| The Future Voice of Trad Music
By Sean O' Driscoll
If traditional Irish music in the U.S. is to become anything other than
a museum piece, it needs people like Ashley Davis.
Her show at the Living Room in Manhattan on Monday night showed how best
to blend modern pop sensibilities with a pure traditional sound, while still
managing to have a laugh.
The former lead singer for Michael Flatley’s Lord of the Dance during
its Vegas run, Davis broke free to record her own album and explore a more
authentic version of Irish traditional culture.

With a master’s degree Irish music from the University of Limerick, she
has taken the best of what she has learned and mixed it with lush vocal
arrangements for a show that thankfully breaks free from the constraints
of the traditional Irish music scene.
With a fiddler, a guitar player, a flutist and a pianist on back up,
Davis’ show flies through an hour, each song introduced by a long and often
hilarious story of how the lyrics were written.
When her brother asked for Irish music for his wedding, she told him
she did the whole range of Irish traditional songs — drinking, heartache,
rebellion — which one did he want? After realizing the limitations, she
spread out a list of traditional Irish greetings and composed a haunting
melody called “Beannachti” with days to spare before the wedding.
Before introducing “Rathlin Rant” inspired by a forlorn love tale Davis
found on Rathlin Island in Northern Ireland, she says that women in traditional
songs were never allowed to say “f*** you!” “Well, they can now!” she says,
to cheers from the female members of the audience.
She breaks into a song about lost love that is reminiscent of the best
of Clannad or Moving Hearts, before ending with the traditional reel, “The
Broken Pledge.”
Pretty soon it’s back to more storytelling, this time about a traditional
music friend from the Limerick/Kerry border who rang every Pig and Whistle
venue in New York complaining that they shouldn’t allow a pig to play the
tin whistle if she was going to perform in the venue. It leads into one
of Davis’ most powerful tracks, “Down By the Sea,” from her debut album.
Overall, a great hour’s entertainment and, if there is any justice, Ashley
Davis’ name is about to explode onto the Irish music scene.
Check out her website,
daisyrings.com,
for upcoming shows and details of her debut album Closer to You.
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