
“One thing Donnell and I were given in 2020 was the space and time to be creative, to think and focus and find what was inside of us. “Creativity comes when there is space for it,” says MacMaster. They approached it not bound by easy patterns or habits but as a blank canvas. A power couple was born.Ĭanvas is only their third album together. They were married in 2002, by which point their cumulative album sales topped one million. They are two of the world’s top Celtic fiddlers: she is a renowned, award-winning solo artist from Cape Breton, Nova Scotia he from the legendary Leahy family of Ontario, an intergenerational musical act that toured the world.
Natalie macmaster tour full#
“We adjust the music to accommodate the season,” MacMaster said.Photo Credit: Rebekah Littlejohn Natalie MacMaster & Donnell Leahy Create A Musical Canvas With Upcoming AlbumĪ blank canvas is full of possibility-much like the partnership of Natalie MacMaster and Donnell Leahy, whose new album Canvas comes out on March 17, 2023. Her children were raised with contemporary songs as their seasonal soundtrack, many of which ( Jingle Bell Rock, Good King Wenceslas, Angels We Have Heard On High, Joy to the World, and others) appear in the show. The Christmas spirit was alive and well, but you didn’t hear one Christmas song.” “There were no Christmas tunes at Christmas parties in my town,” MacMaster, who is from tiny Troy, Nova Scotia, said. The family is creating new traditions with A Celtic Family Christmas. The music they created apart from each other, prior to being married in 2002, was hugely successful from a commercial standpoint, but there are other rewards from playing together as a family, according to MacMaster. MacMaster and Leahy have been described as the first couple of contemporary Celtic music, with Leahy coming from a celebrated family band of 11 brothers and sisters, and MacMaster hailing from a family tree that includes Buddy MacMaster and Ashley MacIsaac. There are multiple ways that provide new options and joys that you couldn’t have imagined.” “It’s another version of us at the moment, and pulls out different things. Everyone will have their turn, MacMaster added. When the youngsters get older, they will occupy the same roles. The two oldest children have more time on stage at the moment, which is a nice opportunity for them, the two-time Juno Award winner said. When the young kids perform, they usually just do a brief segment. While some fans will miss seeing the little ones on stage, MacMaster said the show has strengths all its own. There’s no driving kids to hockey or gymnastics. No cooking, no cleaning, not even any parenting. “I’ve got nothing to do out here on the road. Life on the couple’s farm in Douro, Ont., is incredibly busy, MacMaster said. MacMaster is enjoying the relative silence while she has to opportunity to do so. Not all of the children perform, but every member of the immediate family (including Clare, 13 Julia, 11 Alec, 10 and Sadie, eight) is involved in the production in some way, MacMaster said.
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More family members will join MacMaster and Leahy for future dates, but due to a variety of factors, some children have stayed behind for the Western Canada run.

MacMaster and Leahy have arranged five dates on Vancouver Island, including Tuesday at the Royal Theatre, which will re-introduce audiences to their two oldest children, Mary Frances, 16, who plays piano and fiddle on the tour, and their son, Michael, 15, who plays accordion and guitar. “But now that it is all rehearsed and practised and put together, it’s like pushing play.”Ī Celtic Family Christmas spans 23 dates in Canada through Dec. “A couple of months ago when we were juggling everything, we put our muscle into designing the show and figuring out what we were doing and how we were going to do it,” MacMaster said. Road life is easy compared to her normal day-to-day regimen. She views the family’s annual A Celtic Family Christmas tour with a glass-half-full approach. Not so for fiddler Natalie MacMaster, who has trekked from coast to coast each winter with her husband, fiddler Donnell Leahy, and seven children for the better part of 10 years. Touring across Canada in November and December with seven young children along for the ride? That’s sure to sap the Christmas spirit from even the most ardent Santa supporter. 20, and the Sid Williams Theatre (Courtenay) on Nov. 19, the Cowichan Performing Arts Centre (Duncan) on Nov. Note: MacMaster and Leahy also perform at the Port Theatre (Nanaimo) on Nov. Tickets: $46-$177.25 from the Royal McPherson box office (25) or rmts.bc.ca NATALIE MacMASTER & DONNELL LEAHY - A CELTIC FAMILY CHRISTMAS
