| Teada Explore Roots With New Tour
By Paul Keating
One of the more colorful traditions associated with an Irish Christmas
is the Wren Boys and the custom of visiting from house to house offering
a bit of song or music in exchange for a small treat or coin.
Two Irish groups have developed their own approach to this Christmas
tradition.
On an ambitious 15 gig tour are Teada (pronounced tay-da), with a show
they are calling “An Irish Christmas in America” and it features special
guest artists like singer Cathie Ryan, harpist Grainne Hambly and piper
Tommy Martin to augment the well-travelled quintet.
Led by fiddler Oisin MacDiarmada, Teada members are Sean McElwain (guitar/bouzouki),
Paul Finn (accordion), Damien Stenson (flute) and bodhran player Tristan
Rosenstock, who looked for a broader approach on this tour.

With their last album for Green Linnet entitled Give Us a Penny and Let
Us Be Gone, previously proclaimed in verse by the Wren Boys as they travelled
from house to house, they didn’t have to look very far for a central theme
for the new show.
The December timing was ideal for breaking out of their usual performance
format of hardcore trad music and allowing the twentysomething members of
the band to explore some ancient Irish folklore.
They struck up a great musical friendship with Cathie Ryan on a joint
tour last year in New Mexico and looked for an opportunity to perform together
again.
The chance to highlight two of Ireland’s symbolic instruments in the
harp playing of Hambly and uilleann pipes with Tommy Martin rounds out the
show even more. Local dance troupes were invited to perform as well so the
package is complete for a night of great entertainment.
The tour begins out west in Arizona and California on December 1 and
concludes on December 18 in Earleville, New York.
Their East Coast appearances are — December 9 at the National Geographic
Auditorium in Washington D.C., December 11 in Manhattan at Joe’s Pub in
the East Village for three one-hour shows (3, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.), December
14 in Lakewood at the Strand Theatre and the following night in Morristown,
New Jersey at the Morristown Unitarian Fellowship. Full details of the tour
and the show can be found at
www.teada.com.
Nothing surpasses the Christmas message of giving to the less fortunate
and the tour has an “unofficial” sponsor in the Irish relief agency Concern
which is always there to help alleviate human suffering around the world
and most recently for the victims of earthquake in Pakistan. There will
be information at all the shows on how we can all help.
|