One of Ireland's best-loved traditional bands,
Dervish emerged out of Sligo at the beginning of the 1990s and quickly earned a reputation for their fiery live shows, strong musicianship, and tightly crafted arrangements. Portraying a strong D.I.Y. spirit, the band issued a string of high-quality self-released albums throughout the '90s and 2000s, earning fans around the world through hard touring and appearances at both folk festivals and major rock festivals like Brazil's Rock in Rio and England's Glastonbury. They even took part in the Eurovision Song Contest. In 2019, after nearly three decades and 12 self-released recordings,
Dervish signed with Rounder Records to issue
The Great Irish Songbook, their guest-heavy tribute to their country's most enduring songs.
The group initially formed in 1989 under the name the Boys of Sligo. At the urging of Sligo-based Sound Records, the original quintet of
Liam Kelly (flute, tin whistle),
Shane Mitchell (accordion), Michael Holmes (bouzouki),
Brian McDonagh (mandolin, mandola), and Martin McGinley (fiddle) recorded a lone album of traditional instrumental tunes under this name before adding singer and bodhran player
Cathy Jordan to the mix in 1991. Around this time, McGinley was replaced on fiddle by Shane McAleer and the expanded lineup began performing as
Dervish.
With the release of 1993's
Harmony Hill,
Dervish began to establish themselves as a premier Irish traditional act, coloring the music with their distinctive tonal flair while steering clear of the temptation to use synths or any of the electric instrumentation adopted by many of their Celtic peers at the time. This all-organic approach served them well throughout their career as they proceeded to record a slew of well-regarded albums like
Playing with Fire (1995) and
Midsummer's Night (1999). Operating without a label, they managed their own business quite well; they toured Europe frequently, and recorded 1997's Live in Palma in Spain. During this period, they also made a trip to South America, where they performed at Brazil's massive Rock in Rio festival.
By the end of the '90s, fiddler
Tom Morrow had come on board, replacing McAleer, and
Dervish celebrated their first ten years as a band with the 2001 anthology
Decade. Still an independent act, they continued to release high-quality albums like 2003's
Spirit and 2005's
A Healing Heart while cultivating their international fan base with frequent trips to the U.S., Europe, and beyond. In 2007, they represented Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest and released their seventh studio album,
Traveling Show. That same year also included a trip to China accompanying Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern on a state visit where they broke into an impromptu session on the Great Wall of China.
In 2012,
Jordan issued a solo album,
All the Way Home, returning to band business a year later for
The Thrush in the Storm. In 2018, after operating without a label since 1991,
Dervish signed with American folk and roots music specialists Rounder Records. Their first release for the label arrived a year later in the form of
The Great Irish Songbook, which featured a number of high-profile guests including country singer
Vince Gill, Americana star
Rhiannon Giddens, and U.K. songwriter
David Gray, among others. ~ Timothy Monger