Cormac de Barra

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Cormac DeBarra
Image:CormacDeBarraPressPic.jpg
Promotional image by Tim Jarvis
Background information
Genre(s) Celtic
Folk
New Age
Occupation(s) Harpist
Composer
Years active 1989 - present
Associated acts Clannad
Moya Brennan
Hazel O'Connor
Brian Kennedy
Website Official site

Contents

[edit] Biography

Cormac de Barra is a harpist and part of Moya Brennan's band. He comes from a family of traditional musicians and singers from Dublin but with roots in County Cork. He studied Irish harp with his grandmother, Róisín Ní Shé, in Dublin and went on to study concert harp in the USA with Leone Paulson.

I was born and grew up in Dublin although the Debarras originally come from Cork. I started playing the harp at the age of 10 with my grandmother, Róisín Ní Shé and went on to spend some of the best summers of my life studying concert harp in the USA.

Cormac's professional debut was a six-month tour in Osaka, Japan playing in the Irish Exhibition at Expo '90. While in Japan he gave a performance for Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko in their palace at Akasaka, Tokyo. Also present at the recital was Irish Nobel Laureate, Seamus Heaney. Cormac also spent six months in Seville, Spain, performing at Expo 92.

He toured with a family group, with harpist Anne-Marie O'Farrell and as a solo artist from 1993 onwards, also finding time to work in theatre in Dublin both as a performer in W.B. Yeats' 'The Cúchulain Cycle' and as musical director of a production of 'Playboy of the Western World' at the Ambassador Theatre.

He has also been touring the UK and Europe with Hazel O'Connor since 1998 in her autobiographical show 'Beyond Breaking Glass'. DeBarra also performs with The Chieftains and the Irish Harp Orchestra, Cathy Jordan of Dervish, Liam Ó Maonlaí and my brothers Fionán and Éamonn (a member of 'Slide'). DeBarra has recorded with Galldubh, Moya Brennan & Brian Kennedy to name but a few.

Since winning the Féis Ceoil Harp Competition in 1989, something he refers to as his first big moment, he has performed as a solo musician for the Emperor of Japan in Tokyo (at the age of 17), played at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival with Hazel O’Connor, presented the traditional music series ‘Flosc’ on TG4 which was awarded Best Television Music Series by Irish Music Magazine and finished his first CD ‘Barcó’ in 2003.

"I have to say that I owe a lot musically to my two harp teachers, Róisín Ní Shé and Leone Paulson and to the two people who got me singing, Hazel O’Connor and Máire Ní Thuama.

In 2003 Cormac joined his brother Fionán in Moya Brennan's band. In 2007 they were both part of the reuinted line-up of Moya's famiy group, the world-famous Clannad.

As well as these other groups, Cormac is also part of a family trio, Barcó, with his brothers Fionán and Éamonn. Recordings to date include the CD Barcó and the harp duo CD Double Strung with Anne-Marie O'Farrell.

[edit] Discography

[edit] Solo & Personal

  • Barcó, (2003) - Cormac DeBarra
  • Double Strung, (2005) - Cormac DeBarra & Anne-Marie O'Farrell
  • Music of Great Irish Houses, (2007) - Cormac DeBarra & Karin Leitner

[edit] With Hazel O'Connor

  • Breaking Glass, (2000)
  • Acoustically Yours, (2002)
  • Hidden Heart, (2005)

[edit] With Moya Brennan

[edit] Other

  • On Song 2: Red Sails In The Sunset , (2005) - Brian Kennedy

[edit] External links