Na Laethe Bhi
Banba �ir
There for You
Mystery Game
Struggle
I Will Find You [Theme from "The Last of the Mohicans"]
Sould Searcher
Caide Sin Don T� Sin?
Other Side
Sun Set Dreams
Gentle PlaceAverage customer rating:
Beautiful and memorable; lyrical and melodiousI bought this CD when it first came out and to this day it remains one of my all-time favorites. Some of the songs are hauntingly beautiful. I love the lead singer's voice.
another favorite album from Clannadafter I finished a review of "Anam", I start to write this
this is very first album I got (borrowed from my fd)
when he played on his player, I can feel how romantic and harmony it is
after that, I went to record store, but I have no luck of this (I got Anam), then I keep borrowing this album
about 2 months later, I found it, and I got it
I like "There for you" and "Struggle", they sound like the early-80's British new-romantic; "I will find you", the sound really matchs the movie "The Last of Mohicans", "Sunset dreams", I've never heard Maire sounds like water flowing; "The gentle place" as the name is, sounds gentle and like flying up to top of mountain
if you're collecting Clannad's album, Anam and Banba must be collected
Celtic strands...'We are a fusion of various styles of music, growing out of a traditional Gaelic root.'
- Maire Brennan
For anyone who likes Enya, this group is important, showing both a prehistory of the solo Enya, as well as a side-development in the area of modern electronic celtic-inspired music. Maire Brennan is now the lead vocalist for Clannad, but she has also produced her own solo work.
Clannad is a family effort, having been begun by Maire and her brothers Ciaran and Paul, plus their uncles. Indeed, the similarity between the words 'clan' and 'clannad' cannot be missed. Enya is another sister, having joined the group briefly before embarking upon a solo career.
Banba achieved great popularity for the band Clannad because of the song I will find you -- this song was used in the film 'Last of the Mohicans'. It is a haunting, lyrical ballad of love and longing, of desire and commitment, doing the strains of music and love with a bittersweet that only the Celtic people seem to know how to do properly.
'Hope is your survival
A captive path I lead
No matter where you go
I will find you
If it takes a long long time
No matter where you go
I will find you
If it takes a thousand years'
Incorporating Mohican and Cherokee chants into the lyric structure, this song is truly a cross cultural experience. It reaches deep into the emotive part of the soul.
Other songs on the album are variously in English and Gaelic, including the beautiful and interesting Na Laethe Bhí and Banba �"ir, both of which have interesting cadences and can inspire feeling despite being in a foreign language. (My family lineage having Scottish roots, I am no stranger to Gaelic, but even so these are unfamiliar, perhaps made the more beautiful as I can ascribe my own meaning to them).
Banba was released in 1993, twenty years after the group got its start. The previous year, Anam had been released with a track entitled 'Harry's Game', which again was from a motion picture, 'Patriot Games'. The music on both of these CDs are consistently Clannad, which is to say, beautiful, melodious, celtic-inspired gems.
The other CD of theirs in my collection, Fuiam, dates back to 1982. At this time, Enya had not yet struck out on her own, and she and her husband Nicky Ryan were still an integral part of the group. The music shows some immaturity compared with the later work of both Enya and Clannad, but the seeds of the future greatness are here. Fuiam, which means 'sound', features Enya on keyboards and vocals for two songs.
These CDs, as indeed much of the output of this group, is a real treasure for those who enjoy various kinds of music. Prepare to be inspired.
Trite and disingenuousComparisons to Enya are apt; this is new-agey pop music for soccer moms. Clannad are no doubt technically accomplished musicians, but the songs on "Banba" are so saccharine, overproduced, and self-consciously folky that they're basically unlistenable.
There is one pleasant exception: there is genuine emotion in "Na Laethe Bhi", demonstrating that they *can* write a decent song when they put aside the formulas and clichés. But that's far from being enough to save this album.
"I Will Find You"-Last of the Mohicans isn't the only hit!I bought this CD years ago like others for that song, but I must say that there are at least 4 other songs that I enjoyed on here. I won't say because everyone finds their own favorites. Needless to say when I'm in a Celtic mood this is own of my favorites to put on the shuffle along with "Enya" and "Yanni"
Happy Listening