Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
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Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album
Damien O'Kane's album Summer Hill.
Damien's debut solo album features songs from Damien's native Northern Ireland and further afield. This album also contains self-composed instrumentals delivered with unique O'Kane flare and panache.
Folk songs, by their very nature, have always travelled through families. Now Damien O'Kane, a blue-eyed, brown-eyed Northern Irishman, joins these ranks. His partner is Kate Rusby, whose own Mercury-nominated crossover folk records certainly set the bar high for their household. Thankfully for O'Kane, 'Summer Hill' meets this bar beautifully.
O'Kane is best known for his exquisite banjo playing, both with accordion player Shona Kipling and supergroup Flook, winners of best group at the BBC 2 Folk Awards, and this is still very present on his debut album. But what also hits you immediately is the richness of O'Kane's voice. It is both strong and sweet, rough and romantic, giving directness and immediacy to the old stories he has collected, many of them from the tumultuous past of his homeland. O'Kane has set seven of them to his own melodies, strengthening the link between his past and present, as well as the status of the lyrics in the Celtic folk canon. O'Kane's settings are largely conventional, but complementary. Strands of Magilligan, a sunny romp about an American settler in County Derry, and Dobbins Flowery Vale, a sweet lullaby about a leafy lovers retreat, are two of the most crowd-pleasing. Lough Erne Shore is one of the most effective, however, creating a sparse atmosphere around the tale of an otherworldly girl whose "cupid has led me astray". Echoing the early work of Bert Jansch and John Martyn, it suggests that O'Kane is at his best when he is daring to experiment.
Elsewhere on Summer Hill, there are further signs of adventure. Seasick DeeâDee Goes to Holyhead, a multi-layered banjo instrumental recorded on a laptop, is full of rhythms and sounds that resemble the stranger fringes of krautrock, which might annoy the purists. They will prefer the lolling loveliness of Trewitt Road, an air for a friend of O'Kane's from Newcastle, which also reveals his flair for romance.
The title track does, too. A duet with a girl who has lovely blonde tresses like so many of the girls in his songs, Kate Rusby's soft tones provide a perfect counterpoint to O'Kane's rougher edges. It also suggests that here is a folk family with a long, bright future. -Jude Rogers
O'Kane is an outstanding banjo player but it is his superb vocal phrasings that make this solo debut such an unalloyed delight...a gorgeous record - **** - Sunday Express
Relaxed, assured and recorded with loving care, O'Kane effortlessly adds his name to the proud history of outstanding Ulster singers. - fRoots
Tracklisting
1. Strands Of Magilligan
2. The Banks Of The Boyne
3. Summer Hill - O'Kane
4. Damien & Kate Rusby
5. The Lag's Song
6. Seasick Dee (Dee Goes To Holyhead)
7. Laurel Hill
8. Lough Erne Shore
9. The Breaking Of Omagh Jail
10. Farewell Coleraine (Lead The Knave)
11. Dobbins Flowery Vale
12. Raven's Wing
. Trewitt Road
More from Damien O'Kane
Includes unlimited streaming of Summer Hill
via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
...more
Damien's debut solo album features songs from Damien's native Northern Ireland and further afield. This album also contains self-composed instrumentals delivered with unique O'Kane flare and panache.
Folk songs, by their very nature, have always travelled through families. Now Damien O'Kane, a blue-eyed, brown-eyed Northern Irishman, joins these ranks. His partner is Kate Rusby, whose own Mercury-nominated crossover folk records certainly set the bar high for their household. Thankfully for O'Kane, 'Summer Hill' meets this bar beautifully.
O'Kane is best known for his exquisite banjo playing, both with accordion player Shona Kipling and supergroup Flook, winners of best group at the BBC 2 Folk Awards, and this is still very present on his debut album. But what also hits you immediately is the richness of O'Kane's voice. It is both strong and sweet, rough and romantic, giving directness and immediacy to the old stories he has collected, many of them from the tumultuous past of his homeland. O'Kane has set seven of them to his own melodies, strengthening the link between his past and present, as well as the status of the lyrics in the Celtic folk canon. O'Kane's settings are largely conventional, but complementary. Strands of Magilligan, a sunny romp about an American settler in County Derry, and Dobbins Flowery Vale, a sweet lullaby about a leafy lovers retreat, are two of the most crowd-pleasing. Lough Erne Shore is one of the most effective, however, creating a sparse atmosphere around the tale of an otherworldly girl whose "cupid has led me astray". Echoing the early work of Bert Jansch and John Martyn, it suggests that O'Kane is at his best when he is daring to experiment.
Elsewhere on Summer Hill, there are further signs of adventure. Seasick DeeâDee Goes to Holyhead, a multi-layered banjo instrumental recorded on a laptop, is full of rhythms and sounds that resemble the stranger fringes of krautrock, which might annoy the purists. They will prefer the lolling loveliness of Trewitt Road, an air for a friend of O'Kane's from Newcastle, which also reveals his flair for romance.
The title track does, too. A duet with a girl who has lovely blonde tresses like so many of the girls in his songs, Kate Rusby's soft tones provide a perfect counterpoint to O'Kane's rougher edges. It also suggests that here is a folk family with a long, bright future. -Jude Rogers
O'Kane is an outstanding banjo player but it is his superb vocal phrasings that make this solo debut such an unalloyed delight...a gorgeous record - **** - Sunday Express
Relaxed, assured and recorded with loving care, O'Kane effortlessly adds his name to the proud history of outstanding Ulster singers. - fRoots
Damien is a musician of many talents. He’s a singer. A very good one, too, with a relaxed, assured style that exudes
natural warmth and empathy.
He’s also a brilliant banjo player. And a fine guitarist. And an ingenious arranger. Not to mention an accomplished tunemaker, researcher, bandleader and accompanist of rich imagination and fearless vision....more
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