Posts Tagged With: Festival

Joe Cooley and Willie Keane Weekends

This is why I am in Ireland!

But I did have a dilemma this last  weekend . It was October Bank Holiday weekend and there were two Festivals within striking distance. Solution – go to both.

So Saturday I headed off to the Joe Cooley Weekend at Gort about an hour’s drive from Caherush. Gort is just over the border in Co Galway and a pretty town it is. There is a magnificent monastic ruin just down the road and the home of Lady Gregory nearby. The streets are unusually wide and it is situated around a spacious square with a number of pubs, all within a quick jog of each other. Necessary to avoid the wind and the rain!  A perfect place for a Festival.

Where do you start when you arrive at 1:00 pm? Well you park the car and you wind the window down and listen and within moments you hear the strain of fiddles and accordions coming from inside O’Donnell’s Pub. So with my travelling companions, Danny and Nicolle, we headed in and immediately the circle widened to accommodate us. This doesn’t always happen and when it does you know you are in for a good session. It was led by box player Jim, who I am sure is the happiest man in Ireland, smiling and whooping his way through tune after tune and engaging all and sundry in continuous banter, and there were some older players and a good smattering of the next generation. So the music was a great mix and at a good pace. Plates of toasted ham cheese and tomato sandwiches kept arriving and even a special ‘order’ for vegetarian, Nicolle!

Around 3:00 we headed off to Sullivan’s Hotel for the highlight of the programme. This was the attempt on the Guinness World Record for the Largest Irish Band. The record is something around 270 held by nearby Kilfenora in Clare and only set earlier this year. There was palpable excitement as scores of musicians gathered outside the ballroom with their whistles, fiddles, banjos and pipes. Even a cahone (does that count?). Fevered last minute run-throughs of the chosen tunes created a somehow engaging dissonance, much as the expectation created by an orchestra tuning up. There was sheet music for those unsure of how the polkas went.

We all filed in shepherded by hi-vis vested marshals who almost outnumbered us, to take our places in rows of seats laid out for us. It looked like they were expecting around 300. There were cameras and videos including Irish TV there to record the event. Initially there was optimism but as the queues diminished and only half the seats were filled it became apparent to all that this was not to be the day. The scheduled start time of 4.00 pm went, perhaps in an attempt to scour the pubs for more musicians, and finally, it was after 4.30 when an excited announcer surprisingly proclaimed over the microphone “Congratulations! You have broken the record!”  Looking at the empty seats I was a bit confused.  “The largest Irish band in Connacht!”. There was excited applause as the crowd basked in the glory of being an ‘almost-Guiness World Record’ holder. To confirm the record we of course had to play and after a run through off we went launching into Maggie in the Woods. The sound was fantastic and it was actually quite thrilling to play with such a large ensemble, roughly in time and close enough to being in tune. There was genuine enthusiasm in the playing and in the reception from the assembled crowd, many of them proud parents. Then there were more tunes (not rehearsed!) and even a set dance. Was this the world  record for the biggest Ceili Band playing to a set dance?  Perhaps just in Connacht! Anyway it was all great crack and we queued up again on the way out to get a certificate to record the Attempt. There’s always next year!

The search resumed for the ‘killer’ session. So back to O’Donnelly’s where there was a new crowd of musicians but equally welcoming and then to Johnny Ward’s. This session was in a separate room with no bar and was as close to a house session as you could get. It was unfortunately marred by an extremely drunk bodhran player, with a Walton’s instrument and while it had a lovely celtic design the music did not match as he proceeded to beat it  mercilessly and a whistle player who certainly made his presence felt. I watched as this man, already finding it hard to stand up demolished his next Guinness in two swigs. Despite these ‘distractions’ which contributed to a sometimes messy sound there were moments of absolute magic in the music. Concertina player, Patrick and a couple of box players and a banjo drove the session and I provided the only fiddle – an unusual event. Tunes were played fast but with a real skip which gave the music a lovely rhythmic lift. It was absolutely fantastic to play along with. After this session fizzled and a plate of Taco Chips from Supermac’s there was another great session at Sullivan’s populated mainly by Galway  musicians and three hours went so quickly as we cycled through a familiar array of reels and jigs.  Bed was very welcome at 3:00am after close to 12 hours of playing.

