Prize-winning piper packs a whole lotta Led
ROB ADAMS May 17 2006
John McSherry has been likened to a Jimi Hendrix of the pipes,
a John Coltrane of the chanter even. Flattering comparisons, of
course, but not perhaps the one the Belfast-born uilleann piper
would choose himself.
McSherry, whose band At First Light begins its first Scottish
tour tomorrow in a double header with Shetland fiddler Chris Stout's
quintet for the Scottish Arts Council's Tune-up series, has just
released an album-of-the-year contender in Tripswitch.
Recorded in partnership with his At First Light colleague, fiddler
Donal O'Connor, the album drops a big hint on its opening track
about who McSherry might have wanted to be, if he hadn't taken
up the pipes. Two big hints, in fact: there's the influence of
Led Zeppelin's Whole Lotta Love on the guitar part, but one particularly
bluesy dragged note McSherry cheerfully acknowledges as his own
Jimmy Page moment. There's even a slight resemblance between the
two musicians.
McSherry grew up in a household where traditional music albums
and rock albums vied for turntable time. "I used to listen
to my dad's Planxty albums and just feel the emotion in Liam O'Flynn's
piping, it was so soulful," he says. "Then Paddy Keenan
came along with the Bothy Band and we had the Led Zep records,
and it always seemed to me that the uilleann pipes were just as
exciting as an electric instrument. We never compartmentalised
the music, just took it all in, and actually there have been bits
stolen from Led Zep on other records I've made, too."
His first set of pipes arrived when he was 11. By this time, he'd
already been playing tin whistle for two years, essentially preparing
for the pipes. The family all played musical instruments or sang.
Later, the McSherry siblings would join together in the group
Tamalin. Before that, though, young John had an obsession to deal
with.
"When those pipes finally arrived, I practised like mad,"
he says. "Five hours a day was the norm and if I had to go
through a day without practising, I'd cry. It's sad, I know. But
when I hadn't practised properly, I'd go up to my room and just
finger the chanter for an hour before I went to bed, playing tunes
in my head. I'd do the same thing in school, doing the fingering
on a pencil. The teacher must have thought I was away with the
fairies."
His self-imposed regime paid off when, after just six months,
he entered the All-Ireland Championships and came third in the
under-12 section. He went on to win the senior title and, at the
age of 18, became the youngest player to win the coveted Oireachtas
piping competition.
By this time, he was on his way to a professional career that
has seen him co-found the outstanding band Lunasa, join Irish
music guru Donal Lunny in Coolfin and record sessions with Clannad,
Sinead O'Connor and Nanci Griffith, among many others, as well
as working in theatre productions.
"I pretty much gave up competing as soon as I'd won the titles
I was after," he says. "But it was a great foundation
for what came later and the social aspect was really useful, too.
I got to meet loads of people and swap tunes with them, but it
also gave me the confidence to walk into a session, in both the
informal music-making and recording senses, and feel quite comfortable
playing something totally spontaneously."
Spontaneity is a major part of McSherry's game plan. With Coolfin,
a group that otherwise sounded drilled to the nth degree, the
solo spots he played were always completely improvised.
"There were times when it went horribly wrong and I'd think,
what was all that about? But I preferred to leave it to chance
because when it turned out right, that was such a great feeling,"
he says.
Since McSherry's opposite number on the upcoming tour, Chris Stout's
music has a spontaneous element also, the two bands seem ideally
matched. "Some people in traditional music get a bit nervous
when you use the word improvisation but it doesn't mean you're
playing wildly all over the place," says McSherry.
"It might mean playing one note because on the pipes you
can put a lot of different emotions into that one note. For me,
it's just the case that whatever embellishments I add to a tune
are that day's embellishments and reflect the way I happen to
feel at the time, rather than playing the same thing over and
over again."
John McSherry's At First Light and the Chris Stout Quintet play
The Tolbooth, Stirling, tomorrow; the Queen's Hall, Edinburgh,
Friday; Rothes Halls, Glenrothes, on Saturday and the Eastgate
Theatre, Peebles, on Sunday. The tour visits Ullapool, Aberdeen,
Skye and Strontian the following week.
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