Clannad
are a Grammy Award-winning [1] Irish musical group, from Gaoth Dobhair, County Donegal. [2] Their music has been variously described as bordering on folk and folk rock, Irish, Celtic and New Age. They are known for performing in various languages, including English, Latin, Gàidhlig, Mohican and most of all in their native tongue, Irish. [3]
Clannad is comprised by siblings Moya Brennan (born Máire Ní Bhraonáin) and Ciarán Brennan (born Ciarán Ó Braonáin), and their twin uncles Noel Duggan (born Noel Ó Dúgáin) and Pádraig Duggan (born Pádraig Ó Dúgáin). Other siblings, Enya (born Eithne Ní Bhraonáin) and Pól Brennan (born Pól Ó Braonáin), left the group in 1981 and 1990 to pursue solo careers.
Clannad first made their mark in the folk and traditional scene in the 1970s in Ireland and Europe. They subsequently went on to bridge the gap between traditional celtic music and pop music in the 1980s and 1990s with albums such as Macalla
and Anam
. [4] [5] During their career they toured the world extensively and gained fans in every major territory. Lead singer Moya Brennan and her sister Enya have also enjoyed significant success as solo artists. The band won a Grammy Award in 1998 for Best New Age Album, and their record sales exceed the 15 million mark. [6] They are also widely regarded as the band which, for the first time, put Irish traditional music and the Irish language on the world stage and paved the way for many other Irish artists. [7]
Ten years after "taking a break
", [8] the five original members of Clannad reunited on stage at the Celtic Connections Festival in February 2007 in Glasgow, Scotland. Moya, Ciarán, Noel and Pádraig embarked on their first UK tour in over 10 years in March 2008, starting in Gateshead. [9] In 2009, the band's Pádraig Duggan announced that the band were recording a new album. [8]
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CLANNAD TICKETS
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Musical upbringing
Siblings Ciarán, Pól, and
Máire Uí Bhraonáin (Brennan) and their two uncles Noel and Pádraig Ó Dúgáin (Duggan) grew up in
Gaoth Dobhair, in rural Ireland. The Brennans' mother, Baba, was a music teacher, and their father, Leo, was a former member of a cabaret band. Leo was travelling extensively in the early family years. Later, they bought a pub with a stage called
Leo's Tavern
(
Tábhairne Leo
). The children would occasionally do
cover versions of
Beatles,
Beach Boys and
Joni Mitchell songs at home and in their family pub.
The name Clannad comes from
Clann
A
s
D
obhar'', meaning 'the family from Dore'. The children were performing late at night in the pub (the story was recounted by Máire, TG4, 17 March 2007, Clann as Dobhar & Clannad Beo) when the local police sergeant walked in. They feared a summons, but instead the policemen had a form to enter a local music competition. They didn't have a name at the time, but had to find one for the competition. Someone suggested Clann As Dobhar, which was provisionally abbreviated to
Clannad
.
The young Brennans' and Duggans' passion for the traditional music of Ireland soon expanded beyond their native Gweedore. They would later visit such outlying communities as
Tory Island off Donegal's coast. Armed with some 500
Gaelic songs, they would later begin to arrange these songs for a full band, something which had previously never been done.
Traditional years
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Clannad entered a local folk festival in
Letterkenny,
County Donegal, and won first prize, a record contract with the Irish arm of Phillips, when they were still in college and school. They did not make the record until 1973 because the record company did not like the idea of them doing half the album in Irish, as it was not heard of to sing Irish in mainstream music.
The first album was recorded in 1973, simply called
Clannad
, and it showed a band aware of contemporary
Irish music of the day. There were hints of modern influences, most notably
Pentangle's, in songs such as "The Pretty Maid" and "Morning Dew", but it was the Irish songs, particular an early arrangement of "Níl Sé'n Lá", a
drinking song they found on one of their
Tory Island expeditions, that really showed the band's ability to form contemporary, jazz-influenced versions of traditional material. This album was also released under the name
The Pretty Maid
. The second album followed in 1975 on Gael-Linn records and was titled
Clannad 2
. Produced by
Planxty and
Bothy Band founder
Dónal Lunny, it showed a tremendously more mature band that was quite committed to singing mainly in Irish. Their arrangements were still experimental for the times, but their increasing skill in the use of traditional acoustic instruments kept the music well within the boundaries of
folk music.
