- Born
- Birth nameLoreena Isabel Irene McKennitt
- Loreena McKennitt was born in Manitoba and began her music career peforming in a number of places including Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada before settling in Ontario. Her music was widely used in the TV series EZ Streets and is now heard in Roar.- IMDb Mini Biography By: <jdobbin@solutions.net>
- Her song "The Mummer's Dance" was used in the television commercials and movie trailer for Ever After: A Cinderella Story (1998) even though that song was not included in the soundtrack or the movie itself.
- In 1998, her fiancé, Ronald Rees, his brother Richard and their close friend Gregory Cook, drowned during a boating incident on Georgian Bay.
- Her vocal range is dramatic soprano.
- At the time of her fiancé's death, she was mixing a new album, Live in Paris and Toronto, at Peter Gabriel's Real World studios.
- Her fiancé, who was killed in an accident, was 12 years younger than her.
- I had been waiting for this person all my life. (On her fiancé who died in an accident on July 1998.)
- [observation, 2013] I think anybody who's working in the music industry and has been in it for any length of time will state unequivocally that the industry is in an advanced state of collapse.
- [on taking a hiatus from performing for several years] There were big big changes from that time [1998 to 2007], so I would say we hadn't really fully kept up to speed. But one thing I was well aware of is the lack of copyright reform. And it was a subject I followed along with, and participated in the last stretch, when our government brought in copyright reform. a few years ago.
- [on young performers beginning as buskers] I definitely encourage that. It's potentially a pretty brutal and honest way of seeing if what you're doing is of interest. But you have to set yourself in the right situation. The Market is a good place, particularly Saturday mornings and particularly after nine o'clock. The serious shoppers do that between six and nine and they're really not interested in music. But the social shoppers, with their kids, they'll stop and say, 'Here Johnny, here's a harp and isn't that lady..' Whatever. They've got time, they've got interest and they've also got money.
- I heard one recording of a harper from Brittany - Alan Stivell - and what was so interesting was he wove a Celtic harp with cello and drum kit and Breton pipes altogether, and electric guitar. And I thought, oh, that's really neat. He had a bit of rock, but also it wasn't the Highland pipes but the Breton pipes. Yet the cello line was a kind of classical kind of instrument. I would say that's an influence I adopted into my own music.
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