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September 2013

Music

A Salute to the Batalion de San Patricio

 

We’re very pleased to debut the first music video released by the Philadelphia-based , award-winning group, RUNA today, September 12, the official day of commemoration of the soldiers of the Batallón de San Patricio, a group of Irish immigrants who fought in the Mexican Army  against the US in the Mexican-American War in the mid-1800s.

RUNA performs their version of Gerry O’Bierne’s song, “The Holy Ground,” which was filmed on location at The Grand Canyon.

RUNA’s lead singer, Shannon Lambert-Ryan, explained that the song tells the story of “an Irish immigrant who moves from Cork (“The Holy Ground”), Ireland to the United States and down to Mexico. He becomes a soldier and joins the San Patricio Battalion in the Mexican Army. The song tells the story of his love for his countries, old and new, and his fight for freedom in Mexico.”

The Grand Canyon was “a perfect setting to tell their story,” says Lambert-Ryan.

The other members of RUNA are Fionan de Barra, Cheryl Prashker, David Curley, and Maggie Estes.

 

Shannon Lambert-Ryan and Fionan de Barra of RUNA.

Shannon Lambert-Ryan and Fionan de Barra of RUNA.

Music

Interview: Nuala Kennedy

Nuala Kennedy

Nuala Kennedy

Flutist and singer Nuala Kennedy, whose energetic and inventive spin on traditional music has earned her fans around the world, seemed destined to become a musician.

Growing up in Dundalk in Ireland’s County Louth, Kennedy lived in a household where music was ever-present. While not everyone who is raised in a house full of singers necessarily goes on to sing or play or perform, Kennedy was bit by the bug, which would grow to become a successful career, at a very early age. She never had formal lessons, but her mother sang, all of her father’s family sang, and her brother and sister also sang.

“Apparently I commented on my mum’s singing more or less as soon as I could talk,” Kennedy says. “That’s when they thought, ‘we must have someone here who is interested in music,’ and they gave me a whistle, and there was a piano in the house. I’d pick out a few songs on those instruments myself, and later started lessons on whistle and piano around age 7.”

When she was 12, her parents encouraged her to join a local ceili band, Ceoltoiri Oga Oghrialla, playing piano and flute. In the early going, Kennedy admits, she couldn’t play flute all that well. That changed quickly.

“I was just teaching myself, learning by osmosis from the other musicians in the band. I can recall the moment I could feel the flute vibrating, and I knew I was playing it – it was very exciting to finally be able to play. I was quite addicted. As an older teenager I learned so many tunes, as well as all the ceili band tunes, I used to take home tapes from the library and learn every single tune on them.”

In the ’90s, Kennedy moved to Edinburgh to expand her range beyond Irish music, to absorb what Scottish traditional music had to offer. She found the experience exhilarating.

“The pub sessions in Edinburgh is where I first experienced Scottish music and musicians, and in the mid-nineties it seemed quite a liberating musical scene compared to the one I came from, though that perception could also have been due to the simultaneous change from living in a town to living in a cosmopolitan city. There were a lot of people of different ages all playing together, and there was a great spirit of fun and camaraderie. You’d get little bits of crossover with musicians from different musical backgrounds. There’s a performance style in Scotland which is quite driving and group-orientated; there are lots of musicians who are versatile and can adapt to enhance the music, so the sound is greater than the sum of its parts, and it’s exciting to be a part of it.”

Fast forward a few years. Kennedy was teaching in a local primary school, but by that point in her life she had become thoroughly immersed in the Irish musical tradition, with more eclectic influences picked up along the way. She had become a master of the wooden flute and whistles. She had studied classical piano at the Royal Academy of Music in Dublin. Her singing–once described as “high, clear and beautiful measured”–had matured into something exquisitely beautiful, a sound all her own. Her songbook had expanded dramatically to pull in both Irish and Scottish influences, as well as contemporary accents. Performing was starting to pay the bills, so she made a decision.

“It came to a crunch: Trying to combine all the music I wanted to do with a full time job was too challenging, so I thought I’d try going full-time at the music for a while. That was more than ten years ago now.”

