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Community and Christmas meet in Loreena McKennitt’s latest album

Canadian songwriter Loreena McKennitt usually travels to far-flung locations to find inspiration for her “eclectic Celtic” music. She’s sold 14 million albums that are rooted in Irish traditions but also include influences spanning from southern Europe to the Far East. 

In the wake of the pandemic, she yearned to create a Christmas show reminiscent of community concerts from her childhood. So that’s what she did for “Under a Winter’s Moon,” a live album recorded in 2021 at a Presbyterian church in Stratford, Ontario. The result is a communal celebration of values that are sometimes neglected in the bustle of the digital age. 

Why We Wrote This

By styling her latest album around the Christmas shows from her childhood, musician Loreena McKennitt explores the importance of ritual in holding communities together.

Ms. McKennitt is an advocate for celebrating a variety of rituals and traditions. The concert is a mix of Celtic Christmas carols and seasonal readings. In an effort to widen perspectives, the album also includes Indigenous actor Tom Jackson reading “The Sky Woman Story,” a tale that describes the creation of North America and its people.  

“You have a strength of fabric that happens in a communal sense where people … [are] vested in each other,” Ms. McKennitt says. “Our mission should be to know each other well, to look after each other.”

Loreena McKennitt’s new live album is a homecoming.

The Canadian songwriter and harp player usually travels to far-flung locations – Spain, Morocco, Turkey – to find inspiration for her “eclectic Celtic” music. She’s sold 14 million albums that are rooted in Irish traditions but also include influences spanning from southern Europe to the Far East. 

But in the wake of the pandemic, she yearned to create a Christmas show reminiscent of community concerts from her childhood. “Under a Winter’s Moon,” recorded in December 2021 at Knox Presbyterian Church in Stratford, Ontario, is musically adventurous yet highly accessible. The concert consists of Celtic Christmas carols and seasonal readings. It’s a communal celebration of values that are sometimes neglected in the bustle of the digital age.  

Why We Wrote This

By styling her latest album around the Christmas shows from her childhood, musician Loreena McKennitt explores the importance of ritual in holding communities together.

“Gratitude is such an important concept, and I wonder if I consider it enough,” says Ms. McKennitt during a Zoom call. “Also, there’s a lot to learn from the divinity of nature and the endless cycle of life and how the Christ story sits within that. And those sentiments of love and peace and hope and rebirth are so important.”

“Broad ways of thinking”

The recordings for her latest album feature a five-piece band. During “The Holly and the Ivy” and “Good King Wenceslas,” an ebullient combination of Irish whistle, cello, fiddle, and bouzouki makes the more than 100-year-old Knox church sound as lively as a banquet hall. Ms. McKennitt’s shimmering soprano utilizes the natural reverb of the vaulted ceilings on celestial pieces such as “The Wexford Carol” and “Balulalow.” “God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen” incorporates Middle Eastern modalities and rhythms.  

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