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Capital News article (to save to your hard drive, right click and Save Target As). For a text only version, click here
None so rare as fiddlers fair: The Australian, September 25, 2006. (1.4Mb pdf. To save to your hard drive, right click and Save Target As). For a text only version, click here
The Face (Marcus profile in the
Review section of The Weekend Australian, January 14-15, 2006)
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Fiddlers festival proves instrumental to
fun (The Australian, March 24, 2005)
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What The Press Said About:
Frenzee
(Rouseabout Records)
* * * *
I defy anyone to not like this CD. The hi-fi speakers spark with the fun the
band formerly known as Fiddler's Festival had recording it. They tear through a
typically bizarre and eclectic mix of jazz, folk, gypsy, country and rock,
including a madcap Holidays for Strings. This beats the socks off the Sydney
band's previous releases on all levels, the diversity sounding more cohesive and
the multi-violin front line, led by Marcus Holden, augmented by guests galore.
John Shand, Sydney Morning Herald
Frenzee
(Rouseabout Records RRR40)
If you could have only one live band on your desert island, then choose
Fiddler’s Feast (formerly Fiddler’s Festival). They are rollicking fun, with
plenty of fiddles, and a tight rhythm section playing with precision and power.
Frenzee will put a smile on your face and leave you breathless with its high
energy, feet taping, no boundaries repertoire. An impressive list of guest
artists joins in, including George Washingmachine on vocals and fiddle. The song
selection is eclectic: originals, folk songs, and a decomposed Eine Kleine
Nutmusik by Marcus Holden, where he was trying to
see how many themes and nursery rhymes he could inflict on W.A Mozart!
Jaslyn Hall, Limelight
Strung Out
Fiddlers Festival (Bloody Dog Records)
By: JOHN SHAND
Homespun Hoedown that stomps into Celtic Country.
Genre busting is a post modern reality, but this debut album by Marcus Holden's
Fiddlers Festival doesn't just crash through the boundaries, it nukes them. A
track by track tour shows how extensive the scope of it all is.
Fiddlers Curse is an instant classic in the country rock vein, with Kevin
Bennett (of The Flood fame) delivering a gritty narrative lyric. Peel Of The
Onion, a traditional Celtic tune, is lent a slightly new age air with it's
keyboard programming while retaining the folky robustness. La Cumpasita, a
tango, has a bewitching Argentinean texture created by Holden's lusty fiddle,
accompanied by accordion, guitar, bass and drums. A similar texture is used to
different effect on the ensuing two-tune medley of Celtic flavour.
El Condor Pasa is a highlight. Holden doubles on viola and recorder, while Kate
Morgan adds cello and Willy Qua flute. The result is a reading of the timeless
melody which exquisitely emphasises its loneliness and desolation. A rather
cheeky medley combines Coleraine Jig with Jesu, Joy of Man's desiring and gets
away with it, while Tiger Rag sees Holden joined by George Washingmachine for a
two-fiddle workout that would get them whooping in the pub and might have you
doing the same in your living room if you're not careful.
Holden is a selfless leader who clearly delights in the talents of his peers.
Ray Schloeffel plays violin on his own charming Blacktown Jig, and Malachy
Bourke is the lead fiddle on Holden's arrangement of the Morning Dew. If the
core Celtic theme seems to be developing at this point, Holden's title track is
a country hoedown with a hint of the melancholy to ease the glibness that can
beset such music. What follows could be the genre busters anthem: Cole Porter's
Don't Fence Me In (with Goofy Scatting). Music for a Found harmonium is a kind
of country
Ravel's Bolero, with a repeated theme growing in intensity.
Turkey Set is a bluegrass stomper (with soprano sax interjections from Willy
Qua) which gives way to Old Tunes, a simple setting of the Henry Lawson Poem. So
what do call it? A pedant might try for Celtic country with rock and jazz
influences. But it's music- unassuming, honest and fun.
