Details

Track Listing 1. Never Give All the Heart - (featuring Brenda Fricker/Anuna) 2. A Stor Mo Chroi - (featuring Bonnie Raitt) 3. Lowlands of Holland, The - (featuring Natalie Merchant) 4. Magdalene Laundries, The - (featuring Joni Mitchell) 5. Jimmy Mo Mhille Stor - (Gaelic, featuring The Rankins) 6. I Know My Love - (featuring The Corrs) 7. Factory Girl - (featuring Sinead O'Connor) 8. Deserted Soldier - (Gaelic, featuring Mary Chapin Carpenter) 9. Ye Rambling Boys of Pleasure - (Gaelic, Loreena McKennitt) 10. Sake in the Jar - (Japanese, featuring Akiko Yano) 11. Raglan Road - (featuring Joan Osborne) 12. Siuil a Run - (featuring Sissel) 13. Fiddling Ladies, The - (featuring Eileen Ivers/Natalie MacMaster/Maire Breatnach/Annbjorg Lien) 14. Danny Boy - (featuring Diana Krall)
| Details | | Contributing artists: | Akiko Yano, Annbjorg Lien, Anuna, Bonnie Raitt, Brenda Fricker, Diana Krall, Eileen Ivers, Joan Osborne, Joni Mitchell, Loreena McKennitt, Maire Breatnach, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Natalie MacMaster, Natalie Merchant, Sinead O'Connor, Sissel, The Chieftains, The Corrs, The Rankins | | Producer: | Paddy Maloney | | Distributor: | BMG (distributor) | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes The Chieftains: Martin Fay, Sean Keane (fiddle); Derek Bell (harp, keyboard, tiompan); Matt Molloy (flute); Paddy Maloney (tin whistle, Uillean pipes); Kevin Conneff (bodhran). Additional personnel includes: Bonnie Raitt (vocals, dobro); Brenda Fricker, The Rankins, Natalie Merchant, Joni Mitchell, Sinead O'Connor, Mary-Chapin Carpenter, Loreena McKennitt, Joan Osborne, Akiko Yano, Sissel, Diana Krall (vocals); Eric Della Penna (guitar); Annborg Lien, Eileen Ivers, Natalie MacMaster (fiddle); Mairtin O'Connor (accordion); Patrick Fitzpatrick (keyboards); Hutch Hutchinson (bass); The Screaming Orphans, Anuna (background vocals); Maire Breatnach, The Rankins, The Corrs. Engineers include: Jeffrey Lesser, Brian Masterson, Takahiro Nochimura. Includes liner notes by Paddy Moloney. The Chieftains have always worked in their own carefully defined middle ground between pop crossovers like Clannad and rigid, inflexible traditionalists. Maybe that's why they're one of the longest-lived and best-loved groups in all of Irish music. They never lose touch with tradition, but as past recordings have proven, they're not afraid to work with artists from different musical worlds. TEARS OF STONE is an album of collaborations with pop artists on original tunes (Joni Mitchell sings on a version of her own "Magdalene Laundries") and traditional ones (Bonnie Raitt proves an excellent folk balladeer on "A Stor Mo Chroi"). Bluesy American siren Joan Osborne's take on "Raglan Road" may not equal the version Van Morrison once recorded with the Chieftains, but what could? Countrywoman Sinead O'Connor puts in a particularly strong appearance on the traditional ballad "Factory Girl."
Industry Reviews 3 out of 5 - ...The Chieftains are a treasure and every home should have at least one of their albums... Uncut (08/01/2002)
...There is some beautiful music here. Eileen Ivers and Natalie MacMaster kick butt with a colorful amalgam of Irish, Cape Breton, and Norwegian fiddling... Dirty Linen (06/01/1999)
...Blending Irish music naturally and unobtrusively into other cultures and styles is the key to The Chieftains enduring success... and this sensitive album... Mojo (02/01/1999)
4 Stars (out of 5) - ...Guests include heavyweights Joni Mitchell, Bonnie Raitt and Mary Chapin Carpenter; mid-table types like Sinead O'Connor and Natalie Merchant, as well as traditionalists Loreena McKennitt, Eileen Ivers, The Rankins and - there is no escape - The Corrs... Q (04/01/1999)
...There is some beautiful music here. Eileen Ivers and Natalie MacMaster kick butt with a colorful amalgam of Irish, Cape Breton, and Norwegian fiddling... Dirty Linen (06/01/1999)
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