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Denise Foley

Arts, News

The Mysteries in the Bog

One April morning in the west of Ireland, a farmer cutting turf in his bog makes a gruesome discovery: the head of a woman, face tanned like leather, with long red hair. As two experts arrive to investigate—one an Irish archeologist named Cormac Maguire and the other an American pathologist called Nora Gavin—the mystery of the ancient “bog body” becomes entangled with the recent suspicious disappearance of another woman, the wife of a local landowner, and their toddler son.

 

That is the premise of the debut mystery novel, “Haunted Ground,” by American writer Erin Hart. Published in 2003, this complex and evocative book was nominated for two of the top literary prizes for mysteries, the Agatha and Anthony Awards, for best first novel. Hart masterfully crafts a satisfying mystery into which she has woven strands of history, archeology, Irish folklore, and music (Cormac plays the flute and Nora is, like Hart herself, a sean nos singer). The two characters reappear in Hart’s second novel, “The Lake of Sorrows,” which likewise melds ancient and current mysteries—two bodies, murdered centuries apart, discovered in a commercial bog in Ireland’s midland county of Offaly (where Hart’s husband, two-row button accordion player, Paddy O’Brien, was born).

I recently spent a delightful hour talking on the phone with Erin Hart from her home in Minnesota, where she co-founded the Irish Music and Dance Association. The conversation ranged from what first piqued her interest in bog bodies, her longtime passion for Irish music, and why it took her almost two decades to finally write her first mystery. That last bit of information should give renewed hope to aspiring novelists who’ve been toting a killer plot in their temporal lobes but haven’t actually gotten around to writing it down. There’s time!

How did you get the idea for your first novel?

I was always interested in words and reading, but the idea of writing a book was so completely out of my sphere of possibility, until I heard a true story about two farmers out cutting turf who found the head of a red-haired girl. I was in Donegal, staying with a friend [Altan’s Daithi Sproule, who now makes his home in Minnesota] and his mother told me that her son-in-law was a famous archeologist who studied artifiacts and people found in the bogs, and his father was also an archeologist. She told me about the red-haired girl. Later, I wrote him a letter to ask him about it, and he wrote back a beautiful letter about his memory of the event, which happened when he was 9 or 10 years old. He and his father went out to the farm of the men who found the head and they had it in a biscuit tin on their kitchen table. Hs father took the tin and put it in the back seat of the car and drove back to Dublin with it. He remembered exactly what it looked like: upper teeth biting through the lower lip, the clean cut through the neck, all those wonderful, gruesome details you could use to launch a story. He told me that it “still haunts me. Forty years later, she’s still with me.’ I thought, Wow, that woman deserves a story, even if I have to make it up.

So after hearing that story, did you immediately sit down to write about it?

Well, no. [Laughing] I was looking at my journal from that time and I had written, “What a great opening for a mystery. Someone ought to write that.” Of course, I didn’t do anything with it then. The other thing I wrote was “thinking of writing a story about a red-haired girl whose head was found in a bog.” The last entry was, “Must find out more about bogs.” [Laughing.]

How did you finally do it?

When I first heard about the red-haired girl, it was the ‘80s and I was working at the Minnesota State Arts Board. One day, when I was at the copier making a gabillion news releases to send out, I thought, “I have to take a class to keep my brain alive.” When I looked into it, I had two alternatives: Get my MBA or go into creative writing, so I chose creative writing, but I decided to stick to nonfiction because you don’t have to make stuff up. I started writing all these memoir pieces about my happy childhood, and it didn’t take too long before I realized that if you had a happy childhood, no one wants to read your memoir. So I took some journalism classes and started to do some freelance work. It was good experience learning how to meet deadlines. I was freelancing for newspapers and wound up as the theater critic for the Pioneer Press in St. Paul, writing reviews and art features. My teacher at the university was the on-air theater critic for NPR, and when he moved to San Francsico, I waltzed over to NPR and said, “You don’t have a theater critic anymore and you need one.” So for five years I was theater critic for NPR. And actually, seeing all those plays, hearing all that great dialogue, and seeing how story arcs were made really helped when I sat down to write.

Were you writing the novel all that time?

