Máire Ní Chathasaigh
Máire Ní Chathasaigh (Irish pronunciation: [ˈmˠaːɾʲə nʲiː ˈxahəsˠəɟ]) (born 1956) is an Irish harpist and singer.
Career
She began playing at eleven years old, inspired by her family, many of whom are noted musicians from West Cork. She drew heavily on traditional styles, but also created new techniques of ornamentation. She has won the All-Ireland competition at under-fourteen and under-eighteen levels and then, in the mid-1970s, she won the Senior's three years in succession. [1]
Her 1985 The New-Strung Harp was the first harp album to consist of exclusively Irish traditional dance music. Her stylistic innovations made her famous in the Celtic music scene, and she began teaching in continental Europe and in the United States. She has taught for more than fifteen years at Cúirt Chruitireachta, a school in Termonfeckin, County Louth, organized the Irish Harp Society, Cairde na Cruite. Her arrangements have been collected in two books, The Irish Harper Vols. I and II, and she has an honours degree in Celtic Studies from University College Cork. In 1989 she recorded The Living Wood with guitarist Chris Newman; they have worked extensively together as a duo since then.
Máire also works with the Choir of New College, Oxford and the New English Chamber Orchestra, and she also appeared in the film Driftwood. Among other musicians, she has worked with Celtic pioneer Dan Ar Braz. She performs regularly with her sister [2] Nollaig Casey and Nollaig's husband Arty McGlynn.
Albums
- The New Strung Harp (1985)
- The Living Wood (1988) - with guitarist Chris Newman
- Out Of Court (1991) - with guitarist Chris Newman
- The Carolan Albums (1991) - with guitarist Chris Newman
- Live In The Highlands (1995) - with guitarist Chris Newman
- Dialogues (2001) - with guitarist Chris Newman
- Firewire (2006) - with guitarist Chris Newman
Books
- The Irish Harper (Vol. 1 and Vol. 2)
References
- ↑ "Maire Ni Chathasaigh Biography". All Celtic Music. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
- ↑ "The Casey Sisters". Old bridge Music. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
External links
- Old Bridge Music official site