Monthly Archives:

February 2014

People

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Get ready--it's almost that time again.

Get ready–it’s almost that time again.

The events are starting to multiply as we inch toward March. You can get some St. Patrick’s Day practice this weekend when The Next Generation, the youngest trad performers in the area, appear at the Garden State Discovery Museum’s Irish Festival (on Sunday at 2 PM, though the festival runs both weekend days); The John Byrne Band appears at the new Brittingham’s in Lafayette Hill (Saturday); the amazing (this fits all of them) Brian Conway, Billy McComiskey, Brendan Dolan and Mary Courtney perform together at West Chester University (on Saturday night) along with local fiddler Alex Weir, dancer Josh Srour, and the Do Cairde Irish dancers; and Jamison Celtic Rock, the Bogside Rogues, Raymond Coleman, and the Irish Flame School of Irish Dance help raise money for the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade at the FOP Lodge 7C in Northeast Philadelphia on Sunday afternoon.

And that’s not all: Celtic Pride is appearing on Thursday evening at Washington Crossing Inn.

Or you can catch The Broken Shillelaghs at Schileen’s Pub in Westvill, NJ on Thursday night as well.

Or. . .you can catch the supergroup Solas at the Sellersville Theatre on Thursday night.

The Philadelphia Rose of Tralee Center is holding an information meeting for anyone interested in entering the competition  to become Philadelphia’s next Rose of Tralee. It will take place on Thursday evening at The Radnor Hotel in Wayne, where the Rose of Tralee event is held every year. The Rose of Tralee is open to any young woman of Irish descent. The winner will compete in Ireland in the summer.

On Friday, three-time All Ireland concertina champion Caitlin Nic Gabhann will be joined by fiddler Ciaran O’Maonaigh, a former TG4 Young Musician of the Year, in a house concert in the Philadelphia area. For more information and location, email phillyceiligroup@gmail.com. These are two up and coming young Irish musicians who are worth seeing. Nic Gabhann is also an accomplished Irish dancer who performed in Riverdance.

And a big head’s up: The Burlington St. Patrick’s Day Parade is always the first one in our area, and it’s coming up in a week. Yes, on Saturday, March 1, there will be bands, pipers, dancers, and floats all heading down High Street in Mount Holly. It’s grown every year since we’ve been around (we’re heading into our eighth year of being Irish in Philly). You could top the day off be going to the Gloucester County AOH St. Patrick’s Day Party at 8 PM that evening with The Broken Shillelaghs, or hear Derek Warfield and the Young Wolfetones at the Rising Sun VFW Post 2819 on Martins Mill Road in Philadelphia, which starts at 8 PM.

Looking even further ahead. the “sashing” of the Grand Marshal of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade–this year it’s Jim Murray, former GM of the Eagles and founder of Ronald McDonald House–takes place at a dinner on Thursday, March 13, at the Doubletree Hotel in Philadelphia. Contact Kathy McGee Burns, chairperson of the event, at mcgeeburns@aol.com or 215-872-1305 for tickets and more information.

Then, after this, all Irish breaks loose. More on that next week.

If you have a March concert, gig, party, performance, play, anything going on, please put it on our calendar. It’s easy to do yourself: Go to the orange bar at the top of our page, click on Irish Events Listing, and fill in the blanks. If you have trouble, give me a shout-out on our Facebook page or email me at denise.foley@comcast.net.

Keep checking our calendar for late-breaking events.

People

Economy and Immigration: Ireland’s Top Priorities

Irish Ambassador Anne Anderson with SAP US President Gregory McStravick.

Irish Ambassador Anne Anderson with SAP US President Gregory McStravick.

Irish Ambassador to the US, Anne Anderson, in a speech to more than 400 people attending an awards program in Philadelphia on Thursday, illustrated the paradox of the Irish economic recovery. Called the European Union’s “bright spot,” Ireland’s economic growth has outpaced the rest of the Euro zone, its Moody’s rating has climbed from “junk” to investment grade, and Forbes Magazine recently called it the best place to do business in Europe.