No [laughing]. Actually, 10 years went by while I went to grad school, worked fulltime, and had my freelance career as a theater critic. In grad school, I took a fiction writing class, which made me feel terrified because you have to make stuff up. Then I started writing a short story and realized, hey, you can make stuff up. But after 8 years of grad school, I only had one story. I submitted it to a magazine called Glimmertrain, which was offering a nice $1,200 cash prize for new fiction. That was around 1996. I was lying in bed one morning with pneumonia and I get a phone call: “Guess what, you won the award for new writers.” I was flabbergasted. I had been lying there in bed with pneumonia, reading all these mysteries and I started thinking, “Hey, I stepped across the creek, now I think I’ll swim the ocean.” What helped push me in that direction was after I won the prize, I got calls from several agents who had read the story and were looking for new clients. Two asked me send more of my fiction work and, as you recall, I didn’t have any. I wasn’t about to say, I have all these happy childhood memoirs, so I mentioned that I had an idea for a mystery novel set in Ireland. One said, “Sounds interesting. Let me know when you finish it.” I figured I’d never hear from her again, and I didn’t. One said, “Send me 50 pages.” It took me six years to write them. It didn’t hurt that “Angela’s Ashes’ had been published. The agent told me to hurry up and finish before “Irishness goes out of fashion.” [More laughing]

How did you choose Nora and Cormac as your lead characters?

Logic. You just ask yourself, who would be interacting with an event of this type, who comes to a bog when human remains are involved: the police, the pathologist who would decide whether it’s a modern or ancient crime, and of course, definitely, an archeologist should be the hero, and probably a pathologist interested in bog remains. Originally, my lead characters were two guys so there was no element of romance, but my agent and I and had similar ideas, that they should be a man and a woman and one Irish and one American, so they would know different things and be able to educate each other and the reader.

Did you have a good sense of who they were and where the plot would take them?

In order to find out about my characters, I have to write, I can’t just sit and plot. Playwright August Wilson said that he didn’t write plays, he took dictation. I used to think that was baloney, but it’s true. Once you’re writing, your characters do things you don’t expect, and there are plot turns you don’t expect. It’s a very intuitive process. And 90 percent of the mystery writers know say that’s their experience.  

Nearly all of your characters play some kind of instrument or, like Nora, sing, which makes sense given your involvement in Irish music.

I put a lot of music in it because everyone I know in Ireland is involved in music in some way. Devaney, the policeman in “Haunted Ground,” is a fiddle player, Cormac is a flute player, not an accordian player like Paddy, but Paddy is very partial to the flute. One of the farmers in the story, Fintan, plays the pipes. I was was half thinking of making Nora an unaccompanied singer and thought, nah, that would be too much. But Nora shares a job and interests with a woman who was a teacher at Trinity, Maura Delaney, a medical doctor. When I met her she mentioned something about going to a gig. I said, ‘Oh, what instrument do you play?’ and she said, ‘Oh, I don’t play, I’m a singer.’ So Nora became a singer because if it’s handed to you on a plate, you take it.

How did you meet your husband, Paddy?

He was traveling around the states and was playing in St. Paul. In 1981 I had gone to Ireland for a two-month language course in Connemara and had traveled around going to music festivals and things. The day I got home some friends said, “come down to this bar and hear this great band.” Halfway through the evening, I heard this booming voice saying, ‘And now well have a song from Erin Hart,’ and that was Paddy.  My friends had told him I was a singer. He would come to town every three or four months and we’d have a date. That went on for two years and then he went home to Ireland for a while. Then he came back and moved in with me. That was in 1983, and in 1987 we got married.

Has he been a source of information for you when you’re writing your mysteries?

Paddy actually used to work on big industrial bogs as a fitter. He repaired heavy machines. I wore him out with questions. He drew me diagrams about how everything works, gave me information on shifts, the weather. In “Lake of Sorrows,” there’s a scene where there’s a peat storm, where the wind picks up the peat and whirls it around. He told me about that and the “fairy wind,” a tiny tornado of peat, that gets taken across the bog. It’s spooky and is considered a premonition of something bad happening. Then there was a really odd coincidence. We were getting ready for the “Haunted Ground” launch in Ireland and guess what, they found a new body in the bog in Offaly. They thought the body might be 2,000 years old, which is exactly what I was considering for “Lake of Sorrows.” I thought, what were the chances of this turning up exactly when I needed it? I was reading the story to Paddy about how this farmer, Kevin Barry, was surprised when he climbed out of his digger to find this body, and Paddy said, “Did you say Kevin Barry?” I said, “Yes.” He said, “I think that fellow’s my cousin.” And he was. So I was freaking out. My response was, “So, do you have his phone number?” He did and we went there for two weeks and Kevin showed us all around.

