Rouge. 3pm. July 21st.

Tomorrow is my solo show as part of the Galway Fringe festival. There is an awful lot of brilliant events going on around Galway this week between the Fringe events and the Galway Arts Festival itself, but if you drop in to Rouge on Saturday afternoon you will be treated to some songs from my album, and some newer material. They have a lovely grand piano in the venue, which I’m looking forward to trying out.

The string players I’d been hoping to use have an event that clashes with my gig, which is a pity, but there will be some beautiful additional vocals from some of the singers who sang with me at the launch nights, including the very talented Deirbhile Ni Bhrolchain, who sings with Cois Claddaigh as well as being a sean nós solo performer herself too.

My brother Kevin Brett will also be singing, and adding guitar to some of the songs. You’ll be able to catch the Athenry Guitar Orchestra he co-directs performing as part of the Fringe programme too in a lunchtime recital on Friday 27th in St. Nick’s. I’m interested to hear how well the string parts I had in mind will adapt for classical guitar instead, even if it’s just for a few of the songs.

Inspiration: Sarah Slean

Sarah Slean is a musician I’d heard friends talking about online a lot before I finally checked her music out. I think one of those friends may have given me a copy of two of her albums to start me on my path of discovery, but they were certainly right in their guess that her music would be right up my street. Piano? Check. Classical background? Check. Musical theatre influence? Check. Literate, clever, witty, and wry? Check.

Although Lucky Me was the song that grabbed me and pulled me in, it was the album Night Bugs that I took hold of and fell for utterly. Before long two of her songs started appearing as covers in my sets – the wonderful Sweet Ones, and the more dramatic The Score.

The latter was one of the songs that I did with the girl group trio I played with for a while. Their three part harmonies in that song really were something else, and playing around with harmonies with those singers was one of the big influences on the vocal layering on my debut record. We

Her most recent album, Land & Sea, is an absolute treat – particularly the second disc, which centers around voice, piano and strings, which is one of my favourite combinations of instruments. Despite the fact that it was her more pop leaning songs that I initally was drawn in by, it’s this disc that I find myself turning to.

I mean, check out this live performance of “Napoleon” performed with a string ensemble.

The album was finished off in a hut in Newfoundland, which features in the video for the song The Devil And The Dove:

It was here, in a little shack by the sea with a grand piano, a bed, a table, chair and kettle (little else), Sarah completed composing the songs and four orchestral scores for this incredible collection. “…one of the most inspiring places on Earth…. It’s impossible to be distracted from the powerful presence of Life itself here – the rugged land, the ever-changing weather, the magnificent, powerful ocean…it’s a place to ponder the vast expanse of time before and beyond us, to ponder the wondrous marvel of being.”

One of the songs from that latest record is one of those little inspiration touchstones you turn to at times. I’m always a music first, lyrics later, kinda listener when it comes to songs, and indeed sometimes it’ll be months before I realise exactly what the words of a song I love actually are. However, with The Right Words, it was the words that grabbed me along with that beautiful vocal melody in the chorus.

“throw your heart into the ocean, throw your heart into the sea
you will find that all the right words
will come out naturally”

88 is a magic number

88 folded and waiting.

88 handmade covers specially for the fundit funders finally finished tonight. In the morning they’ll be double checked for flaws or disasters, then editioned and signed and I’ll start putting together the packages to be posted out to funders very soon. There’s a bunch of you who’ve not contacted me with an email address. You’ll be getting an email reminder, and you’ll be getting yours later than everyone else because I can’t post it to you if I don’t have an address to post it to. It would make me sad if the cd didn’t get to its home.

I have a paper cut – of course it was just with the last handful that I managed to get a bad paper cut on my index finger. Damnit. I’m having a glass of wine to celebrate.

I’ve a bunch of shows coming up this summer, but the first two confirmed so far are for two different fringe festivals here in Galway. (apparently we’ve gone from no Fringes to two! Excellent stuff.)

So, July 6th I’ll be playing on the bill with three other male solo performers for an event called “Solitary Men” for the Colours Fringe. I’m very tempted to learn Loudon Wainwright’s “One Man Guy” for that gig, as that would make me chuckle. That will be in the gorgeous upstairs venue in Kelly’s on Bridge St and so far I know that Willow Sea is headlining and Matteo is also performing. I’ve not found out who the last performer is, but I’ll be sure to edit this post when I do. Seems like it’ll be a diverse evening of music, and I’m really looking forward to it. There is a door charge of €3, and it is in a licensed venue, so it’s over 18’s unfortunately.

I’m doing a full solo show for the Galway Fringe on the 22nd at 3pm in Rouge restaurant. They have a grand piano there. I’m pretty darn excited about that fact. It’s also a nice afternoon show that’s open to all ages, and it’s free! They do have pretty delicious wine there too, just saying. It’s the day of the Macnas parade for the Galway Arts Festival, so you should really be in Galway that weekend to experience the height of the summer festival season here.

I’m looking at having some singers with me as well as some string players, and I’m open to people who want to come and play with me on a song or two at that performance. Just get in touch. I’m going to be asking some of my fellow string orchestra members as well as some of the singers I had for the launch. I quite like a crowdsourced bunch of talented folk making the musical experience even richer.

Off Beaten Path producions is the dance company set up by Genevieve Ryan and Katarzyna Voetter, and they’ll be doing three dance shows as part of the Fringe festival too. One of the two pieces they’ll be presenting will be the dance they’ve choreographed to my song Codail Sámh. I’m so excited to see this being performed live, as what I’ve seen of it in workshop form has been so beautiful. We’re looking at incorporating some live music into their show too, but I’ll fill you in on exactly what’s happening closer to the time.