Clannad 2
featured some ground-breaking traditional music, including Máire's harp playing on the O'Carolan song "Eleanor Plunkett" and ensemble work on songs like "Rince Briotánach" and "Teidhir Abhaile Riú", an Irish
matchmaking song.
The following year they produced
Dúlamán
. The title track was a song about two
dúlamán
, or seaweed merchants, one of whom is trying to win the hand of the other's beautiful daughter. It has been a favourite of Clannad's live shows for a very long time and is still performed in a rock version which captures the flavour of the original recorded acoustic version.
The band in 1976 still consisted of Máire on
lead vocals and
harp, Ciarán on
double bass, electric piano and vocals, Pól on flutes, guitars and bongos, Noel on guitar, vocals and Pádraig on
mandolin, guitar and vocals. They still kept the Gaelic spelling of their surnames of Ó Braonáin for the brothers, Ní Bhraonáin for Máire and Ó Dúgáin for Pádraig and Noel. During their first tour of Europe in 1976 a
standing ovation after an eight-minute version of "Níl Sé'n Lá" convinced them to become full time professionals.
[11] The band's next album was
Crann Úll
(Irish for
apple tree
) released in 1978 on Tara Records. It featured a stronger emphasis on Máire's
harp-playing. "Ar a Ghabháil 'n a Chuain Domh" featured a particularly full band arrangement reflective of their live jams at the time. "Lá Cuimhthíoch Fán dTuath" ("A Strange Day in the Countryside") showed the first hints of the more atmospheric side of the band's arrangements. On "Gathering Mushrooms" they included their sister
Eithne Ní Bhraonáin (now known as Enya) on supporting vocals.
Clannad in Concert
was released in 1979, featuring excerpts from their 1978
Swiss tour and a now world-famous version of "Down by the Sally Gardens" and a 10-minute version of "Níl Sé'n Lá". It served as a base for various solos by the individual members. In 1981 with the album
Fuaim
(pronounced
foom
, meaning sound), recorded in
Dublin's famed Windmill Studios, Clannad began to experiment with a more lush and electric sound.
Enya became, for a short time, a full member of the band, adding
keyboards and harmony vocals as well as lead vocals on two songs, "An tÚll" and "Buaireadh an Phósta". This album marked Clannad's first experiments with
synthesizer. It also had guest
Neil Buckley on
clarinet and
saxophones plus a percussionist and
electric piano. The following year Enya left to pursue her solo career and the band was about to record the album which would forever change their career as well as their sound,
Magical Ring
which appeared in 1982.
Chart success
1980s
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Clannad were signed up to
RCA Records when they were approached and asked if they would be interested in doing a song for a fictional drama on British television, depicting
The Troubles in
Northern Ireland. Ciarán, Pól and Máire got together and wrote the now-legendary song "
Theme from Harry's Game". Entering the British charts at number 5, it remains the only hit single in the UK ever to be sung entirely in Gaelic. The album
Magical Ring was a huge turning point in Clannad's career, it was the start of their international career.
Magical Ring contained half traditional material and half original recordings. The album which was on the UK album charts for over six months earning the group their first
gold record award, features some of Clannad's best and most enduring original compositions like "Tower Hill", "Passing Time", "Newgrange" and "I See Red". In its impact of achieveing a fusion of traditional folk, modern rock and
world music, for its
utopian vision of man in harmony with
nature,
Magical Ring is often compared with
Alan Stivell's
Renaissance of the Celtic Harp.
[12]
This album led to their next commission, the soundtrack for the 26-episode TV drama
Robin of Sherwood
. The resulting album was
Legend
(1984).