You have a third book coming out, don’t you?

I just sent the manuscript in! And I’m glad I did. I couldn’t go out in the yard without one of my neighbors screeching up and asking, “When’s the book going to be done?” I was outside the other day painting some trim and my neighbor asked me, “Why aren’t you writing?” [Laughing]

Can you tell us a little bit about it? When we last leave Nora and Cormac, she’s heading home to see her parents who are still grieving over the disappearance of her sister—Nora’s back story from “Haunted Ground”–and Cormac is going to Donegal because his father has had a stroke.

It begins in St. Paul in a place called Hidden Falls Park, which is an excellent place to hide a body. Nora is coming home on plane, remembering the details sisters’ disappearance, and Cormac is in Donegal, so it kind of takes place in both places. They talk back and forth—there are still things they have not revealed to one another. He still hasn’t told her what’s happening to his father and she doesn’t tell him about coming home and meeting the policeman she was interested in before she went to Ireland and that she’s delving into her sister’s case.  

No bog bodies in this one?

Actually, that park has seepage marshes that are something like microsite bogs. Because we have freezings and thawings, extremes of temperature unlike Ireland, it’s likely people wouldn’t have remained intact. The working title of the book is “False Mermaid,” which is also the name of a plant that grows in the Mississippi and will be a botanical clue. And I think that’s all I’m going to say about it.

News, People

Slip on Your Dancing Shoes and Ceili for Kayleigh Sunday, November 2

As medical disorders go, methylmalonic acidemia—MMA—probably is one of the lesser known. There are no monster Labor Day telethons to fund research into this inherited metabolic disorder. MMA can cause a buildup of methylmalonic acid in the bloodstream, resulting in severe ketoacidosis and, often, death.

The boys of Blackthorn can’t single-handedly replicate the success of a Jerry Lewis telethon, but, hey, they’re going to give it their best.

You can help Blackthorn raise money for research into MMA by slipping into your dancing shoes and traipsing on down to the Knights of Columbus on Baltimore Pike in Springfield-Delco Sunday, November 2, for the 8th annual “Ceili for Kayleigh.” All proceeds benefit MMA research.  The event goes from 4 to 8 p.m.

The organization is named in honor of (soon to be) 9-year-old Kayleigh Moran. The Moran and Boyce families, together with her wide circle of friends, created the fund in her name to raise money for the research that is being conducted to find a cure for this disease.

“Ceili for Kayleigh” is dependent on continued and new support from individuals, clubs, organizations, and corporate sponsors to further its work. The organization is asking you to contribute to the cause in any way you can.

At the 8th annual benefit, organizers will be holding a “Pick-a-Prize” raffle table. Donors are welcome to give any type of “new” item that can be raffled off at this table during the benefit. (Examples: Gift certificates, sports items, signed memorabilia, crafts, electronics, business t-shirts.) You can also sponsor a table, enabling you to place your business cards, menus, coupons, and signs on the table that you sponsor. Because this event will be well attended by the local community—last year’s attendance reached 500 people—it is a great opportunity to advertise your business for the low cost of $50. Please make checks payable to “Ceili for Kayleigh.”

Tickets are $25. For tickets, call Marty Moran at (610) 356-6072.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Perhaps the best way to be Irish this week is to attend the October Feis sponsored by the Dennis Kelly AOH Division 1 in Havertown, which benefits the “Heroes Homecoming Fund,” a charity that offers help to financially needy injured soliders from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. See our story about this wonderful benefit.

