Music Review: Celtic Thunder Storms On!

    How It’s New York:  Celtic Thunder play New York, and lots of New Yorkers unabashedly love them.

    How It’s Irish:  They are all Irish.

    Mike Farragher on Celtic Thunder confesses that Celtic Thunder are one of his “guilty pleasures!”   “I have always applauded this show in particular for taking their high wattage spotlight on PBS appearances and shining it on obscure Irish songwriters.”

    Catch them on TV:
    Saturday, March 17 2012 – “Fox and Friends” (Morning)
    Saturday, March 17, 2012 – “QVC” – Performances at 1AM EDT – 3AM EDT 4AM EDT – 7AM EDT (Time Change) and 10PM EDT – MIDNIGHT EDT
    Monday, March 19, 2012 – “Better TV” LIVE @ 11:45AM

    Related articles:  interview with Ryan Kelly, interview with  Damian McGinty



    No matter how many storm clouds swirl around the production of Celtic Thunder, they keep rolling on. Founding father and legenday composer Phil Coulter has flown the coop, Damian McGinty went to Hollywood to get mileage out of his stint on Glee, and Paul Byrom has amassed his own following with last year’s excellent solo album This Is the Moment. Yet the wildly popular show has managed to hatch another chapter in Voyage, their 8th album. Old stagehands Keith Harkin, Ryan Kelly and George Donaldson are now joined by Neil Byrne, Emmet Cahill, and Daniel Furlong. 
    Emmet Cahill, 21, was awarded The 2010 John McCormack Bursary for the most Promising Young Tenor, was named the most promising young singer at the Royal Irish Academy of Music and was a multiple prizewinner at the National Feis Ceoil singing competition in Ireland. He hails from Mullingar in County Westmeath in Ireland.


    Furlong is the youngest member of Celtic Thunder. Daniel is 13 years old and hails from Taghmon in County Wexford. He is a boy soprano and was discovered when he entered a singing competition at the age of seven and won! He has been part of Wexford’s renowned Opera Festival every October and played the role of Edgar in the Wexford Light Opera Society production of Ragtime in 2008. He gets his solo turn on “Over the Rainbow” and his high child register takes the song to dizzying heights. If you close your eyes and didn’t know any better, you’d swear you were listening to a track from Celtic Woman instead of Celtic Thunder. Since this is a show, founding producer Sharon Browne ably guided McGinty’s character through the brambles of puberty; let’s hope she does it again with Furlong because his voice is pristine! 





    I must confess that there are certain people in the Irish Voice and IrishCentral.com offices that roll their eyes and tease me mercilessly each time I turn in a column about one of these big shows, but hear me out on why these are guilty pleasures!  I have always applauded this show in particular for taking their high wattage spotlight on PBS appearances and shining it on obscure Irish songwriters. Included in Voyage is a heartwarming read by Damian McGinty of Glen Hansard’s “Falling Slowly.” I’ve also been a sucker for the Celtic infusion these artists bring to rock standards–Donaldson’s rich Scottish baritone adds warmth to the homespun Cat Stevens track “Cats in the Cradle.” 


    Included on the disc is a spirited live version of “Seven Drunken Nights” by the ensemble. Presumably, Furlong sipped soda through the whole performance! 


    In other Celtic Thunder news, the organization behind the show peeled off some of Damian McGinty’s best bits from the show and put them into an exclusive EP on Itunes. If you can’t get enough of his rendition of “Puppy Love,” fire up your laptop and download away! For more information on the show, log onto www.celticthunder.ie