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Jeff Meade

Food & Drink, News

St. Patrick’s Day 2014 at Brittingham’s

Tom Webster and Richie Maggs from Down By the Glenside

Tom Webster and Richie Maggs from Down By the Glenside

One of the area’s best known and beloved Irish pubs underwent a facelift last year. We wanted to experience St. Patrick’s Day in the Lafayette Hill eatery’s light and airy new digs.

The day started with a great buffet. The hash was the best we’d ever tasted.

Things got off to a slow start, but business picked up pretty quickly–not long after local singer-raconteur Oliver McElhone started to sing rebel songs, and whatever else anybody wanted to hear, from a stage not far from one of Brittingham’s two bars.

And both bars were pretty busy when we left.

St. Patrick’s Day at Brittingham’s attracted a pretty diverse crowd, including two guys from a band called Down By the Glenside who had played there the night before, and two off-duty nurses who had just come off the night shift. “It’s our happy hour,” they said.

Early or late, it was a pretty happy hour for everybody.

We snagged a few photos. Check them out, up top.

And one video of McElhone himself, singing … of course … a rebel tune. Feel free to sing along. We did.

News

Conshohocken 2014

Valley Forge Pipe Major Joe Raudenbush

Valley Forge Pipe Major Joe Raudenbush

There’s always a crowd at the Montgomery County St. Patrick’s Day parade. Saturday in Conshohocken was no exception. If anything, the balmy near-60 degree weather brought out many more Irish, and wannabe Irish. We also saw the first flip-flops we’ve seen in months, a harbinger of spring if ever there was one.

Grand Marshal Jay Murray, wearing the maroon kilt of Irish Thunder—he plays pipes—led the bands, dancers, fire trucks, local pols, Hibernians and more down Fayette Street.

Check out the photo gallery.

News, People

Paying It Forward

Jim MurrayA lot of people in Philadelphia would say Jim Murray ought to be canonized on the strength of a single miracle: As general manager of the Philadelphia Eagles, he determinedly and methodically drove the team from its status as perennial cellar-dweller to its very first Super Bowl in 1980.

Sadly, the Birds lost to the Raiders, 27-10. Miracle workers can do only so much.

What many Philadelphia don’t know, perhaps, is that Jim Murray has devoted his entire adult life to miracles, not just the kind that occur within the confines of a gridiron. Those other miracles are far more enduring, and they have had a deep impact on thousands of people—maybe more.

On Sunday, Murray’s contributions to the betterment of the city and well beyond the city limits will be recognized as he marches up the Benjamin Franklin Parkway as another kind of GM—this year’s grand marshal of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day parade.

To hear Murray tell it, his selection as grand marshal is just another shining example of the incredible good fortune that has followed him all his life. He is blessed with a genial, some might say “irresistible” personality, and you have to figure that helped. Murray could probably jolly the Israelis and the Palestinians into coming to the table, and afterward persuade them to play a pickup game of touch football in East Jerusalem. He has received every kind of award and honorary degree you can think of. He was inducted into the Philadelphia City All-Star Chapter of the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame in 1992, and he received President Ronald Reagan’s Medal for Volunteers of America in 1987. For a man of so many achievements, he is curiously self-effacing.

Not bad for a guy from 812 Brooklyn Street in West Philly, where Murray spent his early years before moving with his family to Clifton Heights. There was nothing in Murray’s life that might have predicted the successful life he has had. But it wasn’t as if there was anything standing in his way, either, and early on Murray set out to make the most of his gifts. Murray, the son of Mary (nee) Kelly and Jim Murray, has always been possessed of an indomitable and optimistic spirit.

“We were poorer than poor, and richer than rich,” he says, “but West Philly was a wonderful place to grow up. Officer Gallagher was down at the corner.  Everybody would turn you in if they saw you doing something wrong. Your street was your playground. We had no organized athletics, nothing like that, but I was always a sports fan. I don’t think you can put limits on prayer, God and good parents. Great teachers and mentors are a vital part of the equation. And it doesn’t hurt that you get lucky.”