Shortly after
Magical Ring
, Clannad were asked to provide music for the television series
Robin of Sherwood
. They once again began to stretch themselves, creating music for a range of characters and events. For the first time ever, they produced an album without any of their native Irish, as the story was set deep in
English folklore. The album
Legend
(1984) won the band a
BAFTA award, the first time an Irish act had been honoured thus. The musical style of the album was dominated by
guitar riffs and
trumpet reverberations. It was primarily this album that firmly elevated the group to 'household name' status, with their music being broadcast into millions of homes every Saturday night for 26 weeks.
Macalla
(
echo
in Irish) was released in 1986, Clannad's next proper album, and proved to be their most critically acclaimed album ever. It contained all original material except one traditional song and yielded the group a hit single "
In a Lifetime", a duet with
U2's
Bono. The album featured the core quintet plus a large number of backing musicians who have continued to tour with them, including ex-
King Crimson sax man
Mel Collins,
Moving Hearts' guitarist Anton Drennan and drummer Paul Moran. Also onboard was
producer Steve Nye, whose previous charges included the
Penguin Café Orchestra and
David Sylvian. The album opens with the song "Caisleán Óir". In "Buachaill Ón Éirne" they covered a traditional Irish song from their native
Donegal. It was the first time ever such a song featured on a chart-topping
comercial album, something Clannad went on to pioneer in. When
Macalla
was released, the listening public began to be more accepting of the mainstream material that appeared heavily on the record. Songs such as the
pop-flavoured "
Closer to Your Heart" and the powerful ballad "
Almost Seems (Too Late to Turn)" were successful singles for the
quintet. The latter even served as the official
Children in Need single for 1985.
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The following album,
Sirius
, was released by
RCA in 1988 and was recorded in Los Angeles with rock producers Greg Ladanyi and
Russ Kunkel (
James Taylor's drummer). The album included a duet with
Bruce Hornsby and guest appearances by
Steve Perry and
J.D. Souther. The title track was Pól Brennan's encouraging call to the
environmental movement, and to the
Greenpeace ship of the same name. "
Something to Believe In" featured the voice and keyboards of
Bruce Hornsby. Completed with the help of some of the biggest names on the
Californian rock scene,
Sirius
was another different creation, just like their previous 3 albums. Received with critical apprehension,
Sirius
was initially, stoutly defended by the band as a change, but since the members have expressed their disappointment with the album and even
Pól Brennan apologised on its behalf. The following year they embarked on their first world tour and within a year the album had become their best selling work to date.
Between 1988 and 1991 there were some side projects for the band, including
Atlantic Realm
(1989) and
The Angel and the Soldier
(1990).
Atlantic Realm
was a small album made for a
BBC documentary about the Atlantic Ocean. The recording was mainly instrumental as their voices as instruments.
The Angel and the Soldier
was a half hour animation, without voice overs and the music told the story. Both albums proved to be a minor success, and also demonstrated once again that Clannad were one of the most acclaimed soundtrack artists in the music industry. Two greatest hits albums were released at around this time:
- Past Present
[RCA], which to date is the only "greatest hits" compilation so far by the band to include any original tracks: "The Hunter" and "World of Difference". Both are among their best recordings while strangely only appearing on this rare album. This album also included tracks from Magical Ring
, Macalla
, and Sirius
.
- The Collection
[k-Tel], re-released in 1996 under the label's Celtic Collections
series. Unlike Past Present
however, it also included five earlier tracks from their more traditional Irish period.
Pól Brennan left the group to pursue a solo career and work with the
WOMAD (World of Music, Arts and Dance) organization in
Britain. He released a trio album in 1993 with
Guo Yue and Joji Hirota under the new name Trísan. The true reason for Pól's departure is unknown; being a family band, very little information is released about personal and professional relations about and between the members.
