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   » » Wiki: Steve Wickham
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Steve Wickham is an Irish musician. Originally from , Dublin, but calling home, Wickham was a founding member of In Tua Nua (left in 1985 replaced by Aingeala de Burca) and played violin on the classic U2 song "Sunday Bloody Sunday", as well as recordings by , the , Sinéad O'Connor, and . He is a long-standing member of . Wickham plays both rock and roll and traditional , and has developed a rock music technique for violin he calls the "fuzz fiddle".

Wickham is also accomplished with the , , , saxophone, piano, guitar and bones. He identifies , , Toni Marcus, and Mozart as musical influences, amongst others. He has been described by Mike Scott as "the world's greatest rock fiddle player" and by New Musical Express as a "fiddling legend."


Career with The Waterboys
Scott invited Wickham to participate in The Waterboys after hearing his work on an O'Connor demo tape at Wallinger's studio. Wickham contributed his fiddle to the song "The Pan Within" on The Waterboys' This Is the Sea. After the album was released, Wallinger left The Waterboys and Wickham joined the group officially. Wickham invited Scott to move The Waterboys to , Ireland in 1986. Wickham's influence and the new environment resulted in the traditional Irish music and traditional Scottish music sound of Fisherman's Blues (1988). In 1990, Wickham, preferring an acoustic sound over rock, disagreed with Scott and Anthony Thistlethwaite over the direction of The Waterboys, and left the band. Wickham appeared as a guest at some Waterboys concerts in Dublin in 2000, and, according to Scott "it felt so good he re-joined the band". The Waterboys now continue to record music and tour, with Wickham as a prominent member until he left the band again in 2021. While some of the band's recent releases have been dominated by a rock sound, such as the album A Rock in the Weary Land, Wickham's musical preferences can be seen in and in his own side-projects. Wickham also regularly performs with the Sligo Early Music Ensemble.


Fuzz fiddle
Wickham has experimented with a technique he calls "fuzz fiddle", partially inspired by rock fiddler Warren Ellis and the genre of music. Wickham's first attempt at a distorted rock fiddle sound was with a band named Juggler, which existed between 1978 and 1981. Wickham fed his fiddle through a guitar , but disliked the amount of feedback and the fact that it "was very difficult to control". While attending a concert with Scott, Wickham observed Ellis use a fiddle with a successfully. Wickham, after experimenting with some combinations, settled upon an , fiddle and pedal combination he was pleased with, "and the fuzz-fiddle was reborn". Wickham has used the technique for The Waterboys song "Is She Conscious?", a cover of Bruce Springsteen's "Independence Day" and, in a nod to 's version of "The Star-Spangled Banner", has also used it in a performance of "Amhrán na bhFiann".


Selected discography
Wickham has performed on numerous albums as a guest or band member. His first solo album, Geronimo was released in 2004: the album is named after Wickham's name for his "beloved" violin.

  • Solo albums:
    • Geronimo (2004)
    • Beekeeper (2017)
  • As a band member
    • :
      • This Is the Sea (1985)
      • Fisherman's Blues (1988)
      • Room to Roam (1990)
      • The Best of the Waterboys 81–90 (1991)
      • The Secret Life of the Waterboys 81–85 (1994)
      • The Live Adventures of the Waterboys (1998)
      • The Whole of the Moon: the Music of Mike Scott and the Waterboys (1998)
      • Too Close to Heaven (2001)
        • as Fisherman's Blues, Part 2 (2002) in the United States
      • (2003)
      • Karma to Burn (2005)
      • Book of Lightning (2007)
      • An Appointment with Mr Yeats (2011)
  • As a featured instrumentalist:


Geronimo track list
  1. "Lazy Days"
  2. "Mouth of the Shannon"
  3. "Fado"
  4. "The Hunter"
  5. "One of these Days"
  6. "A Snow Year"
  7. "Midnight Boy"
  8. "Lament for Pearl"
  9. "The Livestock Polka"
  10. "Polka Art O Leary"
  11. "Point to Point"
  12. "The Eclipse"


Notes and references

External links

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