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Friday, February 15, 2019

MICHAEL O'SHEA

Now I may have mentioned before but that one of the happiest times I spent at MOMA in Oxford was with Bruce Gilbert, Graham Lewis (from Wire) and the legendary artist illustrator  and Eno authority, Russell Mills. Thanks to the then Asst Director at MOMAO, Marco Livingstone, he got the lads in to construct an installation piece in the top gallery and they pretty much came everyday to install it and once installed pretty much came everyday anyway to tinker with it and to hang out. They simply created the most extraordinary construction and accompanying soundtrack piece it has been my privilege to witness (imagine a post industrial landscape covered in leaves and the soundtrack to accompany 'Eraserhead'! ) and also seemingly to try to drown yours truly in Guinness! We talked about art in the pub next door, Samual Becket, Brian Eno, Russell wonderful artwork and much much more. Affable, super intelligent and always good company, the boys fascinated me. During their time with us they decided to re-form Wire and had their first concert performance in the said top gallery some months later. It was simply superb! 
Now one of the things Bruce, Russell and Graham introduced me to was the work of Michael O'Shea and I still treasure my copy of this fine fine album which we learn from Bandcamp this morning has been re-pressed and re-released. I urge you to give it a listen and to get hold of a copy if you can. Michael's work is unique as indeed was he. I am sad to hear from the liner notes that after his suspected disappearance (he was always the nomad) shortly after the boys recorded him for their DOME label he was killed having being knocked down by a van in London in 1991. My heartfelt condolences to his family and to Russell and the boys from Wire too.                                                                                  
 [Andy Swapp]
BANDCAMP says:

Having sold his instruments to fund a nomadic 1970s lifestyle, eccentric Irish experimentalist Michael O’Shea was forced to create his own handmade answer to the sitars and zelochords he’d become accustomed to playing on his travels around the globe.

Using an old door, 17 strings, chopsticks and combining them with phasers, echo units and amplification, the new device was to become his signature sound, mixing Irish folk influences with Asian and North African sounds in a mesmerising and soulful new way that brought him to the attention of the leading improvisers of his day - Alice Coltrane, Ravi Shankar, Don Cherry and more.

A logical follow up to AllChival’s recent reissue of Stano's debut LP, Michael O’Shea’s self titled LP was originally released on Wire's Dome Imprint in 1982.

The background to the album is as interesting and inspiring as the artist who created it - born in Northern Ireland but raised in the Republic, O’Shea was keen to travel and escape the troubles of his home.

Wandering throughout Europe and the Middle East, O’Shea found himself living and working as a relief aid in Bangladesh in the mid Seventies where he learned to play sitar while recovering from a bout of hepatitis. A later period spent busking in France accompanied on zelochord by Algerian musician Kris Hosylan Harp led to O’Shea’s idea of combining both instruments as a homebuilt instrument - Mo Chara [Irish for "My Friend"].

He later described the process on the back of the LP himself saying: "Having sold my sitar in Germany and being desperate for money to travel to Turkey, I conceived of the idea of combining both sitar and zelochord. The first Mo Cara was born, taken from the middle of a door, which was rescued from a skip in Munchen"

A combination of dulcimer, zelochord and sitar, O Shea would play it with a pair of chopsticks, striking the strings softly using Irish folk rhythms mixed with the rich, nostalgic sounds of of the many Asian artists he’d encountered on his travels.

It was a pan cultural sound standing at an unusual crossroads of folk, traditional, rock, progressive, jazz, electronic and post-punk worlds without hesitation.

Perfecting the instrument on the streets, there were further spells spent busking in the underground stations and cafes of London's West End and Covent Garden during the heady days of the 1970s when they were full of eccentric street entertainers, jazz improvisers and musical pioneers.

His work with Rick Wakeman never saw the light of day but O’Shea’s contact with the world of post-punk London ensured his name would live on.

Introduced to Wire's Bruce Gilbert and Graham Lewis via cartoonist Tom Johnston, O’Shea eventually acquiesced to an open invite to record at their studio. Turning up unannounced in the first half of 1981 the LP was recorded in a day in the legendary Blackwing Studios and released on Dome the year after.

The first side features the fifteen minute masterpiece "No Journeys End" with the B side featuring more input from Wire in processing the Mo Chara sound.

Lewis himself said years later of the forgotten masterpiece: “I always said it was the best job we ever did.”

After an aborted LP with The The's Matt Johnson the following year, O’Shea quietly disappeared from the formal recording world . His brief but unique contribution to the music world came to a sad end in 1991 when O’Shea was struck by a post van and died a few days later in hospital in London.

This repress on All City’s AllChival imprint has been remastered and reissued with the approval of both Dome and his surviving siblings.
  

credits

released January 25, 2019

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