1990s
The band continued on as a quartet and recorded 1991's
Anam
. It marked a return to the Clannad sound of such albums as
Magical Ring
and
Fuaim
and was recorded in two and a half months at the band's home studio in the hills of
Dublin. On Pól's leaving the rest of the group began sharpening their song-writing skills with Ciarán, already the main source of their original music. The title
Anam
means "Soul" in Irish and the album had 10 songs. The album was finally released in the USA in 1992 with a different cover and the addition of the previously released
Bono duet "
In a Lifetime" and "
Theme from Harry's Game", which had been included in the motion picture
Patriot Games
. As a result, it got used on the
Volkswagen advertisement, which helped establish the band's career in the USA and the song went on to win the
Billboard Music Award for "World Music Song of the Year". They dedicated the opening song "Rí na Cruinne" to the One World One Voice charity project.
In 1991, a duet between the band and
Paul Young, "
Both Sides Now" was released. The track had been put together for the
Blake Edwards film
Switch
, featuring
Ellen Barkin. In the storyline, a nasty male chauvinist, is re-incarnated as an attractive female. The use of the
Joni Mitchell song was therefore quite suitable and proved a hit for the group. Released in 1994,
Banba
became Clannad's 13th studio album and was greeted with rave reviews and the band's first
Grammy nomination. The album jogged comfortably to the number one spot in the World Music Chart.
Banba
is a romantic
mythical name for Ireland. The track "I Will Find You" was especially written for the film
The Last of the Mohicans
, Máire sings in
Mohican and
Cherokee. Once again all the songs were written and produced by Ciarán Brennan, except "Sunset Dreams", written by Noel Duggan.
Moya Brennan described the album as "a fusion of various styles of music, growing out of a traditional Gaelic root."
Banba
has been described as one of Clannad's most visual albums, and has sold over 1 million copies to date.
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The album
Lore
(1996) gave some thought to the Native American Indians. On "Trail of Tears", Noel Duggan imagines how it felt to be exiled from one's ancestral land, he was also thinking about these people and their connection with the Irish. It opens with "Croí Cróga" ('braveheart' in English) which was written as a theme tune for the
Mel Gibson film
Braveheart
which, for unknown reasons, never made it onto the soundtrack.
Lore
features American drummer
Vinnie Colaiuta and
Mel Collins. It contained a strong jazz element, with songs such as "Seanchas" blending contemporary sounds with traditional
Irish music and the
Irish language. Clannad toured Europe, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand in 1996 to promote the
Lore
album, due to apparent disagreements with
Atlantic Records, the plans to tour the USA were scrapped. In 1996, they received a lifetime achievement award from the Irish recording industry (the
IRMA).
After 25 years of recording ground-breaking music, Clannad returned in 1997 with another album,
Landmarks
. In the song "Of This Land", Máire sings about Ireland, of its past and of its future. The track "Fadó" (translates as
Long Ago
), demonstrates the influences of old
Celtic history on Clannad's music. It became one of the most celebrated Irish albums in history and in 1999, it won a
Grammy award for
Best New Age Album, Clannad's third Grammy nomination.
In 1999, the group composed the song "What Will I Do" for the
Kevin Costner film,
Message in a Bottle
.
2000–present
After
Landmarks
, Clannad ceased to make any more studio albums, but have promised to return in the near future.
In 2003, Clannad released the best of album,
The Best of Clannad: In a Lifetime
, which is one of their biggest-selling albums to date.
In 2005 the two Duggan twins, Noel and Pádraig, as the musical duo
The Duggans, got together for the first time outside of Clannad and recorded the album
Rubicon
.
During the 2006 solo tour of
Moya Brennan in The Netherlands, the concert in
De Doelen,
Rotterdam, was dedicated to
Leo and Baba Brennan. The whole of Clannad, including former member
Pól and sister Deirdre, performed five songs.
The five original members of Clannad appeared on stage together at the
Celtic Connections Festival in
Glasgow on 19 January 2007. The concert was greeted by 2,000 fans who travelled from places such as the USA and
Brazil to see the legendary group perform some of the most loved songs in their history. While at the Meteor Ireland Music Awards that were held in
Dublin on 1 February 2007 Clannad were presented with the coveted Lifetime Achievement Award.
In March 2008, Clannad began their first UK tour in over 12 years, starting at
The Sage in
Gateshead.
