All Posts By

Denise Foley

Music

McKeown and McPartlan: Two Great Irish Voices In Harmony

Singer Mary McPartlan

Singer Mary McPartlan

It doesn’t happen often, but sometimes you meet someone who makes you suspect you were separated at birth. You laugh at the same things, love the same music, have so much in common that it’s a little like meeting. . .yourself.

That’s how Grammy-winning vocalist Susan McKeown felt when she met trad singer Mary McPartlan last summer in a café in Miltown Malbay, where they were both attending Willie Week, the annual Willie Clancy Summer School music festival.

“We only chatted a few minutes but we talked so much we planned out our next five years,” laughs McKeown, who was born in Dublin but now lives in New York. “We had so much in common.”

One of those plans was to work together someday, and they are. The women, considered two of the finest Irish traditional singers today, will be appearing for the first time together at the The Irish Center in Philadelphia on Saturday night.

Although McKeown won her Grammy for her work with The Klezmatics—singing Klezmer music, the Yiddish version of Irish trad—she and McPartlan are both steeped in Celtic folk. In their brief encounter, they also discovered that they both love the music of Mali, the western African nation, and have a penchant for weaving the music of other lands with the tunes of their roots. They both also have a theatrical background. McKeown graduated from the American Musical and Dramatic Academy in New York, and for the last dozen years McPartlan has been a producer and director of numerous music and theatre projects, many for TG4, Irish language television.

They also learned that they loved each other’s music. “There is something deep and honest about Mary’s voice that appeals to me,” says McKeown. “When I first heard her, she reminded me of [singer] Dolores Keane. She has very soulful voice that seems to tap into the past.”

McPartlan—whom I caught up with by phone as she was cooking supper for her family in Galway—has heard that comparison before and was pleased to hear McKeown thought so. “I love Dolores Keane,” she says. “She’s been a massive inspiration.”

McPartlan is a relative late-bloomer in Irish music. Though she began singing in the 1970s, she didn’t decide to make music a career until 2003. “My life was totally taken up with my job—working in the arts–and rearing my kids (she has four, two in their 20s and two teenagers),” she explains. “It was a very demanding time and I pulled back from solo performance. The fact that I’m a professional producer of the arts and especially music kept me spending a lot of time in the company of musicians and being involved in making music programs kept me going.”

While in the midst of a time-consuming project that kept her away from home for weeks, she says, “I made a tape of my songs for a lift.” She gave the tape to her good friend, piper Paddy Keenan, and asked him what he thought. “He said, ‘Mary, quick, go get a producer,’ which I did and I’ve never looked back.”

Her first CD was “The Holland Handkerchief,” which debuted to critical acclaim in January 2004. But her burgeoning new career was almost derailed: That same year, McPartlan was diagnosed with breast cancer. “I struggled with the breast cancer treatments and went on stage whenever I could,” she says. “But I never gave up. I think that music healed me faster than anything ever could.”

At the same time, she was also studying for her master’s degree. While it sounds like the perfect storm for stress, her performances and studies provided a welcome distraction from doctor’s visits and radiation treatments, she says. Four years after her diagnosis, McPartlan released her second CD, “Petticoat Loose,” which contains some interesting collaborations between McPartlan and a variety of musicians, including a Romanian string quartet.

Like her new friend, McKeown is musically adventurous. Her Grammy came for “Wonder Wheel,” a collection of Yiddish music (with lyrics by American folk musician Woody Guthrie) she performed with the Klezmatics. “Now you might think that Yiddish and Irish songs had nothing in common, but it’s not such a great leap as you might think,” she says “The tunes are so vibrant and exuberant, as they are in the Irish tradition, and they also tap into the same great sadness and depth of emotions.” They are, after all, songs born of love—and pining–for a homeland.

McKeown was born in Dublin, the fifth of five children. “The story is told that my parents had four children, none having a talent for music, so they had a fifth child, me. My aunts told me this. My mother was an organist and an entertainer at social events, and I always sang with her. So she was struck lucky the fifth time. We used to go around in the car together singing, doing harmonies, singing everything—religious music, popular music, the Beatles—whatever was on the radio.”