But a 12 percent unemployment rate—a figure she admitted would be higher if young people weren’t still leaving Ireland in droves–still makes immigration reform in the US one of her top priorities, said Anderson at the Ambassador Awards at the Hyatt at the Bellevue, the premier event of the year of the Philadelphia-based Irish-American Business Chamber and Network.

She told a story of going home to Tipperary not long ago “where I went into the local pub for tea and sandwiches, and started talking to the barman. I asked him how things were and he told me it was great at Christmas, there had been a lot of life around the place until all the young people had gone back.” She asked him where they’d gone. “Australia,” he told her.

“They should have an opportunity to come here,” Anderson told the crowd, urging them to contact their local lawmakers to remind them that “this immigration issue has an Irish face.”

There are an estimated 50,000 undocumented Irish people in the US. “Most are employed, pay taxes and are good upstanding, god-fearing citizens,” said Anderson, who was Ireland’s permanent representative to the United Nations before replacing longtime Irish Ambassador Michael Collins nearly six months ago. “But they’re living in the shadows and I don’t have to tell you the human toll this takes—they’re unable to go back to Ireland for a terminally ill parent, a funeral, a wedding.”

The reason for the high number of Irish undocumented: It’s the unintended consequence of an immigration overhaul in the 1960s meant to end bias against immigrants from Asia, Africa, and Latin America. That left the Irish “with an infinitesimal share of green cards,” said Anderson.

Although several bills have been introduced in Congress to increase the number of green cards available to Irish citizens, immigration reform—like just about everything else in the US Congress—has been the victim of partisan skirmishes. There’s unlikely to be any movement in that direction unless some of the players change.

Anderson acknowledged that talking about Ireland’s recovery and at the same time pointing out the need to forge a new pathway for Irish immigrants to the US seems inconsistent. “We don’t want anyone forced out of Ireland,” she said. “But in the current circumstances [Ireland’s high unemployment rate] it’s a fact of life.”

Since many IABCN members do or want to do business in Ireland—like this year’s Ambassador’s Award winner SAP, the German multinational business software company with a US headquarters in Newtown Square and more than 1200 employees in three offices in Ireland—they’re no strangers to the facts of Irish life.

In fact, in his acceptance speech, SAP US President Gregory McStravick echoed Ambassador Anderson’s comment, citing Ireland’s highly educated populace and favorable business atmosphere, that “no one invests in Ireland for sentimental reasons.”

“We’re not doing it for sentimental reasons,” he told the crowd. “We’re not doing it because we’re good people, though we are. We’re doing it because it makes good sense for our business. There’s some very good talent in Ireland. . .and there are great benefits to doing business in Ireland.”

The Ambassador’s Award is one of three the IABCN gives out annually. Denis O’Brien, senior executive vice president of Exelon Corporation and CEO of Exelon Utilities (which includes PECO), was chosen to receive the Taoiseach Award, given to individuals of Irish descent who shows “exemplary leadership and compassion,” long before this year’s winter storms made this an “annum horribilis” for PECO.

Although more than 700,000 of its customers lost power–some for nearly a week—PECO got relatively good marks from most for its response: Thousands of PECO worker, putting in 16-hour days, with the help of more than 2,000 out-of-state electrical workers, restored power to all its customers in six days. It was the second worst storm in the company’s history.

Ann Claffey Baiada, RN, CRRN, director of Bayada Home Health Care, received the Uachtaran Award, given yearly to people of Irish descent who make “significant civic, cultural, or social contributions to the United States or Ireland, particularly contributions to the Irish diaspora.”

Baiada, who traces her family’s roots to County Donegal, grew up in a strongly Irish community in Germantown where, she said, “we had many mothers and you didn’t dare cross any of them.” It was also a community where she said everyone learned the important lessons, knowing right from wrong and to “take care of each other.”

