Owain Phyfe

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Owain Phyfe

Owain Phyfe plays for an audience at a Renaissance fair in 2003
Background information
Birth name Owen Fite
Born (1949-04-09)April 9, 1949
Died September 5, 2012(2012-09-05)[1]
Occupations Singer-songwriter

Owain Phyfe (1949-2012) was a vocalist, instrumentalist, composer, and the founder of Nightwatch Recording, which concentrates on Renaissance and Medieval music. He lived in Berkley, Mich., often playing at O'Mara's Restaurant when he wasn't traveling the Renaissance circuit. He died from pancreatic cancer on September 5, 2012.[1] The following day performers and fans held an all night wake in his honor.

Early years

Phyfe grew up in a bilingual family with Welsh as a second language. Phyfe started and ran an automotive engineering company for nearly ten years.[2] In 1992, however, nourished by his grandparent's appreciation for song, Phyfe's study of languages in college and his travels abroad to England, France, Mexico, and Spain as well as his experience later as a musician in New York City's Greenwich Village, he sold the company and turned to music as a full-time profession.[3]

Beginnings

In the mid-1980s, Phyfe and his wife Paula became festival performers at the Michigan Renaissance Festival. Spellbound by early music, Phyfe decided to develop a "singer of songs" persona. While researching late medieval and renaissance music, he found himself favoring faire life over the automotive engineering company he had started in 1983. "It became my dream to present the beauty of Renaissance music," Phyfe explained, "not as a documentary, but as a living expression."[3]

Musical career

He teamed up with the magical Renaissance Fair jam band CANTIGA in 1990 to form The New World Renaissance Band, specializing in the performance of ancient music in English, Spanish, Italian, Welsh, German, French, Provençal and Latin. He has also toured with Richie Blackmore.[4] He played many traditional instruments including recorders, viola, cello, fiddle, and harp. He performed across the U.S.,[5] and his music has aired worldwide and on over 250 radio stations across North America.[6] He performed and offered workshops at many medieval recreationist, musical and Neo-Pagan events including the S.C.A.'s Pennsic War,[7] The SCA's "Gulf Wars" event, where he performed solo and also with Wolgemut at the Green Dragon Tavern the Michigan Renaissance Festival,[8] Sirius Rising, Pagan Spirit Gathering[9] and the Starwood Festival,[10] both as a soloist and with the New World Renaissance Band. He also contributed to the soundtrack of the Wim Wenders film Pina[11]

Partial discography

Owain Phyfe

  • 1995 - Sweet Was the Song (with L'Ensemble Josquin) (Nightwatch Recording)
  • 1999 - Poets, Bards, & Singers of Songs (Nightwatch Recording)
  • 2006 - Lágrimas de Sangría (Tears of Sangria) (Nightwatch Recording)

New World Renaissance Band

  • 1992 - Live the Legend (Nightwatch Recording)
  • 1995 - Where Beauty Moves and Wit Delights (Nightwatch Recording)
  • 1996 - Odyssey (Nightwatch Recording)
  • 2002 - Tales From the Vineyard (Nightwatch Recording)

Soundtrack

  • 2011 - Pina, Director: Wim Wenders, song: La Prima Vez (Neue Road Movies, Eurowide Film Production)

Critical reception

Live the Legend made the year-end bestseller list for classical releases at a number of retail chains across the midwest, including Streetside Records and Harmony House, and ranked #13 nationwide on Public Radio Music Source's classical best-seller list.[2]

Reviewing a performance in St. Louis, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch said, "the fact that the group's sound was nearly as seamless live as it was coming out of the the recording studio is impressive in the extreme, especially since the band's first two releases, "Live the Legend" and "Where Beauty Moves and Wit Delights," are outstanding musically and acoustically...The group's leader, Owain Phyfe, handles the foreign language lyrics of many of the songs as easily as he does the English (a skill many opera singers would do well to emulate)."[12]

Awards

  • 1997 Cessés Mortels de Soupirer (Sigh no More, Mortals) - Best Music Video: Ohio's National Telly Awards
  • 1997 Cessés Mortels de Soupirer (Sigh no More, Mortals) - Best Music Video: International Communicator Awards
  • 2003 Texas Renaissance Festival: The Phillip Hafer (King Henry) Memorial MVP Award

Performance reviews

  • Revue Magazine June 1995
  • Detroit Monthly March 1996
  • WKBD-TV News Spotlight May 26, 1996

Album reviews

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 By Jerry Wolffe of The Oakland Press (2012-09-13). "Renaissance Musician Owain 'Phyfe' Fite Dies at 62". theoaklandpress.com. Retrieved 2013-04-05. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Period Music for Modern Times: Owain Phyfe and the New World Renaissance Band", Renaissance Magazine, Vol. 3, #2, Issue #10 (1998)
  3. 3.0 3.1 Owain Phyfe Appreciative Listener Society (OPALS)
  4. Cantiga Music Website
  5. . Nightwatchrecording.com. 2012-04-01 http://www.nightwatchrecording.com/calendar.owain.htm. Retrieved 2013-04-05.  Missing or empty |title= (help)
  6. Oakland Press News, 13 Sep 2012
  7. Pennsic.Net - Entertainers at Pennsic War
  8. Owain Phyfe article renaissance magazine
  9. Pagan Spirit Gathering 2008
  10. Starwood Festival 24 | Entertainment |ACE Pagan Magical Consciousness Gathering
  11. La Prima Vez
  12. Debbie Stover, "Forget the chatter, get to the music," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 17 Feb 1994.

Further reading

External links

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