When you hear Jim Murray speak, as he has had the opportunity to do several times since his choice as grand marshal, it is clear that he is a presence. Part of that particular aspect of his personality might have to do to with his build. He’s the first to joke about his belt size. Thursday night at the Doubletree Hotel in Center City, where he received his silken tricolor grand marshal’s sash, he worried aloud about whether it would fit. Every time he’s made a public appearance, he’s worn at least one hat. Last week at the CBS3 pre-parade party, he donned a gold yarmulke in tribute to his flawed, flamboyant, but nonetheless generous and beloved boss Leonard Tose. Yesterday, at a City Hall ceremony to declare March Irish Month, he wore a green Eagles cap. In neither case did it look like the headgear was a good fit for his head. His eyebrows are like furry little rain gutters. His cheeks are ruddy, and they rise like little helium balloons every time he smiles—which is often. He’s always good for a laugh—and often he’s the butt of his own jokes.

In short, Jim Murray is a big guy, but with a heart to match. He’s a hard guy to say no to.

And people have been saying yes to him for a long time.

But at least in one one case, someone said no early on. No matter who you are, you can’t escape hard knocks.

“I felt that I had a vocation, so in eighth grade, I went into the seminary, the Augustinian Academy on Long Island. In junior year, they thought a few of us had snuck out to see the Christmas show at Radio City. We didn’t actually go. We overcame the temptation. Long story short, we were expelled. That kind of thing is traumatic when you’re trying to decide. But once again, God has a sense of humor. I ended up getting thrown out and going to West Catholic. Being taught by the Christian Brothers was a great spirit.

After West, he attended Villanova. One day, he answered an ad for a student baseball team manager. He approached former Phillies first baseman and ‘Nova baseball coach Art Mahan. Murray admitted he wasn’t a baseball player, but he really wanted the job and was eager to learn. “Art Mahan changed my life,” says Murray. “When he died two years ago, he was 97 years old, the oldest living Phillies and Red Sox player. He gave me a lot of my personality training.”

It was Mahan’s advice that gave Murray his first break, in sports administration with the Tidewater Tides of the South Atlantic, or “Sally” League. After that, he served a tour in the Marine Corps Reserve, and then returned to baseball as assistant GM of the politically incorrectly named Atlanta Crackers. He went into the restaurant business for a time, but Mahan, who by then was Villanova’s athletic director, persuaded him to return to the university for a sports administration job.

“He called and said, ‘You have 24 hours to decide whether you want to come back here to be sports information director at Villanova.” Murray said yes. It didn’t take anywhere near 24 hours.

Murray loved the job, but a few years later, Mahan changed his life again.

“I was in the best job I ever had, but one day Artie said, ‘The Eagles are looking for an assistant PR director. You should go down and get interviewed.’”

Murray got the job. In time, through a lot of hard work and creative thinking, he moved up through the ranks to become the team’s general manager, and it was during those years that the team had its spectacular run.

One day, one of the Eagles’ players received the phone call no parent wants to receive. Murray remembers it well. It was a turning point for him, too.

“Fred Hill, who was a central casting tight end from Southern Cal, got a call from wife Fran at St. Christopher’s. His daughter Kim was diagnosed with leukemia.”

Leonard Tose being Leonard Tose,  he rallied to the support of Hill and his family, and looked for bigger ways to help. He threw his support and his money into “Eagles Fly for Leukemia,” and he asked Murray to lead the effort.

“We had the first big event,” Murray recalls. “It was a fashion show. Then the boss called me over. He had many addictions, but No. 1 was his generosity.” Tose asked Murray to go go to St. Christopher’s to find out how else the Eagles might help. “I had no idea how that would be part of my life.”

Murray visited St. Christopher’s and talked to one of the top docs, who admitted the hospitals had many crying needs, but he knew someone who needed help even more. “He looked around, and he says, ‘We need everything, but there’s somebody with a greater need. He said, ‘Her name name is Dr. Audrey Evans, and she’s a world famous oncologist. She’s at Children’s Hospital at 18th and Bainbridge.’ So I went to see this lady, Dr. Evans. I said ‘My name is Jim Murray. I’m from the Philadelphia Eagles,’ and she says ‘What are they?’ I said we’re on TV every week,’ and she says, ‘I don’t have a TV.” I said, ‘We have money.’”

