Gaelic Storm
Wed., June 21, 8:00 PM $10 Tickets
Flagstaff Orpheum Theater |
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Thur.,
June 22, 2006 8PM Rhythm Room |
Phoenix (May 19,
2006) – On Thursday, June 22 GAELIC STORM will perform at Rhythm
Room. The show will begin at 8:00 P.M. with a soon to be Featured in the film, “Titanic”, Gaelic Storm tours aggressively and plays over 125 dates a year. Gaelic Storm routinely breaks attendance and merchandise sales records, pushing their popularity beyond the World music genre and into the mainstream music consciousness.
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TICKETS ON-SALE NOW
Tickets priced at $18.00 are currently on-sale at www.livenation.com and all Ticketmaster outlets. Tickets will also be available at the Rhythm Room Box Office. To charge by phone, call 480.784.4444 (Phoenix Metro Area) or 520.321.1000 (Outside Phoenix Area). All dates, acts, and ticket prices are subject to change without notice. All tickets are subject to applicable taxes, and service and handling charges. For more show information, check out www.livenation.com On the day of the show tickets will be priced at
$20.00.
For a limited time, tickets are available at the Irish Cultural Center in Phoenix, AZ in the gift shop. Tickets go on sale for $15 on Friday, 5/26. For more information about purchasing tickets through the gift shop call 602-258-0109. The Irish Cultural Center is the year-round home for Celtic music, language, and dancing classes; Irish literature and film; touring musicians and actors; and First Friday art exhibits. The Sixth Annual Arizona Irish Festival is coming to the Irish Cultural Center in Phoenix on Saturday, October 28, 2006. The Festival celebrates historic and modern Ireland and commemorates the Irish in America and all over the world. For more information about the Sixth Annual Arizona Irish Festival, please contact Jacqueline Carro, 480.495.8924. www.ArizonaIrishFestival.com Press Contact for Live Nation: Mary Passarella –
marypassarella@livenation.com
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With
three popular albums under their belt, Gaelic Storm's fourth record, SPECIAL RESERVE
was released on August 19, 2003 on Higher Octave Records/Virgin-EMI and reached
#2 on the Billboard World Music Charts in the second week of sales. Since the
1998 release of their self-titled first album, which reached #5 on Billboard's
World Music chart in 1998, Gaelic Storm continues to thunder onto stages around
the world. Showcasing their unique brand of high energy Celtic music, the band
has become a crowd favorite, touring relentlessly while breaking attendance and
merchandise records worldwide.
SPECIAL RESERVE is a "best-of" collection that features
favorites from Gaelic Storm's previous OmTown releases,
GAELIC
STORM ("The Leaving of Liverpool," "Johnny Jump Up/Morrison's
Jig," "Tell Me Ma"); HERDING CATS ("Drink the Night Away,"
"After Hours at McCann's," "She Was the Prize," "Titanic
Set"); and TREE ("Johnny Tarr," "Swimmin' in the Sea,"
"Beggarman") as well as 3 exciting new tracks.
On St. Patrick's Day, 1996, co-founders Patrick Murphy of Cork
City, Ireland (vocals, piano, accordion, spoons, harmonica) and New Yorker Steve
Wehmeyer (bodhran, vocals, digeridoo) officially joined forces with Steve Twigger
of Coventry, England (guitar, mandolin, bouzouki, vocals), at O'Brien's pub
in Santa Monica, California. Feeling that traditional Celtic music did not have
to be stayed and banal, the trio focused on the rowdy hand-clapping character
of a traditional pub party. They wanted to create a
sound
that would remain true to traditional Celtic music while adding an original
twist of a dizzying whirlwind of live energy - hence the name "Gaelic Storm".
Their first performance was such a hit that the crowd refused to let them off
the stage for the next act. Adding additional players, the band has fine-tuned
their line-up to this day. Currently, Gaelic Storm also includes: Tom Brown
on highland Bagpipes (an open grade Highland Piper from Ottawa, Canada), Ryan
Lacey on drums and world percussion (graduated twice from the Los Angeles Music
Academy, once for hands and once for sticks), and Ellery Klein on fiddle (who
holds a MA degree in Traditional Irish Music from the University of Limerick).
