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Tim O'Brien|Two Journeys

Two Journeys

Tim O'Brien

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Itinerant American folk musician Tim O'Brien has been on a tear since 1996's Red on Blonde, bluegrass interpretations of Bob Dylan songs (and don't laugh, it stands as one of the very finest Dylan tributes ever recorded). Since that time he has issued collaborations with Dirk Powell and John Hermann (Songs From the Mountain -- inspired by the novel Cold Mountain) and Darrell Scott (Real Time), as well as issuing the original inspiration for this recording, The Crossing in 1999, which offered a rootsy musician's ear-view of how Irish music informed the folk traditions of the American South and found a home in a mutated yet no less soulful form. Two Journeys is The Crossing's mirror image. This album shows O'Brien -- and a company of the British Isles and American South's finest musicians -- looking toward the coastlines of Ireland to express those traditions as they prepared to leave the homeland for the "new world." Digging deep into his own bag of folk songs, traditional ballads, and a few slick bluegrass moves, O'Brien has managed to tell a story, mostly with his own songs, of the cultural miscegenation that took place in the vast Irish exodus during and after the potato famine. From the opening track, "Turning Around," we hear the song of a captain in the middle of the Atlantic, looking back on the homeland with a sense of loss, regret, and heartbreak, and toward the new with a shred of hope, fear, and trepidation. This leads into the glorious swagger of "Mick Ryan's Lament" by Robert Lee Dunlap. The tune extrapolates "Garryowen," George Custer's marching song that was likely his final one at Little Big Horn. And then we're off, deep into the middle ground of a sea rife for the picking with fiddle tunes, jigs, reels, bluegrass, folk-blues and Celtic soul. With help from the aforementioned Yankees, and Paddy Keenan on uilleann pipes, traditional percussionist Kevin Burke, keyboard work from Triona No Drohmnaill, and the vocal support of Karan Casey and Maura O'Connell, O'Brien doesn't merely create facsimiles of Irish songs, but showcases the log, knotty rope between traditions, being not part one or the other but fully both. The most moving track on the disc, and also its most spooky, is "Demon Lover," a duet between O'Brien and Casey. It's a ballad so old it nearly dates antiquity, the rendering here, which doesn't even resemble modern versions, is chock full of pathos, lust, and regret. This may very well be his finest outing.

© Thom Jurek /TiVo

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Two Journeys

Tim O'Brien

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1
Turning Around
00:03:35

Tim O'Brien, Composer, MainArtist

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

2
Mick Ryan's Lament
00:03:20

Tim O'Brien, MainArtist - Robert Emmet Dunlap, Composer

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

3
For The Fallen
00:03:21

Tim O'Brien, Composer, MainArtist - Phillip Aaberg, Composer

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

4
Paddy Fahey's/Garret Barry's/The Cliffs Of Moher
00:05:22

Tim O'Brien, Arranger, Work Arranger, MainArtist - PUBLIC DOMAIN, Composer - Kevin Burke, Arranger, Work Arranger

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

5
The Apple Press And The Apple Cart
00:03:34

Tim O'Brien, Composer, MainArtist

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

6
Demon Lover
00:05:20

Tim O'Brien, Arranger, Work Arranger, MainArtist - PUBLIC DOMAIN, Composer

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

7
The Holy Well
00:03:17

Tim O'Brien, Composer, MainArtist

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

8
Me And Dirk's Trip To Ireland
00:02:36

Tim O'Brien, Composer, MainArtist

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

9
The Lancer's Jig/Gusty's Frolicks
00:02:37

Tim O'Brien, Arranger, Work Arranger, MainArtist - PUBLIC DOMAIN, Composer

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

10
What Does The Deep Sea Say?
00:04:17

Tim O'Brien, Arranger, Work Arranger, MainArtist - PUBLIC DOMAIN, Composer

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

11
Two Journeys (Deux Voyages)
00:04:19

Tim O'Brien, MainArtist - Christine Balfa, Composer - Dirk Powell, Composer

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

12
The Tide Flows Into Miltown
00:06:00

Tim O'Brien, Composer, MainArtist

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

13
Pear Tree/Muddy Roads/Ladies' Pantelettes
00:03:37

Tim O'Brien, Arranger, Work Arranger, MainArtist - PUBLIC DOMAIN, Composer

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

14
Norwegian Wood
00:04:05

Tim O'Brien, MainArtist - John Lennon, Composer - Paul Mccartney, Composer

(C) 2001 Sugar Hill Records, A Welk Music Group Company ℗ 2001 Howdy Skies Records

Album review

Itinerant American folk musician Tim O'Brien has been on a tear since 1996's Red on Blonde, bluegrass interpretations of Bob Dylan songs (and don't laugh, it stands as one of the very finest Dylan tributes ever recorded). Since that time he has issued collaborations with Dirk Powell and John Hermann (Songs From the Mountain -- inspired by the novel Cold Mountain) and Darrell Scott (Real Time), as well as issuing the original inspiration for this recording, The Crossing in 1999, which offered a rootsy musician's ear-view of how Irish music informed the folk traditions of the American South and found a home in a mutated yet no less soulful form. Two Journeys is The Crossing's mirror image. This album shows O'Brien -- and a company of the British Isles and American South's finest musicians -- looking toward the coastlines of Ireland to express those traditions as they prepared to leave the homeland for the "new world." Digging deep into his own bag of folk songs, traditional ballads, and a few slick bluegrass moves, O'Brien has managed to tell a story, mostly with his own songs, of the cultural miscegenation that took place in the vast Irish exodus during and after the potato famine. From the opening track, "Turning Around," we hear the song of a captain in the middle of the Atlantic, looking back on the homeland with a sense of loss, regret, and heartbreak, and toward the new with a shred of hope, fear, and trepidation. This leads into the glorious swagger of "Mick Ryan's Lament" by Robert Lee Dunlap. The tune extrapolates "Garryowen," George Custer's marching song that was likely his final one at Little Big Horn. And then we're off, deep into the middle ground of a sea rife for the picking with fiddle tunes, jigs, reels, bluegrass, folk-blues and Celtic soul. With help from the aforementioned Yankees, and Paddy Keenan on uilleann pipes, traditional percussionist Kevin Burke, keyboard work from Triona No Drohmnaill, and the vocal support of Karan Casey and Maura O'Connell, O'Brien doesn't merely create facsimiles of Irish songs, but showcases the log, knotty rope between traditions, being not part one or the other but fully both. The most moving track on the disc, and also its most spooky, is "Demon Lover," a duet between O'Brien and Casey. It's a ballad so old it nearly dates antiquity, the rendering here, which doesn't even resemble modern versions, is chock full of pathos, lust, and regret. This may very well be his finest outing.

© Thom Jurek /TiVo

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