[13]
In May 2008, the Clannad song "
Down by the Sally Gardens" was featured in the listening paper for Music
GCSE from the
OCR exam board.
On 25 August 2008, Clannad released a new compilation album of their early music to contrast the music of their previous compilation album at the beginning of 2008,
Beginnings: The Best of the Early Years
.
[14]
Clannad's
Pádraig Duggan announced that Clannad would be recording a new album in February 2009. In an interview he stated that the album would be
unplugged and could consist of
their old songs
.
In June 2009, Clannad was nominated for an IMA Award in the category
Best Revival Act
, along with other revived bands
Planxty,
Moving Hearts,
Arcady and
Stockton's Wing.
[15] [16]
Musical style
When Clannad first started out in the early 1970s their music and sound stemmed solely from their traditional background. Despite this they managed to popularize such old songs as "
Dúlamán", "Teidhir Abhaile Riú" and "Coinleach Glas An Fhómhair", and these songs have remained popular numbers at their concerts. On the departure from their
folk and
traditional background in 1982, they created a new sound that would define the meaning of
New Age and
Celtic music forever. When "
Theme from Harry's Game" and "Newgrange" were first heard, radio stations all over the world became fascinated by the earthly and spiritual sound that they had never encountered before.
[17] One critic said "the tunes were seeped in the old ways, but the production and the arrangement was fresh and inventive". This transition in Clannad's career is often seen as the birth of
Celtic music and till this day they are regarded as the pioneers of that genre. They are also noted for their melodious
harmonies, which have been at the heart of their music since their first album.
Legend
(1984) was based on
English folklore. With later albums Clannad delved further into the realms of electronica and even
pop. Due to this, many of their singles entered pop charts all over the world, and widened their fan base once again. Despite their huge success with this genre of music, the group managed to maintain a link with their Gaelic roots right up to the present day, giving traditional Irish songs such as "Tráthnóna Beag Aréir" and "Buachaill Ón Éirne" the Clannad treatment.
Even though the
rock-infused
Sirius
and the pop-inclined
Macalla
have become huge successes for Clannad, it was their break-through style that they created themselves that has left the greatest legacy. One of the places where Clannad's influence can be seen is in the film
Titanic
, where
James Horner admitted to basing the soundtrack on Clannad's style.
[18] The soundtrack was so like Clannad's work that it has been incorrectly credited to them for many years.
[19] The "otherworldly" and "godly" Clannad sound comes from the ancient hills and glens that surround
Gweedore, according to lead singer
Moya Brennan. Also, when asked to describe the group's style
Ciarán said,
"There's a feeling in all our music an ambience that stems directly from where we were brought up and to have to define our sound I always say that if they were to visit Gweedore they wouldn't need to ask."
[20] Traces of Clannad's legacy can be heard in the music of many artists, including
The Corrs,
Loreena McKennitt,
Anúna,
Riverdance,
Enya and
U2.
[21]
Trivia
- Clannad's 'Celtic mysticism' is a recurring theme in the film Intermission
.' [22]
- Their hit song "The Hunter" is a re-working of the song "Herne", which appears on their 1984 album Legend
.
- Rock group U2 broadcast the Clannad song "Theme From Harry's Game" at the beginning of every concert during their 1983 War Tour, and continued to do so through the first round of the Joshua Tree Tour in 1987. [23]
- Máire is heard teaching Gaelic to Bono at the beginning of "In A Lifetime".
- Chicane's melodic trance anthem "Saltwater" features an adaptation of the song "Theme From Harry's Game" taken from the Clannad album Magical Ring
.
The Brennan family
The Brennans are officially Ireland's most successful music family, with combined sales of over 90 million records.
[24] Máire (or Baba) Duggan and Leo Brennan are the parents of the Brennan siblings
Máire (or Moya), Leon, Ciarán, Deirdre, Pól, Olive,
Eithne (or Enya), Bartley, and
Brídín. Baba was the local school's music teacher and Leo led the celebrated
Slieve Foy show band. The catalyst that would propel the entire family onto the stage was the opening of Leo's Tavern in 1968 in Meenaleck, Co. Donegal. This pub has become a musical Mecca over the years, and
Bono and
Paul Brady have even been known to join in the regular jamming sessions.
