Love and legacy: Celtic Fiddlers founder Korona Brophy releases 1st solo album - Action News
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Love and legacy: Celtic Fiddlers founder Korona Brophy releases 1st solo album

Celtic Fiddlers founder, music teacher and instrumentalist, Korona Brophy has released her first solo album, called Heart to Heart.

Have a First Listen to Heart to Heart

Korona Brophy, third from left, is pictured at The Rooms in St. John's with the Celtic Fiddlers, an ensemble group she founded in 1993. (Submitted by Korona Brophy)

Playing every instrument, including violin, cello, bass and piano on her first album was not a challenge for Korona Brophy.

The 66-year-old Mount Pearl womantaught music in Newfoundland and Labrador's school system for 30 years and at Memorial University for more than a decade.

Brophy is also a member of the ensemble group the Celtic Fiddlers, which she founded in 1993. But it took a global pandemic for Brophy to take the time to rummage through her old sheet music and decide to make a solo album with producer Vaughn Sutton.

"I'm going to do it before I get too old, you know," she told CBC's Weekend AM. "So I did it, and I'm really pleased with it."

Dedicated to her grandchildren

The album, Heart to Heart, is dedicated to Brophy's four grandchildren and was supported by a grant from ArtsNL. The 13 tracks on the mostly instrumental album include tunes she learned from her parents and some that she taught, including Let Me Fish off Cape St. Mary's by Otto Kelland and Let it Be by the Beatles. Her grandkids also helped out, singing on Twinke Twinkle Little Star.

Korona Brophy taught music for more than 40 years in Newfoundland and Labrador. She says she wanted to put her favourite tracks on an album 'so everybody could enjoy it.' (Submitted by Korona Brophy)

Brophy started out playing the cello as a student at Mount Allison University and then pickedup the violin and bass. "Then I taught all the instruments, and I wrote the music," she said. "Back in the '80s you couldn't just buy scores, you know, you had to arrange them yourself."

From Corona to Korona

She says she gets asked all the time about how she got the name "Korona," especially since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Brophy said she was named after anaunt, Sister Corona Reardon, who was a member of the Sisters of Mercy. "Corona" means "crown," as in the crown of the blessed virgin Mary, she explains.

Brophy said she changed her nameto Korona while she was in high school to differentiate it from the Corona brand of typewriter and the Corona brand of cigar (this was before Corona beer came to Newfoundland and Labrador).

"I had one lady ask me if I took up the name since the virus started. 'Oh yes, of course I did,'" she joked.

Brophy dedicated the CD to her grandchildren. She says some of the songs on the album are ones she learned from her parents. (Ray Abbott)

Keep the music going

Brophy said a lot of Celtic Fiddlers performances have been cancelled due to the pandemic.

"Trying to keep your music going is difficult," she said, but going into the studio to record the album was joyful for her.

"I loved going to the studio. I loved just taking the time," she said. "It was such a work of love. I truly wanted to put this down on a CD so everybody could enjoy it."

Do you have a new album of music thatWeekend AMshould know about for First Listen? Email us,wam@cbc.ca, and tell us about it.

You can hear First Listen on Sundays onWeekend AMfrom 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. (5:30 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. in most of Labrador) on CBC Radio One.

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