That got Dr. Evans’’ attention.

Tose wound up supporting Evans’ proposal to create  special rooms for pediatric patients called “Life Lanes.”

But a later meeting with Dr. Evans led to something even bigger.

Murray met up with Evans at the Blue Line, a bar at the Spectrum, where he was going to present her with a check. “I said, now, what else do you need?’ and she said ‘It would be great if the parents of these children had someplace to stay.’ She said, ‘I want to buy a YMCA.’ I said, What you need is a house’ So she said, ‘Well, get us a house.’ Now I’m back to the rosaries.”

Murray had contacts in the MacDonald’s chain, and that was how he found out the restaurants were about to introduce the Shamrock Shake for St. Patrick’s Day. Murray asked for 25 cents off the sale of every Shamrock Shake to go toward the house. But then Murray got a call back from McDonald’s CEO Ed Renzi. ‘He said, if we give you all the money, can we call it Ronald McDonald House?’ I said, you can call it Hamburger House, anything you like.’”

That was in October 1974. Today there are 336 Ronald McDonald Houses in 35 countries.

Forty years later, Murray still can’t believe the project has come so far. And he still visits Ronald McDonald Houses just to see how the project still changes lives.

He recently visited the Philadelphia house with Dr. Evans.

“I never get used to it. There was a beautiful young girl from West Virginia, and her baby had a serious condition. I looked at Dr. Evans as she was looking at this young girl’s face, and I thought, it was exactly 40 years back at the Blue Line Bar that this started, and I thought about the kind of heart it took to bring these things together.”

Music

Help Bring a Hot New Band to the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival

FullSet

FullSet

It’s time to pay the piper.

And the fiddler, accordion player, flutist, guitarist, and bodhran player.

In short, the entire band known as FullSet.

You can bring this exciting ensemble of scary-good young musicians to the 40th annual Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival in early September … but the time to raise the cash necessary to hire the band is running short.

The Ceili Group is racing to meet a tight deadline to raise a minimum of $4,000, a substantial chunk of which is required to hire FullSet for the Ceili Group, a three-day extravaganza of Irish music, dance and culture, and one of the highlights of the Philadelphia folk scene.

“We have to have the goal raised by April 1 in order to book FullSet,” says Ceili Group Rosaleen McGill, the Ceili Group member who heard about the band and suggested featuring them at the festival. “Right now, they’re on a contingency. If we can’t meet the goal, we’ll have to release them.”

To bring in the bucks, the Ceili Group is turning to crowd-funding—typically, raising small amounts of cash online with the help of a large number of contributors. There are many crowd-funding websites. The Ceili Group is using a site called indiegogo.

“This is the way a lot of people are raising funds like that,” says McGill. “It’s a reasonable goal. I really trust in our community to help us raise the money and support the festival. The Ceili Group has touched a lot of people. We have a history of 40 years, bringing musicians over to Philadelphia before they hit it big. FullSet is affordable. They’re just coming up. They were up in Bethlehem at the Celtic Connections Festival last year. We’re hoping to tap into anyone who saw them up there.”

There’s another reason to bring FullSet to Philly, aside from their formidable performance skills. They also happen to be great teachers, says McGill. One of the highlights of the festival is the opportunity for up close and personal musical instrument instruction by performers. Some of the world’s finest Irish traditional musicians have shared their knowledge at the event, so making the musicians of FullSet available for workshops to is a real bonus.

Another great musician, the world-renowned singer Seán Keane, has already been booked.

Aside from the money required to hire FullSet, McGill says the Ceili Group hopes to apply some of the website contributions toward improving festival publicity.

“Last year, when we had a grant (from Pew), we did a lot of ads, and they seemed to really get people in the door. That’s another thing we were really going for. The more money we raise, the more if those ad opportunities we can get.”