Sunday morning arrived, with all good intentions to head to the Willie Keane Weekend at Doonbeg (about ten minutes drive to the south of Caherush) in time for the Trad Breakfast, I have to admit the late night proved too much of a barrier and I didn’t get there until 2pm! There was music in four pubs on the main street of the village, famous more for the Donald Trump Resort a couple of kilometres out of town than anything else. But this weekend it was all about the music. Some of the best music you will hear and most of it coming from the unsung and the unheralded. Highlights for me included:

A wonderful set from Tony Linanne and Padraig Mac Doncha (in an Eb session) at Madigan’s, the brilliance of Andrew MacNamara and Mark Donnelly, the surprise packet that was Scaradaragh (a group of Sliabh Luachra musicians from North Cork), just so much fun to play with – bring on those polkas!, the brilliance of the young musicians from Tulla and Kilmaley (Amy & Gearoid McNamara and Yvonne & Pamela Queally, joined by friends including the Murphy sisters from Dublin) and then a great exhibition of sean nos dancing to wind up Sunday night.

On my way home after a fabulous day, I popped into the bar at Tubridy’s to the sight of a table of well primed revellers enjoying the music of Roisin & Conor Broderick and Deirdre Winrow. One of them saw me come in with my fiddle on my back and yelled. “Here he is. I have been reading about you” Taken off guard I asked what she meant. “In the brochure – you’re the fiddler!” They then engaged me in a random conversation in which it became apparent they were down from London for a weekend of golf at the Trump Resort. Luckily they didn’t stay long and on her way out I asked the girl what she meant. She explained that it was me in the programme as a “fiddler’ from 10pm and they were waiting for me. I looked to the corner where Dierdre was quite expertly pumping out a reel on her fiddle and pointed out “but there’s already a fiddler here.” “No” she said in all seriousness “that’s a violinist!” And she retreated with her companions to their five star room in the Lodge at Trumps…..

One other quick anecdote. Sitting, engrossed in my playing at the Igoe Inn (great name!) I felt a hand on my shoulder and a whisper in my ear. “Kevin Crawford” was all she said. I looked around to see a middle aged lady standing over me. “What about him?” I whispered back.  [Kevin, of course, is the well know flute player from Lunasa]. “Is he here?” she said seriously. “I haven’t seen him”, was all I could think to say and apparently satisfied she wandered off. I later found out she had done this with every musician in the place! He should be very pleased he has such a devoted fan.

Anyway, home by 1.00 am after another ten hours of almost continuous sessioning on top of the previous day. So I think I put in a good shift. A quiet couple of weeks now but really looking forward to the Ennis Festival coming up. Stay tuned.

Here are some pictures from the weekend. …….

Registering for the World Record Attempt

Registering for the World Record Attempt

Toasted Cheese and Tomato Sandwich

Toasted Cheese and Tomato Sandwich

Danny and Nicolle lead a session

Danny and Nicolle lead a session

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Optimism

Optimism

Last Minute Practice

Last Minute Practice

Filling up

Filling up

Expectancy

Expectancy

The biggest Irish Band in Connaught!

The biggest Irish Band in Connaught!

Mick Minogue on his ancient goatskin

Mick Minogue on his ancient goatskin

Session at Johnny Walsh's Gort

Session at Johnny Walsh’s Gort

Session at Sullivan's in Gort

Session at Sullivan’s in Gort

Alice from Galway via Australia

Alice from Galway via Australia

Danny from Australia

Danny from Australia

fingers

fingers

I was there!

I was there!

Tony Linanne and friends, Doonbeg

Tony Linanne and friends, Doonbeg

Session at Igoe Inn, Doonbeg

Session at Igoe Inn, Doonbeg

Sliabh Luhraca comes to Clare.

Sliabh Luhraca comes to Clare.