There’s a few other live gigs being organised at the moment too, and as soon as details are confirmed I’ll update on all those plans. As ever, I’m completely open to doing a house concert anywhere there’s a piano or where one can be set up. So, if you’ve ever fancied having an evening of live music in your home for yourself and whoever else you like, then get in touch by email or on twitter, and ask me about it.

Checking out my music for the first time?

I put together a few tracks that are some of my own favourites, and give a good cross section of the different kinds of music I’ve explored so far. Some songs from my debut album Wires, (check out the web album liner notes version of that album too) and some of the instrumental piano work too.

I’m heading back into the print studio tomorrow with Grace, to finish screen printing the last batch of the funder’s edition of the album covers. Once that batch is printed and assembled, then I’ll be starting to post them out to the folk who helped fund the album recording last summer.

There’s a few more video recording shoots coming up in the next few weeks, all going to plan, and I can’t wait to see how those turn out. For these next two, I’m working closely with Galway based dancer Genevieve Ryan, who has been helping turn my ideas into actual video shoots. She’ll be dancing in one of the videos herself too. The next two songs that I hope to be shooting videos for are Phoenix and Codail Sámh, but I’ve been working on treatments for a few other songs off the record too, and hopefully will get around to shooting those videos this summer too. For one of those in particular, we might be looking to crowdsource some extras for the shoot, so keep an eye on this blog, and my twitter, facebook, or google+ page if you might be interested.

The videos are all being done with pretty much no budget, and just the time, energy and talent of people who want to come together to create something. It’s absolutely humbling that such talented people are giving their talent and time to these little projects of mine. I’m really looking forward to seeing how the next two videos turn out, but I’ll be doing updates about those shoots when they happen later this month.

Speaking of camera work, some bright-eyed fans of Ros Na Rún spotted that I had a tiny little part in an episode of the show last week. I’d almost forgotten about it myself, and missed it airing, but some people saw it, recognised me, and got in touch to tell me so. Sweet – thanks a million.

Piano habits

Improv is how I interact with a piano mostly. As much as I’ll go and play music by some wonderful composers, or my own music, very often I’ll just sit at the piano with a coffee and play away whatever comes into my head. I have been known to be playing with one hand while reading twitter with my phone in my other hand, but that’s a bad habit I’m trying to do less of.

I go through phases with what I play when I’m just improvising away at the piano. Lately a lot of my piano improvisations have ended up exploring similar rhythm patterns, and a lot of close playing with overlapping hands. For a while I was really exploring a lot of simple chord progressions and melodies, out of which grew some of the piano instrumental pieces that I still play and have done demo recordings of. There’s one piece that I’ve not recorded at all yet which is sort of a link from that stuff to the kind of exploration I’m doing at the piano these days.

I’ve found myself playing compound chords, odd progressions, lots of repeated chords with accents providing the rhythms, and melodies forming and dispersing out of those chords. There was a quote that stuck in my head from a piano masterclass from Daniel Barenboim I was watching on youtube, where he said something about how you are either playing with all ten fingers as individual fingers, or else with both hands as one unit. It stuck in my head, because it’s so true:

“You don’t play with two units, with two hands: you either play with one unit made of two hands, or you play with ten units.”

Daniel Barenboim – Masterclass on Beethoven – Chicago, USA. July 2005

The kinds of music I explore through improvisation is very much a signifier of what kind of music I write around that time, as very often it’s through improv that I’ll find a melody, or progression, or whatever, that ends up as a song. Certainly I can pinpoint which songs of mine were written around the same time, merely by looking at what kind of piano part it has.

I’m always tempted to record myself every time I improvise, but that’d be a heck of a lot of random hours of playing music, with a lot of repetition as I explore an idea. Instead, if there’s something I really like that I’m playing, I’ll play around with it and really watch what I’m playing. Also, I don’t really like people listening to me improvising, as it’s always riddled with “mistakes”, or messy playing, or half formed ideas, and as interesting as those sketches might be, they’re really just sketches which might become actual works later on. Also, the improv can be a lot closer to the bone, and it’s like a musical brain drain I guess. It’s also my favourite way to practice and exercise my hands, but not perhaps the best way, as it gets too limited in focus sometimes.

One of the simple little piano pieces that grew from an improv is the extra bonus track on the Bandcamp version of the album, but you can download it for free if you sign up to my mailing list with your email address.

I always tell people that piano is easy – the notes are there, you just play them, but playing piano well is the difficult part. But really, if you’re interested in piano you should watch that entire masterclass with the three different pianist being coached by Barenboim. It also features this wonderful piece of wisdom about the piano:

The piano, like this, a very primitive, neutral instrument. Any weight you put on the keys produces a sound, look. It’s a C# – not particularly interesting, but I do with the elbow. You can do that with an ashtray – anything, you can do that!

You try to do that with a violin, you get nothing! You have to first find a note, then you have to know how to put the finger, then you have to know how to connect the two hands.. then you have to decide… so before you can actually make the equivalent of that [pointing to the piano note].

Therefore, the piano is, from that point of view, a very neutral element, and it is precisely this neutrality which gives it the possibility of so much expression. Because you can put on the neutral wall any colour you want – you cannot put whatever colour you want on a wall that already has a colour – blue, red or whatever it is.

And the neutrality of the piano is what gives it the possibility to be so expressive. But in order to do that, you have to accept the fact that in itself, left to its own devices, it is a very neutral, inexpressive instrument, but that it is open to 20 million different ways of seduction of each finger.

Daniel Barenboim – Masterclass on Beethoven – Chicago, USA. July 2005

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