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Celtic balladeer
John McDermott was born in Scotland, but following his family's relocation to Canada in the mid-'60s, he went on to hone his crystalline tenor at Toronto's St. Michael's Choir School. After graduating he accepted the position of circulation manager with a Toronto newspaper; discovered while singing at a private party,
McDermott was befriended by publishing magnate Conrad Black, who funded the sessions that led to the release of the singer's smash 1992 debut, Danny Boy, a record originally intended as a gift for his parents' golden wedding anniversary. Old Friends followed in 1994, and a year later
McDermott issued
Christmas Memories; with 1996's
Love Is a Voyage, he even earned a Canadian Juno Award nomination as Male Vocalist of the Year.
When I Grow Too Old to Dream appeared in 1997, and a year later he resurfaced with
If Ye Break Faith -- We Shall Not Sleep (retitled
Remembrance for American consumption). Between 1998 and 2006 he released Old Friends,
Time to Remember, Celtic Tenor, and
Love Is a Voyage, as well as a collection of some of his most beloved material called
Timeless Memories: Greatest Hits. He reunited with
Irish Tenors Finbar Wright and
Anthony Kearns during this period, recording a new album with
the Tenors (2005's Deus Meus) and embarking on a U.S. tour in 2004. In 2007,
McDermott found himself with three new albums and an EP under his belt: O Canada,
When I Grow Too Old to Dream, On a Whim: Songs of Ron Sexsmith, and Daughter of Mine. ~ Jason Ankeny