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Denise Foley

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

If you think that a typical Irish event involves music, dancing, singing, eating and drinking, you’d be right. And that’s a fair description of a “Wren Party,” a traditional Irish get-together that celebrates. . .well, maybe “celebrates” isn’t the right word to describe a tradition that once involved killing a bird and carrying its carcass from door to door, begging for handouts. Sounds too much like a holiday envisioned by Wes Craven, even though a saint was involved. Anyway, today it’s just a lot of singing and dancing and fun-having, and there’s one scheduled for December 26 at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Glenside.

Not to your taste? How about checking out 2U, the U2 Tribute Band in concert at the Sellersville Theater? They’re not Bono Lite either. They out-edge The Edge (do his friends call him “The?”). 

And you still have time to pick out your costume for the New Year’s Eve Masquerade Ball at the Irish Center. It’s a great deal: For $50 a person, there’s an open bar, dinner, dancing to the music of Vince Gallagher and John Kelly, and, since you’ll be wearing a mask, you can make a fool of yourself and no one will be mocking you the next day. At least, not by name.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish In Philly This Week and Beyond

Kick up your Christmas heels on Friday, December 14, at the Philadelphia Ceili Group’s Christmas Ceili at the Irish Center in Mt. Airy. Prepare for an old-fashioned good time with live music, dancing, and a pot luck supper (bring a contribution–a big irishphiladelphia.com smooch to anyone who brings those great little meatballs in the grape jelly sauce). The festivities start at 8 PM.

Get ready for some serious toe-tapping if you head down on Friday night to Coatesville to hear The Hedge Band, four of Baltimore’s best Irish musicians (including Billy McComiskey, who shows up here fairly regularly). As usual, Frank Dalton has put together a great show of Irish traditional music at one of the nicest venues around. The show starts at 8 PM, but come down early and grab a light dinner at the Coatesville Cultural Society’s café.

On Saturday, take the kiddies to the Irish Immigration Center in Upper Darby to meet Santa, and shop for crafty items for those hard-to-buy-for folks on your list. There’ll be music (of course–this is an Irish event, after all), food, drink, and great raffle prizes.

Did we mention music? On Saturday night, the Philadelphia Ceili Group is presenting “Irish Christmas in America,” which promises to be a magical evening of music and dance with Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh of Danú, and Téada’s Sean McElwain and Tristan Rosenstock on guitar and bodhran respectively, acclaimed harpist Gráinne Hambly and uilleann piper Tommy Martin, along with dancers Abbey Magill and Sienna Hickey. Though the weather outside is predicted to be frightful, expect the evening to be delightful. Enough to make the Grinch give back Christmas. It starts at 8:30 PM.

Still have some Christmas energy left? On Sunday, the Donegal and Mayo Associations will be holding their Christmas party at the Irish Center. You don’t have to be a member to attend (you don’t even have to be from Donegal or Mayo). The party starts with a Mass at 3 PM. At 4 PM, Santa arrives bringing toys for the kids (you’re invited to be Santa’s little helper: Bring a wrapped toy with your child’s name on it so Santa can do the honors). Christmas shopping alert: At the same time that Santa is keeping your kids busy, there will be a Home Interior Show in progress in the Barry Room. Proceeds from your gift purchases will benefit the Golden Jubilee events for the Commodore Barry Club (the Irish Center). For more info, call Michelle Higgins at 215-722-8987. And stay for dinner. It starts at 5 PM.

Our friends to the North (that would be Quakertown and the Lehigh Valley) might want to mark down December 21–that’s the date of the Christmas Dinner and Concert by Seamus Kennedy at McCoole’s. We haven’t heard him, but everyone tells us that Kennedy is a total hoot.

