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Blessed Sadness

by Antoni O'Breskey

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  • Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album

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    Art photography by Milena Giacomazzi, design by Shay Kennedy.

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Baigali Khan 04:30
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Cloudburst 04:43
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about

Blessed Sadness is the new album by Antoni O’Breskey, to be released on the 14th of July.
Conceived at the beginning of the first lockdown in 2020, the album was recorded between Italy and Ireland during last summer, in collaboration with an extensive ensemble of musicians, including Ultan O’Brien (Slow Moving Clouds), Davide Viterbo (Distant City), Consuelo Nerea Breschi (Varo), Paddy Cummins (Skipper’s Alley), Leonora Lyne and many more.
The Album comprises a journey between new compositions, such as 2020 Rhapsody, Cloudburst, Blessed Sadness, Waltz to Forgotten Times, Baigali Khan and Unfolding Lullaby, one remixed version of Antoni O’s past compositions: Dancing on the Green (1982) with a young Steve Cooney on didgeridoo, two traditional songs newly arranged, Eighteen Years Old and Barbara Allen as well as two traditional instrumentals, The Swallow’s Tail and Doctor O’Neill’s.

Antoni speaking about the album:

‘Guadalupe’, an old Galician traditional song says in one of the verses:
“Many people think that I sing because I’m happy, but that’s not the case, I sing because I’m like the birds, if they don’t sing, they die!”
Blessed Sadness is the title of the album, and I’d like to thank artist Milena Giacomazzi for capturing the cover picture; a trumpet reflecting its image on the black surface of a piano which is seemingly transforming into a dark, deep ocean.
The trumpet is emblematic of the traditional jazz era with roots in the blues, transforming a song of sadness into one of joy.
The same evocative spirit, the so called ‘duende’, that for me, is a thread that links all traditions; where struggle, sorrow, power and joy are intertwined, from the Irish ‘sean-nos’, to the ‘cante jondo’ flamenco, the ‘gypsy catharsis’, to the West African talking drums tradition.
The conception and development of this work commenced in 2020, in the conditions and with the means and resources that were available to us at a time of uncertainty, on the one hand imposed limitations, but on the other, led to new unforeseen possibilities. The ‘I Ching, The Book of Changes’ states that the power that makes us go beyond obstacles in life, if used in the correct way, is the same power that makes us then reach new aspirations.
So in these conditions, since 2020, when travel was (and still is) difficult, and the social ‘closeness’ was (and still is) forbidden, we made our best effort to maintain this contact, because I feel that music cannot take place without human interaction. Thus, new situations emerged that we had never before imagined and which we found incredibly inspiring and exciting.
The title Blessed Sadness was given to me by Davide Secondi, half-Italian half-Finn, who lived with me in Ireland several years ago working in a few restaurants as a pizza maker, and playing drums in a couple of bands at night.
While he was there he picked up a ukulele in the house, and from the instrument emerged such wonderful, magical sounds; sounds of powerful feelings, of a profound closeness that seemed to come from vast distances, feelings of immense warmth that seemed to come from an infinite coldness. And what could be more current than this?
One morning a year ago I received a beautiful ukulele musical piece and Davide told me "Here’s a gift for you, it’s called 'Blessed Sadness' , do whatever you like with it."
That is how this album was born, and I chose this title because it represented for me exactly the situation that humanity was experiencing at the time, and continues to face.
Luckily, I was in Dublin when Davide sent me the piece and thus I attempted to create a thread that would gather a group of exceptionally talented musicians with whom I have had lively musical exchanges and great friendships with over the years.
With Ultan O’Brien, Tom Mulrooney, Leonora Lyne, Aongus Mac Amhlaigh, Paddy Cummins, Sean Conway, and my daughter Consuelo Nerea we began to work on the project and our enthusiasm grew more as the project grew. Since the first lock down in 2020 we began exchanging material and ideas with a group of Italian musicians also involved in this project: cellist, violinist and producer Davide Viterbo, which whom I had the pleasure to be working in the last 20 years on numerous projects, Davide Secondi, Massimo Giuntini and Giorgio Vendola.
Oh, and I must not forget the two surprise guests on the album!
In 1982 I recorded an album with Steve Cooney and David Hopi Hopkins; there was a track, ‘Dancing on the Green’, that seemed perfect for this album, and I wanted to give it a new life, so I asked Paddy Cummins to play over the recording, and here we go, past and present, almost 40 years later we have an Appalachian dulcimer, didgeridoo, bodhrán and banjo combination!
The experience of making this album felt diametrically opposed to what the surrounding world offers us today and for this we are very grateful, but we also want to offer our experience to everyone, through these notes, hoping that these feelings will spread as far and wide as possible, because I think that music should serve this purpose in these times.
I’d like to thank all the people involved in this project, and I hope we can meet again soon, and celebrate by opening a good auld bottle of Lambrusco!

Antoni O’Breskey

credits

released July 14, 2021

Antoni O’Breskey - piano, trumpet, appalachian dulcimer
Ultan O’Brien - fiddle, viola
Davide Viterbo - cello, fiddle
Consuelo Nerea Breschi - vocals, fiddle
Steve Cooney - didgeridoo
Aongus Mac Amhlaigh - cello
Leonora Lyne - flute
Paddy Cummins - banjo, mandolin
Davide Secondi - ukulele
David ‘Hopi’ Hopkins - bodhrán
Seán Conway - mandolin
Massimo Giuntini - low whistle, bouzouki
Tom Mulrooney - double bass
Giorgio Vendola - double bass

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Antoni O' Breskey Dublin, Ireland

“O’Breskey’s musical crossovers have an ethical imperative. He seeks to mesh the majority with the minority, the present with the past, and the vocal with the silenced, so as to “deflate the ethnocentrism of classical Western music.” For this musician, musical cultures are not defined by borders, but by historical roots that reach deeply across all areas of the globe.

THE IRISH ECHO, BOSTON
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