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Mike Harding, BBC Radio 2
Mojo
Irish Music Magazine
The Irish World
Pay the Reckoning
fRoots
Mike
Harding (BBC Radio 2, Jan 5th '05)
... a terrifically exciting new singer... lovely stuff...
a brilliant CD of great songs.
Mojo
... She's assembled some fine musicians, like Andy Metcalfe
on guitar and Harriet Earis on harp, but it's the bare purity
of her voice and the controlled dignity of her singing that's
really striking, especially on the unaccompanied Lovely Annie
and Willie O.
Colin
Irwin, Feb 2005
Irish
Music Magazine December 2004
Launch
Pad
Return to Camden Town Festival
... So
back to the main event and Helen Roche, she is a pretty and
slight brunette with a compelling command of the traditional
singing idiom, not too florid with tastefully chosen grace
notes and a range that can accommodate the intricacies of
the tradition with ease. Singers are often judged on the rage
of material in their stage repertoires and the good news with
Helen is that she is firmly rooted in folk song from these
islands, one sentence from the brochure sums it all up. "Her
album Shake the Blossom Early is a collection of songs from
the Irish tradition, many of them from the north of Ireland,
including songs from Paddy Tunney, Geordie Hanna, Joe Holmes."
And she does great service to them all.
Helen grew up in England and Mid Wales, and inherited her
singing from her father Jules and Grandfather Bill, both of
Liverpool and it is evident by her technique and choice of
songs that she was well grounded in the tradition. Joined
on the night by the musicians who played on her album: Harriet
Earis (harp), Colman Connolly (pipes), Conan McDonnell (bodhran,
accordion), Michael Lempelius (guitar, bouzouki), Richard
Bolton (cello) and Andy Metcalfe (the album's producer on
guitar). Rather than the full band she asked individual players
to join her on a series of duets and trios, in this way her
voice was able to dominate each vignette. Songs on the album
are Green Grows the Laurel, The Dark Eyed Gypsy, Lovely Annie,
As I Roved Out, The Irish Maid, The Wee Weaver, Dobbin's Flowery
Vale, The Lisburn Lass, The Draighean Donn, When A Man's In
Love, I Wish My Love, The Verdant Braes Of Skreen, Willie
0.
Watch this space as Helen Roche could be the next big name
in Irish singing.
Sean
Laffey
The
Irish World, November 2004
Roche's
voice is incredible - emotive and stirring... A hugely promising
recording start for an already popular live musician.
Tara
McWeeney
Pay
the Reckoning
http://www.paythereckoning.com/reviews.html#helenroche
We've
known Roche for some time, our paths crossing at this and
that session where, when the ebb and flow of the nights' proceedings
have reached an appropriate spell, Helen has regaled the assembled
musicians and punters with her beautifully intense songs of
love lost and love gained, of hearts lifted and broken by
love. Few singers have Roche's ability to demand a gathering's
complete attention; to quieten even the most rowdy of pubs
and then to fill the space with a swell of sound. The launch
of Helen's album is a gear-shift; time to bring her voice
and her vision to a wider audience. They won't be disappointed.
Helen's exceptional way with song may be well-known to a select
few at the time of writing, but Pay The Reckoning predicts
that by this time next year, there'll be few afficionados
of traditional song who won't have been charmed by Helen's
CD.
There
is a delicacy about Helen's singing which underscores the
often savage emotion of the songs which she favours. An inspired
collector, Helen has zeroed in on songs which suit her perfectly,
from Dobbin's Flowery Vale where raw feelings are masked in
an outpouring of euphemisms as florid as Dobbin's Vale itself
to Willie O, whose unflinching directness is heart-scalding.
Along the way, Helen treats us to some of the top-drawer standards
of the Irish tradition - The Verdant Braes of Skreen, Green
Grows The Laurel, When A Man's In Love and I Wish My Love
amongst others. Equally top-drawer are Helen's backing musicians,
Harriet Earis (harp), Colman Connolly (pipes), Conan McDonnell
(bodhran, accordion), Michael Lempelius (guitar, bouzouki),
Richard Bolton (cello) and Andy Metcalfe (the album's producer
on guitar). The arrangements are subtle and sympathetic, always
adding to and never distracting from Helen's central role
in the endeavour.
We've
watched this CD develop from the sidelines - at times, here
and there, receiving snippets about progress. Many of Helen's
friends in London and, indeed, across the world have fretted
with Helen during the gestation. Well, we're pleased to report
that the wait's been well worth it! But the waiting's over
and the end result is a credit to all concerned but particularly
to Helen. Well done, girl... now, let's see what happens!
fRoots,
March 2005
Helen Roche is
a London-based singer with a voice of such gorgeous range
and timbre that love songs fall naturally within its ambit
and, to prove so, Shake the Blossom Early is an entire collection
of such songs drawn from the Irish tradition. Such is the
emotional power of Helen's singing and the sheer quality of
her approach to that tradition, embodied by the subtlety of
many of the musical arrangements here, that listening to Shake
the Blossom Early becomes a thoroughly absorbing and utterly
gratifying experience.
Helen's chosen songs have been largely drawn from the north
of Ireland and, clearly, she has spent much time immersing
herself in the singing of Paddy Tunney, Sarah Makem, Geordie
Hanna and Robert Cinnamond, while her father Jules, and late
grandfather Bill, are other noteworthy sources. However, while
paying tribute to such inspirations, Helen completely retains
her own identity.
Her album's title derives from The Draighnean Donn on which
the harp of Harriet Earis and Colman Connolly's low whistle
provide sumptuous backing. Elsewhere, such as the opening
Green Grows The Laurel, Colman's uilleann pipes offer a resonant
backdrop for Helen's sensuous rendition of the song, though
perhaps the most eloquent support is provided by the guitar
of Michael Lempelius and Richard Bolton's cello on an elegiac
rendition of As I Roved Out. Helen's reading of I Wish My
Love Was a Red, Red Rose (with producer Andy Metcalfe on guitar)
is illustrative of this album's finesse. Her diction throughout
this and every other song is downright perfect and she retains
a remarkable capacity to resist over-ornamentation in her
delivery.
Very rarely Helen's voice does waver, but that's the merest
quibble regarding this thoroughly gorgeous, fulfilling and
utterly indispensible album. Shake the Blossom Early is a
consummate delight.
Geoff
Wallis
First published at greater length on The
Irish Music Review
12th
November, 2004
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