The first members of the family to publish their music were Ciarán, Pól and Máire (now known as Moya), who in 1972 released Clannad's first album. Their
Irish folk sound captivated audiences, and it was to be the beginning of a long prosperous career, one that continues to grow. Over the years they have sold millions of records, they sang for the Pope, and their first famous song "
Theme from Harry's Game", was the first, and so far only,
Irish Gaelic song ever heard on
Top of the Pops
.
The other six children can all sing and play one or more instruments - Olive and Deirdre have sung on Moya's solo albums and
Brídín, who for years toured with Clannad as a backing vocalist, has released a solo record,
Eyes of Innocence
.
Máire Duggan is currently the lead member of the local
Catholic choir, Cór Mhuire Doire Beaga, but no longer continues to teach in the local community school
Pobalscoil Ghaoth Dobhair. The choir has gained national acclaim, and is frequently joined by Leo Brennan and the Brennan siblings.
Leo helps his son Bartley to run the family pub, Leo's Tavern, and still takes to the stage equipped with his accordion and mic.
[25]
Private lives
The private life of lead member Moya was detailed in
her autobiography in 2000. In it Brennan recalls her upbringing as the eldest of nine siblings in rural County Donegal, Ireland. Along with the highs of success in the music business she also recounts low periods where alcohol, drugs and an abortion made her re-evaluate her life. She emerged from dark years as a committed Christian with rekindled faith. She remarried in 1991 (having previously been married to a Dublin musician) and now lives in Dublin, Ireland with husband, photographer Tim Jarvis, and children, Aisling and Paul.
[26]
Discography
Studio albums
- 1973 – Clannad (The Pretty Maid)
- 1975 – Clannad 2
- 1976 – Dúlamán
- 1980 – Crann Úll
- 1982 – Fuaim
- 1983 – Magical Ring
- 1984 –
Legend
- 1985 – Macalla
- 1987 – Sirius
- 1988 – Atlantic Realm
[soundtrack]
- 1989 – The Angel and the Soldier Boy
[soundtrack]
- 1990 – Anam
(US: 1992) Gold
- 1993 – Banba
Gold
- 1996 – Lore
- 1997 – Landmarks
- 2009/10 – Untitled
Compilation albums
- 1989 – Past Present
- 1990 – The Collection
- 1994 – Themes
- 1996 – Rogha: The Best of Clannad
- 1998 – The Ultimate Collection
- 1998 – An Díolaim
(collection of early recordings for Irish Gael-Linn label)
- 2002 – A Magical Gathering: The Clannad Anthology
- 2003 – The Best of: In a Lifetime
- 2008 – Celtic Themes: The Very Best of Clannad
- 2008 – Beginnings: The Best of the Early Years
Live albums
- 1979 – Clannad in Concert
- 2005 – Clannad: Live in Concert
Singles
- 1974 – "Dhéanainn Súgradh/Eleanor Plunkett"
- 1975 – "An Bealach Seo 'tá Romhainn"
- 1978 – "Down by the Sally Gardens"
- 1981 – "Mhorag's Na Horo Gheallaidh/Strayed Away"
- 1982 - "Horo Gheallaid/Dúlamán" (live at Celtic Folk Festival, Holland)
- 1982 – "Theme from Harry's Game" UK #5
- 1983 – "I See Red/Tá Mé 'Mo Shuí" UK #81
- 1983 – "Newgrange" UK #65
- 1984 – "Robin (The Hooded Man)" UK #42
- 1984 – "Now Is Here"
- 1985 – "Closer to Your Heart"
- 1985 – "Almost Seems (Too Late to Turn)" UK #80
- 1986 – "In a Lifetime" UK #20
- 1987 – "Something To Believe In"
- 1987 – "White Fool"
- 1988 – "Live and Learn"
- 1989 – "The Hunter" UK #91
- 1989 – "In a Lifetime (reissue)" UK #17
- 1989 – "Hourglass" UK #91
- 1989 – "A Dream in the Night"
- 1990 – "In Fortune's Hand" UK #80
- 1991 – "Why Worry?"
