Question Of Taste: Canadian musician Mairi Rankin

Mairi Rankin plays in counties Galway, Dublin, Kerry and Cork.
Mairi Rankin is a musician from Mabou, Cape Breton Island on the east coast of Canada. She plays the fiddle, step dances and tours regularly with a number of groups. She is currently on tour in Ireland with with cellist Eric Wright, and guitar and melodeon player Tim Edey, organised by Music Network. Dates include Station House Theatre, Clifden, Monday, May 9; Sugar Club, Dublin, Tues; St John’s Theatre, Listowel, Thurs; and Ionad Cultúrtha, Baile Mhúirne, Friday. See musicnetwork.ie
Dirty Birds by Morgan Murray. The hilarious, cringe-worthy tale that makes you feel a bit better about your own life situation. It's the coming of age story set against the 2008 global recession of a humdrum individual named Milton Ontario, who leaves his small town in Saskatchewan to pursue fame and fortune in Montreal and to find his idol Leonard Cohen.
I've not watched any recent films lately but rewatched a favourite documentary called the Grey Gardens filmed in 1976. That whole era of the opulent Bouvier Beale family is so over the top yet so sad in the end. Makes for a great story and lots of interesting articles to research afterwards.
Step dancing is a huge part of the culture in Cape Breton. Square dances happened every single night of the week in the summer. Since Covid, that hasn't been the case. It might be the first time in over 200 years that the dancing did not happen on the island. That changed the first week of April when we held our first square dance in Mabou and the hall was jam-packed with smiling, energetic, couples dancing their faces off. It was awesome to look out at the dance floor and see such happiness radiating from it.
My favourite CD (dating myself here) is by a Scottish piper named Angus Nicolson called Lassies That Baffle Us. Rick Taylor produced it and the arrangements and horn section parts are simply magnificent. The tunes that Angus picked and wrote really stand out as top-notch. It was the inspiration for Eric and I's Cabin Session album.
I remember being enthralled with Gustav Klimt's Lady with Hat and Feather Boa, even though it was a poster, which I bought, it really piqued my interest with the use of bold colours and rich textures which I'm still a fan of today.
Seeing Natalie MacMaster live when her In My Hands album came out was the inspiration I needed to see how playing traditional music could be the vehicle that allowed you to see the world.
I love dark, sinister, eerie shows and Servant has been the best thing I've watched in ages. It is a slow burn that kept me on the edge of my seat with every episode. Already waiting impatiently for the final season to come out next year.
CBC- the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation is a regular on my morning routine. Something was Wrong is also a pretty dark podcast I put on when cleaning.
I've lost three dear musician friends this year. Koady Chaisson from The East Pointers, Pastelle LeBlanc from Vishten, and Ellen MacPhee, a fantastic piper, all from Prince Edward Island. I'm smiling thinking about it.... we'd be howling with laughter and the tunes would be epic. I'd do anything in the world to hear them again.
On a flight from Boston to Halifax on one of those tiny planes, I ended up sitting right across from Hulk Hogan. He was decked out in his usual uniform of a bandana and white tank top. The poor fellow barely fit in the seat and was the colour of beef jerky.
I've read and reread Pamela Des Barre's memoir I'm With the Band about the Los Angeles rock music scene in the 1960 and ‘70s and would love to be a fly on the wall at that time. The fashion, music, creativity and overall sense of freedom seemed to be the golden era that will never be replicated again.