Also on tap this weekend, friends of Emmett Ruane will be holding a “wake” for Emmett’s Place, a small pub in Oxford Circle that has been a mainstay of Irish entertainment for 37 years. Emmett is retiring, and many of those friends are musicians who’ve played at his place over the years, who will be performing starting at 7 PM Saturday and going into the wee hours. If you enjoy Irish dancing, you can pretty much count on burning lots of calories doing sets.

On Sunday, at the Irish Center in Mt. Airy, there’s a benefit, with live music by Paddy’s Well, to raise money for a Havertown plumber named Tony McDermott who has been battling cancer since last year and unable to work. Your $25 will help support the family of this Creeslough, Donegal native: his wife Bernadette, and two daughters, ages 5 and 7. If you’re unable to attend, you can send donations to the McDermott Family Benefit, Box 823, Havertown PA, 19083.

One of Ireland’s finest traditional musicians, John Carty, will be performing on Sunday night at the Coatesville Cultural Society—a very comfy and intimate venue—with guitarist Donal Clancy, who is now actively touring with the group Danu. Singly, they are remarkable performers; together, wow.

On Monday, Irish novelist Tom Phelan will give a talk at Villanova University’s St. Augustine Center on Ireland’s “forgotten heroes,” its World War I soldiers who fought in the British army. Phelan, whose novel, The Canal Bridge, tells the story of these soldiers who were not welcomed home as heroes, will discuss the conditions these soldiers—and there a quarter of a million of them—faced in the trenches and the reception they got at home.

On Wednesday, the group, Crowfoot, will be appearing at the Blue Ball Barn at Alapocas Run State Park in Wilmington, DE. This group melds musical influences from England, Ireland, Quebec, and the Appalachian mountains into a distinctive style.

There are also several performances of the Brendan Behan play, “The Hostage,” at the Roselle Center for the Arts in Newark, DE, this coming week.

Of course, we all know that Samhain is coming (that would be Irish for Halloween, or, strictly translated, summer’s end), so be sure to have some goodies on hand to keep the wandering souls of the faithful departed at bay. Halloween is an Irish invention; the ancients used to leave gifts of food for the dead during this magical time when the laws of space and time were suspended. They carved out turnips to look like protective spirits and lit candles to help guide the spirits home. This was also the time when the “wee folk” pulled pranks on unsuspecting humans, though in those days, no toilet paper or soap were involved.

As always, check our calendar of events, and don’t be surprised to see it trick-or-treating at your door next week. It’s thinking of going out as CNN.

News, People

5 Questions For. . . Kevin Kane

Kevin Kane, center, and his brothers, John, left, and Christian, during a recent trip to Galway, Ireland.

Kevin Kane, center, and his brothers, John, left, and Christian, during a recent trip to Galway, Ireland.

Every Ancient Order of Hibernians division across the US spends a good part of its time and effort raising money for local charities. In Havertown, the Dennis Kelly Div. 1 AOH is no different. But its focus has been on helping veterans, either on the battlefield or, as they’re doing this year, on the home front. We spoke to Div. 1 Vice President Kevin Kane about Saturday’s benefit at St. Denis Gym in Havertown—featuring live Irish music by The Shantys, comedy, TVs all around for watching the Phillies, and gourmet food and drink—that will raise money for The Hero’s Homecoming Fund, the division’s own charity.

What is the Hero’s Homecoming Fund?

The “Hero’s Homecoming Fund” is a name we gave to the monies that we will be raising at our October benefit.  The idea is to cut as many checks as possible directly to injured troops and their families for them to use as they see fit to improve their holiday season this year. We did not want to shower a family with $300 worth of Christmas gifts if what they really needed was help with their PECO bill, so it would seem actual checks cut directly to the troops would be the most effective way to help. Last year our fundraiser was “Treasures for our Troops” where we raised money, bought the care items for troops currently stationed in Iraq and Afghanistan, and sent over about 100 individual packages to them.  This year, we are going on the home front with returned soldiers.

What got you personally involved in this particular charity?

