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Kevin Burke (musician)
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Kevin Burke (musician) : ウィキペディア英語版
Kevin Burke (musician)

Kevin Burke (born 1950) is an Irish master fiddler considered one of the finest living Irish fiddlers.〔〔〔 For nearly four decades he has been at the forefront of Irish traditional music and Celtic music,〔 performing and recording with the seminal groups The Bothy Band, Patrick Street, and the Celtic Fiddle Festival.〔
In addition to his solo albums, Burke has had successful project collaborations with Christy Moore, Andy Irvine & Paul Brady, Mícheál Ó Domhnaill, Jackie Daly, Ged Foley and Cal Scott.〔
In 2002, Burke was awarded a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts,〔 the highest honour given in the United States for folk and traditional music.〔
==Biography==
Kevin Burke was born in 1950 in London, England to parents from County Sligo in Ireland.〔 Inheriting a love of Irish music from his parents, he took up the fiddle at the age of eight, studied under Jessie Christopherson,〔 and eventually acquired a virtuosic technique in the Sligo fiddling style. He traveled frequently to Ireland to visit relatives and immersed himself in the local Sligo music. By the age of thirteen, he was playing with Irish musical groups.〔 He joined a céilí band, the Glenside, and played weekends at various Irish dance halls around London. In 1966, the Glenside performed at the céilí band competition at the All-Ireland Fleadh in Boyle in County Roscommon and won the competition.〔
In 1972, Burke met American singer-songwriter Arlo Guthrie in a pub in Milltown Malbay in County Clare. Impressed with Burke's fiddling, Guthrie invited him to Los Angeles to play on his album ''Last of the Brooklyn Cowboys'' (1973).〔 Burke's exposure to the musicians he met in the United States—including accordionist Joe Burke and fiddler Andy McGann—inspired him to devote his life to playing music.〔 In 1974, Burke moved to Dublin, where he teamed up with singer-songwriter Christy Moore, a former member of the Irish band Planxty.〔 Together with Jimmy Faulkner and Declan McNelis, they played throughout Ireland for the next few years.〔
In 1976, Burke became a member of the influential Irish traditional music group The Bothy Band. During the late 1970s, they emerged as one of the most exciting bands in Celtic music.〔 While much of their repertoire centered around the traditional folk music of Ireland, their "enthusiasm and musical virtuosity" influenced a generation of young Irish musicians.〔 Burke replaced Tommy Peoples on fiddle, and soon became an integral member of the group, appearing on three of their albums: ''Old Hag You Have Killed Me'' (1976), ''Out of the Wind – Into the Sun'' (1977), and ''After Hours (Live in Paris)'' (1979).〔 Burke developed an especially strong musical bond with the band's guitarist and vocalist, Mícheál Ó Domhnaill, and soon the two began appearing together as a duo. When the Bothy Band disbanded in 1979, they toured the United Kingdom and Europe together, and recorded a highly acclaimed album, ''Promenade'' (1979).〔 In 1980, Burke and Ó Domhnaill moved to the United States and toured throughout the country before settled in Portland, Oregon, where they recorded a second acclaimed album, ''Portland'' (1982).〔
In the early 1980s, Burke joined the Legends of Irish Music tour, where he played with influential Irish musicians Andy Irvine (vocals, bouzouki, mandolin and harmonica) and Jackie Daly (accordion). Together they formed the group Patrick Street.〔 During the next two decades, the group released eight albums: ''Patrick Street'' (1987), ''No. 2'' (1988), ''All in Good Time'' (1993), ''Corner Boys'' (1996), ''Made in Cork'' (1997), ''Live from Patrick Street'' (1999), ''Street Life'' (2002), and ''On the Fly'' (2007).〔
In 1992, Burke recorded the solo album ''Open House'' with Mark Graham (harmonica, clarinet, vocals), Paul Kotapish (guitar, mandolin, cittern, bass), and Sandy Silva (percussion).〔 These three comprised the core of his band and together, as the group Open House, they recorded two other albums, ''Second Story'' (1994) and ''Hoof and Mouth'' (1997).〔 In the early 1990s, Burke started touring and recording with Scottish fiddler Johnny Cunningham and Breton fiddler Christian Lemaître as the Celtic Fiddle Festival. Together they released six albums: ''Celtic Fiddle Festival'' (1993), ''Celtic Fiddle Festival: Encore'' (1998), ''Rendezvous'' (2001), ''Play On'' (2005), ''Equinoxe'' (2008), and ''Live in Brittany'' (2013).〔
In 2002, Burke was awarded a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts,〔 the highest honour given in the United States for folk and traditional music.〔 In recent years, Burke partnered with Ged Foley to record ''In Tandem'' (2006), and collaborated with documentary film composer Cal Scott on the acclaimed album ''Across the Black River'' (2007) and follow-up album ''Suite'' (2010).〔 In 2007, Burke started an independent record company, Loftus Music, in order to release his own recordings.〔 Burke continues to tour throughout the world. He currently lives in Portland, Oregon with his wife and two children.〔

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