Celtic Connections review: We Banjo 3 with Chessboxer, Glasgow


We Banjo 3 with Chessboxer - Mitchell Library, Glasgow
* * * *
The US duo of Ross Holmes and Matt Menefee proved as inventive, eclectic and eccentric as their hybrid sport’s name suggests, delivering an exuberant, galloping tribute to a computer game horse, an unusually graceful rendition of Welsh rugby hymn Calon Lân and a delightful bluegrass interpretation of Britney Spears’s Toxic, with Holmes chopping away on the fiddle with gleeful mischief in his eyes.
Joined for a sprightly hornpipe by We Banjo 3 at the end of their set, the two pairs of Galway brothers repaid the compliment at the climax of theirs, with everybody reconvening for a boisterous jig or two. Their name a misnomer, Enda and Fergal Scahill and Martin and David Howley seamlessly marry Irish and bluegrass traditions, with virtuoso musicianship on the tenor banjo, alongside mandolin, guitar and Fergal as adept on a bodhran as the fiddle. The pop immediacy of Gonna Write Me a Letter foregrounded another strong suit, young Fergal’s emotive vocals, evidenced on a liberated take on Guy Davis’s We All Need More Kindness In This World too. But it was on the instrumentals that the fraternally intuitive quartet really impressed, throughout a beautiful mandolin/banjo encounter on Liz Carroll’s Air Tune especially.
Seen on 25.01.14