And on December 23 at the Old Dutch Parsonage in Somerville, NJ, enjoy an evening of seasonal songs and stories as Robert Mouland portrays Michael Keane, an actual Irish harper who came to the American colonies in 1754 with the Royal Governor of North Carolina. The setting is the Old Dutch Parsonage, a house museum built in 1751. The concert is in the parlor which is warmed by a large fireplace and lit by candlelight (oooooo). Mouland will perform on a unique array of period and antique instruments including the Irish harp, harpsichord, baroque fiddle (c.1760), baroque flute (c.1795), English guittar (c.1770) and union pipes. It starts at 7:30 PM and seating is limited. For more info call (908) 725-1015.

Post-Christmas, think about attending the annual Wren Party at the Knights of Columbus Hall on December 26. We went last year and had a great time. It’s an old Irish tradition–make it one of yours. No New Year’s Eve plans? Consider the New Year’s Eve Masquerade Ball at the Irish Center. Dance to the music of Vince Gallagher and John Kelly, enjoy dinner and drinks, and kiss your honey at midnight, all for $50 per person.

See our calendar for all the juicy details.

Food & Drink

Lift a Cup of Kindness

Originally published December 16, 2006. (But it was so good, we just had to bring it back.)

So, what are you washing down your Irish Christmas pudding with this year? Our friends at McGillin’s, the oldest Irish pub in Philadelphia (1310 Drury Lane), shared with us some holiday recipes which, if they’re not strictly Irish, do have a distinctly holiday flavor.

So what do you say when you lift your glass of Poinsettia Punch or your Pumpkin martini? A few choice Irish toasts:

“Nollaig shona duit!” (Happy Christmas!)

“Nollaig faoi shéan is faoi shonas duit.” (A prosperous and happy Christmas to you!)

“Go mbeire muid be oar an am seo aris!” (May we be alive at this time next year!”)

One caveat: Please, drink responsibly, so we all may be alive at this time next year.

Poinsettia Punch

Our friends at McGillin’s, the oldest Irish pub in Philadelphia, shared this holiday recipe which, if it;s not strictly Irish, does have a distinctly holiday flavor.

Ingredients

  • 1 magnum champagne
  • 64 oz. (2 quarts) cranberry juice
  • 16 oz. orange juice
  • 10 oz. Triple sec
  • Orange slices, for garnish

Procedure

Mix ingredients together. Enjoy!

Pumpkin Martini

This spirited drink comes to us courtesy of the good folks at McGillin’s Olde Ale House.

Ingredients

  • 1-1/4 oz. vanilla vodka
  • 1-1/4 oz. pumpkin smash (a liquor)
  • 1/2 oz. milk or half and half
  • 1 tsp. sugar
  • 1 tsp. cinnamon

Procedure

Mix first 3 ingredients. Pour over ice in martini shaker. Shake well. Then, mix sugar and cinnamon and rim martini glass with mixture. Strain liquid martini ingredients into chilled martini glass rimmed with the cinnamon and sugar mixture.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

Forget the mall. Take your kids to see the Irish Santa this Saturday, December 8, at the National Guard Armory, Southampton Road and Roosevelt Boulevard in Northeast Philadelphia. Bring a donation of canned goods for the Hibernian Hunger Project or an unwrapped non-violent toy for the U.S . Marines Toys for Tots Campaign as part of Project St. Nicholas, an annual event that raises donations for these and other charities.

Santa is scheduled to appear from Noon to 2 PM. Stay on for the Irish Unity Festival later on in the day and hear some some of the best Irish musical groups in the area including The Bogside Rogues, Ballina, Birmingham Six, Tullamore Trio, The Shantys and more.

Moya Brennan of Clannad will be singing her heart out in Sellersville at the beautiful Sellersville Theater (where all the seats are great) on Saturday night. Read more about her here.

If you’re in Philly Sunday, consider heading to the Dark Horse Pub for the Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol” dinner and reading. For about $50, you get a five-course dinner and drama. God bless us every one! If you’re going to be in Quakertown, McCoole’s is having its Christmas party followed by a Seven Nations concert. Hmmm, heavy metal bagpipes. Very Christmasy. But we love a band in kilts, so. . .