Andrew MacNamara and friends, Doonbeg

Andrew MacNamara and friends, Doonbeg

Igoe Inn

Igoe Inn

Igoe Inn

Igoe Inn

Great craic

Great craic

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Categories: Festivals, Trad Irish Music | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

100 Nights of Sessions – 100 photos!

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Traidphicnic. Spiddal 2014. “Will I know the next tune?” Siofra Barker

Tubbercurry 2014. Alistair Cassidy. For my next trick…….

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Tubbercurry 2014. John Joe Kelly

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Tubbercurry 2014. Flute session

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Tubbercurry 2014. Paddy Ryan

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Ennis 2014. Brogan’s. Yvonne Casey, Josephine Marsh and Fu Akamine.

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Drumshanbo 2014. Keith from Wales.

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Drumshanbo 2014. Albert from Barcelona

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Drumshanbo 2014. Caroline from France

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Drumshanbo 2014. Jose from Barcelona

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Drumshanbo 2014.

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Drumshanbo 2014. Concentration!

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Drumshanbo 2014. The kids take over the High Street.

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Achill Island 2014. Brendan Begley at the Valley House

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Feakle 2014. Fiddles!

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Feakle 2014. Pat O’Connor

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Feakle 2014. Vincent Griffin

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Feakle 2014. Maurice Lennon and Vincent Griffin

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Tubbercurry 2014. Alistair Cassidy. Snap!

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Willy Clancy Festival. Milltown Malbay 2014. Geraldine Cotter and Kieron Hanrahan.

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Tubercurry 2014. Johnny Og Connolly and friends.

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Feakle 2014. Yvonne Kane and Cormac Begley

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Feakle 2014. Edel Fox, Yvonne Kane, Cormac Begley and friends

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Feakle 2014. Joan Hanrahan and Dympna O’Sullivan.

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Feakle 2014. Steve from England

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Feakle 2014. Eileen O’Brien

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Feakle 2014. Young Clare musicians

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Feakle 2014. Eoghan O’Sullivan, Dennis Cahill.

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Feakle 2014 Eileen O’Brien and Pat O’Connor

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Feakle 2014. Thierry Masure

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Feakle 2014. Antoin Mac Gabhann

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Feakle 2014. Dennis Cahill

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Feakle 2014

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Sligo 2014. Irish music played by Spaniards in the Itailian Quarter. Jose and Montse.

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Traidphicnic Spiddal. Tola Custy, Laoise Kelly and Mike McGoldrick.

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Traidphicnic Spiddal 2014. Magic fingers. Mike McGoldrick

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Tubbercurry 2014. Nicolle Figueroa Gallaga.

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Tubbercurry 2014. Emmy and Veronika from Netherlands

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Tubbercurry 2014. Rita from Switzerland

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Willy Clancy Festival. Milltown Malbay 2014. Adam Shapiro

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Willy Clancy Festival. Milltown Malbay 2014. Friels Hotel. Can’t compete with the World Cup and Brazil vs Germany.

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Willy Clancy Festival. Milltown Malbay 2014. John Rynne,

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Feakle 2014. Orla Harrington, Eileen O’Brien, Andrew MacNamara

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Willy Clancy Festival. Milltown Malbay 2014. Enjoying the Craic

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Traidphicnic Spiddal. Tola Custy

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Feakle 2014 Seamus Begley at Peppers

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Sean Keane

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Laura Ugur and John Rynne

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014.

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Musician’s Corner

Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Gerry Harrington demonstrating the Stroh Viol to James Kelly’s fiddle class

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Maurice Lennon and Sean Ryan

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Tubbercurry 2014. The (virtual) reality of the modern session

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Tubercurry 2014. Phillip Duffy

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Sean Ryan

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. The next generation.

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Adam Shapiro and Patricia Wang

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Busking in the Miltown sun

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Let there be light. And there was. And it shone upon the fiddler

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Fiddler

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Fu Akamine and Patricia Wang

Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. The genesis of a session, Coore.

