Great Big Sea will flood Performing Arts Center with fine blend of Canadian music
By Tom Isler of The East Hampton Press and The Southhampton Press
Oct 5, 09 1:37 PM
Bob Hallett stepped back from the mic. It was early September and
the founding member of the eclectic band Great Big Sea was finishing up
an open-air concert in Buffalo, New York, with his bandmates.
They
were in the middle of playing an up-tempo drinking song Mr. Hallett had
come up with more than 15 years ago, “The Old Black Rum,” but something
made him stop singing after the first verse.
He didn’t need to bother with the second.
The
lyrics floated up to the stage from the audience like fog rising on the
Erie Canal. Five thousand people were belting out his words. “…’Cause
the old black rum’s got a hold on me like a dog wrapped ’round my leg…”
It was a pinch-me moment for Mr. Hallett.
On
stage were three guys from Newfoundland who mixed traditional folk
songs and sea shanties from that isolated corner of Canada with their
own original pop songs; who played instruments like the fiddle, the
diatonic accordion and the goatskin drums; who had never recorded on a
major U.S. label; who never got radio play in the States; who had not
released a new album in more than a year; who were still going strong
16 years after starting out in dive bars in St. John’s; who were now
performing in front of the largest crowd they’d ever attracted—an
overwhelmingly American crowd, no less.
And the audience knew every word.
“You
just have to step back and think back and philosophize about how you
got here,” Mr. Hallett, 41, recalled during a recent telephone
interview.
Great Big Sea will be flooding the Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center on October 11 at 8 p.m.
The
success of Great Big Sea was not completely unexpected—at least from
the band’s perspective—but it certainly was improbable. “We knew in our
heads that there was a place for a band like this out on the world
stage,” Mr. Hallett said. “The music was really good. But no one had
successfully taken it out of Newfoundland, let alone Canada.”
Mr.
Hallett, Alan Doyle and Sean McCann might not have been the most
talented of musicians, but they were determined to spread their
cultural heritage, and they were hungry for success. “We knew if we had
the right recipe, people would like the dish,” Mr. Hallett said.
It was just a matter of convincing people to take a taste. So Great Big Sea tried to make it as palatable as possible.
The
first step was to arrange traditional songs as pop songs. Then Great
Big Sea brought the tunes to life with an infectious jollity, a
full-tilt zest that inspires even the most skeptical listeners to hoist
a frothy pint and search for the nearest mahogany bartop and a jig
partner.
Mr. Hallett calls it the “Great Big Sea presentation.”
“You
have to be good friends with your songs because you’re going to play
them every night for the rest of your life,” he said, explaining the
band’s enthusiasm for its music. “We’re not actors.”
(That’s not
entirely true. Mr. Doyle will make his big-screen debut in the
forthcoming “Robin Hood,” directed by Ridley Scott and starring Russell
Crowe and Cate Blanchett.)
But Mr. Hallett simply means: the band isn’t faking it. They really are having a raucous good time.
For
the record, Mr. Hallett says the band has never embraced the
oft-applied label of “Celtic” to its music, although he understands
that it helps the uninitiated grasp the general universe within which
the band plays—one also populated by the likes of the Pogues, Gaelic
Storm and Carbon Leaf. Irish, Scottish and bluegrass music all comes
“from a similar place,” Mr. Hallett explained.
Over the years, the band has gained confidence and maturity and expanded its musical horizons.
On
“The Hard and The Easy,” released in October 2005, the band delved
deeper into the more esoteric and obscure traditional music of
Newfoundland that it had shied away from in its early years when it was
focused on attracting general audiences. And on its last release,
“Fortune’s Favor,” which debuted in April 2008, the band deliberately
embarked on a “sonic experiment” to move away from the sound upon which
they built their name.
“We wanted to see what we could play and still be in the same band,” Mr. Hallett said.
The
album has as many different sounds as the northern Atlantic has shades
of blue and green—even if the accordions and tin whistles are
consistently in the background. Listen straight through and you’ll hear
echoes of Huey Lewis, Ben Folds, ’80s metal bands, Christian rock and
the Muppets. You’ll hear the gruffness of Nickelback, the whispy
folksiness of Neil Young and the tightly blended vocals of Phish at
their most melodic and playful.
“The question for us is: is this as good or better than what we’ve
done before?” Mr. Hallett explained. “The biggest pressure is, can we
top ourselves?”
The one thing Mr. Hallett will not tamper with is
the place he calls home. “The further we get from there, the less
authentic we’ll be,” he said. “The music is so tied to the geography
and the culture of Newfoundland, if we were to move away, an essential
piece of what we are would be gone.”
Sure, maintaining that
stance requires a lot more travel on his part to get to gigs. But he
knew what he was getting into. “This is the life I’ve wanted since I
was 8 years old.”
Great Big Sea will play at the Westhampton
Beach Performing Arts Center on Sunday, October 11, at 8 p.m. Tickets
are $30, $40 or $50, available by calling the Arts Center box office at
288-1500, stopping in at the PAC at 76 Main Street in Westhampton
Beach, or visiting www.whbpac.org.
Where is Stormy?