Mary Black (born 22 May
1955, in Dublin
) is an
Irish
singer. She is well-known as an interpreter
of both folk and contemporary material which has made her a major
recording artist in her native Ireland, and in many other parts of
the world.
Background
Mary Black was born in Dublin, Ireland into a musical family. Her
father was a
fiddler, her mother a singer,
and her brothers had their own musical group called
The Black Brothers and her younger
sister
Frances would go on to achieve
great success as a singer in the 90s. From this musical background,
Mary began singing
traditional Irish
songs at the age of eight. As she grew older, she began to
perform with her siblings (Shay, Michael and Martin Black) in small
clubs around Dublin.
Musical career
1980s
Black joined a small
folk band in the
late 1970s called General Humbert, with whom she toured Europe and
released numerous albums. In 1982 she developed a professional
relationship with musician/
producer
Declan Sinnott and recorded her first
ever solo album,
Mary Black. The album performed well in
the Irish charts and it went
gold. In 1983 it was honoured by the
Irish Independent and it
is still referred to as one of the best Irish albums of the 1980s.
Black ventured into the traditional
Irish
music band
De Dannan and toured with
them around Europe and in the US. The album she recorded with them
Anthem, won the Irish Album of the Year award. During her
time with De Dannan, Black continued with her solo career with
albums such as
Collected (1984) and
Without the
Fanfare (1985). These recordings took Black into a more
contemporary musical direction. Along with the success of these
releases,
IRMA
named her Entertainer of the Year in 1986 and Best Female Artist in
1987 and 1988.
Black departed from De Dannan in 1986 and 1987 saw the release of
her first
multi-platinum Irish album,
By the Time it Gets Dark. However, Mary's popularity
reached new heights with the release of the ground-breaking album,
No Frontiers, in August 1989.
It rocketed to the top of the Irish album charts (it stayed in the
Top 30 for over a year), and achieved triple-platinum status.
Mary's popularity grew in the United States, due to several tours
and widespread radio exposure.
1990s
Following the success of
No Frontiers in the United
States, and the extensive
airplay
received by the lead track "Columbus", Black became a hit NAC
recording artist. In spring 1991, she embarked on an American tour.
Her 1991 release,
Babes in the Wood, entered the Irish
charts at No.1 once again and remained there for six weeks. Her
single "The Thorn Upon the Rose" reached No.8 on the Japanese
singles chart after it was used in a national railroad television
advert.
Babes in the Wood performed well in the US and it
was voted one of the top 10 albums of the year in the United
Kingdom by
Today newspaper.
The of album release
brought about a sell-out tour and her first concert at the Royal Albert
Hall
in January, 1992, which was broadcasted on Channel 4 a year later. She was once again
named Best Female Artist by the IRMA.
Mary was featured on the cover of
Billboard magazine in a story
hailing her as "a firm favorite to join the heavy-hitting ranks of
such Irish artists as
Enya,
Sinéad O’Connor and
Clannad's
Máire
Brennan in the international marketplace". Her next album
The Holy Ground once again reached the top of the Irish
album chart. She also toured the US during October/November 1993,
in support of the album. The next project saw Mary join forces with
six Irish female artists to record the compilation album,
A Woman's Heart. Other
artists here included her sister
Frances
Black,
Eleanor McEvoy,
Dolores Keane,
Sharon Shannon and
Maura O'Connell. Its good sales success
spawned another album,
A Woman's Heart 2.
Black recorded two duets with American folk singer
Joan Baez in the spring of 1995, for Baez's album
Ring Them Bells. A greatest
hits album of Mary's work,
Looking Back, was released and
she went touring mainly in the US, Germany and Scandinavia, to
support the release. Black released three more albums in the 1990s,
Circus,
Shine, and
Speaking with the
Angel. She was named "Best Female Artist" in 1994 and 1996 for
the fourth and fifth time.
2000-present
Mary released her first live album in 2003,
Mary Black
Live. She also released her only
studio album of the 2000s,
Full Tide.
Although it was successful, Mary has kept a low musical profile in
the last few years. In
2009 she is featured on
one track of
Steve Martin's album
The Crow: New
Songs for the 5-String Banjo
Musical style
For a number of years, WHAT HI-FI? magazine considered Black's
voice to be so pure, that it was used as an
audiophile benchmark for comparing the sound
quality of different high fidelity systems . A
music critic once quoted : "Over the years,
Mary Black has come to define what many people see as the essence
of Irish woman singers: profound, slightly ethereal and beyond the
reaches of trends." Today, Black is held in high esteem in her
native Ireland and beyond and is regarded as one of the most
important Irish vocalists of her generation.
Personal life
Mary is married to Joe O’Reilly, of Dara Records, and they have two
sons (Conor, Danny) and a daughter (Róisín). Her son Danny is a
member of the popular Irish rock band
The
Coronas.
They reside in Dublin, however, they spend
much time in County
Kerry
.
Discography
Studio albums
- Mary Black (1982)
- Collected (1984)
- Without the Fanfare (1985)
- By the Time It Gets Dark (1987)
- No Frontiers (1989)
- Babes in the Wood (1991)
- The Holy Ground (1993)
- Circus (1995)
- Shine (1997)
- Speaking with the Angel (1999)
- Full Tide (2005)
Compilation albums
- The Best Of Mary Black (1990)
- The Collection (1992)
- Looking Back (1995)
- Song for Ireland [USA] (1998)
- The Best of Mary Black 1991-2001 & Hidden Harvest
(2001)
- Twenty Five Years, Twenty Five Songs (compilation with
new and re-recorded material, 2008)
References
- http://www.answers.com/topic/mary-black
- http://house-of-music.com/maryblack/mbbio.shtml
- http://www.black-brothers.com/library/blackfamily.htm
- http://www.sweetslyrics.com/bio-Mary%20Black.html
-
http://www.helium.com/items/93717-interview-irish-music-sensation-mary-black
- http://www.rte.ie/tv/othervoices/thecoronas.html
External links
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