St. Mary of the Lakes in Medford, NJ, is holding its Christmas Concert on Sunday as well. It features tenor Ciaran Sheehan, who played the Phantom in “Phantom of the Opera.”

Planning ahead: There are two fabulous concerts coming up. First, The Hedge Band, featuring four of Maryland’s finest Irish musicians, including Billy McComiskey, whom many of you have enjoyed at the Philadelphia Ceili Group’s Irish Music Festival in September. They’ll be appearing on Friday, December 14, at the Coatesville Cultural Society–another venue where there’s nary a bad seat.

The following day, take the kids to see Irish Santa again at the Irish Immigration Center in Upper Darby. There’ll also be music, arts and crafts, drinks, and great raffle prizes. And save some energy for Irish Christmas in America, an amazing concert to be held later that evening at the Irish Center in Mt. Airy.

Check our calendar (our Christmas calendar and regular old everyday one) for all the details.

People

Step Into the Virtual Pub

CelticLounge.com founders Larry Kirwan, left, and Mike Farragher.

CelticLounge.com founders Larry Kirwan, left, and Mike Farragher.

It may shock some faithful Irish Voice readers to learn that columnist and music critic Mike Farragher grew up hating–he puts the word in capital letters–Irish music. It was because “my parents rammed it down my throat,” he explains. You know, like Brussels sprouts and the need for deodorant–those parent things that you don’t appreciate till you get older.

Then Farragher heard Black 47, the New York City Irish band that wove Irish music with rock, reggae and hip-hop. Suddenly, he says, here was Irish music that appealed to his modern-day Celtic soul. “Finally the beautiful Celtic culture made sense. It was as if Black 47 was an interpreter that translated my culture back to me. I think they’ve been turning people onto their own roots for years.”

More than a decade ago, Farragher met Larry Kirwan, front man for Black 47, and found a kindred spirit. They’ve been friends ever since, and recently became collaborators on a new website, CelticLounge.com, a “virtual pub” where artists can come to play and meet and fans can come, like Farragher, to hear music that will connect them to their roots.” But it’s more than just about music, as Farragher explained to us recently. In fact, in the beginning, it wasn’t really about music at all.
How did you come up with the idea of Celtic Lounge?
I had been kicking around the idea of doing a social network for Irish writers. I had written a novel called Collared (www.collared.net), which was a suspense novel set in the church scandals. I discovered that writing was a very lonely life. You never know if what you’re writing is on target or not,
and I thought there was a need to put a quasi-support group together. At the same time, Larry Kirwan from Black 47 was considering doing something similar for musicians. Celtic rock and ethnic music in general is a difficult thing to get played on the radio, so he thought it would be a good thing to put a network together to promote the genre. We discussed this over a pint and decided to create something together, which has turned out to be bigger than either of us imagined!
 
What do you hope to accomplish with the site?
Nothing short of the rebranding and reimagining of what it is to
be a Celt in general and an Irishman in particular. You Google images of “Irish” and you get shamrocks, drunken leprechauns, and Aran sweaters. It is a narrow,  slightly insulting view of what we are. Celts are vibrant, wildly creative  people, and that is what we are hoping to put out there. A cultural revolution! On a smaller scale, it is a place for Celtic artists and fans of that art to come together. I was speaking with a very well known NY-based band today, and the leader was lamenting how the smoking ban and other factors have really killed the Irish bar scene in the Big Apple. “People now get their music on an iPod instead of on a barstool,” he said with a sigh. Well, that trend plays into our “online pub” concept very well when you think about it!