As of today, the Ceili Group has raised $750 toward its goal, with 39 days left in the campaign. You can help close the gap. Visit igg.me/at/pcg40thfestival

News

In Mount Holly, They Love a Parade

It was just a little cold.

It was just a little cold.

“Precious” had a boo-boo. As witness the tropical-themed multicolored foam ring around her neck. That didn’t stop her person, Arden Townsend, from decking her out in St. Patrick’s Day finery—a little plastic high hat and a charming green silk doggie t-shirt.

And amazingly, Precious didn’t seem to mind at all.

It wasn’t the most unusual sight at the Burlington County St. Patrick’s Day Parade Saturday in Mount Holly.

Well, OK, maybe it was, but at this time of year there’s a lot of competition for “unusual.”

We’ve been covering St. Patrick’s Day in the Philly area so long, we’ve gotten used to even the most over-the-top top hat. Green hair? Ho hum. Shamrock deeply-bobbers? Fuhgeddaboudit.

That didn’t stop the folks along the parade route in Mount Holly from trying. Let’s face it, you have to be trying really hard to make a mummer look underdressed. The dude with the sparkly green tinsel wig sure pulled it off.

It was a bright but chilly day, and a lot of people along High Street wrapped themselves in blankets, but there’s something about a St. Patrick’s Day that leaves a warm feeling in your heart.

Or maybe it’s the Jameson’s.

Figure it out for yourself. Here are the pictures. More than 30 of ’em.

People

Like Father, Like Son

John "Jay" Murray and sons.

John “Jay” Murray and sons

John “Jay” Murray III, the grand marshal of the 2014 Montgomery County St. Patrick’s Day parade, sits in a hard wooden chair hastily moved into the kitchen of the Ancient Order of Hibernians Division hall in Swedesburg. It was the only room available for an interview. You couldn’t hear yourself speak downstairs in the bar, and the Irish Thunder Pipes and Drums had just started wailing away in the meeting room next door.

So there we sit, a stockpot and an industrial-size colander drying in the sink, a glassed-in commercial fridge humming away alongside us, and a 50-pound sack of potatoes behind us on the counter.

Murray’s dark hair is neatly parted in the middle, as it always is. He is wearing a neat gray suit and a blue dress shirt, his black shoes gleaming with what looks like a fresh spit-shine. Still, his tie is loosened, his arm is draped over the back of the chair, and he’s slurping a pint of Guinness. He’s relaxed.

Hard to believe that this mild-mannered all-round nice guy was once a narc for the Norristown Police Department. You can’t imagine how he pulled it off.

Murray was a cop for almost 27 years, rising through the ranks to become a detective. (He reluctantly accepted a buyout in 1996.) He loved his job, and he especially loved being a detective. He acknowledges that cops are exposed to the ugly side of human nature, but early in his tenure at Norristown PD, Murray learned to separate the professional from the personal. The lesson came by way of his father, John “Jay” Murray, Jr., also a Norristown police officer, a hail-fellow-well-met type who went on to become mayor of Norristown.

“I worked good cases.” Murray says. “I wasn’t taking domestic disturbances or ‘someone stole the flower pots off my porch,’ the minor stuff. I was doing robberies, burglaries and homicides. Stuff where you can do some god investigation work. I had a good career. It keeps you you going. But I never brought anything home. What happened at work stayed at work. I learned how to turn it off. My dad was a policeman for 22-23 years, the same as me. When I joined the force, he was still there. We had long talks and stuff. Words of wisdom. He was rough and tough, but he had a heart of gold. He told me that there was the police side of life, and then there was the other side. He said you take all my good stuff and keep that. Let the other stuff go.”

Anyone who knows “Jay” Murray can tell he learned his lesson well.

Murray and his pop were close. Where his father led, he would follow. Which is how Murray, along with his dad, became founding members of the AOH division.

An old friend from the force, Jim Cahill, was a member of another Montco AOH division, but he thought there was room in the county for another one. The problem? You need a minimum of 12 members to start a division. Cahill had rounded up a few prospective members—but he needed more.

