Alan Stivell (; born Alan Cochevelou on 6 January 1944) is a French Celtic musician and singer, songwriter, recording artist, and master of the Celtic harp from Brittany.

From the early 1970s, he revived global interest in the Celtic (specifically Breton) harp and Celtic music as part of world music. As a bagpiper and bombard player, he modernized traditional Breton music and singing in the Breton language. A precursor of Celtic rock, he is inspired by the union of the Celtic cultures and is a keeper of the Breton culture.

Musical career

Early life and career beginnings

thumb|upright|"Crystal Harp" [[solid-body (Goas-Stivell, 1987)]]

Alan Stivell was born in Riom on 6 January 1944.

His father, Georges Cochevelou, was a civil servant in the French Ministry of Finance who achieved his dream of recreating a Celtic or Breton harp in the small town of Gourin, Brittany and his mother Fanny-Julienne Dobroushkess was of Lithuanian-Jewish descent. In 1953, Alan began playing the instrument at the age of nine under the tutelage of his father and Denise Megevand, a concert harpist. Alan also learned Celtic mythology, art, and history, as well as the Breton language, traditional Breton dance, and the Scottish bagpipe and the bombarde, a traditional Breton instrument, from the oboe family. Alan began playing concerts at the age of eleven and studied traditional Breton, English, Irish, Scottish, and Welsh folk music, also learning the drum, Irish flute, and tin whistle. Alan spent his childhood in Paris, with its cosmopolitan influences. But he fell in love with Breton music and Celtic culture, in general, and often went back in his teens to Brittany.

In 1970, Stivell released his first hits, the single "Broceliande" and the album Reflets, both on the Philips record label. He became closely associated with the burgeoning Breton roots revival, especially after the release of the purely instrumental 1971 album Renaissance of the Celtic Harp, which won one of the most famous awards in France, the prize of the Académie Charles Cros.

On 28 February 1972, Stivell performed a concert in the Olympia theater, a famous music hall in Paris, where Alan and his band played music combining traditional Celtic music with modern sounds (electric guitar, drums, etc.). This concert made Stivell and his music well known throughout France. Stivell's records in the late 1990s contained more pronounced rock elements, and he performed at a rock festival called Transmusicales in Rennes. He continued working with a variety of musicians, inviting Paddy Moloney (of The Chieftains), Jim Kerr (of Simple Minds), Khaled and Youssou N'Dour to be in his very international 1 Douar / 1 Earth album. The same year, the DVD Parcours was published by Fox-Pathé.

In 2006, a new CD album called Explore came out in France and other countries, distributed through Harmonia Mundi. The album explored fusions of Celtic music with electro-rock, raga and hip-hop with a unique and personal vocal style and an original mix of lyrics in Breton, English and French.

thumb|Alan Stivell and [[Nolwenn Leroy performing "Brian Boru" at the Paris Olympia in 2012]]

In 2009, the title of his album Emerald celebrated his emerald anniversary with his fans (i.e. forty years together) and paid homage to the sea and the Celtic lands (color blue-green, Glaz in Breton language). In 2013, a new CD album and DVD called Olympia 40th Anniversary came out in France (Universal) as a result of the concert performed at the Olympia mythical music hall on 16 February 2012.

On 2 October 2015, Stivell released a new CD album called AMzer: Seasons through WorldVillage in France (and other countries), his first one of the 2010s, coinciding with his career's 50th anniversary. The album is also available as a "Leclerc limited edition" including 3 bonus tracks (2 alternative mixes and a brand new instrumental) and a 60-page booklet.

Critical acclaim

Music critic Bruce Eder has written: "[Stivell's] harp recordings, with their enveloping lyricism and tightly interwoven patterns of variations, can appeal to more serious listeners of new age music. Stivell's main audience, however, lies with fans of Celtic music and culture, and English folk music. Embracing ancient and modern elements, but (apart from his folk-rock work) making no compromises to modern melodic sensibilities, his music captures the mystery and strangeness of Breton, Irish, Welsh, and Scottish landscapes that are both ageless and timeless. It is haunting, mysterious, and beautiful, with no equivalent in modern popular music and few peers in the realm of commercial folk music."

In the 1978 book Racines interdites ("Forbidden Roots"), a series of interviews with Stivell covers questions about the Breton language, history and geography, as well as his utopian vision of a world living in meditative harmony with nature. Lyrics for 17 of Stivell's songs are reprinted at the back of the book.

Legacy

Alan Stivell has influenced multiple contemporary artists, most notably folk metal band Eluveitie. Their biggest hit 'Inis Mona' shares a melody with the traditional Tri Martolod. Where it is played on bagpipes, tin whistle and hurdy-gurdy with the addition of harsh vocals, electric guitar, bass guitar and drums.