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Coore

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Coore

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Liz Coleman

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Traidphicnic, Spiddal. Florianne Blanke

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Sean Keane, John Joe Tuttle and friends

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Harry Bradley, Sean McKeown, Connie Connell.

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. The front bar at Friels. Gerard Callaghan, Rick Epping (in the mirror) Mick Creehan, Mick Hand

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Rick Epping, Mary Bergin, Mick Hand and Mick Creehan

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014.

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Kevin Rowsome

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Stefan, Dermie Diamond, Angela Creehan, Sinnead Nic Dhonnachadgh

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Pat Mullins, Macdaragh Mac Dhonnachadgh, Maurice Lennon, Sean Ryan

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. All boxed in at the Blondes.

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Lorraine O’Brien, Catherine McEvoy, a bemused Jackie Daly, Aoife Granville, Niall Kenny and Conal O’Grada. Revenge of the flutes.

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay, 2014. Crosses of Anagh. Alistair Cassidy and Daire Mulhern

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Willie Calncy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014, Street Session with Leon Agnew, Antoin Mac Gabhann and Seamus Sands

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Frank Kelly and Leon Agnew

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Enjoying the craic at Friels. Niamh Parsons

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Antoin Mac Gabhann

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Seamus Sands

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Alistair Cassidy, Crosses of Anagh

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. In the sunshine at the Blondes. Ciarán Mac Aodhagáin, Siún Ní Ghlacáin, Damien O’Reilly

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. the Blondes.

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Niall Kenny and Caitlin Ni Ghabhann, John Flynn

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Caitlin Ni Gabbhan in the sunshine at Blondes

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Gilles Tabary on flute

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014.

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay 2014. Aine Ni Chellaigh, Josephine Boland and Declan Fay

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Feakle 2014. Sorcha Costella, Brian Donnelly and Aisling Hunt.

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Fleadh Cheoil Sligo 2014. Street buskers

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Feakle 2014. Peppers – Half set dance to the music of Seamus Begley

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Fleadh Cheoil. Sligo 2014. Seamus Tansey at Shoot the Crows

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Fleadh Cheoil. Sligo 2014 Christina and Fiona from London

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Achill. 2014.. Brendan Begley and Harry Bradley

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Fleadh Cheoil Sligo 2014, Liam Kelly and Shane Mitchell, Martin McGinley at Riverside Hotel.

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Willie Clancy Week. Miltown Malbay. My last free Willie

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Willie Clancy Week, Miltown Malbay, Geraldine and Martha Clancy at Mullagh

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Willie Clancy Week Miltown Malbay, 2014

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Willie Clancy Week Miltown Malbay 2014. James Kelly

Recently I completed my 100th continuous night of Sessions since I came to Ireland.  Not something I set out to do but over the moon that it has panned out that way. Since I started at Tullamore on 15th May and then Ennis three days later for the Fleadh Nua I have not missed a night of playing Irish music and have not felt like missing one. My hundredth night was just a lovely quiet way to ‘celebrate’ with Joan Hanrahan and friends at Kelly’s Bar in Ennis – a classic Irish Pub with a long pedigree of traditional sessions.

It would be impossible to estimate how many sessions I have participated in as on some days such as in Miltown or any of the other festival for that matter I might have played in half a dozen. Quality has been variable as you would expect but at every session I felt privileged to be there.

I have played with musicians both ‘famous’ and unheralded (but not necessarily less talented), with musicians from all over Ireland and almost every part of the globe, musicians from 8 years old to 88 and beginners and masters of the tradition. And not only players but lovers of the music who might have travelled from Cork or Canada or Sligo or Sweden to just sit and listen for hours. All brought together to share this wonderful secret we all have that is Irish music. Shhh! Don’t tell anyone.

I have been to eleven festivals so far including Doolin, Willie Week, Spiddal TraidPhicnic, Tulla, Clare Fleadh at Kilaloe, Tubercurry, Drumshanbo, Achill, Feakle and the Fleadh Cheoil at Sligo. I have been to Workshops and Summer Schools and had lessons from fiddlers such as Maurice Lennon, James Kelly, Paddy Ryan, Tola Custy, Siobhan Peoples, John Daly, Liam O’Connor, Martin Hayes, Eileen O’Brien, Yvonne Kane and Yvonne Casey. So if I still can’t play the fiddle after all that then I have only myself to blame.

