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Short Blurb:
Boston-based
husband-and-wife duo Matt & Shannon Heaton offer updated and
traditional Irish music on flute/guitar/bouzouki/accordion, stirring
traditional-style singing, and a fresh, appealing stage show.
Medium Blurb:
After
years of study in Chicago; many nights of music in Clare, Galway, and
their adopted home of Boston; and countless performances,
husband-and-wife duo Matt & Shannon Heaton offer updated and
traditional Irish music with stirring traditional-style singing
accompanied by flute, guitar, and bouzouki, and a fresh, appealing
stage show.
They bring to their performances a depth of shared experience and a
love for Irish music. Their stage banter and rapport with audiences is
comfortable, often hilarious. The Boston Globe's Scott Alarik wrote,
"Their playing is masterful and inventive, their arrangements
city-smart and spacious. Still. they never forget that Irish music is,
at its heart, a neighborly form meant for sharing, not showing off."
Their four duo CDs to date highlight the Heatons fresh, stellar, and
accessible approach to presenting traditional music. And Shannon's
August 2010 release "Blue Dress" rounds out their EatsRecords catalog
[include link] with original and traditional flute music with harp,
percussion, guitar, and bouzouki.
Longer Bio/History:
Every Irish traditional musician has a collection of peak session
memories: the spontaneous night of tunes after hours in the back
of a pub, the house party in rural Clare with that wonderfully
ancient concertina player, the songs swapped backstage at a festival.
Matt and Shannon Heaton share many similar Irish music memories,
because they have performed together from their first meeting
in Chicago in 1991. Behind their Irish flute- and guitar-driven
tunes and stirring songs is a deep well of mutual memories, setbacks,
and triumphs.
Having built their act from years of touring together (first with
band Siucra, then as a duo), Matt and Shannon have grown into
thoroughly entertaining performers. They bring to the stage a
depth of shared experience and a love for Irish music; their stage
banter is comfortable, often hilarious.
“Their playing is masterful and inventive, their arrangements
city-smart and spacious.
Still, they never forget that Irish music is, at its heart, a
neighborly form meant for sharing, not showing off."
—Scott Alarik, Boston Globe
Musically speaking, the Heatons play the heck out of their instruments
(Irish wood flute/accordion, guitar/bouzouki). After years of
study in Chicago, and many nights of music in Clare, Galway, and
their adopted home of Boston, Irish Music Magazine’s John
O’Regan wrote, “their duet playing is tight, sweet,
and tasteful, lacking nothing on either technical expertise or
instrumental virtuosity.”
As for their singing, when Matt and Shannon perform centuries-old
songs, it feels current, conversational. They make traditional
music relevant to American audiences. O’Regan wrote “songwise
[there are] hints an older domestic sound, the familiar down home
harmonies of The Carter Family and Tim and Mollie O’Brien.”
Like Richard Thompson or Nic Jones, the Heatons’ music comes
from a traditional aesthetic, a devotion to strong traditional
bones, and a passion for reaching out to the modern world around
them. They are devoted to Irish traditional music and uplift listeners
by connecting with each other and the people around them.
Before focusing on Irish music, Matt earned a classical guitar
degree, played with Chicago popsters the Flavor Channel, and fronted
Nuevo tango group Orquesta Atipica. Meanwhile Shannon studied
flute and ethnomusicology at Northwestern University, joined Matt’s
tango band, and took weekend trips to Chicago’s Wat Dhammaram
to continue the Saw Oo (lap fiddle) and Thai singing studies she
began when she was an exchange student in Thailand.
By the time Shannon was 16 years old, her favorite mixed tape
included Highlife music (from her family’s tenure in Nsukka,
Nigeria); Native American stories (from her parents’ research
trip for their book Let My People Know); traditional Thai songs
on Saw Duang and Saw Oo (from her year in Suphanburi, Thailand);
and as much of Matt Molloy’s 1984 “Stony Steps”
as would fit on the rest of the cassette.
Early exposure to languages and folk melodies instilled in Shannon
a love of tradition. From her early piano and recorder lessons
(from her mom and Belgian neighbor in Nigeria) to her flute and
Irish flute studies in Chicago, Shannon was drawn to traditional
music. And when she first heard Irish flute playing on her Grandpa
Murphy’s turntable she was hooked on Irish.
Though she specializes in Irish wooden flute and traditional Irish-style
singing, adores the Chicago musicians who started her out, and
is deeply involved with her local Boston traditional music scene
(she co-founded Boston’s Celtic Music Fest and teaches for
Boston’s Comhaltas), she has retained a deep interest in
world music, especially the music of Thailand. She and husband
Matt Heaton included their own Irish-style version of Thai classic
“Lao Dueng Duen” on their 2009 release “Lovers’
Well” (their 4th as a duo).
Matt’s first taste of professional music was behind the
organ console as a page-turner for his father Charles Heaton,
a noted organist and composer. After a couple of false starts
on the piano and trumpet, Matt picked up his first guitar, a Harmony
electric plus amp (and butter dish) for $35 at a garage sale.
After the amplifier exploded, he focused his energies on the acoustic
guitar.
Though he studied classical guitar at Northwestern University
(MMus) and Italy, played rock in Chicago, and tango in Denver,
it is Boston’s vibrant Irish music scene where he has made
his musical home. What began as an obsession with an unlabeled
cassette tape (which later turned out to be “The Planxty
Collection”) and a courtship with a young Irish flute player
named Shannon, has led to a vibrant Irish music performance career.
In addition to his duo work with wife Shannon, he is highly sought
after as accompanist, and has performed with traditional luminaries
Aoife Clancy, Robbie O’Connell, Emily Smith, and the Boys
of the Lough.
"Hanging
with the Heatons," a short film by Justin Bell and Christine
Giordano
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