STRUNG OUT
Reviewed by Salli Chmura
Fiddlers Festival has gathered a large following over the past few years and is
highly sought after at all major festivals in Australia. This, their most recent
CD is very typical of the variety and energy they put into their live
performances and recordings.
The tracks on this album boast some of Australia's best fiddle players including
Marcus Holden, Mark Oats, Ray Schloeffel and George Washingmachine with an
endless and impressive list of accompanying instruments and musicians on vocals,
guitar, piano accordion, drums, electric bass, mandolin, banjo and even
didgeridoo.
If you enjoy a mix of Irish, jazz, classical, bluegrass, country, blues and
Celtic music as well as some brilliant improvisations, this is definitely a CD
to rush out and buy.
The CD opens with a country ballad- Fiddler's Curse (based on a true story)- and
includes vocals from well-known singer-songwriter Kevin Bennett, to the
accompaniment of banjo, guitar, mandolin, bass and drums as well as some
brilliant violin playing from Marcus and Mark.
The are several lively reels and jigs with the musicians' fingers flying at
breakneck speed and Tiger Rag is no exception. Turkey Set goes like a bullet and
then gets faster without missing a note even when switching to the Sailor's
Hornpipe.
Then there are the more relaxing numbers such as the Uruguayan tango tune named
La Cumpasita (Fernando's Hideaway) which includes piano accordion, drum kit and
soprano sax with close harmonies.
Also on the CD are the perennial favourites El Condor Pasa and Don't Fence Me In
with Great scat singing from George Washingmachine.
In conclusion to this wonderful selection of fiddle tunes is a recitation by
Tryone Schulaiss (a pseudonym of course) of Henry Lawson's Old Tunes accompanied
by Marcus on violin, viola and tenor violin. "Just you bring in your fiddle Jack
and set your heart in tune..."
Highly recommended. 'Frenzee'
Strung Out
Fiddlers Festival (Bloody Dog Records)
By: KEITH GLASS
This is the third album from a bunch of violinists brought together by
Sydney-based Marcus Holden. Their previous album came out on a major label, and
the co-operative's members have done all right for themselves, being brave
enough to go it independently with this fine album. Having said that, I guess
you would have to be partial to fiddles.
Aiding Holden are the talented Andrew Clermont, George Washingmachine and Ray
Schloeffel, as well as a slew of nifty players of other instruments. Because
Marcus has his own studio, he has been able to put some labour-intensive time
into this intricately layered album, while retaining a sense of fun and freedom.
Kicking off with the vocal talents of Kevin Bennett on the original composition
Fiddlers' Curse, this album runs from country to Celtic to jazz and contemporary
classical, yet the thread of virtuoso and inventive fiddling is paramount
throughout. The incorrigible Washingmachine never gets too serious -- his
version of the musical chestnut Don't Fence Me In has him scat singing along in
a tribute to jazz bassist Slam Stewart that is exhilarating and pure fun.
Available from PO Box 430, Croydon Park, NSW 2133, or fiddlersfestival.com
Get Reel
The Fiddlers Festival's new CD GET REEL received **** (FOUR STARS!) from John
Shand's review in the Sydney Morning Herald (Metro Section) on Friday 29th
August 2003!
Here's what John said...."This new one from Marcus Holden's band Fiddlers
Festival just leaps from the speakers. Once again, the repertoire is
wonderfully, irreverently eclectic. For instance, it surges from PRESIDENT
GARFIELD'S HORNPIPE into IT DON'T MEAN A THING (IF IT AIN'T GOT THAT SWING)
without blinking an eye. The folk, jazz, bluegrass, rock and tango standards are
perfectly happy in each other's company. Throughout the album, Holden's
marvellous violin swoons and and sighs, swaggers and strikes sparks, even
becoming ominously electrified on MUSICAL PRIEST PARTS 1 and 2. It's funny, sad
and full of surprises."