姓名: JenniferByrne 英文名:- 性别:男 国籍:- 出生地:- 语言:- 生日:- 星座:- 身高:- 体重:-
Jennifer Byrne was born in Dublin, raised for a time in County Wicklow before crossing the border into County Wexford, living here and there before finally settling in the gorgeous seaside village of Curracloe. In a life spent moving and travelling, the unspoilt beaches and forest of this tiny beauty spot are the closest thing to home for Jennifer.
Though not from a particularly musical family, Jennifer’s beloved grandfather was an accordion player with his local Enniscorthy ceilí band and a fine singer. She began piano lessons the day she started school, trying her hand at a range of instruments before discovering her voice much later.
She studied music at University College Cork, beginning a love affair with African music in general. While studying for a Master’s degree in Ethnomusicology at SOAS, University of London, Jennifer took every opportunity to travel and play and research, developing a longstanding passion for Southeast Africa.
Several years of living in London and working in the folk/trad department of MCPS further opened her ears to traditional music: English, Welsh and Scottish this time.
I learned so much at that point about songs, singers, writers. I worked with people who had an encyclopaedic, way past the bounds of obsessive knowledge of these traditions and they happily fed a need in me for more. It was a way, I suppose, to make up for the lack of variety of music I’d had access to growing up. I took advantage of that opportunity big time.
On moving back to Ireland, Jennifer turned to music education and began to marry her love of teaching and performing with her interest in world music. Seeing a lack of multi-cultural education provision, she spent the next couple of years working with venues throughout the southeast in addressing this. By night, she sang in any venue that would have her.
The need to perform in her own right became more pressing and in 2009 she set about instigating in earnest the process of writing and collecting material for a record.
I’d been mentally storing songs for a long time, knowing that one day the time would be right to get more serious about recording something. I’d also been writing bits and pieces for years, but struggled to find my own voice. I did know, though, that all my travels had brought me directly back home, musically, and my music could only really be from one place.
During the course of a song-writing trip to Boo Hewerdine’s home the following summer, a friendship, and plan of action, emerged. Mark Freegard’s 3kyoti Studio, Glasgow, January 2011. Material was chosen, musicians were called in, biscuits were bought. And Suitcase was the result.
Suitcase is an eleven-track album of songs new and old. Jennifer wrote some, Boo donated a couple, they co-wrote one and the remainder are traditional. Among the musicians featured are Kris Drever, John McCusker, Alan Kelly and Brooks Williams. The bones of the tracks were laid down during one dreary Celtic Connections week.
It was a productive few days. We locked ourselves in, ate a lot of rubbish, swore a bit, laughed our heads off and left exhausted. But the shape was there.
The title track refers to the cardboard suitcases young Irish immigrant men used to carry their humble belongings to the UK during the 1950s and 60s: only to become something of a lost generation. It’s a topic that Jennifer intends to return to in the future. In fact, writing has already begun on album number two: another collection of traditional and contemporary material, the same but different.
Watch this space…