This review is written by Dai Woosnam, daigress@hotmail.com, 10/03
It is extraordinary to think that it is over 40 years since I
first saw The Dubs. And amazing to think that I would be reviewing a
new release of theirs in 2006.
Except of course, it is not exactly “new”. The first CD sees a rich
haul from a raid on their glorious CD and vinyl back-catalogue. Twenty
magnificent tracks all sounding as fresh as a daisy when (jointly)
re-mastered by John Sheahan (and HE should know about “veracity” when
it comes to re-producing The Dubs’ original sound!).
I just can’t fault it. How touching to hear dear Luke Kelly’s voice
again. Tell me that I am NOT imagining it: he really DID have a voice
that somehow spoke to one’s innermost emotional spot, didn’t he? I mean
that it has nothing to do with 20/20 hindsight, now that we reflect on
how relatively young he was when he died.
So many of the old favourites are there on CD One. And they are there on CD Two also.
Except that the second disc is a live recording of the 40th Anniversary
Concert, recorded in 2002 at the Gaiety in Dublin. And here, old mid
Sixties’ favourites like “Seven Drunken Nights” and “Black Velvet
Band”, are cheek-by-jowl with Eighties’ Dubs’ songs like “The Fields of
Athenry” (written by Pete St. John in 1979). This
last song has an appreciative audience giving the chorus a bit of
welly. And Paddy Reilly delivers it with the same wonderful assurance
he delivers almost everything else he tackles on this second disc.
It is truly a splendid feast. Push me to choose just one track to save
from the fire, and then it has to be Sean Cannon’s 1987 singing of “The
Rose of Allendale”. It was recorded when Sean’s soaring voice was at
its most golden. It is a voice up there with John McCormack’s and Josef
Locke’s.
In the unlikely event that you have not got a Dubliners CD in your collection, put matters right here.
So is this a puff-job review? Is there NOTHING that disappointed this
reviewer? Well, sorry to seem like I am president of the Dubs’ fan
club, but there wasn’t. Well not really.
But okay, if you push me to nit-pick, then here’s one very minor note
of censure. It relates to the spelling on the liner notes.
(No, not the phoney spelling of “craic” for “crack”. There is nothing
remotely Gaelic about this Lowland Scots word. But the battle is lost
here, I fear, when you get such erudite guys as Colin Irwin using this
solecism in a recent book title.)
No, I refer to their marvellous version of “Fiddler’s Green”. Come on fellows! John Conolly is not the brother of The Big Yin!
Dai Woosnam
Grimsby, England
daigress@hotmail.com
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