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    A fourty four min limited run long play vinyl record. Joey has hand picked ten of the fourteen tracks from King of the Blind to be included here on hi definition audio. This also includes an interior designed printed sleeve with notes, a download card of all of the  MP3's and compact disk liner notes, as well as cover art on the outter sleeve by Jesse Smith.

 

A bit about the project:

Award-winning Boston-based uilleann piper Joey Abarta has
released his second solo album, King of the Blind, available on vinyl and for digital download. The album is named for the title track, King of the Blind, a tune that Joey discovered in John & William Neal’s “A Collection of the Most Celebrated Irish Tunes” (1724), which is said to be attributed to the famous 17th century blind Celtic harper, Turlough O'Carolan. Joey’s arrangement of this tune is inspired by the late Liam Og O’Flynn, who recorded it on his self-titled solo album in 1988.

“From the first time I knew this record was going to be a reality my thoughts on the subject were: no frills, great sound, low editing, organic solo piping,” Joey said. “There are a handful of squeaks and squawks, everything we love about the pipes. The Japanese art of finding the beauty in imperfection is called Wabi-Sabi. I think this idea embodies the pipes, their music, and their place in traditional music.”
King of the Blind showcases Joey’s high regard for the great piping luminaries from Seamus Ennis to Patsy Touhey to Jerry O’Sullivan, which has distinguished him as one of the most exceptional pipers today. Joey continues to emphasize historical influences and early American piping styles in his playing, often performing together with his wife, old style step and sean nós dancer, Jackie O’Riley, who features on several tracks in King of the Blind. This album represents a snapshot of the tunes Joey has heard, collected, practiced, and recorded over the
past decade.

Joey’s discography includes his first solo album, Swimming Against the Falls (2013), which was called a “debut of majestic proportions” by Tradconnect, and a duo album, Copley Street (2016), with Boston-based fiddle player, Nathan Gourley, which was described as “a wonderful album from two stunning young players that adds to Boston’s rich history of traditional Irish music,” by The Irish Echo. Belfast-based flutist and uilleann piper and member of Na Píobairí Uilleann, Harry Bradley, describes Joey’s playing: “In taking an engaged approach to the piping tradition, in lavishing attention on the great recorded heritage of the pipes and absorbing playing techniques, he arrives at his own unique style and proves that anyone anywhere, through his or her own efforts, can contribute to revitalizing Irish musical traditions in creative and meaningful ways.”

King of the Blind was funded, in part, by a prestigious Artist Fellowship in the Traditional Arts from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, which this year recognized Joey as a bearer and conduit of a cultural tradition by his peers and the state of Massachusetts. 

Recorded, mixed, and mastered at Dimension Sound by Dan Cardinal.
Produced by Joey Abarta and Nathan Gourley.
Old style step and sean nós dancing by Jackie O’Riley.
Arrangements by Joey Abarta.
Promotional photos by Louise Bichan.
Cover illustration and design by Jesse Smith, Black Rogue Design.
Joey plays a concert set by David Quinn and Benedict Koehler, and a flat set in B-15 by Joe Kennedy.

King of the Blind (Long Play Vinyl Record)

$30.00Price
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