The Irish American Business Chamber and Network is a nonprofit organization that promotes development of economic and education partnerships between the US, Ireland, and Northern Ireland.

View more photos from the event here.

Music

Review: “Ainneoin na Stoirme” by Téada

teada stormI believe the word I am looking for is “Wow.“

I refer to “Ainneoin na Stoirme (In Spite of the Storm),” the vibrant new CD from the Irish traditional supergroup Téada. It’s a jewel. Emerald, of course.

The band possesses a particular talent for resurrecting the great old stuff and making it seem like new stuff. A lot of bands play the old tunes with a good deal of flair, and a reverence for tradition. I probably like them all, in one way or another, for one reason or another.

Still, there’s something different and rare about Téada. The band’s world-class young musicians, led by founder Oisín Mac Diarmada on fiddle, know how to fill every corner of a room with rich, gorgeous sound. If you’ve heard them in concert, you know what I’m talking about. All the same, there’s a music box lightness and airiness to their execution of that sound that I’ve always admired.

So in that sense, “In Spite of the Storm” is more of the same. And that’s a very good thing indeed.

Now, add to the mix 2013 TG4 Traditional Singer of the Year and living legend Séamus Begley. He joined the band in March of 2012. His voice is like a branch of strong, solid mahogany, sanded down to a silky smoothness. It’s not as if Téada was ever lacking. Téada never needed anything to make it better than the already accomplished band that it is. And yet, Begley’s singing takes an already accomplished band and somehow completes it.

Begley’s singing produces many of the albums finest moments. I particularly liked the waltz “Ar A MBóithrín Buí/Tell Me Now.” Sung in Irish, it sounded like the gentlest of lullabies.

One cute little tune you won’t want to miss is Marty Robbins’ old chestnut, “Saddle Tramp.” Begley seems to delight in telling you a story, and this is a good one. You have to love the lyrics:

They call me a drifter, they say I’m no good
I’ll never amount to a thing
Well, I may be a drifter and I may be no good
There’s joy in this song that I sing

Couldn’t have said it better. Mac Diarmada might surprise you with his take on old-timey fiddling. It really makes the tune.

Of course, Mac Diarmada and his bandmates have always possessed the power to amaze. They hit the ground running with a blistering set of reels (“Dinny O’Brien’s/The Sweetheart Reel/Paddy Kenny’s”). You’ll be hanging on by your fingernails, but the boys hold the whole thing together with ease.

You’ll also a nice pairing of jigs and a slip jig, “The Jig of the Dead/I Have a House of My Own With a Chimney Built On the Top of It/Paddy Breen’s/The Bird’s Call.” Seán Mc Elwain opens the set with some terrific bouzouki licks, and he’s a key element of everything that follows, providing skilled counterpoint throughout.

Flutist Damien Stenson takes the lead on the final set, reels once again: “James Murray’s; Porthole of the Kelp/The Watchmaker/The Spinning Wheel. Very pretty.

I also have to say, I sometimes think its easy not to notice the contribution of the bodhran player. And I’m not just saying that because of my feeble attempts to play the thing. I think that’s because, if the drummer knows is business, he’s supporting the band in a very delicate, unobtrusive, but really indispensible way. It’s really not an easy act to pull off. Fair play, as the saying goes, to Tristan Rosenstock, who provides solid rhythmic  backing from the beginning to the end of this 11-track offering.

All told, a terrific and indispensable piece of work.

News, People

Being Cool to His Schools

Michael Bradley

Michael Bradley

As if he didn’t already have enough to do, Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day parade director Michael Bradley, Jr., is taking on a daunting new assignment. He is the chairman of a relatively new board that will oversee all 23 Catholic schools in Delaware County.

Bradley holds leadership positions in a number of organizations, including Penn State’s Board of Advisers. He also happens to be president of a family-owned flooring and wall protection company.

