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Jeff Meade

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Jamison will be appearing at the Philly Fleadh which is produced by Frank Daly, far left, and CJ Mills, far right.

Jamison will be appearing at the Philly Fleadh which is produced by Frank Daly, far left, and CJ Mills, far right.


Imagine most of the great Celtic bands from the Philadelphia area all in one place. You don’t have to imagine—they’re going to be at the Philadelphia Fleadh, at the Ed Kelly Ampitheater in Pennypack Park in Northeast Philadelphia on Saturday. The Young Dubliners are headliners on the Celtic rock stage, with Blackthorn, Jamison, Bogside Rogues, Galway Guild, the John Byrne Band and many others playing on four stages throughout the day, which is supposed to be beautiful weather-wise.

Irish comic Dylan Moran brings his new show, “Yeah Yeah,” to the Trocadero on Saturday night. You may remember him from the Simon Pegg hit films, “Shaun of the Dead” and “Run Fatboy Run.”

On Thursday, The John Byrne Band does a concert in Pastorius Park in Chestnut Hill. Grab your blanket, grab your baby, grab your bucket of beer and head over there for a lovely evening of Irish, folk, and singer-songwriter fare. On Friday, the band will be bringing its Pogues show to Tir na Nog in Philadelphia too.

Arts

Beach Reads, Irish Style

A fave

A fave

Our Facebook group has 2,190 members. It was starting to feel like all of them had something to say when we asked them a question: What’s your favorite Irish book? We expected a healthy response, but nothing like the torrent of recommendations that came flooding our way. If you’re looking for some great Irish-themed reads for your stay in North Wildwood (or wherever your family summer migration pattern dictates), we have a ton of suggestions.

Before we boil things down—and that’ll be hard, because there were so many ideas—we invite you to join the group on Facebook. If you aren’t a regular visitor, you’re missing out.

Here’s some of what our Facebook pals recommended. (We won’t be able to include them all.)

First off, there was a lot of agreement around certain books, and certain authors. Not surprisingly, books by the prolific Roddy Doyle made the cut.

Thomas Ivory’s favorites: The Barrytown Trilogy, which included “The Commitments,” “The Snapper,” and “The Van.” They’re all hilariously irreverent tales of the

Rabbitte family of Barrytown, a North Dublin working class suburb. If you’ve seen any of the movies based on the books—”The Commitments” being the best-known—you know what we’re talking about. As great as the movies were, the books are so much better and grittier. “Not sure if they’re my favorites,” Tom says, “but they’d be good beach reading.”

Tom also recommended anything by Sebastian Barry. “A Long Long Way” and “The Secret Scripture,” for two.)

Tom O’Malley and Rosie McGill also recommended a Doyle masterwork—a bit on the serious side, but equally gritty, the brilliant “A Star Called Henry.” Laura McPhail also recommended anything by Doyle.

A couple of books by Frank McCourt, not surprisingly, also made the cut: his masterwork, “Angela’s Ashes,” and the later “Teacher Man.” Of the latter, Mary Beth Bonner Ryan says: “I laughed so hard, he tells some of his experiences as teacher and the journey he took from Ireland to America. Very good light read, perfect for a nice summer read!”

One surprise: A few of our friends highly recommended a book about Ireland written by an author who is most decidedly not Irish: the historical novel “Trinity,” following the lives of Catholic and Protestant families, and the tensions that arise from long-simmering religious and political differences. The author is Leon Uris.

Says Kevin Quigg: “Even though Leon Uris is American, I read the novel in Ireland while staying in the area where the story took place.”

Brendan O’Neill also recommended “Trinity.”

If you’re looking for something lighter (MUCH lighter) many of us recommended an incredibly silly book, “Round Ireland With a Fridge,” by Brit comedian Tony Hawks. It just goes to show the lengths to which people will go to win a bar bet. We’ll leave it at that. I loved it, my Irish Philly partner in crime Denise Foley loved it, and so did Rich McEntee:

“”Round Ireland with a Fridge” was ferkin hilareous, I recommend it to everyone. not sure it should be read in public though, unless you are very not-shy about busting out in laughter.”

Kathleen Madigan had so many recommendations, it’s probably a good thing we posted the question on Facebook, and not Twitter:

“Here are a few: 1- “The House on a n Irish Hillside” by Felicity Hughes-McCoy. It is a true story about rediscovering one self though simplicity; 2- “Ireland” by Frank Delaney; 3- The series by Patrick Taylor. I have read “Irish Country Doctor”, “Irish Country Village”, Irish Country Christmas”, and “Irish Country Girl”. I am now starting on “Irish Country Courtship”. There are also others in the series I haven’t read yet; 4- “When Ireland Fell Silent” by Harolyn Enis. Have tissues for this one.”