It’s a cause near and dear to my heart. On October 14, 2006,  Staff
Sergeant Joseph Kane, my cousin and friend, was killed by an IED (improvised explosive device) outside Baghdad.  He was a Monsignor Bonner graduate and from Darby. Because of my AOH Division’s work in the cause and also my obvious family attachments to the cause, I was put in touch with one of the heads of Operation First Response, Nick Constantino.  While it is a national organization that helps wounded troops, Nick is a local guy in Broomall who knows my aunt and uncle well (the parents of my cousin who was killed in action. After the final tally from our event we will sit down and figure out how many checks we can write, then Nick will give our division access to as many cases as we wish to review for donations.  We hope to be able to help local guys but will not hesitate to go outside of the area as well.

Your division has other personal links to the troops, isn’t that right?

Yes, one of our division members, Jim McCans, spent time
in Iraq last year with his cadaver dog “Stashe.” When Jim was working with the military there, they came across a land mine and two of the soldiers assigned to help and guard Jim were severely wounded, Sgt. Rob Laux and Sgt. Chris Payne.  Both soldiers are still recovering from their injuries at Walter Reed Hospital.  Our division is putting both of the up for the night at a
local hotel, and they will be the guests of honor at our event.

[Editor’s note: This week, Havertown paramedic Jim McCans and Stache will receive an ASPCA Presidential Service Award for their work in Iraq, searching for the remains of US troops. The incident Kane refers to resulted in Stache breaking his eardrum, leading to temporary hearing loss from which the four-year-old Police Academy-trained black lab has since recovered.]

Like the other AOHs in the region, your division is active in the Hibernian Hunger Project, which was launched in this area and is now a national AOH charity. You’ve linked your work with veterans to that too, haven’t you?
 
Our commitment to veterans is also evident by our selection of recipients for our recent Hibernian Hunger Drive, where local schools and parishes donated food stuffs that we delivered to The Philadelphia Comfort House, at 41st and Baltimore Avenue, a temporary residence operated for the benefit of financially needy veterans and family members who require temporary housing while being treated at the VA Hospital. Our division also supported the recent charity benefits for Corporal Matthew Sonderman, another local severely wounded vet.

Your division recently co-sponsored a charity basketball game at Msgr. Bonner High School involving a ball team from a Belfast School. Tell us about that.

Our division sponsors a group of Irish basketball players from St. Malachy’s in Belfast to come over and tour the area, and play some basketball against some local high school basketball teams.  In turn, we send a dozen or so local high school players once a year over to Belfast to do the same. We used part of the monies we raised at our “Bonner to Belfast and Back” basketball game this past Monday night to donate, along with the Bonner Fathers Association, a $500 check to the foundation set up for Officer Patrick McDonald, a Philadelphia cop of Irish descent shot and killed in the line of duty last month.

If you can’t make it to the benefit, you can still donate to help a returning injured vet. Send checks payable to “AOH Inc.” and mail them to division financial secretary Chuck Harrington at 715 Ardmore Ave, Ardmore, PA 19003.

Food & Drink

Say Goodbye to Emmett’s Place

Since 1971, Emmett’s Place in Oxford Circle has been the place to go for great Irish music and dancing every weekend. But now, after 37 years, owner Emmett Ruane is retiring. And in true Irish fashion, his friends are holding a “wake” for the place where they drank beer and danced sets even as the neighborhood became less and less Irish.

On Saturday, October 25, some of the musicians who played at Emmett’s—for some of them, one of their first gigs after arriving in the city from Ireland—will be providing the music one last time. (Update, October 27, 2008: Here’s a video sampler of the farewell party.)

Starting at 7 PM, you might catch Tommy Moffitt, the Vince Gallagher Band, the Malones and Their Cousin, Gerry TImlin, the King Brothers, Erins’ Heirs, Mike Brill, Paul Moore, Tom McHugh, Pat Campbell, Oliver McElhone, The Birmingham Six, The Brigade, Cletus McBride, The Celtic Connection, Tom Kelly, the Tara Gael Dancers, and more. (If you’re interested in being a part of the musical troupe, contact Fintan Malone at (215) 379-0424.)

Moore, lead singer of Paddy’s Well, previously of Blackthorn, says he knows the place and its owner “all too well.”

“He’s one of the finest people I know.” says Moore. “I am thrilled he can retire happily after all those years and that we can give him a nice farewell this weekend. All of the bands that I have ever played with got our first chance to play publicly there—Blarney Stones a/k/a Blarney, Blackthorn and Paddy’s Well. He was always true to keeping Irish music in the pub all through the years—’til the very end—through good years and bad.