Her passion for singing was fueled by “winning medals in competitions—I liked that,” she laughs. “I was always asked to sing at religious events in school and I always got parts in the school musicals.” She went to college in New York with a scholarship and toured Europe with a group of Irish musicians with whom she released a cassette called “The Chanting House.” While in New York, she collaborated with musicians like Seamus Egan (Solas) and Eileen Ivers. The release in 1995 of “Bones,’ which features McKeown’s take on traditional Irish keening (caoineadh)—the poetic, emotional crying over the dead—led to her solo career. Like McPartlan, she is entrenched in traditional Celtic music, but she also writes her own tunes and employs musical elements of other cultures in her work.

“I’ve worked with a number of Malian musicians, quite frequently the kora player Mamadou Diabate,” she says. The kora, she explains, the is African version of the harp, a stick plunged into a gourd with 21 strings, sounding remarkably like the Irish harp. “I worked with the Malian Ensemble Tartit, me sitting on the ground with 12 of them, men and women, playing instruments, clapping, singing.” The music was remarkable, but McKeown also remembers it as a moment of motherhood magic. “I had my daughter, Roisin, with me. She was a baby and still nursing Another Mali singer, Mah Damba, got a big piece of cloth and tied it on me like those baby snugglers they sell, and she was asleep in a few minutes.”

Both McKeown and McPartlan expect some magic moments on Saturday night. “We’ll probably be doing the set list as we come down in the van,” McKeown jokes. “And it will be the first time we’ve ever heard each other live. Sure, and we only just met for five minutes!”

Those five minutes make McPartlan believe the magic will last. “I really think Philadelphia will be the nucleus f what I hope will be great, exciting, creative things to come.”

Susan McKeown and Mary McParlan will be performing at the Irish Center, Carpenter and Emlen Streets in the Mt. Airy section of Philadelphia, on Saturday, January 10, at 8 PM.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

Now that you’re sobered up from the holidays, you can find out what all that “Nollaig Shona Duit!” meant by taking a free Irish language lesson (Donegal dialect, quite lyrical) at theSligo Pub in Media on Monday night.

Before that though, support the Eire Og Gaelic footballers at their annual banquet Saturday night at the Irish Center.

On Thursday, January 8, the first Celtic Media night sponsored by the Celtic Cultural Alliance, kicks off in Bethlehem with the film, “From Shore to Shore: Irish Music in New York City,”at McCarthy’s Tea Room on Main Street (part of the Donegal Square shop). This media night will be held on the second Thursday of each month in the upstairs Great Room with a limited menu and BYOB.

Sound like a slow week? Maybe, but next week will kick off in style with fiddler Eileen Ivers, Irish singers Susan McKeown and Mary McPartlan together for the first time, and the Scottish group, Malinky, all next Saturday night. As they say in Ireland, oy!

Arts

Irish Play Makes American Debut in Philadelphia

In “Skin Deep,” a thriller set in the Dublin art world, Karl, a struggling artist, owes money to his landlord, a photographer named Dan. Stuck for inspiration, one day Karl hits upon an idea, involving a huge favor from Susan, a medical student moonlighting in a hospital morgue. As Karl’s new work elevates him to celebrity status, Dan’s girlfriend Ruth, journalist, becomes suspicious of the secrets to Karl’s success. All this…and a mysterious foot!

A complex and intricate piece, Skin Deep explores the question of who owns the body, how much money the human form is worth, all set against the backdrop of a Dublin flush with new money and new ambition.

This original play is the first of the season from the Inis Nua Theatre Company, Philadelphia’s only company dedicated to producing contemporary plays from Ireland, Scotland, Wales and England. The play opens January 6 at the Adrienne, 2030 Sansom Street, Philadelphia and runs till January 18.

“We’re very honored as a small theatre company to be the American premiere of this exciting Irish work,” says Inis Nua Artistic Director Tom Reing. “When I first saw the original production in 2002, I knew I wanted to produce Skin Deep. But no theatre in Philadelphia felt like a right match to pitch it. It’s kind of the reason why Inis Nua was created.”

Playwright Paul Meade, who will be attending the production, is a writer, director, actor and Artistic Director of Gúna Nua Theatre. From Limerick, Ireland, Paul trained at the Samuel Beckett Centre, Trinity College, and later received an M.A. in modern drama from U.C.D. Paul’s work as a writer includes “Scenes From a Water Cooler,” “Skin Deep,” “Thesis,” and “Trousers.” all for Gúna Nua. In 2007 Paul wrote “Mushroom” for Storytellers Theatre Company. Also in 2007 Paul was awarded a play writing commission by the Irish Council for Bioethics.