“Jimmy had called me and asked him about it, and I kinda said, ‘I’m doing this and doing that. But he got to my dad. He knew my dad. Finally, after a couple of weeks or a a month of this, my dad called me, and said, ‘C’mon. we’re going to join.”

Almost immediately, the division grew by leaps and bounds. Murray became the division’s first secretary, and he continued to assume leadership roles in the nascent division. The two Murrays assumed prominent roles. So prominent, in fact, that when the division started to work on the Montgomery County St. Patrick’s Day parade, John “Jay” Murray, Jr., became grand marshal in 1995.

Murray went on to become one of the founders of the division’s pipe band. He learned how to play the pipes, and he brought along his brothers, Bernie and Mike, who became drummers.

As it happens, Murray’s father stimulated his interest in piping. “My dad had taken me a few times to hear pipe bands when I was a kid. It always stuck with me. I always had a love for it, so I did it. Then my oldest son Sean said, ‘I’d like to do that, too.’ I was here, and then he came along not too long after.”

Murray has enjoyed a good life, surrounded by loving family and friends, but hard times came late in 2013, when his wife Donna passed away. He has good days and bad days. The night we spoke, he admitted, was a bad day.

The days immediately following his wife’s death were especially hard.

Then came the division’s annual Appreciation Day on December 21. Murray didn’t want to go, but his sons, Shane, Casey and Sean, talked him into it. “I hadn’t been around since my wife passed. My kids ganged up on me and said, ‘C’mon, dad you haven’t been out. You should go.’”

Traditionally, the grand marshal is announced at Appreciation Day, which Murray knew all too well, since he had been parade chairman. The sons knew what was up, but Murray had no idea.

“The guy doing the announcing was the parade chairman, Jimmy Gallagher. I was on the police force with Jimmy when he first came on. He was still in uniform. I broke him in. We’ve been good friends ever since. First, he announced a couple of awards for something or other … and then he looks at me, and then he looks away, and then he announces me. I was flabbergasted.”

It was a much needed lift that at least temporarily eased some of the pain. It’s hard, but he manages to count his blessings.

“It’s an honor. I know the things that go into nominating someone who is deserving. We’ve had some really good ones—all nice guys, all decent guys. It feels real good to know they must think you’re a really nice guy too. It’s nice to be loved.”

And once again, Murray’s thoughts turn to his pop. “I knew what they thought of him. It feels good in my heart to know that they think his son deserved it, too.”

The Montgomery County parade marches down Fayette Street in Conshohocken on March 15, starting at 2 p.m.

People

Ten Years Is the Charm

One happy baby enjoys the parade.

One happy baby enjoys the parade.

A little over 10 years ago, Jim Logue had a brainstorm: Hey, kids, let’s have a St. Patrick’s Day parade in Burlington County.

Logue didn’t know what he was getting himself into. He enlisted the aid of a friend, Scott Mahoney, who didn’t have a clue, either.

That first year, it was a pretty short parade, with just 17 units. When the 10th anniversary parade steps off tomorrow in downtown Mount Holly, in the neighborhood of 60 units will march down High Street, including pipe bands, local paddy rock bands on flatbeds, Irish dance schools, AOH divisions, and more.

Every year, of course, there’s a grand marshal. This year will be two: the two determined young fellas who co-founded the parade.

“Jim and l and I were both members of the Ancient Order of Hibernians Tommy Maguire Division,” says Mahoney. “It was my first experience with the AOH. Right away, Jim was really into the idea of having a parade. I just went along for the ride.”

Scott Mahoney

Scott Mahoney

Logue and Mahoney have been instrumental in picking grand marshals year after year. Logue says the parade committee had often suggested that the two consider accepting the honor, but Logue always declined. Just running the parade was a massive undertaking, months in the planning. “We were just trying to keep things together. It never crossed our minds.”

Mahoney laughs when he recalls how the honor came their way. In the beginning, when they weren’t sure whether the parade would take off, they kidded other people on the committee about it. “We had kind of joked around about it. We said, if we make it to 10 years, we’ll be grand marshals. Once we mentioned it, people remembered.”