Busy or not, Bradley doesn’t mind a bit. In fact, he has been lobbying for a role in county schools ever since a Blue Ribbon Commission issued a report in January 2012 calling for some predictably unpopular choices. Faced with a 38 percent drop in enrollment and a staggering $6 million deficit, the commission ordered the closure of 45 of the Archdiocese’s 156 elementary schools and four of 17 high schools.

Twenty-four elementary schools appealed, and 18 earned a reprieve. All four high schools also were spared the chopping block thanks to millions of dollars in pledges and donations.

Nevertheless, parents and communities reacted with alarm, and no small degree of anger, to the commission’s findings.

“They were closing all of these schools,” he says. “The main thing I told them is, you can’t have one group in charge. I was badgering them about it enough so that they looked at it. I was not the only one, but I was at the forefront of the screaming. They agreed with me. They came up with a plan to name advisory boards to run the counties. People just want to be heard. Bringing it all down into more manageable units is better.”

In Bradley’s case, it was never a question of “be careful what you wish for.” A leadership role on the Delaware County advisory board was exactly what he wanted.

“It’s a challenge, and a really neat thing,” he says. “I find it rewarding to build things up from scratch—rather than complain about it, to come up with solutions. I love Catholic education. I live Catholic education. I enjoy the heck out of it because I enjoy the kids.”

Bradley says the immediate plan is to put the schools on more of a business footing, and to unite them in the quest for financial stability and higher enrollment. Stronger involvement on the part of the business community is also a key element.

“Every school has been left on its own. They weren’t sharing information. That’s crazy. It’s important to share, and give them direction on how to raise money. There’s government money out there for them. It’s available.”

Bradley harbors no illusions that every Delaware County school will survive. There are some tough decisions ahead. But for now—and probably long into the future, knowing Bradley—the advisory board is accenting the positive. Rather than talking about which school is going to close, he says, the focus now remains on how to keep them open.

It’s a tough job, but in the end, each school has to solve two problems. “They need money, and they need kids,” Bradley says. “That’s it. You solve those problems, and all the other problems solve themselves.”

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

A Screaming Orphan, screaming.

A Screaming Orphan, screaming.


Expect cancellations and delays this week—and possibly through Spring this year—as you attempt to be Irish. Here’s what our calendar says it’s going on, but be sure to call ahead to see if an event is still on:

One event that’s definitely on—the annual Midwinter Scottish and Irish Festival at The Valley Forge Convention Center. An incredible lineup of acts—and, for those of us who are winter weary, whiskey tasting classes—will make you forget that you just shoveled two tons of snow in five days and boy are your arms tired. Here’s the lineup—print it out and plan accordingly.

Friday night:
8:00 – 8:30 Angus and Didgeridrew
8:45 – 9:45 The John Byrne Band
10:00 – 11:00 Jamison
11:15 – 11:59 Albannach

Saturday
STAGE ONE

10:00 – 10:30 The MacLeod Fiddlers
10:35 – 11:00 Cummins Irish Dancers
11:15 – 12:00 The Bogside Rogues
12:15 – 1:00 Albannach
1:15 – 2:15 Brother
2:30 – 3:30 McLean Avenue Band
3:45 – 4:45 Mick McAuley and Winifred Horan

5:00 – 6:15 Screaming Orphans
6:30 – 7:30 Rathkeltair
7:45 – 8:45 Brother
9:00 – 9:45 Albannach
10:00 – 11:00 Hadrian’s Wall
11:15 – 11:59 Neil Anderson leads the Band Jam

STAGE TWO 

11:15 – 11:30 Campbell Highland Dancers
11:45 – 12:30 Colleen SearsonL
12:45 – 1:30 The Brigadoons
1:45 – 2:30 Rathkeltair
2:45 – 3:30 Hadrian’s Wall
3:45 – 4:15 The MacLeod Fiddlers
4:30 – 5:30 The Bogside Rogues
5:45 – 6:30 The John Byrne Band
6:45 – 7:30 The Brigadoons
7:45 – 8:30 McLean Avenue Band

