Mick O’Brien & Caoimhin O’Raghallaigh – Kitty Lie Over

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Top 10 Traditional Albums of 2003

Number 1. KITTY LIE OVER, by Mick O'Brien and Caoimhín Ó Raghallaigh (ACMCD 102)

Two of Ireland's most respected and sought after musicians have pooled their many talents and come up with a gem of a recording.

'Kitty Lie Over' is the new CD album from Mick O'Brien and Caoimhín Ó Raghallaigh. Launched at the Willie Clancy Summer School in Miltown Malbay on July 6th 2003, it is their first album together, and contains 15 tracks of unaccompanied traditional music on uilleann pipes, fiddle and whistles. There is a strong emphasis on rare and interesting versions of tunes. Mick and Caoimhín, both from Dublin (one Northsider and one Southsider), are highly regarded musicians in traditional music circles.

The music on this CD is played in the pitches of B and Bb. Eleven tracks are pipes and fiddle duets, two tracks are whistle duets, and two tracks are fiddle and whistle duets.

Kitty Lie Over:

Mickey Callaghan's Slide:

An Londubh (The Blackbird):

Munster Buttermilk:

  1. Kitty Lie Over /Munster Buttermilk
  2. Teampall an Ghleanntain / Hickey's
  3. Mickey Callaghan's Slide / Winnie Hayes Jig
  4. Biddy from Sligo/ Punch for the Ladies
  5. Woman of the House / Rolling in the Ryegrass
  6. An Manglam / The Fairy Reel / I Have No Money
  7. Rathawaun/ The Hare in the Corn
  8. The Sporting Pitchfork / The Rambling Pitchfork
  9. The Lady on the Island / Seanbhean na gCartai
  10. Young Tom Ennis / The Rose in the Heather
  11. An Londubh (The Blackbird)
  12. The Copper Plate / Paddy Gone to France/ The Wind That Shakes the Barley
  13. Dillon Brown / Sarah Hobbs
  14. Na Ceannabhain Bhana / Mairseail Alasdruim/ Munster Buttermilk
  15. The Silver Spear / Mullin's Fancy

Press Reviews

FolkWorld CD Reviews

The herrings are boiled and the praties are roasting, Kitty lie over close to the wall!

The a line borrowed from the Irish jig "The Frost is All Over". Dubliners north and south, Mick O'Brien (uilleann pipes, whistle) and Caoimhín Ó Raghallaigh (fiddle, whistle), meet. And it wasn't in the midst of the muddy river Liffey, though one may say this record is a landmark like the newly erected Millennium Spire on O'Connell Street.

These days there seems to be a trend to the pure drop. 15 tracks including 11 pipes/fiddle duets, 2 whistle duets, and 2 fiddle/whistle duets. The only accompaniment is the drones and regulators of the uilleann pipes. These are pitched in Bb, and the fiddle is obviously tuned down. Thus the sound is mellow and smooth.

There is a fondness for Sliabh Luachra music, Mick and Caoimhín pay homage to the great names, Denis Murphy, Patrick Kelly. The latter is almost forgotten:

Isn't it shocking that with all the recordings available nowadays, you can't get a single track of this most wonderful of fiddle players. If you were to give him a few bits of cast-off tunes, he would sculpt them into something that could fly - like making an aeroplane out of a scrapheap..

Mick and Caoimhín give their best to continue this legacy. As Peter Browne puts it in the liner notes: Everything sounds right! Walkin' T:-)M

IRISH ECHO Newspaper. New York City

CEOL Column

By Earle Hitchner

Top 10 Traditional Albums of 2003

Number 1. KITTY LIE OVER, by Mick O'Brien and Caoimhín Ó Raghallaigh (ACMCD 102)

The uilleann piping of Dublin's Mick O'Brien first earned international recognition through his teenage performances on two late-'70s recordings, "The Piper's Rock" and "The Flags of Dublin.

" In 1996, he issued a superb solo debut, "May Morning Dew," that finished in the Irish Echo's list of top 10 albums.

Now comes "Kitty Lie Over," a duet album with fellow Dublin-born musician Caoimhín Ó Raghallaigh that surpasses

O'Brien's earlier achievements.

In Ó Raghallaigh, O'Brien has found a fiddler whose style is an ideal match to his tonally rich, expressive chanter, regulator,

and drone work. This is much more than two talented instrumentalists getting together in the studio for some tunes.

They've carefully worked out the repertoire (much of it drawn from Sliabh Luachra), arrangements, pitch (B or B-flat),

and harmonies that allow them to truly marry their instruments, one complementing and extending and bolstering the other.

Ó Raghallaigh is himself an accomplished uilleann piper and pipemaker (apprenticed to Geoff Wooff in Miltown Malbay, Co Clare), so his pipes-like style and reflexes on fiddle add immeasurably to his duets with O'Brien.

The 11 pipes-and-fiddle tracks are wondrous, with "Woman of the House/Rolling in the Ryegrass" a shining example of this interplay, and there are also some tantalizing whistle and fiddle-and-whistle duets.

Hands down (or should I say up?), this is the most impressive Irish traditional instrumental CD of 2003 and one of the best in many years. [Published on January 21, 2004, in the IRISH ECHO newspaper in New York City. Copyright

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