What kind of response are you getting?
Overwhelming. It’s twice as much fun and four times the work than what I was expecting. Reaction is great….we have Irish Americans in the military guarding the Korean border who log in to get a slice of home and their culture. We have young writers getting the rush of having their very first story published on our online magazine. I even heard of some hookups that have been facilitated by our social network. So, people log in for different reasons and we have something that will interest most people who click in and grab an “e-pint.” On another note, we are working with a liquor company on a writer’s contest that will award $1000 for the best short story or essay writer. Wouldn’t it be great if the next Joyce or Behan was found hanging out at CelticLounge? A record company is working on a compilation CD featuring some of the artists  that are featured in our radio player. We have people buying t-shirts with our logo on them. So, you start creating an online community, minding your own business, and before you know it, you’re a clothing designer and a record producer! I can’t wait to see where we take CelticLounge next!

What are your biggest challenges?
Getting the word out is a challenge. We have 70,000 visitors a
month with 46 million people claiming to be Celts or coming from Celtic roots of some sort on both sides of the Atlantic. So, we have our work cut out for us! While the site is making enough money to sustain it, there is always the problem in most businesses of a million ideas and not enough cash to launch them. I think that keeping the content fresh is always a challenge, wehave loads of writers and musicians contributing to the site.

How are you handling the extra workload? Neither of you has given up your day (or night) jobs, I take it.
Sleep? What is that? Right now, Larry and I manage the content.
Our technology partner is WebSignia (www.websignia.net), who really brought our vision to life digitally. They do amazing work. When you are doing something you love, the time flies by. I’m blessed because I LOVE my day job and I love playing with CelticLounge.com. I am both a left brain AND a right brain
guy, so I love working in the business world by day and then creating on CelticLounge and writing by night. On top of that, there is a lovely and understanding wife and children in the mix. It’s a hectic lifestyle, but a balanced one.

How do you and Larry work together?
It is amazing to be working with such a creative spirit. Rocker! Author! Playwright! Sirius Radio DJ! You learn a lot orbiting his solar system. We have had plenty of disagreements as we create CelticLounge.com, but they are minor and resolved quickly because our creative vision and passion are evenly matched for the most part. It’s been a blast working together and I hope it continues to be this fun!

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

Liz Carroll and John Doyle

Liz Carroll and John Doyle

You’re in for a real treat on Saturday. Fiddler Liz Carroll (winner of the Senior All-Ireland championship at age 18), accompanied by ex-Solas guitarist John Doyle, will be appearing in concert at the Calvary Center for Culture and Community, 48th Street and Baltimore Avenue in Philadelphia. Carroll is known for her fiery, emotional performances so it could be quite an aerobic workout for you: Be prepared to be leaping to your feet more than once. The event is sponsored by Crossroads Concerts, a local organization dedicated to bringing diverse musical experiences to the region.

If you’re in the Lehigh Valley over the weekend, drop into Bethlehem, which gets its sparkle on during the holiday season (it’s not called “The Christmas City” for nothing). Local sean nos singer Terry Kane and her partner John Beatty will be performing at Christkindlmarkt at the corner of Spring and Main Streets. Christkindlmarkt is German for “place to buy really cool Christmas gifts” (not really), but this craft fair really is a great place to start your holiday shopping. And you get to hear one of the loveliest voices in the region to boot. We could listen to Terry sing forever.

Looking ahead: The Dark Horse Pub at 421 S 2nd St in Philadelphia is presenting Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol” dinner and reading on December 4. For about $50 per person, you get a five-course meal and an entertaining evening with Bob Cratchit, Tiny Tim, and Mr. Scrooge. No, it’s not really Irish, but it’s from the same neighborhood and it sounds like craic to us.

If you’re in the First State, that same evening you can enjoy a concert by the Celtic quintet Grada, featuring Alan Doherty, lead soloist on “The Lord of the Rings” soundtrack. The group promises some special surprises for their Christmas show, including seasonally themed numbers and humorous audience interactions (something we find a little frightening, but to each his own). Some important insider info: This event is sponsored by Green Willow, which brings lots of great musical acts to the area. If you mention “Green Willow” when ordering tickets, you get a discount. And if you wear a festive hat (something else we find frightening) you may also win a prize.

