Natalie MacMaster

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Natalie MacMaster
Natalie MacMaster in 2004.  Photo by Forrest L. Smith, III.
Natalie MacMaster in 2004. Photo by Forrest L. Smith, III.
Background information
Born June 13, 1972 (1972-06-13) (age 35)
Origin Inverness County, Nova Scotia
Canada Flag of Canada
Genre(s) Cape Breton fiddle music
Instrument(s) Fiddle, vocals
Years active 1989 – present
Associated acts Buddy MacMaster
Donnell Leahy
Website www.nataliemacmaster.com

Natalie MacMaster CM (born June 13, 1972) is an award-winning fiddler from the rural community of Troy in Inverness County, Nova Scotia, Canada. She is one of the best-known musicians in the tradition of Cape Breton fiddle music, and has made a highly successful career as a touring musician, travelling to Europe and Asia and doing as many as 250 shows in a year.

MacMaster has toured with many famous performers, including the Chieftains, Faith Hill, Carlos Santana and Alison Krauss. She has appeared at many music festivals worldwide, including the Celtic Colours festival in Cape Breton, Celtic Connections in Scotland, and MerleFest in the United States.

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[edit] Background

MacMaster is the daughter of Alex and Minnie (Beaton) MacMaster, and the niece of Cape Breton fiddler Buddy MacMaster. She is the cousin of two other well-known Cape Breton fiddlers, Ashley MacIsaac and Andrea Beaton, and also a neighbour of folk-artist Travis MacRae. She was born on June 13 1973. In 2002, she married fiddler Donnell Leahy of the Leahy family band, and moved to Lakefield, Ontario, where she currently resides with her husband and two children. On December 3, 2005 she gave birth to a daughter, Mary Frances Rose. Her second child, Michael Joseph Alexander, was born on June 23, 2007.

MacMaster began playing the fiddle at the age of 9, and made her performing debut the same year at a square dance in Glencoe Mills, Nova Scotia. When she was 16 she released her first album, Four on the Floor, and a second album, Road to the Isle, followed in 1991. Both of these self-produced albums were initially released only on cassette, but Rounder Records omitted a few tracks and re-released as A Compilation in 1998.

In recent years she has expanded her musical repertoire, mixing her Cape Breton roots with music from Scotland and Ireland, as well as American bluegrass.

She has received a number of Canadian music awards, including several "Artist of the Year" awards from the East Coast Music Association, two Juno awards for best instrumental album, and "Fiddler of the Year" from the Canadian Country Music Association. MacMaster was also awarded an honorary doctorate from Niagara University in New York in 2006. In 2006, she was made a member of the Order of Canada.[1]

[edit] Discography

[edit] Albums

[edit] Compilations

  • Traditional Music From Cape Breton Island, Nimbus NI5383, 1993 (two tracks)
  • Celtic Colours — The Road Home, 1997 (one track)
  • Celtic Colours — The Second Wave, 1998 (one track)
  • Celtic Colours — Forgotten Roots, 1999 (one track)
  • Roots Music: An American Journey, Rounder 0501, 2001 (one track)
  • Songs for the Savoy, 2001 (one track)
  • Celtic Colours — The Colours of Cape Breton, 2002 (one track)
  • Celtic Colours — Volume VII, 2003 (one track)

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.gg.ca/media/doc.asp?lang=e&DocID=4828 Gg.ca Retrieved on 05-08-07

[edit] External links