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The Visit

Loreena McKennitt

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Album Review

Loreena McKennitt's fourth release, and first for a major label, is a quietly majestic tapestry of worldbeat and Celtic pop that effortlessly weaves together traditional and contemporary songs into lush showcases for her fluid voice and harp. The multi-talented Canadian utilizes all of her strengths here, resulting in her most rewarding batch of tunes to date. With larger production values and more ambitious arrangements than the sparse Elemental and Parallel Dreams, her flair for the dramatic and the theatrical runs rampant throughout. Whether she's toasting the souls of the departed with Pagan glee on the delicious "All Souls Night," or reinterpreting King Henry VIII's "Greensleeves" through Tom Waits, it's never without both feet in the water. Often when artists attempt to blend modern instruments (keyboards, guitars, etc.) into the traditional folk idiom, the results are instantly dated and horribly overwrought. McKennitt, however, never allows the two to compete, and it's a testament to her belief in the songs themselves that they don't devolve into garish new age drivel. Her adaptation of Alfred Lord Tennyson's "The Lady of Shalott," which utilizes an opening melody lifted — probably unknowingly — from the bagpipe solo at the end of AC/DC's "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)," is The Visit's most powerful moment. Clocking in at 11 minutes, the poet's lovelorn tale of Camelot's most famous peasant maiden is rendered brief by McKennitt's breathless delivery and atmospheric and austere presentation. The Visit is Loreena McKennitt at her most comfortable, creative, and soulful.

Customer Reviews

There she sings by night and day...

Another of McKennitt's best, the jewel of this album is "The Lady of Shallot", based on the work of the British poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson. The interplay of the words in Tennyson's poem echo McKennitt's ability to weave traditional themes and styles together with her own tapestry of lyric and song. Also among the best on this album, "All Souls Night" and "The Old Ways" are an experience in themselves.

Exquisite and haunting

Loreena McKennitt has achieved something with this album that I've never heard the likes of before. It is serene and beautiful and evocative of a time gone by, with hints of Scottish and Celtic music. It seems to ache with a haunting beauty. If you like this album, you might also enjoy Celtic Woman, the LOST score by Michael Giacchino, or the "Home Movies" album by Kerry Muzzey. These elements make up a wonderful iTunes playlist.

A definite must have!

This is an amazing album, as a whole or as individual songs. It is one of the few albums that I have purchased repeatedly when it was "permanently borrowed" by a friend, shattered in a car wreck, and eaten by my roomates puppy. I'm on my fourth copy and this album was worth every single penny. The highlights, for me, are All Souls Night, Courtyard Lullaby, and The Old Ways. I actually sang Courtyard Lullaby to my neice when she was a baby and she loved it. Bonny Portmore and The Lady of Shalott still give me goosebumps every time I hear them. This is an album that will stay with you as long as you can hear, and perhaps even beyond.

Biography

Born: 1957 in Morden, Manitoba, Canada

Genre: Singer/Songwriter

Years Active: '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

The daughter of a nurse-mother and a livestock-trading father, songstress Loreena McKennitt studied classical piano and vocal training, and learned to dance in the highland style as a youngster. Her love of traditional music was strengthened in the folk clubs of Winnipeg, which she frequented during the brief period she studied veterinary science at the University of Manitoba. Relocating to Stratford, Ontario, she continued to sharpen her skills as a composer and performer. In 1981, she auditioned...
Full Bio

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