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Planxty as a group have
had two periods as a band (with a third on the way). They first
formed in 1972 and performed and recorded together until 1974 when
the original members, Christy Moore, Andy Irvine, Liam O'Flynn and
Donal Lunny, went on to pursue solo projects.
By 1978, Christy had his own band 'The Christy Moore
Band', Donal was in The Bothy Band, Liam and Andy was playing solo
gigs.
It
was Christy who thought that it would a good time to recreate the
''Original Planxty''. Liam and Andy agreed wholeheartedly. Donal
also agreed and he was persuaded flute player, Matt Molloy, who
was with the Bothy Band at the time to join the band with him.
The band had a new manager in Kevin 'Lofty' Flynn
from County Sligo, a man who was responsible for the Ballisodare
festival in Sligo which was one of Ireland's top festivals of the
time. Kevin put together a hectic touring schedule for the band
which started at the Hammersmith Odeon and went on through Britain
and Germany, France, Switzerland, Austria, Belgium, Holland and
finally, Ireland all this in just an 8 week period.
A week after the tour ended the band went into Dublin's
new 'Windmill Lane' studios to record After the Break. During
the four year break recording techniques had advanced as did the
band's approach to recording making the final mix of the album a
tighter more refined sound than the albums recording during their
first period together.
Planxty – After The Break (Tara Records CD3001)
"It might only be a re-issue but what a re-issue. Planxty
captured at the very peak of their magnificence with the towering
first track ‘The Good Ship Kangaroo’ just for starters. The bouzouki
and mandolin interplay from Donal Lunny and Andy Irvine setting
the scene for Christy Moore’s sublime vocals topped by Matt Molloy’s
flute and Liam O’Flynn’s uilleann pipes – what more could any true
devotee of Celtic music require? You couldn’t in my humble opinion
for here was a band that paved the way for many imitators but were
never (and I do mean never) bettered. The choice of material and
the pace set was so spot on that next to their first (‘Black’) album
I’d rank this as probably my favourite Planxty recording of all
time. With the introduction of Matt’s breathy tones they appeared
to shine as an art-house band so finely polished that it made grown
men want to weep. I remember at the time I was playing alongside
John Bowe at the White Hart in Fulham and everyone in the audience
were requesting if we knew tracks from the record so it just goes
to show how influential it was. ‘You Rambling Boys Of Pleasure’,
‘The Rambling Siuler’ and ‘The Pursuit Of Farmer Michael Hayes’
are all there plus (if memory serves me right) there is the inclusion
of ‘The Bonny Light Horseman’ that never appeared on the original
album but featured on a compilation called the High Kings Of Tara.
Whatever, the recording is an undisputed classic and should be in
every self-respecting folk musicians collection."
Pete Fyfe - The Living Tradition
Planxty : "After The Break"
(Colin Irwin review for Melody Maker 15/12/79)
The
gravest danger in the resurrection of Planxty was always that, in
attempting to recreate the extraordinary verve and majesty of their
original incarnation, they neglected natural current instincts and
succeeded only in becoming a parody of their former selves. That
they managed with ease to avoid this considerable pitfall alone
makes this a great record.
Naturally there's no conceivable way that "After
The Break" can manage the same impact as their bold debut LP,
purely because "Planxty" came first and hit upon a blend
that evidently inspired all those involved. If "The Well Below
The Valley" and "Cold Blow The Rainy Night" fell
short of it (albeit narrowly) then it was because that sharpness
and charged sense of restrained dynamics had to a small degree dissipated.
On several tracks here notably "The Rambling Suiler",
"The Pursuit Of Farmer Michael Hayes", and two sets of
reels, it's fully recaptured.
Yet the track that defiantly declares that they
are looking ahead and not behind is "Smeceno Horo", a
frantic Bulgarian dance tune that's proved so popular on gigs it
even merits a "FEATURING SMECENO HORO" sticker on the
sleeve. A joker in the pack, it's a complete departure from everything
they've done before, even allowing for some of Andy Irvine's flirtations
with Eastern European music in the past. Undeniably invigorating
and infectious, it's nevertheless my least favourite track on the
record, jarring in relation to the rest of the album, but I admire
their resolve in tackling it. It comes over much more powerfully
live.
The only other real quibbles are that Christy Moore
(on "The Good Ship Kangaroo" and Andy Irvine (on "You
Rambling Boys Of Pleasure") seem to take the understated vocal
style perhaps a shade too far, or maybe the vocals are a fraction
too low in the mix. But these really are details - the arrangements
around both tracks are superb, the instrumental break tagged on
to the end of "The Good Ship Kangaroo", the opening track,
stirring memories of "Raggle Taggle Gypsy" and "Tabhair
Dum Do Lamh", "The Rambling Suiler", a Scots moral
tale of a colonel who dresses up as a beggar and pulls a farmer's
daughter, and "The Pursuit Of Farmer Michael Hayes", a
geographical guide to Ireland through the eyes of a fleeing murderer,
are both vintage Planxty.
Matt Molloy and Liam O'Flynn are at the helm of
the instrumental tracks (two sets of reels and one of double-jigs)
and two things emerge. One is that Liam O'Flynn has become an even
more accomplished piper than he was before, and that Matt Molloy's
brief contribution on flute was greater than it actually appeared
on stage. His blend with O'Flynn is mesmerising here.
This is of course, an essential album.
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