For the last 25 years, singer Mary Black has been a dominant presence on the Irish music scene, and has achieved international acclaim in Europe and the USA. She has shared stages, television shows, and recording studios with some of the most revered performers—from Van Morrison and Joan Baez, to Emmylou Harris and Mary Chapin Carpenter, and has played a frontline role in
For the last 25 years, singer Mary Black has been a dominant presence on the Irish music scene, and has achieved international acclaim in Europe and the USA. She has shared stages, television shows, and recording studios with some of the most revered performers—from Van Morrison and Joan Baez, to Emmylou Harris and Mary Chapin Carpenter, and has played a frontline role in bringing Irish music, past and present, to an increasingly appreciative and ever-growing global audience. Now, in her moving memoir, Mary takes us back to her early days, to the roots of her musical heritage. As she recounts her childhood memories and tells how music played an important role in the Black family home, we see how the young girl from Dublin went on to tour the world, sell millions of albums—including No Frontiers, a triple platinum album—and, with her beautiful singing voice, captured the hearts of millions around the world.
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Hardcover
,
320 pages
Published
January 1st 2015
by Transworld Publishers
(first published October 9th 2014)
I had the pleasure of attending one of Mary's farewell concerts in Boston in November. This story illuminates the background and feelings of one of the great Irish talents of our time.