Ashley MacIsaac

 
       

Genres: Folk Rock / Rock / Alternative

Location: Canada

Stats: 30 fans / 6,388 plays / 0 plays today

   
 
 

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4 tracks
 
 

Ashley MacIsaac is, in a sense, the musical representative of the pre-millenial generation of Eastern Canada. An ardent traditionalist with a penchant, nevertheless, for experimentation, this 29-year-old Nova Scotian native has been taught to play the fiddle the working-class, pub-stomp Cape Breton way: fast, furious and with phenomenal precision.
Alternately considered a rebel, taking the old fiddling conventions in newfangled directions they were never meant to go, or a champion, reforging and recreating Celtic music with an updated, mass-appeal quality, MacIsaac has unarguably put his own spin on the sounds he was brought up with. This headstrong approach has led to MacIsaac working with an impressive array of talent: David Byrne, the Chieftans, Mary Jane Lamond, and others. Already considered something of a local legend and prodigy by the time of his impressive 1992 debut Close To The Floor, MacIsaac was not really introduced to Canadian audiences at large until he released the genre-bending Hi!, How Are You Today? in 1995. Along with nation-wide radio play for the first single, "Sleepy Maggie," featuring the dream-like Gaelic vocals of Mary Jane Lamond, and a regular slot on Canadian video channel MuchMusic, MacIsaac was soon recognized coast-to-coast as something of a minor national icon.

His ability to cross the boundaries of folk, punk, garage rock, and metal, all bound together by his astonishing fiddle-playing, branded him as an eccentric, an upstart, and in many cases, a pioneer. Additionally, his refusal to conform to a quick and easy "studio image" earned him a solid fanbase. In 1998, MacIsaac released his follow-up to Hi!, How Are You Today?, a more traditional return to form entitled Fine!, Thank You Very Much. In 1999, he again pushed the boundaries of stylistic conformity with the electronic- and ambient-tinged Helter's Celtic. Following a departure from A&M later that year, the fiddler recorded the independently released Fiddle Music 101, an album of traditional instrumentals made with Halifax fiddler David MacIsaac, and he re-released his 1993 album, A Cape Breton Christmas. A move to Decca Records eventually produced 2003's accurately titled Ashley Macisaac.

September 27, 2005, sees the release of Ashley's latest studio album, "Pride".


 

  • harpist said:
    the devil in the kitchen... never heard it quite like that before. certainly rocks like hell Jun 21
  • make_me_famous said:
    great sound. completely addicted! Mar 29
  • Hac<3 said:
    Ashley, just would like to say that you make me proud to be from the maritimes, altho im not directly from N.S. (im from N.B. close enof tho eh?) but my whole moms side is from there and i visit ingonish every summer, i wanted to go see one of your shows last summer but im supposed to be 19 years old to get in :( anyways maybe ill see you at a concert three years from now! till then Rock on!-Heather Jan 26
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Pride

No release date

Hi How Are You Today?

No release date
 
 

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