Her musical career took off, once again, in Scotland, where she formed one-third of the trio Fine Friday, with singer-guitarist Kris Drever and Anna-Wendy Stevenson on fiddle. Two hugely admired albums followed. A year after Fine Friday disbanded, Kennedy went into the studio to record “The New Shoes,” a sparkling debut.

Kennedy had arrived–far from where she started out, and yet still not all that far distant from her roots.

You can hear Nuala Kennedy, together with Eamon O’Leary next Saturday night in the closing concert of the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival. The concert starts at 7, with Tony DeMarco’s Atlantic on stage first. Tickets and other info here.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Gabriel Donohue will be hosting the second night of the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival on Friday.

Gabriel Donohue will be hosting the second night of the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival on Friday.

Get a little festival practice this weekend in West Windsor NJ—it’s the Mercer Irish Fest, with rides, food, vendors and music—nine different bands over the two day event. Bring the kiddies—under 12s are free.

Jamison is at the Sugarhouse Casino on Delaware Avenue in Philly on Saturday, the last night of the casino’s outdoor summer concert series. Slainte—which is Frank Daly and CJ Mills of Jamison—will be back at Sugarhouse on Thursday, September 12, for a Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade fundraiser with the Celtic Flame Adult Step Dancers.

On Monday, you can get a fab lunch with some great company at the monthly senior lunch at The Irish Center.

And on Tuesday, head back over for some free—yes, free–fiddle lessons from noted local fiddler and teacher Hollis Payer, whose classes will be starting up again on Tuesday, September 17.

Also on Tuesday, Dublin-born singer-songwriter Damien Dempsey will be performing at the World Café Live on Walnut Street in Philadelphia.

After that, get some sleep because Thursday is the first evening of the three-day Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival of Irish Music and Dance at The Irish Center. Tyrone-born musician Gerry Timlin (Timlin & Kane) will be host for the Singers Night, dedicated to the memory of longtime festival organizer Frank Malley, himself a singer.
On Friday, the McGillians and Friends will play for the annual ceili dance in the ballroom, while in the Fireside Room, musician Gabriel Donohue will host a “Rambling House,” a Clare tradition in which anyone is invited to trot out their “party piece,” whether it’s a tune, a song, or a story. Special guest: Cherish the Ladies’ Joannie Madden.

The festival continues on Saturday with free workshops for various instruments, Irish language, St. Brigid’s cross making, genealogy, and more, plus live music, dancers, Irish fairy tale telling, face painting and other kids’ activities. Saturday’s closing concert features the Philadelphia premier of fiddler Tony DeMarco’s Atlantic Wave, including DeMarco, Martin O’Connell, Donie Carroll, Sean Ernest, and Siobhan Butler, along with Nuala Kennedy with Eamon Leary. This is the real thing, folks—craic with a capital C.

Believe it or not, there’s even more going on. On Thurday, Oliver McElhone will be appearing at Jack McShea’s in Ardmore, join McDermott’s Handy at the Gloucester City Marina and Proprietors Park in Gloucetser City, NJ, for an Irish trad night along the Delaware, or check out the Broken Shillelaghs at the Dubh Linn Square Pub in Cherry Hill.

And on Saturday, September 14, it’s another festival—the 7th annual Gloucester City Shamrock Festival with Clancy’s Pistol, the Misty Dew’rs, and the Broken Shillelaghs, along with food, crafts, a beer garden and children’s activities, all along the Delaware River.

If you choose to, you can wave to them from the deck of the A J Meewald, a 120-foot sailboat leaving from Penns Landing on Saturday, with the Friends of Eric onboard playing Irish tunes.

If you think this is an overdose of Irish, just wait. Bethlehem’s Celtic Fest and the AOH Fall Irish Weekend are coming up. Word to the wise: pace yourself.

Check out all the fun from last year’s Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival here and here.

Music

Her Remarkable Career

Joanie and CTL

Joanie and CTL

She’s been described as “irrepressible,” “a force of nature.”

If you’ve seen Joanie Madden in concert, whether as the founder and leader of Cherish the Ladies, a gifted musical collaborator, or as a solo artist, you know it’s all true, and then some.

You’re not alone. In fact, some real heavy hitters also recognize the inexhaustible creativity of champion flute and whistle virtuoso Joanie Madden.

Let’s start with the United States Artists. In 2012, the nonprofit awarded Madden a $50,000 USA Artist Fellowship grant in recognition of her artistry. She’s the first Irish traditional musician to have been so honored.