- 1991 – "Both Sides Now" UK #74
- 1993 – "Mystery Game"
- 1993 – "I Will Find You/Do na Dlo Sv"
- 1996 – "Seanchas"
- 1997 – "An Gleann"
- 1997 – "Christmas Angels"
- 2002 - "I Will Find You 2002 (Arctica Remix)" (feat. Antillas)
Bibliography
[27]
- 2008 – Moments In a Lifetime
, Noel Duggan
Detailing Clannad's journey as a band
- 2001 – The Other Side of the Rainbow
, Máire Brennan with Angela Little
Later subtitled: The Autobiography of the Voice of Clannad
- 2000 – Ireland: Landscapes of God's Peace
, Máire Brennan
sometimes called God of Peace
Eddie Rowley in conversation with Máire Brennan
Sheet music book for 'Past Present'
Videography
VHS released with 'Past Present' compilation
Notable awards
Won
#1984 –
1984 BAFTA Awards,
Best Television Music
for "
Robin of Sherwood"
#1982 –
1982 Ivor Novello Awards,
Best Soundtrack
for "
Theme From Harry's Game"
#1992 –
Billboard Music Award,
World Music Song of the Year
for "
Rí na Cruinne"
#1998 –
Grammy Awards of 1998,
Grammy Award for Best New Age Album|Best New Age Album
for "
Landmarks"
#2007 –
Meteor Music Awards,
Lifetime Achievement Award
Nominated
#1982 –
1982 BAFTA Awards,
Best Television Music
for "
Harry's Game"
#1994 –
Grammy Awards of 1994,
Grammy Award for Best New Age Album|Best New Age Album
for "
Banba"
#1996 –
Grammy Awards of 1996,
Grammy Award for Best New Age Album|Best New Age Album
for "
Lore"
#2009 –
Ireland's Music Awards,
Best Revival Act
, Awaiting Result
References
- http://www.mdm.ie/artists/clannad.html
- Clannad — ( 124 Lyrics + 16 Albums )
- Clannad lyrics, music, biography, records, band, album, videos, CD, and the discography including Clannad famous works
- Clannad MP3 Downloads - Clannad Music Downloads - Clannad Music Videos - Clannad Pictures - MP3.com
- Usually, their results were an entrancing, enchanting form of pop that managed to fuse the disparate elements together rather seamlessly.
- http://www.clannad.org.uk/library/jamesline_biography.pdf
- The Austin Chronicle: Music: Review - Chieftains, Clannad
- New Clannad album
- Kennedy Street - Clannad
- New Clannad album
- Capital Celtic Network - CLANNAD
- JT Koch (ed). Celtic Culture. A Historical Encyclopaedia ABC-CLIO 2006 pp 1627-1628
- The Clannad Newsblog
- New Clannad Compilation Confirmed - Northern Skyline
- CLANNAD & ENYA NOMINATED FOR IMAs! at Northern Skyline
- Profile: Clannad Ireland's Music Awards
- Clannad's 'Earthly' style
- MDM artist management - Clannad
- http://www.filmtracks.com/titles/titanic.html
- Clannad Interview and Article Library
- http://globalrhythm.net/WorldMusicFeatures/TheCorrs.cfm
- "Lynch uncovers his hardnosed relish for the nastier aspects of police work and his softer side too, deriving much pleasure through listening to Irish folk acts such as Clannad in his unmarked police car!"
- "By that time, U2 was using "Harry's Game" as the exit music for their live performances."
- Moya Brennan : News Archive
- Donegal Direct - User Question - Where is Clannad
- CBNmusic - Moya Brennan: Her Prince, Her Peace, and Her Praise
- Northern Skyline - Clannad, Moya Brennan and Enya news