Seminars and Whiskey Tasting

12:00 – 12:45 Irish Language Workshop
with Casey O’Connor
1:00 – 1:45 Scots Gaelic Workshop with John Grimaldi
2:00 – 2:45 What the Heck is a Bagpipe?
with Kent Wires
3:00 – 4:00 Whiskey Tasting (21 & up)
with Frank McDonald
UPSTAIRS
Casino Food Court

12:00 – 1:00 Olive McElhone and Frank Reed
1:15 – 2:00 Colleen Searson
2:15 – 3:30 Oliver McElhone and Frank Reed

THE WATERFORD BALLROOM
12:00 – 1:15 Scottish Step Dance Class
with Lynnette Brash
1:30 – 2:30 Ceili Dancing
with Rosemarie Timoney
2:45 – 4:30 Bagpipe and Highland and Irish Dance Tattoo
Featuring: The Washington Memorial Pipers,
Campbell Highland & Cummins Dancers

Trousers, a play by Paul Meade and David Parell about two Dubliners reminiscing about their summer in New York, continues this week at the Off Broad Street Theatre at First Baptist Church in Philadelphia, an Inis Nua Theatre Company production.

The 2014 CRN-USA North American Open Irish Dance Championships will be jigging and reeling at the Newark Liberty International Marriott Hotel in Newark.

On Monday, Donal Clancy, son of the late Liam Clancy of the Clancy Brothers, will be performing tunes from his new CD, “Songs of a Roving Blade,” at the Coateville Cultural Center.

On Thursday, Irish Ambassador Anne Anderson will present the Ambassador’s Award to the SAP company at the Hyatt at the Bellevue, an annual event sponsored by the Irish American Business Chamber and Network. The Taoiseach Award will go to Denis P. O’Brien, senior executive vice president of Exelon, and the Uachtaran Award will go to Ann Claffey Baiada, RRN, director of Bayada Home Health Care.

Ambassador Anderson will also meet with Neumann University students to discuss the Irish economy and fields that might provide promising career opportunities before the luncheon at Neumann, which is in Aston.

Then, on Friday, the fundraiser you wait all year for (well, I do, at least), the Delco Gaels “Dancing Like a Star” show in which 16 non-dancers dance their way to the trophy. It’s a fabulous show, the money goes to the Delco Gaels Gaelic sports program, and it sells out quickly so this is your last chance. Go to our calendar for the details on this and all of this week’s events.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Jamison Celtic Rock at Archbishop Ryan on Saturday.

Jamison Celtic Rock at Archbishop Ryan on Saturday.


Brrrr, it’s cold out there. And it’s also cold in here. Irishphiladelphia.com lost power during the recent ice storm so we’re borrowing wifi to update the site. For those of you with power—and without—here are some places where you can warm up this week.

On Saturday, Jamison will be Celtic rocking at Archbishop Ryan, a fun fundraiser for the school’s scholarship fund.

In Collingswood, NJ, Saturday night, the amazing Irish group, Clannad will be performing.

And you can catch the Broken Shillelaghs at Nipper’s Pub in Westville, NJ.

On Wednesday, take your honey to the Birdhouse Center for the Arts in Lambertville, NJ, for an evening of love songs by Annalivia, Justin Nawn, and Bronwyn Bird.

On Thursday, the Irish guitar band Kodaline is performing at World Café Live in Philadelphia.

A heads up for next weekend: The CRN-USA North American Open Irish Dance Championships will take place at Newark Liberty International Airport Marriott Hotel in Newark. Chairwoman of the CRN-USA is Olivia Hilpl, who runs the award-winning Rince Ri Irish Dance School in Bucks County.

And Donal Clancy will be performing at the Coatesville Cultural Center on Feb. 17.

Please check our calendar for other regular events, like the many sessions, and dance lessons in both Philadelphia and Wilmington. But check first before you set out. Some events may be cancelled because of the power problems in the area. We just learned, for example, that the regular AOH Ceili in Bridgeport was cancelled for this week because of power outages.