“Kirwan,” the old showband head addressed me. “There are only two types of music,
good and bad. Now step aside!”
With
that he belted into “Down By The Riverside,” and soon had the dance floor
“black” with delighted jivers and quicksteppers who had been ominously absent
during my previous pop meanderings.
The
head’s judgment may still stand but what would he think of today’s polished
mediocrity? For with the advent of computer software even your Aunt Gerty can
“make a record.”
Not
everyone, however, is a songwriter. That breed appears to come in two types:
volcanic talents like Van Morrison or Brill Building types who master their
craft after years of trial and error.
In
one of my other gigs I host Celtic Crush for SiriusXM. This entails a lot of
listening – more like scratching around for diamonds in piles of polished dust.
One thing you learn quickly on Satellite Radio - every song must be
distinctive; with over 100 competing music channels, not to mention the lurking
appeal of Howard Stern, each number must capture and hold the listener’s
attention or else it’s “c u l8r.”
Originality,
unfortunately, is a rarity and though you may long for it like a cat in a tripe
shop, you’re more often forced to settle for a dollop of emotion chiseled into
some decent lyrics and arresting melodies.
Shane McGowan still stands out for
his ability to encapsulate the Irish soul – a rare diamond, indeed; and yet, I
often rue the effect he’s had on Irish-American songwriting. While aping the
man’s phrasing and subject matter can work on stage before a boozed-up
audience, more often than not it comes off as parody in the recording studio.
Far
better that Shane’s musical disciples mine his original sources - Brendan
Behan, Irish showbands, London punk and Tipperary Trad. Channeling these
through the prism of a unique creativity McGowan gave us The Pogues.
Shane
would be the first to note that there are still vast virgin tracts of the Irish
Folk Tradition to draw from. Time to get cracking, Shaneheads! You have the
chops - all you’re lacking is the material and that divine spark of originality
necessary to ignite it.
Which
brings me to Yellow Moon. You might wonder what’s the connection between the
Neville Brothers from New Orleans and anything remotely Irish? Oddly enough, quite
a bit!
Yellow
Moon has long been one of my favorite albums but I hadn’t listened to it since
the 90’s. Was I afraid it wouldn’t stand up – or perhaps I didn’t want to mess
with the memory of sharing a stage with them some years back?
Neville
is a very popular name in my neck of the woods. Were the Brothers descended
from long-ago Wexford emigrants or, as some of you are probably muttering, had
their slave masters hailed from the Model County?
Perhaps,
both! When Black 47 first played Tipitinas in New Orleans’12th Ward we were
treated like royalty by the city’s music lovers and local Irish-Americans.
At
the end of our “meet and greet” line stood a dozen or so of what I took to be
African-Americans. Each one, however, exulted in trumpeting Irish surnames like
Murphy and Doyle. They told me that their forefathers had come to Crescent City
in the 1860’s to dig the canals and married “locally.”
Yellow
Moon not only stood up - it floored me all over again. Each song was a gem,
from the title track to My Blood, from Rosa Parks to A Change Is Gonna Come.
It’s the story of a people rooted in one of the world’s great musical melting
pots. And, sure enough, beneath Daniel Lanois’ incandescent production, one can
glimpse sparks of the Celt.
Listen
to Aaron Neville update Sean-Nós on Bob Dylan’s With God On Our Side – itself
lifted from Dominic Behan’s Patriot Game - and you feel the ineffable pain of
all the world’s dispossessed reclaiming their dignity.
Like
much great art, Yellow Moon is timeless and self-reflecting. By flirting with
perfection this album allows us to reflect on what we were when we first heard
it, while revealing what we have become down the years in between.
It’s
a diamond that still sparkles; pulsing with raw humanity it helps us differentiate
between genius, and the curse of mediocrity and parody. That’s no small thing
in an age of polished dust.