A pile of recommendations, too, from Anne Torpey Smith, leading off with McCourt’s seminal work: “”Angela’s Ashes” still has to be my all-time favorite Irish book. I recently read “A Week In Winter” by Maeve Binchy and enjoyed that. Also Tess Gerritsen’s “The Bone Garden” appealed to me in two ways—being of Irish descent and as a nurse. One character was a poor female Irish immigrant in Boston. One aspect of the story was the fate of many poor women dying from “childbirth fever”, before the simple step of washing one’s hands between deliveries became commonplace for doctors and nurses.”

Runa lead singer Shannon Lambert-Ryan chimes in with a travelogue that makes you believe lovers (she and her spouse Fionán de Barra) can truly be star-crossed: “Lonely Planet Ireland 1999—A picture of Fionán busking on Grafton Street was in the book. I must have seen that picture a hundred times from when I took it on my first trip to Ireland in March 1999 before I met him in 2006! Who knew I would wind up marrying that guy in the picture!”

We could go on, but we’re running out of room. OK, yes, we know this is a blog, and you really can’t ever run out of room, but still … start with this bunch, and then visit us on Facebook to see the rest.

And you can continue the discussion here by adding your comments.

People

A Trio of Triumphs

Liz and Pearse Kerr

Liz and Pearse Kerr

If good things truly come in threes, you don’t need to look any further for proof than Temple heart transplant nurse Liz Kerr.

Kerr has always been inspirational—certifiably so when, in 2010, she was selected to be one of the first Inspirational Irish Women. She is also extremely active in the Ladies Ancient Order of Hibernians, co-founder of Brigid McCrory Division 25.

But within the past month or so, Kerr racked up a trio of triumphs:

  • She graduated from Arcadia University with a master’s in fine arts in writing.
  • A short story she wrote won first prize for fiction in the City Paper’s annual writing contest.
  • Franklin’s Paine Skatepark opened on a large, open tract just off the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, culminating many years of work and bringing to fruition the most fervent desire of her son Patrick, who died in a skateboard accident in 2002 at the age of 15.

We met on a sunny Sunday afternoon at the skate park—it seemed fitting—and we found a reasonably shady spot out of the way of the kids on boards and two-wheel scooters hurtling by.

Kerr is particularly proud of her degree. It’s tough to see how she fit it into her already jam-packed life, but she was powerfully motivated.

“It took two years. It was really intense, but in a good way,” she said. All the same, she laughed, “I finally have my life back.”

Kerr chose the Arcadia program because it strongly promoted the idea of submitting your work for publication—which she did, with relish. Last year she was fortunate to be the runner-up in the fiction category of the City Paper’s annual writing contest. But this year, her short story “After the River,” an unvarnished examination of ordinary lives and loss set in Philadelphia, snagged the top prize, earning the following jaw-dropping review from judge Bee Ridgway:

“After the River” is a gorgeously crafted short story. The first sentence shows us that we are in the hands of a master of American style: the image that cuts to the core of the story’s meaning. The larger shapes of the story are woven together perfectly. The personal loss that traps the main characters becomes the loss that defines the city … and that we see mirrored in other cities across the nation. This is a love story to Philadelphia—and also a eulogy. It is, in my opinion, a heartbreaking triumph.

Kerr also recently published a short story for a compilation, Rust Belt Rising Almanac, published by The Head & The Hand Press. The story, “Radium Girls,” is about female factory workers who developed cancer after exposure to radium while painting watch dials early in the 20th century. It seems like a long time, but women factory workers worldwide, she said, are still exposed to risk. “It just makes me sad to think about the girls who were dying then … and they’re dying now.”

Kerr read from the story recently at a release party–something she doesn’t like to do. “I’m a terribly nervous reader,” she said, “but my family was there, so that kept me calm.”

More stories are on the way, she added. As much as she loves writing, how could it be otherwise?

“Nursing is a great career, but my fun thing is to write. I’ve always wanted to write. It’s just so exciting to get published,” she said.

As the conversation continued, Kerr stopped now and again to say hello to some of the kids on skateboards she has come to know, and to chat with suitably impressed first-time visitors. Kerr is proud of many things, but Franklin’s Paine Skatepark would have to be high on the list.