“I love and respect the fact that he gave so many musicians a chance to succeed in the past 40 years so I am really looking forward to giving him a big farewell this weekend and saying thanks for everything.

“I have so many funny stories and happy memories from emmett’s place that it is hard to pick one. But I would say that my dad (Paul) and my grandfather (Will O’Donnell) only ever heard me perform in public in one place before they both passed away in 1990. It was Emmett’s Place and that’s something i’ll always remember.”

Dancers, too have their memories.

Marianne MacDonald, host of the radio show “Come West Along the Road,” has been going to Emmett’s since the early ’90s. She recalls her first visit. “I went to see Blarney (Fintan and Tom Brett). There was a full crowd, with several folks from New Jersey. On the way home, we realized that Levick Street was one way in the wrong direction and, not being sure what to do, we made a right and ended up doing a scenic tour of North Philly on the way home. The next time we made sure we followed someone who knew the way.

“There were many memorable times but probably one of my favorites was the night before Thanksgiving when Tommy Moffit would play and all of the folks would come in and catch up with each other. The place would be packed to the gills, you could hardly move, you were lucky if you got a seat and there would be three or four sets dancing on the tiny dance floor. It was always a great night, lots of fun and you’d see people you hadn’t seen in months.

“I think it’s sort of like the Northeast’s answer to Cheers, where everyone knows your name. You always felt very comfortable coming through that front door and you’d hear folks calling hello, waving to you and there would be Emmett at the back of the bar by the kitchen or at his table with the lamp.

“I know I will miss the place an awful lot. I hadn’t been getting there as much as I used to but I always tried to get there at least once a month. Emmett deserves a lot of credit for starting the Irish music and keeping it running all these years, through thick and thin. I feel like it’s the end of an era but Emmett certainly deserves a well-earned retirement! I hope everyone comes out next Saturday night for the send-off party.”

Hey, we’re going to be there! Hope to see you too! Emmett’s Place is at 925 Levick Street.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish In Philly This Week

It’s another of those weekends: So much to do, so little time. Here are your choices. . .

On Saturday:

Hear some great Irish bands at a benefit for the families of slain Philadelphia police officers Patrick McDonald and Isabel Nazario at the Bridesburg VFW. The event starts with a mass at 11 AM.

Watch screenings of the latest film from Irish-American filmmaker Shawn Swords which will be running continuously from 5 PM at Rembrandt’s Restaurant in Philadelphia. Swords, who previously produced a documentary on local Celtic rockers Blackthorn, had turned his focus on the American Bandstand era in Philadelphia and the payola scandals in “Wages of Spin.”

Enjoy McDermott’s Handy (Dennis Gormley and Kathy DeAngelo) at the Celtic Café concert series at the Medford Friends Meeting House in New Jersey, starting at 7:30 PM.

Help the LAOH Trinity Div. 4 raise money for AOH charities at Sacred Heart Parish Hall in Clifton Heights, Delaware County. The Old News Band provides the soundtrack, starting at 8 PM.

Tap your feet and clap your hands to Tony DeMarco, noted New York fiddler in the exuberant Sligo style, at the World Café Live in Philadelphia at 8 PM.

But don’t stop there. On Sunday:

Put on your dancing shoes for a ceili at the Polk Township Fire Hall in Kresgeville, PA, starting at 2 PM.

Help raise money for the Inis Nua Theatre Company at a special performance of “Trad,” a play written by Mark Doherty at Fergie’s Pub on Sansom Street in center city. Inis Nua is the only theater company in the city to produce the best of plays by Celtic playwrights. Everything starts at 6 PM.

And it’s not over yet.

On Monday, Monsignor Bonner High School in Drexel Hill will be hosting the players from St. Malachy’s College in Northern Ireland in a basketball game (the last one in 2006 ended in double overtime, so prepare for excitement). Donations will be sent to a scholarship fun at Archbishop Ryan High School in the name of slain Police Officer Patrick McDonald. The Dennis Kelly AOH Div. 1 in Havertown is sponsoring the event, which starts at 7 PM.

On Wednesday, brush up your Gaelic at an Irish language meet-up at 7:30 PM at The Irish Times in Queen Village.