In 2011, she was awarded the Ellis Island Medal of Honor, also because of her contributions to music and to Irish culture in the United States.

Madden, who will join Gabriel Donohue next Friday night for a largely informal Rambling House at the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival, takes it all in stride. Not that she doesn’t feel honored, but she’s so busy doing the very thing that brought her to the attention of those prestigious institutions in the first place: playing her music, seemingly everywhere and all the time.

“I did have a great year, winning the USA Fellowship. That was a big one,” Madden says. “It’s great to have it, and it does make all the hard work worthwhile, but I’d be doing this whether I got the trophy or not.”

Thank goodness for that. Take a look at Madden’s recent musical resume, and it’s clear she has no intention of slowing down, or doing the things that keep the creative juices flowing.

Already a Grammy winner and featured on the final “Lord of the Rings” soundtrack, more recently she contributed to the soundtrack of the BBC America series “Copper.”

Madden has always been in demand as a collaborator on projects outside of her duties with Cherish the Ladies. In 2008, she was featured on the TV show and CD “Absolutely Irish,” which featured a who’s who of Irish musical talent, including Mick Moloney, Seamus Egan, John Doyle, Liz Carroll, and many more. In 2009 she performed on “Pride of New York,” a gem of an Irish traditional recording also featuring Brian Conway on fiddle, Brendan Dolan on keyboards, and accordionist Billy McComiskey.

Probably her most treasured recent collaboration was with her own father, button accordion player Joe Madden, on 2011’s inspiring “A Galway Afternoon.” Also on the CD: Madden’s brother John on drums, pianist Charlie Lennon .. and our own Gabriel Donohue on guitar.

“Galway Afternoon” was easily one of the best CD recordings of Irish that year, and possibly any year. It was another notable triumph.
Of course, what made the album so memorable was the playing of Joe Madden, who was essentially ambushed by his daughter and coaxed into recording, which is not something he ever wanted to do. And what made it so poignant was that Joe Madden’s gift was captured just a few months before he died following a fall in his home.

Madden still feels the loss, but she too is extremely pleased that she was able to capture such an amazing performance, sharing that particular honor with her reluctant dad. “I was just so thrilled that we got it. That’s why you live today and you grab today. He was very happy he made that album, without a doubt.”

With a force like Joe Madden around, it’s not surprising that the family’s Bronx home was a gathering place for many of the best Irish traditional musicians. Still, nothing could have prepared her for her remarkable career.

“When I started out as a musician, the only Irish band that was really making it was The Chieftains,” Madden recalls. “The last thing my parents wanted me to do was to go into the music, except on weekends. I never knew I’d be happy doing that. But I practiced day and night. I just loved it.”

The came a point where Madden knew what truly made her happy, and she made her decision. “I said to my father, ‘I’m going to travel and play my music around the world.’ He said, ‘You’re out of your mind.'”

Later on, of course, Joe Madden came around, she says. “He was just thrilled.”

Collaborations aside, no discussion of Joanie Madden would be complete without mention of Cherish the Ladies, one of the first and most inventive Irish traditional supergroups. Aft 27 years of touring and recording, it’s Cherish the Ladies that continues to dominate her life. Happily, of course.

“My first commitment is a hundred percent to the band,” Madden says.”We’re all great friends, even today. You’re on the road with these guys for so many years, you get to become great, great friends–even like sisters. They’re always there when you need them.”

Which brings us back to where we started. When you think about a Cherish the Ladies concert, there’s no getting past Madden’s incredible humor and her intuitive rapport with the audience. It probably seems like second nature … but it wasn’t always that way. “I got over my shyness on the stage. I realized somebody had to do it. I remember going to see a show with the “Cars,” and they didn’t say anything all night.”

It’s that legendary ebullience, along with her undeniable talents, that have made her who she is today. For that, Madden continues to be grateful, even when the going gets tough.

“Some of our travel days are just torture,” Madden admits. “You get off a plane, and then you have to drive two or three hours. But as soon as you get on the stage, the adrenaline kicks in. I mean, I’m able to out food in the table for blowing the penny whistle. Come on.”

Tickets are still on sale for the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival. Details and schedule here.