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Natalie MacMaster reflects on her music, her life and her legend

Canadian fiddling superstar performs solo show at Campbell River’s Tidemark Theatre
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Natalie MacMaster at the Key City Theatre in Cranbrook, Sunday, March 8, 2020. (Barry Coulter photo)

Natalie MacMaster is a real Canadian treasure.

The internationally-renowned fiddler has brought the Cape Breton (Nova Scotia) musical tradition to the world and has collaborated with the legendary Chieftains from Ireland, American legends Béla fleck, Faith Hill, Carlos Santana, Alison Kraus and Yo-Yo Ma as well as Canadian stars like Jesse Cook and the venerable children’s performers Sharon, Lois and Bram.

Along the way she has won or been nominated for Grammy Awards, Juno Awards and East Coast Music Awards. She is a member of the Order of Canada and has been awarded three honorary doctorates.

But stopping for lunch on a showery, flurry day in Princeton, B.C., MacMaster is pre-occupied with ordering lunch for she and her daughter Mary-Francis on their way to a gig in Port Alberni that night.

“Pardon me, they want me to look at the bread, sorry,” she says before putting the phone on hold at a restaurant in Princeton.

MacMaster is on a six-show tour of B.C. that concludes with one stop in Seattle, WA, and includes a stop in Campbell River on March 14 at the Tidemark Theatre.

RELATED: Superstar Canadian Fiddler Natalie Macmaster returns to the Tidemark for an intimate solo performance

The show is being touted as an intimate acoustic performance with a three-piece band that involves MacMaster and her longtime pianist Mac Morin and includes her daughter Mary Francis, an accomplished dancer, fiddler and pianist in her own right.

“The show is a different experience from a typical Natalie MacMaster show in that it is more up close and personal,” MacMaster says back on the phone.

She expects to connect with the audience more between musical numbers, talking about life on the road, parenting and whatever else crosses her mind.

“But it’s still a high energy show,” she says.

Which, of course, it would be given the style of music MacMaster has made a long and rewarding career of playing. Cape Breton music is virtually straight out of the Highlands of Scotland, brought over by Gaelic settlers of Nova Scotia. There it steeped in the traditions of the homeland while absorbing the New World experience. MacMaster grew up with this music and learned it from family members through the legendary Cape Breton kitchen parties and ceilidhs.

MacMaster has been playing professionally for 37 years but she still loves performing and still loves the music. In fact, she looks forward more to performing now than she ever has. As she matures as a performer she has become more comfortable with herself.

“I really feel connected to who I am when I perform shows,” MacMaster says.

But it also provides an escape from the pressures all women feel as primary caregivers and breadwinners.

“Life can become a bit of a blur. It’s a very self-giving role so most mothers, especially mothers with young children, don’t have a lot of time to devote to their own interests, so you kind of put that on the back burner for a while,” MacMaster says.

MacMaster can relate after continually touring and recording through her seven pregnancies and subsequent toddler years. She and husband Donnell Leahy – a master fiddler in his own right and a musical partner as well – have seven children.

She says this smaller-scale tour and stage show gives her a little time to get back to what it was like at the start of her career.

“To get the time just to have me again onstage with my going back to what I did my previous to parenting, it’s very special to me now and I’m very grateful for it,” MacMaster says.

Besides solo performances (she has toured and recorded with her husband and family over the last few years, in addition to solo work), MacMaster was able to record a solo album that was released in 2019 and the response has been very positive, resulting in a nomination for a 2020 JUNO Award as well as showing strongly on the Billboard charts. Sketches is a return to a solo sound with a fiery collection of traditional tunes and medleys mixed with new compositions which were recorded with longtime collaborator, guitarist Tim Edey.

“It turned out real great,” MacMaster says. “It was a really great little package.”

As for the future, MacMaster has “tons of stuff” on the go involving writing and creating, touring across Canada later in the year and performing in “really fun festivals.”

It’s safe to say, this country loves Natalie MacMaster. And you know what, she loves this country and her place in it.

“It’s great to be Canadian. It’s great to be a fiddler. It’s great to be a mother. It’s great to be united to the country coast to coast by an instrument; the incredible style of fiddle music that exists from one sea to another. I really feel traditionally our culture is strong.”

Sponsored by the Campbell River Mirror, 99.7 2Day FM and What’s On Digest, the Tidemark Theatre and Gee Dan Productions present, Sketches: An Acoustic Evening with Natalie MacMaster at the Tidemark Theatre on Saturday, March 14. Tickets are $54 (+applicable taxes and fees) and can be purchased at the Box Office Tuesday through Thursday between 12 p.m. and 4 p.m. Tickets are also available online: tidemarktheatre.com or 287.PINK.


@AlstrT
editor@campbellrivermirror.com

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