Inis Nua Artistic Director and founder, Tom Reing, will helm the production. His credits include all Inis Nua productions to date (A Play on Two Chairs, Tadhig Stray Wandered In, Crazy Gary’s Mobile Disco and Trad). Tom has also directed for (among others) Azuka Theatre, Shakespeare in Clark Park, Brat Productions and upcoming at the Walnut Street Theater.

The cast includes Corinna Burns as Ruth, Charlie DelMarcelle as Karl, Jared Michael Delaney as Dan and Melissa Lynch as Susan.
The design team includes Regina Rizzo (Costumes), Terry Smith (Lighting/Video Desgin), Mikaal Sulaiman (Sound), Paola Nogueras (Photography) Tim Gallagher (Set), with Rachel Moffat acting as Stage Manager.

Inis Nua’s Theatre Company’s mission is to produce contemporary, provocative plays from Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales that reflect these cultures new and evolving identities. Translated from the Irish language, Inis Nua means “New Island.”

Inis Nua begins its first full season with sponsorship from Fergie’s Pub; The Bards; St. Stephen’s Green; Dark Horse Pub; Black Sheep Pub; Yello’ Bar. Philadelphia Distillery will providing opening night bar services.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

The Wren Boys are on the prowl Friday night, December 26. According to an ancient Irish tradition, the day after Christmas a group of rowdies kill a wren and hang it on a holly bush. They have a good reason. The wren, legend says, betrayed the hiding place of one of the first martyrs, St. Stephen.

Of course, in Ireland these days, there’s no bird killing. Instead, those same rowdies dress in costume and go from door to door, beating drums and playing whistles, and begging for “a penny for the wren.’ So if you woke this morning to hear male voices singing, “The wren, the wren, the king of all birds, On St. Stephen’s Day was caught in the furze, Although he is little, his family is great, I pray you, good landlady, give us a treat,” it wasn’t a horrible Christmas hangover.

Okay, so it’s not going to happen here. But there is a Wren Party Friday night, December 26, at the Knights of Columbus in Glenside, where you’ll be able to sing and dance still 11 PM to live Irish music.

Also on Friday night, the popular U2 tribute band, 2U, will be appearing at the Sellersville Theatre.

Save some time on Sunday, December 28, for a special Christmas treat from Fergus Carey, owner of Fergie’s Pub on Sansom Street in Philadelphia. Actors Michael Toner and Jack Barrett will be performing two “Christmassy plays” by Delaware playwright William Rolleri upstairs at the Center City pub. There are only 50 seats so call asap.

There’s no shortage of places to be on New Year’s Eve. There’s a 32-County Ball at the Irish Center with dinner and dancing to usher out 2008 (and may we say, good riddance!). The Celtic-klezmer band Scythian will be rocking out at the Stotesbury Mansion on Walnut Street, and Timlin and Kane and the King Brothers will be ringing in the new at The Shanachie Irish Pub. If you head down to McGillins, a great old Irish pub in Center City, you’ll be making your own music. You can karaoke out the old and boogie in with the new year.

Some terrific stuff coming up in the earliest part of 2009, including Eileen Ivers in Media, Irish singers Susan McKeown and Mary McPartlan in concert at the Irish Center, and the Scottish group Malinky in Wilmington. Check out our calendar for all the details (and read an interview with McKeown and McPartlan, two of the most amazing voices on Ireland’s folk scene, next week on irishphiladelphia.com).

Arts, News

With a Little Help from His Friends

At the end of the Jimmy Stewart classic, “It’s a Wonderful Life,” the beleaguered George Bailey, whose friends and neighbors are tossing money into a basket to replace the $8,000 missing from his savings and loan, finds a book in the pile from the angel, Clarence, who helped him when he thought life would be better for everyone if he’d never been born. In the front of the book, “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer,” Clarence wrote, “No man is a failure who has friends.”

And playwright William Rolleri knows that even better than George Bailey. The former New York Daily News reporter who now lives in Delaware had little hope of producing his newest play, “The Brothers Flanagan.” It’s a recession; he’s a mostly unknown quantity, as is his play about two Grays Ferry Irish pub owners whose business is being decimated by a serial killer. And, he points out ruefully, “No one wants to produce a 75-year-old playwright.”

Except maybe his friends, who have already anteed up half the cost of the production. And to raise the rest, well, in the spirit of Mickey Rooney’s Andy Hardy movie character from the 1930s, they’re putting on a show in the bar.

