's not too much past their bedtime, the kids may be
staying up with the rest of us, thrilling to the music of their
parents music with ancient roots, blooming in the present
and branching out into the future. And someday they may be passing
along to their children the rich heritage they are inheriting from
their parents.
Sandor Slomovits
[Review published July 2008]
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