John
Regan & Paddy Glackin
with
Mary Corcoran, Colum and Donal Regan
Let Down the Blade
|
Track
Listing
1. The Golden Keyboard/The Bellharbour Reel 2. The Maid at the Spinning Wheel/A Visit to Ireland 3. The Queen of the Fairies/Victoria Hornpipes 4. The Flax in Bloom/Colonel Rodney 5. The Tailor’s Twist/The Friendly Visit 6. Billy McCormack’s/The Ship in Full Sail 7. The Greencastle Hornpipe/The Kildare Fancy 8. The Maid at the Well/The Knocknagow Jig 9. Tom Ward’s Downfall/The Piper’s Despair 10. The Road to Ballymac/The Policeman’s Request 11. Sliabh Russell/Bimis ag Ol 12. Spillane the Fiddler/President Garfield 13. Scotch Mary/Farewell to London 14. Buttermilk Mary/The Knights of St Patrick 15. James F. Dickie/Drops of Brandy 16. The Laurel Bush/The Sligo Lasses 17. The Waltz from "Coppelia" 18. Mulqueeney’s Hornpipe 19. Miss Langton’s/The Copperplate Click on underlined titles to hear sound samples with Real Player |
The title of this
new CD refers to a saying of John’s father when it was time to save the hay
and it works as an allegory for this great album. Many people have said its
about time John Regan got out his accordion and harvested a new recording and
here at last it is. John, one of Ireland’s most respected accordionists teams
up with his long time musical sparring partner, Dublin fiddler, Paddy Glackin
to produce an album of flawless traditional music played at a beautifully considerate
pace. Many of these tunes haven’t been recorded previously.
Mary Corcoran of the Templehouse Ceili Band on piano provides uncluttered accompaniment.
John also plays some duets with two of his sons, Donal and Colm both current
All-Ireland title-holders on the box.
Press Reviews
Folk Roots Aug/Sept 2000
John Regan is a north Sligo button box player who moved to Dublin some
years ago and bumbed into players like Mary Bergin and a young Paddy Glackin.
Paddy joins John for five tracks and Mary Corcoran's solid piano underpin
a regular but lively selection of reels, jigs and hornpipes that will appeal
to his fans.
Joe Crane
The LivingTradition May/June
2000
Back when I'd aspirations to play the button box, I used to listen
to as much of John Regan's playing as possible. My playing didn't improve
but I liked his style, and still do. He partnered fiddler Paddy Glackin
on the first ever Comhaltas concert tour of Britain, back about 197O~ Somewhere,
I've a tape of him playing in the square in Listowel in 1972; no audience,
just playing for the love of it. He seemed to drop out of earshot for a
long time but he certainly didn't rust away, because he's as good as ever
I remember him. This is good Sligo-style accordion, crisp and driving,
without over-ornamentation. There's obviously influence from Joe Burke,
but Regan's his own man all the time.
The 19 tracks are a balanced mixture of reels, jigs, and more hompipes
than you'd normally expect. Most are familiar, some less so. Besides solos,
John plays 5 duets with Paddy Glackin, and accordion duets with each of
his young sons, CoIm and Donal. Most tracks have Mary Corcoran's sensitive
and unobtrusive piano accompaniment, a welcome change from some of the
piano drivers I've heard. A happy combination is of strathspey and slip
jig; unusual, but it works. 'James F Dickie" just slides into a Donegal
version of "Drops of Brandy". The surprise of the album is a duet with
Donal on piano on Delibes' Waltz from "Coppelia". I'm usually scornful
of "cross-over" but if this is what it's about, then I'm all for it. I
suppose it's evidence that good music is universal and timeless.
The inlay notes are concise and adequate, with the sources of each
tune, and tributes to many other musicians, from Patsy Tuohy to the current
crop. Definitely one for the more discerning accordion fan.
(By the way, I finally gave up on the box. I realised that nof only
did the left hand not know what the right hand was doing, it didn't even
know what it was doing itself.) Mick Furey.
Irish Music Mag
From John Regan, one of the finest accordionists over the past 20 years,
comes a new recording that will delight those who have enjoyed his tasteful
and relaxed approach to music. Featuring plenty of well known tunes alongside
ones of rarity, John Regan strikes a lovely balance on this recording with
sets such as The Flax in Bloom/ Colonel Rodney, showing the
flowing and unforced quality which is such a hallmark of his playing. Featuring
piano accompaniment throughout from the able Mary Corcoran, this album
also sees a guest appearance by fiddler Paddy Glackin who joins John for
many a fine set. Similarly to Brian Rooney’s album, John plays the great
jig, Buttermilk Mary and what great spirit there is in this playing.
Another track of note sees John joined by his son, Colm, for a beautifully
measured set of unusual reels, The Road to Ballymac/The Policeman’s
Request. A most welcome addition to the collection of accordion albums,
which like most others, is continually growing. Oisin MacDiarmada.
Dec/Jan 2,000
The Irish Post
Irish music is simple. You get three good musicians, pick a couple
of dozen tunes from the traditional repertoire of 6,000 pieces and press
the record button.
Don’t add anything fancy, mind. Just use a top-class accordion player,
(John Regan), a top-notch fiddler (Paddy Glackin), and one of the finest
piano accompanists around (Mary Corcoran from the Templehouse Ceili Band).
What you end up with is a memorable traditional album with no frills,
just plenty of great music. Let Down the Blade opens with a haunting reel,
The Golden Keyboard, composed by Galway man, Martin Mulhaire, who has spent
most of his life in New York. This well structured tune has shades of that
great Irish set piece, Drowsy Maggie about it, but is altogether less jaunty,
giving the melody an added poignancy. Played on the button accordion by
John Regan you can almost hear the strains of the immigrant in the Bronx
wafting through the air.
John Regan is originally from north Sligo, but moved to Dublin in 66,
which accounts for the inclusion of jigs such as Sliabh Russell and Bimis
ag Ol on the album, two favourites of pipers and fiddlers in the late 60s/early
70s, but not heard so often these days. John’s sojourn in Dublin however
has given him an eclectic repertoire from which to choose. Everything from
the definitive Michael Coleman version of the huge reel Tom Ward’s Downfall
to the welcome inclusion of that Scottish traditional oddity the Strathspey.
There is one delightful aberration on Let Down the Blade – The Waltz
from the ballet, Copelia by the 19th century composer Leo Delibes. From
The Geese in the Bog to Swan Lake in one ethnomusicological leap! But I
tell you what – it’s a great version and the most ballet I’ve listened
to all year. Bravo, as they say at Covent Garden, both to Copelia’s Waltz,
and to the whole album. Malcolm Rogers, Dec/Jan 2,000
The Irish World
Of all instruments used in traditional music, the accordion is probably
my least favourite, but even so, in the hands of John Regan, and his sons
Colm and Donal, it creates quite an effective sound. With fiddler Paddy
Glackin and accompanist Mary Corcoran on hand to lend their two-pence worth,
there is plenty of music on this 19-track album to fill the ear.
The tracks include, hornpipes: Queen of the Fairies/Victoria/The Tailor’s
Twist/The Friendly Visit, Spillane the Fiddler/President Garfield’s, jigs,
The Maid at the Spinning Wheel/The Knocknagow, and reels like, Miss Langton’s/The
Copperplate, most with the bouncy nature that the accordion offers.
Both Colm and Donal Regan currently hold All-Ireland titles on the
box, and the duets with their father make this album a family affair.
L.A.Livingston