Patrick Kerr was an early advocate for safe places to pursue his sport–places where, as in Love Park, skateboarders wouldn’t be hassled for doing something they loved, probably more than anything in their lives.

Kerr, for her part, never understood the inclination to criminalize the kids. Skateboarding, she said, “kept kids out of trouble. They made friends, they stayed healthy. They were out in Love Park doing something rather innocent, I thought.”

The climate changed, she said, when John Street became mayor. In him, the skateboard community found a receptive audience. And at the same time, members of City Council—notably Jannie Blackwell—took up the cause.

After Patrick’s death, Kerr threw her lot in with other skateboard advocates to bring safe, hassle-free parks to the city and surrounding areas. Franklin’s Paine might be the most ambitious of all the projects, and Kerr expects it to become known nationwide as an outstanding example of how to blend skateboarding into an urban environment.

Of course, it’s impossible to forget the inspiration behind her support for the cause. Patrick is memorialized with a plaque on a wall overlooking the park. But his spirit is there in yet another way. The contractors who were pouring concrete for the job asked the couple if they had anything of Patrick’s to blend into the mix.

They chose a lock of Patrick’s hair, and one of his guitar picks.

“That’s what we did,” she said, clearly moved. “Some people might think that’s a strange gesture, but to us, we wanted him here.”

News

Looking for a Few Great Irish People

The Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame in the St. Patrick's Day Parade.

The Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame in the St. Patrick’s Day Parade.

Do you know someone who has continued, preserved, or dedicated themselves to Irish traditions and culture? The Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame is seeking nominees for its 13th annual Hall of Fame ceremony, scheduled for November.

The nominees should have distinguished themselves in the areas of music, education, dance, sports, philanthropy, business etc. Send a letter with your nominee, explaining why they should be chosen to

Kathy McGee Burns
2291 Mulberry Lane
Lafayette Hill, Pa.19444
Or
Mcgeeburns@aol.com

Deadline in June 24, 2013.

People

Thanks For Coming Out!

Karen Boyce McCollum singing "Peggy Gordon."

Karen Boyce McCollum singing “Peggy Gordon.”

It was literally raining buckets on Friday night, June 7, but that didn’t stop dozens from attending the launch party of our new CD, Ceili Drive: The Music of Irish Philadelphia, at the Irish Center. Fortunately, many of them were the musicians whose talents we captured, like a snapshot of Philly Irish musical history, on the CD, so there was beautiful music–and delicious food provided by Tullamore Crew–all night.

You can hear some snippets of the CD at the bottom of the page. If you like what you hear, you can buy it at our shopify website.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

immigration front
A belated happy birthday to William Butler Yeats. The Irish poet would have turned 148 this week. He captured the homesickness those far away feel about Ireland:

“I will arise and go now, for always night and day
I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore;
While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements grey,
I hear it in the deep heart’s core.”

This is an unusually Irish week in the Philadelphia area. This Saturday is the Penn-Mar Irish Festival in Glen Rock, near York. Headlining on stage will be The Elders from Kansas City with the Screaming Orphans from dear old Donegal. There are vendors, activities for the kiddies (who get in free), Irish dancers and Irish food.

Blackthorn is playing at YachtStock Riverjam on Saturday night. It’s happening at the West End Boat Club in Essington.

You can catch the Shantys at Paddywacks in Philadelphia on Saturday afternoon.

Black 47, the NY-based Celtic rock band fronted by Larry Kirwan, will be performing on Saturday night at Fran’s Pub in New Hope.

And Jamison will be at Curran’s in the Tacony section of Philadelphia on Satruday night as well.

Sunday is Bloomsday at the Rosenbach Museum on Delancy Place in Philadelphia. Starting at noon Joyce enthusiasts from all walks of life bring the novel, “Ulysses,” to life by reading sections aloud. Among the readers are BBC’s Frank Delaney, Bill McLaughlin (founder of the Irish American Business Chamber and Network) and his daughter, Morgan, and Fergus Carey of Fergie’s Pub and other popular drinking establishments.

Speaking of Fergie, his wife, Christine Chisolm, has a month-long show of her photographs at stadler-Kahn, the store at 17th and Sansom.

And speaking of Bill McLaughlin, the Irish American Business Chamber will be celebrating its 14th year on Thursday, June 20, at the Corinthian Yacht Club in Essington.

