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Tony DeMarco's name on the album cover says "New York Irish Fiddler," but the fact that he's from New York is less interesting than the apparent fact that he's, well, Italian. In fact, he's half Italian and half Irish, and it's the latter side of his heritage that is on full display on this stunning collection of tunes played in the style common to County Sligo. It's a style that relies less on florid ornamentation than some others do, while leaning more heavily on melodic variation;
DeMarco's particular sound is admirably clear and clean, his approach to variation intelligent without being overly showy. On his long-overdue solo debut he is accompanied by an all-star cast of sidemen including
Kevin Burke,
Jerry O'Sullivan,
Seamus Tansey, and even legendary jazz bassist
John Pattitucci, among many others. Identifying highlights is difficult on a program as consistently brilliant as this one, but a few do stand out: the simple but soaringly lovely tune "Philip O'Beirne's Delight" features not only some of
DeMarco's most tasteful playing, but also quietly brilliant guitar accompaniment by
John Doyle and an array of Latin percussion as well. The slow air "The Blackbird" is a mournful but beautiful duet between
DeMarco and uilleann piper
Ivan Goff, and there's a polka set that features absolutely stunning double-tracked fiddle and baritone fiddle playing by
DeMarco alongside some brilliantly understated bodhran playing by
Tom English. It all adds up to one of the most thoroughly enjoyable albums of traditional Irish music to be heard in years. Very highly recommended.