Search - Tommy Sands feat. Moya and Fionan :: Let the Cirlce Be Wide

Let the Cirlce Be Wide
Tommy Sands feat. Moya and Fionan
Let the Cirlce Be Wide
Genres: Country, Folk, International Music, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (15) - Disc #1

Born in the North of Ireland, an area bitterly divided by opposing religious and political issues, singer-songwriter-activist Tommy Sands has spent his life using music to spread hope, healing and inspiration, as well as ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Tommy Sands feat. Moya and Fionan
Title: Let the Cirlce Be Wide
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Appleseed Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2009
Re-Release Date: 1/27/2009
Genres: Country, Folk, International Music, Pop
Styles: Bluegrass, Traditional Folk, British & Celtic Folk, Contemporary Folk, Celtic, Europe, Britain & Ireland
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 611587111425, 0611587111425

Synopsis

Album Description
Born in the North of Ireland, an area bitterly divided by opposing religious and political issues, singer-songwriter-activist Tommy Sands has spent his life using music to spread hope, healing and inspiration, as well as entertainment. Since the '60s with his brothers and sisters in The Sands Family, as a solo performer, and most recently with his daughter and son, Tommy has been bringing traditional Irish songs and original, socially relevant material to audiences all around the world. On the new Let the Circle be Wide, his seventh solo album, Sands continues to write and perform wise, moving, sometimes rollicking songs infused with his deep but clear-eyed love of his imperfect homeland. The CD reflects some of the changes resulting from the historic 1998 power-sharing Belfast Agreement. Sands has been described as an "enlightened bard," who "says and writes words that are more likely to bring people of diverse backgrounds together than to keep them apart." The 15 songs on Let the Circle be Wide ring with Tommy's warm brogue, the poignant Irish lilt of uillean pipes, fiddles, and whistles, but also carry the influence of different cultures, such as the unearthly vocal buzzes and drones of Mongolian throat-singing on "Rovers of Wonder." Sands, who plays guitar, whistle, banjo, and dotara, a stringed Indian instrument, as well as singing, shares his music's power to heal (the high-spirited "Send for Maguire" and ethereal "A Stór Mo Chroí"), to rally ("Make Those Dreams Come True," "Time for Asking Why"), to pay tribute to the departed ("The Song Sings On: Ballad of Tommy Makem," "You Will Never Grow Old," a gentle farewell to Sands' late brother Dino), to fight prejudice ("Keep On Singing"), to unite people (the title song), and to celebrate Ireland's natural beauty amid ongoing social change ("Fields of Daisies," "Carlingford Bay"). The CD's misty, welcoming opener, "Young Man's Dream," is Tommy's "translation/part transcreation" of an ancient Gaelic song which would much later become Ireland's most famous ballad, "Danny Boy." This dream song, so apt for today, dates back more than 500 years, drawing us to "an island dreaming where the heart is free," where "the dream of love, it belongs to all." Sands' musical inclusiveness extends to enlisting his daughter Moya (fiddle, bodhran, whistle, vocals), son Fionán (banjo, mandolin, backing vocals), his Sands Family siblings and additional musicians including guitarist Arty McGlynn (Van Morrison, Patrick Street, Christy Moore), guitarist/bassist Steve Cooney (Sinead O'Connor, The Chieftains), and co-producer/multi-instrumentalist Tom Newman (Mike Oldfield's Tubular Bells), among others, to perform on Let the Circle be Wide.
 

CD Reviews

Excellent album from an Irish folk old-timer
Joe Sixpack -- Slipcue.com | ...in Middle America | 02/20/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Tommy Sands, one of Ireland's most highly regarded songwriters, is back with a lovely set of songs inspired by the end of the Irish "Troubles" as well as the politics of the post-September 11th world, and his own reflections on a long life full of both sorrow and joy. Shades of subtle and not-so-subtle meaning filter through these songs, as he reflects on violence, peace and hope. The Ireland-specific lyrics may be confounding to outsiders (hard to evaluate Sands' politics, as he simultaneously celebrates the end to the island's civil war and reflects upon its history (history and Ireland? watch out!) Likewise, his views on America's approach to the post-9/11 world may be hard for some to hear: the song "Time For Asking Why" is a call for social justice between the rich and poor, posing the question of whether America's actions were in part to blame for the rageful jihad aimed at its people. The leftie critiques are balanced by joyful, nostalgic glimpses into the world Sands grew up in -- fiddling parties, the rise to fame of his friend Tommy Makem, and the new Ireland, a hopeful world where the Troubles seem gone. The musicianship is top-notch with rich Irish melodies and sweet family harmonies from Sands and his kin. It's a strong album, troubling in some regards but life-affirming and beautiful in others. Definitely worth checking out! (Joe Sixpack, Slipcue Guide To World Music)"