But before we get ahead of ourselves, there’s more this weekend. Celtic Women is at the Mann Center—beautiful women, beautiful voices, killer instrumentalists. Sounds like a perfect gift for Father’s Day.

Or maybe Dad would prefer Jeana Leslie and Siobhan Miller, two Scottish musicians, who will be performing with Aaron Jones, front man for The Old Blind Dogs, are performing on Sunday at the Blue Ball Barn in Alapocas Run State Park in Wilmington.

Kildare’s is calling Monday “St. Practice Day.” Along with your Irish nachos, you get free Irish dancers because it’s the 17th.

And speaking of practice, try out your dance steps—or learn a few—at a special sean nos Irish dancing workshop with noted sean nos (meaning old style) dancer Keiran Jordan, who grew up in the Philadelphia area but now makes her home in Boston. That’s happening at the Irish Center, thanks to the Philadelphia Ceili Group.

On Wednesday, there’s an important meeting at the Irish Center. Ciaran Staunton of the Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform will be explaining the immigration reform proposals now before Congress. Before you make up your mind to tell your legislator to vote yay or nay, listen to Staunton and get your questions answered. The program is free and starts at 8 PM.

Wednesday is also Irish Heritage Night at the Camden RiverSharks at Campbell Stadium. Check our calendar for promo codes to get $5 or $8 tickets.

Love to have tea with an Irish minister? That’s a government, not a church minister. Irish Minister of State at the Department of Health Alex White is paying a visit to the Irish Center on Friday morning for tea and conversation. You need to RSVP at 610-789-6355 by June 17.

Then, clear the decks for Saturday’s awesome first annual Philadelphia Fleadh, featuring four music stages (everyone from the Young Dubliners to Blackthorn, Jamison, and the Bogside Rogues, to the John Byrne Band and some fabulous local Irish session musicians, and even a passel of DJs) for an all-day Irish lovefest in Pennypack Park.

Check out our calendar for all the gory details.

Music, News

Philadelphia Fleadh: Right on Schedule

Philly's next big Irish event.

Philly’s next big Irish event.

Ask Frank Daly how the plans are going for the Philadelphia Fleadh—many acts on 4 stages in bucolic Pennypack Park on Saturday, June 22—and he’ll boil it down to one word. “Insane.”

“I’m not even kidding,” said Daly, front man for the popular Celtic rock group Jamison, when I caught up with him on the phone this week. “I didn’t realize how fragile all the pieces of this thing are.”

Can you say, Murphy’s Law, kids? First, the primo sound guy—he does Celtic Fest in Bethlehem and major rock shows—called to say he wasn’t sure he could pull this one off. (Crisis averted—turned out to be hard, but not impossible.) Then one of the sponsors backed out. (Crisis averted: the owner of Maggie’s on the Waterfront and Goodchild Repair Center stepped in—without being asked.) Final straw: The company providing the tents and the port-a-potties had the wrong date. (Crisis averted: They can do it on the 22nd.) “I thought, man, are you trying to give me a heart attack,” Daly said, laughing.

That’s right. He’s still laughing. Because in the end, he says, it will all work out. “If I thought about all the possible things that could go wrong that day I would never sleep at all. CJ (American Paddy and Jamison partner CJ Mills) and I keep each other sane and positive. We were sitting there the other night, all stressed out, and we suddenly said, do you realize what we’re doing here? This is really cool. So we cracked open a couple of beers, said ‘cheers’ and now let’s get back to it.”

Cool is the word for it. On the Celtic Rock stage, the Young Dubliners are headliners, though it’s likely the crowd will also be packed with fans of the local talent that includes Jamison, Blackthorn, Bogside Rogues, Galway Guild and Clancy’s Pistol. Hosting will be Dan Cronin of Chorus Communications, who is also a Celtic DJ and runs the Hair O’ The Dog gala, a event that has raised thousands of dollars for local nonprofits.

Over at the Sugarhouse Casino Trad Acoustic Stage, the John Byrne Band will be doing their Pogue’s Tribute Show, with the Ladeens, Seamus Kelleher and the Raymond Coleman Band performing. At noon, the Jameson Sister’s Terry Kane will be hosting a new tunes workshop at noon and hosting a session at 1 PM open to all local musicians. Marianne MacDonald, host of the WTMR 800AM radio show, “Come West Along the Road,” will be the trad stage emcee,

The Celtic Club Tent is for those whose taste veers to other musical genres—it’s a full day of DJs, including DJ Daily, DJ April, DJ AJ, DJ Ernesto, and Joey Catz.