On December 28, two of Philadelphia’s finest actors, Michael Toner and Jack Barrett, will be performing two of Rolleri’s short one-man plays upstairs at Fergie’s Pub at 1214 Sansom Street. For $30 a ticket, you not only get two plays, but some Irish music and a Guinness Stout glass (which you can fill downstairs at the bar).

“Fergie [bar owner Fergus Carey] is one hell of a supportive guy,” says Rolleri. “He loves the theater himself, and he loves ‘The Brothers Flanagan.’ If we get the money together to do a full production in fall, we’re going to do it in Fergie’s because the whole thing takes place in a bar.”

Rolleri chose the two short plays because they both got a great reaction from audiences when they were previously performed (by Toner and Barrett). One, called “Sugar Ferguson’s Rotten Apples,” is a largely autobiographical account of an episode from Rolleri’s last visit to his grandparents in Canada, though the playwright, who is half Irish (County Wexford), transports the story to Dublin. It focuses on a near tragedy, involving kids, a forbidden apple tree, a shotgun, the police, and the parish priest. “Ring in the Old” takes place in New York’s Hell’s Kitchen where a bar patron sees an opportunity to bring back, at least for a moment, a little of the now yuppiefied area’s violent past. . .for auld lang syne. Expect some midnight dark humor.

The generosity of his friends has inspired Rolleri to pay it forward. “It occurred to me that there are a lot of younger playwrights in Philly and some of them are very good, but they have trouble getting produced because their work is original and their names not known; their names are not going to sell tickets,” he says. “I have a few friends who wanted me to go ahead and get my play produced, and I decided that if I go ahead, I’m not going ahead alone. Whatever we get at the box office will go to produce another play—not me, but another playwright.”

You can help Rolleri and the unknown playwrights his success will also lift by attending “Apres Noel, Christmassy Plays,” on Sunday, December 28, at 7 PM. For tickets (there are only 50 seats, so act fast), contact Fergie’s at 215-928-8118 or Steve Hatzai at 215-769-0552, or? swhatz@msn.com.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

It’s official now: There’s a way to be Irish just about every day of the week in the region. We know, since we put together the calendar. Between sessions and special events, there’s something going on just about all the time, even leading up to Christmas and beyond.

On Sunday, for example, McCarthy’s Tea Room in Bethlehem is holding a Winter Solstice Tea. (Will there be Druids?) Let’s see if you’re up for it after you’ve gone on Friday night to the Winter Extravaganza Show with Andy Cooney at the Irish Center (dinner, dancing, and the wonderful and really cute Andy Cooney, plus a comic, dancers and others), seen Scythian in Sellersville, The Broken Shillelaghs in Gloucester City, or enjoyed an evening with Seamus Kennedy at Bethlehem’s Ice House.

There’s a session every night leading up to Christmas—at Kildare’s Fado, Shanachie, and a Piece of Ireland pubs. The Auld Dubliner Pub in Gloucester City, NJ, will be holding its Christmas party on Sunday, December 21, starting at 4 PM featuring local favorites, The Malones and Their Cousin, and a special visit from Father Christmas, who we understand is in the area all week. It’s a family-oriented place, so you can bring the kids. And your dancing shoes.

The slow session at the Irish Center has been cancelled for the day after Christmas. But not so the appearance of 2U, the World’s Second Best U2 Show, scheduled for the Sellersville Theatre at 8:30 that night.

On December 28, two of Philadelphia’s finest actors, Michael Toner and Jack Barrett, will be performing two monologues with a Celtic flavor at Fergie’s Pub on Sansom Street in the city. It’s a fundraiser to help local playwright, William Rolleri, produce his latest work, “The Brothers Flanagan,” about two Grays Ferry pub owners whose business is being sharply curtailed by a local serial killer. We smell “dark comedy!” We recently interviewed Bill Rolleri and you can read all about him and his work next week on www.irishphiladelphia.com.

And you don’t have to worry about being Irish on New Year’s Eve. Scythian, those crazy Celtic-Gypsy-Klezmer musicians from DC, are holding a “Mad, Mad, Masquerade” at the Stotesbury Mansion in Philadelphia, and there’s a 32-County Ball at the Irish Center, with music, food, dancing, and a parade of flags that’s in no danger of being canceled because of city budget cuts.

Don’t forget to eat, drink, and shop Irish. Check out our calendar for more details on these and other Irish events in the area. And have a wonderful Christmas!