Whether I will continue at this pace I don’t know but for me the journey is not over and while I get something from each session I go to I will keep going.

I have put together 100 photos to celebrate these 100 days.  Some are amongst my favourite photos and others are of the many wonderful people I have met,  but collectively I hope they give some feel for the mood and magic that is an Irish music session.  Photos come from Miltown, Tubercurry, Drumshanbo, Spiddal, Achill and Feakle. I have included photos from sessions before Willlie Week in my earlier blogs.  Where possible I have tried to identify everyone.  Thanks Niamh and Graham for your help.  If I have missed anyone my apologies and please let me know and I will edit the caption,  and if I have spelt your name wrong, apologies again.

Thanks for the tunes!

 

Categories: Festivals, My Journey, Sessions, Trad Irish Music | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

McArthur’s Bar Tulla

I mentioned McArthur’s Bar in my recent blog on Tulla. I want to say a few more words on it. This place deserved to be in the late Peter McCarthy’s wonderful book McCarthy’s Bar even though he would have had to stretch the qualifications a bit (If you haven’t read this book it is a must; it is one of the best travel books written on Ireland). I saw the pub during the day and it looked to be just another abandoned building. A peek through the window failed to see any sign of life or even recent use and the weeds growing behind the front window did not look promising. But walking past it at midnight there was a glow of lights through the drawn shades and blurry shadows through the frosted window pane.  And the door was just slightly ajar. A familiar murmur came from behind the door.  The quiet hum you get from a pub pretending to be shut. I went through the door into the narrowest of rooms and it was jam-packed. With my fiddle on my back I could hardly squeeze through the door and then past the throng. I could hear music and I stood there momentarily until someone seeing my fiddle nodded his head towards the back saying “it’s in there”. I made my way through another narrow door into another crowded room. I couldn’t help but notice the floor as I walked up a distinct concrete slope. One can only imagine this being a huge advantage when they hose it out at the end of the day.

The music was getting louder as I reached the back room. It was coming from a bunch of kids most of whom looked under 15. By now it was midnight.  Their parents were watching and lemonades in hand they were producing magic music. I felt like an intruder but was invited to sit in. It was as good a session as any I had been to in Ireland.

This experience showed to me a window into the ‘real’ Ireland. A country that has gone through centuries of struggle and subjugation, indeed attempts to eliminate the Irish music and language, was here thumbing its collective nose at petty authority that says children can’t be in a pub after 9pm. Wonderful.

I said in an earlier post that one needs to “go with the flow” in Ireland. After this experience I should add “if you see an open door go through it”.

 

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McArthur’s Bar in Tulla

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McArthur’s Bar in Tulla at Midnight.

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Categories: Sessions, Stories, Trad Irish Music | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Doolin Folk Festival Day 3

Final day of a fabulous three day Festival saw an enthusiastic crowd wowed by Gavin Moore, Siobhan Peoples, Murty Ryan and Pat Marsh, Lisa O’Neill, the New Road, The Unwanted, Dezi Donnelly and Mike McGoldrick, Damien Dempsey and Blackie O’Connell and friends.

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Categories: Festivals, Trad Irish Music | Tags: , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Doolin Folk Festival Day 2

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Well it just gets better! Highlights today were the talented Tommy McCarthy and Louise Costello, the delightful and inventive Twin Headed Wolf, the amazing Mick O’Brien and Caoimhin O Raghallaigh, the beautiful Whileaways, the energetic and dynamic Moxie and The Bonny Men,  the unbelievable Mairtin O’Connor, Cathal Hayden and Seamie O’Dowd, the sensational Solas, a guest appearance from Luka Bloom and the captivating and charismatic Kila.

 

 

Categories: Festivals, Trad Irish Music | Tags: , , , | 1 Comment

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