On the Goodchild Repair Center American Ceili Stage you’ll be treated to performances by the Celtic Flame School of Irish Dance, the Cummins School of Irish Dance, the Pride of Erin, and, for a little American flare, demonstrations by teams from Action Karate. At 3 PM, you can also attend a workshop on Irish step dancing so you can do a little jigging yourself.

There are vendors, food, and bounce activities and face painting for the kiddies in the Leprechaun Green Kids Zone (“I let my 10-year-old girl name that,” explains Daly).

Daly expects a good sized crowd. “We’re already getting a lot of buzz,” he says. And he’s checked out the weather report. “Back in January I predicted it was going to be 83 degrees and partly cloudy and I looked at the extended weather report this week. It’s going to be 83 degrees and partly cloudy.”

Frank Daly is already better than the local stations at predicting the weather, so if he says it’s going to be a great time—and he does—you’d better believe him.

For more details or to buy tickets, go to the Philadelphia Fleadh website.

 

Music

From Celtic Girl to Celtic Woman

Chloë Agnew

Chloë Agnew

Irish singer Chloë Agnew is the daughter of globe-trotting musical parents, entertainer Adele “Twink” King and oboe virtuoso David Agnew. She first appeared on her mother’s RTE show when she was still in diapers. (Though, to be fair, she didn’t sing on the show until she was 6 years old.) She recorded her first CD when she was 12; her second, in 2004. Later on that same year, she appeared onstage in Dublin, the youngest member of what supposed to be a limited-run group, Celtic Woman.

And you probably know what happened to all thoughts of a limited run after that.

Agnew, now 23, and her luminous voice will appear with the latest lineup of Celtic Woman Sunday night at 8 at the Mann Center. It’s the group’s last stop on a long North America tour that began in early April. Catch them while you can.

Though Agnew has packed more musical stardom into her young life than many singers do over decades, performing never stops being a thrill—and at times surprisingly challenging for one so talented and experienced.

“I was born on the stage,” Agnew says. “I was immersed in all things music and theatre. It was just a way of life for me—it was like breathing air.”

But don’t assume singing before jam-packed auditoriums is a walk in the park. It’s certainly not disabling, but it’s no walk in the park, either.

“I think every performer wrestles with stage fright at some stage. If they tell you they don’t, they’re lying. For many years, I didn’t know how to harness it. It can come in fits and spurts. It’s actually a very healthy thing. The day you stop getting it (stage fright), obviously your heart and soul aren’t the way they once were. You have to keep battling through it, and use it as a positive thing. I’m all in favor of it, as awful as it is.”

For Agnew, life before Celtic Woman provided plenty of opportunity to get used to jitters. Her Wikipedia entry is impressive. Here are the high points:

• She won the grand prize at the first International Children’s Song Competition in Cairo in 1998.
• A year later, Agnew appeared in The Young Messiah, an updated interpretation of Handel’s Messiah.
• In 2000, she approached director David Downes (among other accomplishments, he was Riverdance’s Broadway music director) about recording a song to benefit the children of war-torn Afghanistan. The song, Angel of Mercy, was included in a successful CD, This Holy Christmas Night.
• After that, a three-year stint with the Christ Church Cathedral Girls’ Choir in Dublin.
• In 2002, the first CD, with support from Downes, the first CD, Chloë. In 2004, CD number 2, Chloë: Walking in the Air.

There were some non-musical accomplishments along the way. Growing up in Ireland, naturally, Agnew learned the Irish language, but she also sings in Italian, German and Latin. She also taught herself some Japanese. Since the show travels the world, she gets plenty of opportunities to employ her multilingual skills. “It’s been a real joy to be able to sing in all those languages,” she says. “It’s been incredible to do that.”

It probably should not have come as a surprise when Downes asked her to appear in Celtic Woman—back when no one had any idea that this gathering of gifted Irish females would become one of Ireland’s most successful exports, and a sure-fire public television fund drive money magnet.

“I had just turned 15,” Agnew recalls. “It all happened so quickly. I was still in school, and suddenly, to be getting the call to be a part of this show, it was just incredible. It was a fantastic night. We all knew something special would happen.”

Now, as the show approaches its 10th anniversary and it rolls into Philadelphia—where, Agnew says, local Irish are among the show’s biggest fans—Celtic Woman still feels as fresh as ever. “It’s like watching a child grow,” she says. “Just when you think it can’t get bigger and better … it does.”