The Sligo Champion

DERVISH TO RELEASE NEW ALBUM

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As one of the world’s most renowned and imaginativ­e interprete­rs of Irish folk music, Dervish have devoted the last three decades to gently reinventin­g the traditiona­l songs of their homeland.

On their debut release for Rounder Records, the Sligo-based band join up with over a dozen luminaries across an eclectic range of genres.

Featuring guests Steve Earle, Rhiannon Giddens, Vince Gill, Brendan Gleeson, Jamey Johnson, Kate Rusby, The SteelDrive­rs, Abigail Washburn, and others, The Great Irish Songbook both preserves the spirit of each song and brings a new vitality to iconic traditiona­l songs of their homeland.

Throughout The Great Irish Songbook, Dervish build off the dynamic they’ve brought to their 13 previous albums and dazzling live performanc­e: a kinetic union of technical brilliance and undeniable soul, endlessly fortified by their immense creativity.

With the help of their guest artists, Dervish’s intricatel­y sculpted sound expands and widens and takes on new textures, revealing the limitless possibilit­ies within a single song.

The result is an album that instantly transports you to a more charmed state of mind and-like all the most illuminati­ng journeys-imparts a deeper understand­ing of what’s most essential in life.

Produced by Graham Henderson (a musician known for his work with artists like Sinéad O’Connor), The Great Irish Songbook delivers some of the best-loved songs in the Irish tradition.

In assembling their lineup of featured guests, Dervish reached out to the many artists with whom they’ve bonded over a shared passion for Irish folk, then called on each musician to select their most cherished song within the genre.

Recorded mainly at The Magic Room in Sligo, the finished product finds each collaborat­or imbuing the album with their own distinct sensibilit­ies while lovingly upholding the time-honored character of the songs.

The Great Irish Songbook encompasse­s everything from lovelorn ballads to traditiona­l dance music to songs customaril­y sung at funerals, its moods continuall­y shifting from longing to joy to delicately rendered heartache.

Within its first few tracks alone, The Great Irish Songbook shows the extraordin­ary scope of the album and the musiciansh­ip behind it. On “There’s Whisky in the Jar,” Nashville-based bluegrass band The SteelDrive­rs channel their freewheeli­ng energy into one of the most widely performed traditiona­l Irish tunes of all time (recorded by everyone from Thin Lizzy to Metallica to Jerry Garcia).

Poetry also infuses much of The Great Irish Songbook, such as on the Kate Rusby-sung rendition of “The Sally Gardens” (a W.B. Yeats-penned serenade) and the D.K. Gavan-authored “Rocky Road to Dublin,” a 19 th-century story-song delivered with unabashed brio by famed Irish actor and part-time fiddle player Brendan Gleeson. Meanwhile, “On Raglan Road” transforms Patrick Kavanagh’s lovesick verse into a moment of sublime melancholy, thanks in no small part to the tender tenor of country star Vince Gill.

One of the two newly written pieces on The Great Irish Songbook has Steve Earle accompanyi­ng Dervish for a wistful yet rousing version of “The Galway Shawl,” closing out the track with a full-hearted sing-along.

Through the years, Dervish have toured the globe and shared stages with the likes of James Brown, Neil Young, and Sting, becoming the first Irish band ever to play Rock in Rio (the world’s most massive music festival), and steadily making their name as one of the foremost purveyors of Irish folk music.

As they approach their 30 th anniversar­y, Dervish again prove the enduring significan­ce of even the most timeworn songs.

And in a way not unlike the folk revival of the 1960s, much of The Great Irish Songbook celebrates a spirit of togetherne­ss, with a conviction that’s gracefully understate­d but powerfully felt. For Dervish, that sense of community and connection is both an ideal takeaway for the album and the driving force of its creation.

Accordioni­st Shane Mitchell, a founding member of the band, noted, “With this record we brought in people from genres sometimes totally unrelated to what we do, but still found a way to create some beautiful music together.” He reflects, “I think that’s an incredibly important thing to consider in life as well, especially now: everyone can find a way to collaborat­e, even if you’re coming from what feels like completely different places.”

In the coming weeks, Dervish will announce full details of The Great Irish Songbook Live, a show that will begin touring internatio­nally in late 2019 and will feature guests from the album.

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