Instruments

<gallery>

Festival de Cornouaille 2016 - Alan Stivell - 13.jpg|Celtic harp and low whistle

Alan Stivell - tin whistle.jpg|Vocals and tin whistle

Festival de Cornouaille 2016 - Alan Stivell - 14.jpg|Bombard

Alan Stivell - biniou.jpg|Electronic bagpipes (MIDI)

Festival de Cornouaille 2016 - Alan Stivell - 11.jpg|Great Highland bagpipe

Pat O'May et Alan Stivell 02.JPG|Electric guitar

</gallery>

Discography

Original (studio and live) albums

  1. Telenn Geltiek / Harpe celtique (1964) <small>(studio #01 / instrumental #01)</small>
  2. Reflets / Reflections (1970) <small>(studio #02)</small>
  3. Renaissance of the Celtic Harp (1971) <small>(studio #03 / instrumental #02)</small>
  4. À l'Olympia / Olympia Concert (1972) <small>(live #01)</small>
  5. Chemins de Terre / From Celtic Roots / Celtic Rock (1973) <small>(studio #04)</small>
  6. E Langonned (1974) <small>(studio #05)</small>
  7. E Dulenn / À Dublin / Live in Dublin (1975) <small>(live #02)</small>
  8. Trema'n inis: Vers l'Île (1976) <small>(studio #06)</small>
  9. Raok Dilestra: Avant d'accoster / Before Landing (1977) <small>(studio #07)</small>
  10. Un dewezh 'barzh 'gêr: Journée à la maison / A Homecoming (1978) <small>(studio #08)</small>
  11. International Tour: Tro ar Bed (1979) <small>(live #03)</small>
  12. Symphonie Celtique: Tir Na N-Og / Celtic Symphony (1979) <small>(studio #09)</small>
  13. Terre des vivants: Bed an dud vew (1981) <small>(studio #10)</small>
  14. Legend / Légende / Mojenn (1983) <small>(studio #11)</small>
  15. Harps of the New Age / Harpes du Nouvel Âge / Telenn a' Skuilh-dour (1985) <small>(studio #12 / instrumental #03)</small>
  16. The Mist of Avalon (1991) <small>(studio #13)</small>
  17. Again (1993) <small>(studio re-recordings with other artists in duet)</small>
  18. Brian Boru (1995) <small>(studio #15)</small>
  19. 1 Douar / 1 Earth (1998) <small>(studio #16) ("Eunn Douar" in Breton)</small>
  20. Back to Breizh (1999) <small>(studio #17)</small>
  21. Au-delà des mots / En tu-hont d'ar c'homzoù / Beyond Words (2002) <small>(studio #18 / instrumental #04)</small>
  22. Explore (2006) <small>(studio #19)</small>
  23. Emerald (2009) <small>(studio #20)</small>
  24. AMzer: Seasons (2015) <small>(studio #21)</small>
  25. Human~Kelt (2018) <small>(studio #22)</small>

A l'Olympia and In Dublin were recorded live, but featured only new, previously unreleased tracks.

Compilations

  • Attention! Alan Stivell! (1973)
  • Grand Succès d'Alan Stivell (1975)
  • 70/95 Zoom (1997) – Disques Dreyfus <small>(2-CD compilation 1970~1995, 35 tracks)</small>
  • Routes (1997) – Disques Dreyfus <small>(4-CD boxset / 73 tracks / 32-pages booklet)</small>
  • Vers l'île (1999) – Universal Music Group <small>(3CD "Long Box" / 30 titres / booklet)</small>
  • Ar Pep Gwellañ (Le best of) (2012) – Universal Music Group <small>(CD best-of including a bonus CD of the remastered recording of the 1972 "Olympia" concert)</small>
  • 40th Anniversary Olympia 2012 (2013) – Universal Mercury <small>(CD/DVD Live about the new concert in Paris)</small>

Family tree

References

Footnotes

Sources

  • Laurent Bourdelas: Alan Stivell, Brest, 2012,
  • Yann Brekilien (photog. Padrig Sicard): Alan Stivell ou le folk celtique, Paris, 1973,
  • Jonathyne Briggs, Sounds French: Globalization, Cultural Communities, and Pop Music in France, 1958–1980, Oxford University Press, 2015, Chapter 4 "Sounds Regional: The World in Breton Folk Music",
  • Anny Maurussane and Gérard Simon: Alan Stivell ou l'itinéraire d'un harper hero, Paris, 2006,
  • Alan Stivell, Jacques Erwan and Marc Legras: Racines interdites / Gwriziad difennet, Jean-Claude Lattès, Paris, 1979
  • Alan Stivell and Jean-Noël Verdier: Telenn, la harpe bretonne , Brest, 2004,
  • Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine:

<!-- Per WP:ELMINOFFICIAL, choose one official website only -->

  • (English, Breton and French language)
  • Biography until 1995
  • Alan Stivell at discogs.com
  • Alan Stivell at Rate Your Music.com
  • 2019 interview with Innerviews