Logue says they kind of knew what was going on. Still, he says, being named grand marshal is a great honor—particularly when he thinks of all the grand marshals who went before.

His partner concurs.

Jim Logue

Jim Logue

“We have had some genuinely good people leading our parade. Being selected as grand marshal is something I’ll always remember, for sure.”

Typically, Logue emcees the parade from a platform at the bottom of the parade route. This year, he’s just going to sit back, take it all in—and try to relax.

“I’ll still be thinking: Is everything under control? The last few years, we got more and more people involved in the parade, and I know it’s gonna be even smoother this year. But still, in the back of my mind, I’m thinking: Is this gonna happen?”

Music

Interview: Singer Noriana Kennedy of Solas

Noriana Kennedy

Noriana Kennedy

What do you say when one of the world’s top Irish bands asks you to be the new lead singer?

Noriana Kennedy thought about her already thriving career. She thought about the demands of touring with a band that spends a lot of weeks on the road. She thought about time away from home and boyfriend.

But in the end, Kennedy, also a skilled banjo player, said yes—an enthusiastic yes—to Philly hometown band Solas.

Here’s how it happened.

Early last summer, Solas was performing in Dublin. Kennedy and the band’s lead singer at the time, Niamh Varian-Barry, were friends, and Kennedy asked whether she could join in, in a supporting role, and the band agreed.

“They took me up on the offer, and I did a solo set with some new songs I wanted to try out. Little did I know Niamh was leaving, and they were sussing me out for the job. A few weeks later, Winnie (Horan, the band’s fiddler and co-founder) texted me to let me know they were interested in having me join the band. I was thrilled and flattered.”

The decision was not a total no-brainer. Kennedy had just recorded an album with her trio, The Whileaways, and they were planning a tour. She also looked forward to recording her second solo album. Kennedy’s career was very much in progress.

“After a bit of thought and conversations with Seamus Egan (multi-instrumentalist and the band’s leader), it seemed right to join the band and balance all three projects.”

Joining a band as well established as Solas, on the other hand, is nothing like a no-brainer. Kennedy’s was a baptism by fire. There was no time for rehearsal in Ireland, so she joined the band for a one-month tour, starting in Philadelphia in July. There were a few days of rehearsal here, and she had been listening to the band’s CDs all along, struggling to memorize tunes. Then, she was off and running. “The first few gigs were daunting!”

Kennedy’s not completely sure why the band saw her as the right choice—”I must ask the lads”—but she suspects at least one of the answers lie in her deep interest in both the Irish and Scottish folk traditions, in combination with her love of American old-timey music. All that, she believes, blends in nicely with the Solas’s sound.

And it helps that she plays 5-string banjo, clawhammer style. Banjo is more than a passing interest for Seamus Egan, one of the world’s foremost tenor banjo players.

The Whileaways continue to figure prominently on Kennedy’s musical horizon. During Solas’s last one-month break, she returned to Ireland to record an EP with her friends. In April, during the next break, she will go back to Ireland to tour with the band, and release a single.

It’s a lot of music to jam into one life, but Noriana Kennedy has never known any other way. As a kid, she listened to everything—rock, reggae, folk, whatever rolled down the pike that engaged her interest. When she was older, she and her brother formed a band that toured five years before marriages and the demands of family put an end to it.

She continued to work as an environmental consultant, but then the recession hit.

“I decided to have a go at playing music in bars around Galway,” Kennedy says. “I’d teamed up with a brilliant Dutch musician who’d just moved to Galway, who sang and looked like Bob Dylan. We formed a group called Mad Uncle Harry, and we had a great following, and gigged four or five times a week.”

All of that gigging offered some useful schooling for a singer on the way up.

“It was a great three years, and great training for me. My voiced developed hugely after singing in bars and trying to be heard.”

If you’ve heard Noriana Kennedy sing, you know she learned her lesson well.

Solas will appear in concert Thursday, February 27, at 8 p.m. Visit st94.com for details.