Check this spot next week for a look ahead at the big (and small) events of the new year.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

There’s only one break in the holiday action this week: The irrepressible Malachy McCourt—actor, barkeep, politician, author—who will be signing his books (like “Danny Boy” and “The History of Ireland”) at Donegal Square in downtown Bethlehem on Saturday, December 13. Oh wait–a signed McCourt book will make a nice Christmas gift for some Irishophile on your list. So, we’re wrong. No break.

Continue the holiday cheer on Saturday at the Willows Mansion in Villanova where Philadelphia’s Rose of Tralee, Colleen Tully, will be hosting a family-friendly holiday party featuring music, vendors, crafts, and Santa himself. And there’s some good-deed doing involved. Bring a nonperishable food item for the Delco Loaves & Fishes Food Pantry and receive 5 free raffle tickets.

The fabulous local group Burning Bridget Cleary will be holding a CD Release Party and Holiday Show at the Steel City Coffee House in Phoenixville on Saturday night. Their new release is called “Everything is Alright,” and, given everything going on in the economy, we’re hoping they’re being prescient.

History buff alert: On Sunday, go back in time with Robert Mouland at the Durand-Heddon House in Maplewood, NJ. Mouland will be portraying Michael Keane, an Irish harper?who came to America in 1754 with the Royal Governor of North Carolina. He will perform on the cláirseach na h’Eireann (wirestrung Irish harp), baroque violin (c.1760), baroque flute (c.1795), English guittar (c.1770) and union pipes.

Also for history buffs (who like stories and music together), at the Sellersville Theater, favorites Coyote Run will present “A Kilted Christmas.” Expect trad, rock, bagpipes, even a didgeridoo, and lots of fun.

A reminder to you session fanatics: We’ve added a new session at the Auld Dubliner Irish Pub in Gloucester City, NJ, where you can also see some of your local favorites including Kane and Beatty (December 13) and an Irish Christmas Party with the Malones and their Cousin (December 21).

By December 19 you should be finished your Christmas shopping, right? So plan on celebrating the holiday with your friends at the Irish Center, where the amazing Andy Cooney Band from New York is headlining a 50th Anniversary holiday extravaganza featuring comedian George Casey and others. Dinner is available (and can we just say, Mickey Kavanaugh knows his way around a kitchen) and, of course, there’s dancing.

That same night, that crazy Celtic-Klezmer band Scythian is holding its holiday show at the Sellersville Theare, and singer Seamus Kennedy is throwing his party at the Icehouse in Bethlehem. So many choices, so little time!

Are you planning a holiday party, looking for the perfect gift, need a break? Check out your local Irish pub, restaurant, and gift shop. Times are tough and they can use the business. Let’s keep the Irish community alive and vibrant!

Music

A Little Bit of Holiday Cheer

Sean nos dancer Brian Cunningham has flying feet.

Sean nos dancer Brian Cunningham has flying feet.

A couple of weeks ago, ticket sales were as sluggish as the Stock Market for Teada’s “Irish Christmas in America” show, a Philadelphia Ceili Group production scheduled for December 9 at Philadelphia’s Irish Center. But by that evening, there was a rally, and hundreds of people filled the vast ballroom for a little taste of Celtic Christmas–a full house to hear traditional Irish tunes and learn a little about Celtic traditions.

Karan Casey, a founding member of the group, Solas, was the featured soloist, and she wowed the crowd with everything from Irish carols to her paean to Barack Obama, the Nina Simone tune, “I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to be Free.” “Barack Obama,” she explained, “was like an early Christmas gift to the world.”

Also on the bill: uillean piper Tommy Martin, harper Grainne Hambley, and the remarkable, 23-year-old sean nos (old style) dancer, Brian Cunningham. And, of course, Teada itself: founder and the show’s producer, Oisin Mac Diarmada, an All-Ireland fiddler from Sligo; Damien Stenson, also a Sligo native, who plays flute; guitarist Sean McIElwain, and Dublin’s own Tristan Rosenstock, who plays bodhran and was the night’s narrator and stand-up comic.

If you couldn’t be there and would love to hear some of the performance, Marianne MacDonald will be playing some cuts from the “Irish Christmas in America” CD on her radio show on Sunday, December 14, at noon. Tune in to WTMR-800 AM, right after the Vince Gallagher Irish Radio Show. You can hear it on the web at www.wtmrradio.com.