Check out our special Irish Christmas calendar so you won’t miss any Celtic holiday events (and there are many!). And if you’re shopping, please patronize our sponsor, Celtic Clothing. The company is run by local Irish guy, Charlie Lord, of Chadds Ford, and he’s offering a discount to faithful readers of Irish Philadelphia. When you buy from Charlie, you support a local Irish business. And since Charlie gives us a cut, you support our wonderful calendar that keeps you Irish all year long. In fact, check it out for more details on this week’s events.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

The Mid-Atlantic Oireachtas, a huge Irish dance competition, starts the day after Thanksgiving and runs through the weekend at the Downtown Marriott in Philadelphia. Many local dance schools are competing and it’s worth poking your head in for a few hours. The music is great, the dancers are adorable, and you won’t be able to help jigging back to your car. 

But on Wednesday night, you can get your dose of Irish while doing a good deed. On Wednesday night, starting at 5, Paul Moore and Paddy’s Well will be performing at Finnigan’s Wake in Philly at a benefit for the Police Survivors Fund, which is raising money for the family of the late Officer Charles Cassidy. Finnigan’s is providing the buffet and beer, and your $10 cover charge will go directly into the fund.

While you’re downtown, keep an eye out for Irish Thunder. No, that’s not a weather report. The popular pipe and drum band from Montgomery County will be reprising it’s annual Thanksgiving eve pub crawl.

You didn’t really have to make those pies, now did you? Just buy ’em!

Genealogy

The Further Adventures of the Lazy Genealogist

When it comes to genealogy, it doesn’t get any lazier than this: using other people’s research. For one thing, you don’t have to do any of that really hard, musty, and expensive digging on your own if someone has been kind enough to do it for you and transcribe it to the web. The best thing about these sites is that they’re labors of love and you don’t have to pay to search them.

You may not always get a hit, but it’s worth a look at:
http://www.failteromhat.com/index.htm You can find selected extracts of Griffiths Valuation of Ireland 1848-1864 (this was the “census substitute” for mid-19th century Ireland; the first systematic valuation of all property holdings in Ireland) the 1901 Ireland census, 17th century Hearth Money Roles for Armagh, Louth, Sligo, and Monahan, the Irish Flax Growers’ list (also known as the Spinner’s list) for 1796, selected Irish marriage records for 1600-1900, plus a number of documents from Cork, Dublin, and smaller towns along with photos, maps and historical documents. The documents were compiled by John Hayes in the course of his own ancestor-hunting. “It’s nice to hear from people who find the site useful and or have found some relative through the site,” John told me.
http://irelandgenealogyprojects.rootsweb.com/ It’s a little hit or miss, but that’s because this site, hosted by major player rootsweb, is supplied with transcriptions by volunteers (God bless ‘em!). Click on the county you’re interested in and you’ll find window after window of information, from family home pages (like the one mentioned above, often a rich source of data) to transcriptions of historical documents, including hearth rolls and census records. Each county site includes a list of common surnames and the name of a researcher you can contact to ask about your ancestor.

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~donegal/ If, like me, your ancestors came from Donegal, this site developed and maintained by Australian researcher Lindel Buckley is a treasure trove. Lindel has compiled headstone transcriptions from 18 cemeteries, commercial directories, passenger lists, census records, parish resources, land records, occupation-related indexes (including blacksmiths!), old Donegal photographs, a list of more than 100 books with a synopsis of each, and links to other resources.

http://www.rootsweb.com/~genealogylookup/index.html This site is manned by volunteers who are willing to do a “lookup” for you–perhaps a birth or death certificate, or even a headstone inscription. You can post your needs on the message board and with any luck, someone will offer to look it up for you. There is also a state-by-state list of people who love to prowl cemeteries to transcribe inscriptions, dig up census info, marriage licenses (there are fewer of those), and births (not too many). Of course, like many organizations, this one is always looking for volunteers.