HIGHLAND ROCK & ROLL
HIGHLAND ROCK & ROLL
Just as watery mist remakes the world and whisky remakes the man, Angus Mohr revitalizes traditional Celtic music’s brogue with an American blues accent while rejuvenating rock ’n roll’s broad spectrum with bagpipes and pennywhistles. No one is ever going to mistake Angus Mohr for a cover band. Sure, they play songs like “Foggy Dew,” the 1916 Easter Rising ballad, and “Whisky in the Jar,” a sixteenth century tale of love and betrayal, and their set list is peppered with songs penned by Dylan, Pink Floyd, Johnny Cash, and the Ramones. But you’ve never heard “Ring of Fire” or “I Wanna Be Sedated” until you’ve heard it with the pipes’ spiraling keen.
Angus Mohr’s piper, Matthew McDaniel, plays penny-whistles, guitar, and keyboards–sometimes all in a single song. He also shares lead vocals with bassist and frontman Paul McDaniel. Drummer Steve Mossholder takes a turn at the mic as well, lending his tawdry rasp to “Drunken Sailor” and Flogging Molly’s “Devil’s Dance Floor.” Michael Aggson brings his unique edge to the band, wielding his guitar with power and authority.
Welded together not by genre, but by a philosophy that embraces resistance to oppression and the fight for freedom, Angus Mohr crosses musical boundaries to pull in a diverse audience where fans steeped in blue collar classic rock, hippies old and young, grown-up metal heads, and the occasional post-industrial punk, dance to timeless music about timeless ideas. Music that is, like mist and whisky, the water of life.
“Buckle your kilt,
Sharpen your dirk,
Fill your flask,
And get ready to rock
With Angus Mohr”
“Buckle your kilt,
Sharpen your dirk,
Fill your flask,
And get ready to rock
With Angus Mohr”
features a hard-rock sound focused around traditional Celtic rhythms and pipes. They seem to channel as much Led Zeppelin and Iron Maiden as Scottish-Irish chants, and the audiences loved it.”
features a hard-rock sound focused around traditional Celtic rhythms and pipes. They seem to channel as much Led Zeppelin and Iron Maiden as Scottish-Irish chants, and the audiences loved it.”
blending Celtic music with rock, playing original and traditional songs. But there’s nothing traditional about Angus Mohr.”
blending Celtic music with rock, playing original and traditional songs. But there’s nothing traditional about Angus Mohr.”
with their energetic and electric interpretations of Highland music... And it's not often you see a rock band wearing kilts. Next time you get a chance to see Angus Mohr, take it.”
with their energetic and electric interpretations of Highland music... And it's not often you see a rock band wearing kilts. Next time you get a chance to see Angus Mohr, take it.”