Two Great Music Artists For St John’s Ashe Street Concert

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Hatis Noit and Brìghde Chaimbeul will perform in St John’s Ashe Street on May 21.

CONTINUING the concert series where musicians perform in unique and historic buildings around Tralee, nonfaction is delighted to present a very special double bill of two original female artists in the contemporary music scene, the ethereal Japanese voice artist Hatis Noit and Scottish piper Brìghde Chaimbeul in St. John’s Church Ashe Street on Sunday, May 21.

Hailing from distant Shiretoko in Hokkaido, Hatis Noit now resides in London. The Japanese vocal performer’s accomplished range is self-taught, inspired by Gagaku and operatic styles, Bulgarian and Gregorian chanting, to avant-garde and pop.

She discovered her calling at the age of sixteen in Nepal, where she was moved intensely by the otherworldly sounds of a female monk singing Buddhist chants. From that day on she has been exploring the primal, instinctive power of the human voice.

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Her latest  album Aura (Erased Tapes) is a stunning collection of unique, deeply evocative song worlds that show us how the voice connects to the very essence of humanity, nature and the universe.

Brìghde Chaimbeul plays the Scottish smallpipes, a bellows-powered set of bagpipes with a double-note drone. She has devised a completely unique way of arranging for pipe music that emphasises the rich textural drones of the instrument; the constancy of sound that creates a trance-like atmosphere.

In 2021 Brighde performed on the smallpipes to world leaders and listeners across the globe, as the musician of the opening ceremony of COP 26.

Winner of the BBC Radio 2 Horizon Award and youngest ever winner of the BBC Radio 2 Young Folk Award, Scotland’s Brighde Chaimbeul has established herself among the leading experimental purveyors of celtic music.

A native Gaelic speaker from the Isle of Skye, her style is rooted in her native language and culture but takes inspiration from a variety of global forms.

Brìghde might be more familiar to the population of Tralee than they know as she is featured in a mural on the Island of Geese.

The work which was commissioned as part of nonfaction’s ‘Graft’ street art initiative was painted by local artist James Hayes is located on the ESB substation beside the Little Cheese Shop.

Brìghde Chaimbeul featured on a mural at the Island of Geese.

The work entitled ‘Fliuch an tae’ features Brìghde enjoying a cuppa in the middle of Tralee Bay!

This concert will take place at 8pm on Sunday, May 21 in St. John’s Church Ashe Street, Tralee. Tickets which are €15/20 (plus booking fee) can be booked on-line on EventBrite, see www.nonfaction.com for further details.

This event and concert series is supported by Kerry County Council through their Arts Act Grant.

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