Also on Wednesday, the Roselle Center for the Arts in Newark, DE, begins a run of “The Hostage” by Brendan Behan, which concludes on November 8.

And don’t forget: On Thursday, John Carty and Donal Clancy will be playing at the Moorestown Community House in Moorestown, NJ. If you miss them there, they’ll be playing at one of our favorite venues, The Coatesville Cultural Society in Coatesville, on October 26. Carty is one of Ireland’s finest Irish traditional musicians. Clancy (of the famous Clancy family) is touring with the group, Danu.

Music

Finbar Furey in Concert

Fiddler Mary Malone came because, when she was a young mother, someone once gave her a homemade tape of Irish folk legends, The Fureys, a group of Dublin brothers that helped put Irish traditional music on the map.

Will Hill came because, as a teenager, he first heard the uillean pipes played by Finbar Furey on two now-collectible LPs, when Furey was young and still had a head of curly hair. Hill brought those albums with him to The Shanachie Pub in Ambler on Monday night to have them signed by Furey, who made a stop in the Philadelphia area while touring the east coast to promote his new CD, “No Farewells, No Goodbyes.” He was accompanied by performer Brian Gaffney.

And the actor, singer, poet, songwriter didn’t disappoint—not in any way. He signed the albums, performed the songs that first endeared the Fureys to American audiences, mesmerized the crowd with his intricate piping, and made everyone laugh with his stories. Like the one about how, as a young man, he asked famed ‘60s folksinger Tom Paxton if he would mind if he altered one of Paxton’s songs a bit. “I was cheeky back then,” he confessed. “Tom Paxton looked at me with his cold blue eyes and said, ‘What are you going to do with it?’”

He was going to rewrite it for banjo, Furey explained. Oh, and change the words a little.

There was a long, deadly gap in the conversation, Furey recalled. Then Paxton said, “Oh, go for it.”

So Furey did. And the Fureys recorded Paxton’s  “I Will Love You,” catapulting it to number one on the Irish charts. “Then one night I get a phone call. ‘Finbar?’ ‘Yes.’ ‘This is Tom Paxton, Finbar.’ ‘Yes.’ ‘Bastard! I’ve been singing that song for years and nobody’s hardly heard it!’” Furey roared almost as hard as the audience, who began singing with him at the first song and to the last.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

I sure hope you’re well-rested, because you have an lot of Irish stuff to do this week and you’ll need the energy.

Saturday is so jam-packed, it ought to have a few more hours. AOH Division 87 is holding its annual golf outing fundraiser Saturday at Byrnes Golf Course in Philadelphia, which includes a barbecue lunch. On Saturday night the Bristol AOH is holding a release party to celebrate its CD, Hibernian Sessions, a recording of all the great bands that have played at Bristol’s AOH. Some of those great entertainers will be there Saturday night: the Birmingham Six, The Shantys, Jamison and Bogside Rogues. There will also be Irish dancing and vendors. All proceeds go to AOH charities. See our story here.

Also on Saturday night: Join the Crossroads Irish Dancers at Our Lady of Grace School in Penndel where they’ll join up with local group, Celtic Crossroads, for an old-fashioned ceili. (Don’t know how to do ceili dances? Don’t worry, they’ll teach you!)

Or head over to Bucks County Community College for a night of Irish music, dance, and storytelling with the Martin Family Band and storyteller Tom Slattery.

Sunday, in the most Irish state in the US, Delaware, you can enjoy all the music, dancing, and great Irish wares at the 15th annual New Castle County Irish Festival in Wilmington. Things are bad all over—we all need to enjoy ourselves, and this is one way to do it.

On Monday night, you have a rare opportunity to hear legendary singer and piper Finbar Furey at The Shanachie Pub and Restaurant in Ambler. Read our exclusive interview with Furey here.

Next Friday, at The Irish Center in Mt. Airy, enjoy some great music at the Brian Boru Pipes and Drums Fundraiser to benefit the Fox Chase Cancer Center and Music Education Fund to Preserve the Music of Our Celtic Heritage. On the bill, Albannach, an energizing group that puts the perk in percussion. If you love drums, as some of us do, you gotta be there.