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Lincoln fans have not forgotten
Eileen Ivers since her show here a couple
of years ago.
Saturday night at the Lied Center for
Performing Arts, about 800 fans listened,
clapped, stomped, whistled, waved, sang
and at times yelled as Ivers and
her band made their way through two
hours of Irish traditional, blues, bluegrass,
rock and several other mudic genres.
Ir it sounds like an omnibus evening,
it was. Ivers has managed to break through
traditional Celtic music stereotypes,
and her band helped her do this Saturday.
While band members James Riley and
Ivan Goff are for the most part traditional
Irish musicians, Goff crossed the line
into jazz and blues on flute a number
of times. Guitarist riley plays a mean
rock line, too.
No wonder Ivers' playlist included
a classic version of Pachelbel's "Canon
in D" that broke into jazz lines
as the crowd smiled.
It was also clear the musicians loved
what was happening in the Lied Center.
Patrons were highly responsive to
the patter on stage and offered cheers
for almost every number.
Pieces ranged from "Welcoming
Poor Paddy Home," a dirge about
an American emigrant who returned to
the Emerald Isle to live, to "The
Gravelwalk" with Ivers taking a
Jimi Hendrix approach on her trademark
luminescent blue fiddle.
Drummer-singer Tommy McDonnell was
responsible for getting the crowd to
sing along.
The crowd, mesmerized by the ensemble's
stage energy, insisted on an encore
at show's end, and McDonnell led
the house in "Dance All Night"
that included singing "Will the
Circle Be Unbroken" in a panoramic
look at the universal music of Ivers
and her group.
It was also a big night for three early
teen dancers of the Craoi na Tire Irish
dance academy. Ivers had asked the school
to provide dancers for the Lincoln show.
The three dancers performed their fast
steps to perfection in accompanying
four Ivers selections.
"We're about to go on a long travel
circuit. Can we take you on the road
with us?" was Ivers' comment after
the group's sizzling drive through an
AMerican bluegrass tune, "Paddy
on the Turnpike." The crowd
continued its frenzied cheers and applause.
As was the case for Friday night's
Prague Symphony concert, Eileen Ivers
and her band had won the hearts of the
crowd, and the energy streams ran the
other way, too, as the house embraced
Ivers and her troupe.
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