Their dynamic stage show features rousing, upbeat vocals, wild
energetic dance tunes, haunting ballads and infectious madcap
humor.
Playing over 100 shows per year, Gaelic Storm has drawn record-breaking crowds
at Milwaukee's famed Irish-Fest (in '98, '99, ‘01 and ‘02), Celtic-Fest
Chicago, the Dublin Ohio Irish Festival and the Pittsburgh Irish Festival, as
well as Festival Interceltique in Lorient, France (the largest Celtic festival
in the world). Most recently Gaelic Storm broke the attendance record in June
of 2003 at the Albuquerque BioPark, the record was previously held by Alan Jackson.
The band has likewise played to capacity crowds at countless clubs, theaters
and performing arts centers across the country.
Gaelic
Storm never fail to leave audiences on their feet: reeling, dancing and screaming
for more! Routinely, devoted fans drive for miles to catch a Gaelic Storm show.
As a result, the audience frequently sings along word-for-word in classic pub
fashion throughout the band's set. Nominated as "performers of the year"
in 1999 and 2000 by the National Association of Campus Activities, Gaelic Storm
has garnered a huge following among college students from Hawaii to New Hampshire.
In 1997, Gaelic Storm was catapulted out of their formative pub
haunts by an appearance in the blockbuster film Titanic. Cast as the "party
band" in the steerage scene, they landed the part while still drinking
pints and playing weekly at O'Brien's, a pub in their adopted home-town of Santa
Monica, CA.
On their first tour after the film's release, the band was met by huge crowds.
Initially shocked by the large audiences, Gaelic
Storm
remains as accessible as ever, signing autographs after every show and visiting
personally with their fans. Personal connection with the audience remains at
the heart of every performance. "At the performing arts centers, we invite
the audience out for a beer at the local bar across the street or the best Irish
pub", Murphy says. "It's another way to meet and greet and get to
know them better."
A mini-documentary about Gaelic Storm airs regularly on Cinemax, and the band has appeared numerous times on national and international TV. Gaelic Storm was also featured in two episodes on the award-winning prime time drama "Providence" in October 2001. Perhaps the best indication of Gaelic Storm's newfound international success came when Michael Flatley (of Lord of the Dance fame) met Gaelic Storm vocalist and songwriter Patrick Murphy in Murphy's hometown, Cork City, Ireland.
"I
told him he did a superb job of advancing Irish culture throughout the world,
like the Chieftains have for years," Murphy says, "and he said, 'In
fairness to you, you've probably introduced Irish music to five minutes of fame
with that little film clip.'"
Gaelic Storm's eponymous first release is a lively collection of traditional Irish sing-alongs, Celtic dance music and festive, rollicking pub songs. Their endless capacity for up-tempo, high energy music featured on the first release represents why Gaelic Storm was cast as the "Steerage Band" in the Titanic.
With their first album remaining on the charts for over 30 weeks, Gaelic Storm's second album (HERDING CATS, 1999) received even more enthusiastic reviews from both alternative and mainstream music `zines like Irish Music Magazine, Dirty Linen, Request, and In Music We Trust, furthering the band's reputation for traditional and original lively Celtic music.
On their 2001 OmTown release Tree reached #2 and #4 on different occasions on the Billboard World Music Charts, Gaelic Storm once again delivered the infectious energy and mischievous exuberance that have earned them a fiercely devoted following and international acclaim. It features their signature Folk, Pop and World music influenced interpretations of Irish classics alongside poignant, well-crafted originals.
SPECIAL RESERVE, the band's fourth album, is a "best-of"
compilation of thirteen tracks skillfully blended to ensure maximum aural intoxication
without sacrificing a drop of Gaelic Storm flavor. In addition to 9 fan-favorites
off previous releases, the album includes 3 new songs recorded with Mark Miller
(who has also worked with Garth Brooks, Emmylou Harris, Daniel O'Donnell, Mary
Black, Sean Keane, Dolores Keane) at legendary Jack's Tracks studio in Nashville,
TN. A wonderful summary of the band's career to date, SPECIAL RESERVE captures
the magic of the past as well as the spontaneity and intensity of Gaelic Storm's
current live sound.
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