- Music
- 06 Jul 05
Recorded mostly at home in Montréal and in art galleries and hotel rooms by the quarter-Irish, one-woman cottage industry that is Emm Gryner, Songs of Love and Death is a brave selection of Irish pop and rock songs that thankfully avoids the obvious and gives some perhaps forgotten gems an overdue turn around the block.
Recorded mostly at home in Montréal and in art galleries and hotel rooms by the quarter-Irish, one-woman cottage industry that is Emm Gryner, Songs of Love and Death is a brave selection of Irish pop and rock songs that thankfully avoids the obvious and gives some perhaps forgotten gems an overdue turn around the block.
This sensitively under-produced album opens with a version of ‘Forget Georgia’ that follows the Something Happens blueprint, right down to Alan Byrne’s bass lines, but is hampered by a clunking drum machine and handclaps. She reworks The Corrs’ ‘Breathless’ into an, er, breathless, doom-laden, piano-led ballad and transforms ‘Dearg Doom’ from Celtic rock stomper into vintage indie-rock. She also makes worthwhile covers of Thin Lizzy’s ‘Running Back’ and Ash’s ‘Shining Light’. Therapy?’s ‘Nowhere’ becomes a gritty backporch foot-tapper and her imaginative use of the African kalimba shines new light into Gilbert O’Sullivan’s ‘Nothing Rhymed’. The Undertones’ ‘Julie Ocean’ in Gryner’s hands becomes a sumptuous and gritty love-ballad. Kate McGarrigle joins in on banjo for The Virgin Prunes ‘Bau-Dachong’, but mostly it’s a few muso mates plus Gryner’s robust voice and harpsichord, clarinet and electric guitars.
With Irish artists currently falling over themselves to record covers of international standards, it’s ironic that a Canadian would decide to record an album of Irish covers and remind us of the cache of gems gathering dust in the vault. There’s a lesson in there somewhere.