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Denise Foley

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Weekend

The best place to be Irish in Philly is at a German club on Friday night, August 31. That’s when the Philadelphia Police and Fire Pipes and Drums will be holding its Second Annual Halfway to St. Patty’s Day Party at Canstatters, 9130 Academy Road, in northeast Philadelphia.

This is your chance to hear Philly’s finest and bravest play “Do You Think I’m Sexy?” on the highland pipes (only they would have the cojones to do that) and help them raise money to keep the band in clean kilts. It’s also your chance to hear Blackthorn, one of the hottest Celtic bands in the area, do their thing (it involves lots of great music, dancing, and laughing.) Last year, we actually saw some firefighters doing the lambada, which was worth the price of admission–a donation of $35 per person. That includes food, drink, and an opportunity to buy a raffle ticket for a trip to Ireland (or cash). Also on the bill: The Immortals.

The festivities get underway at 5 PM.

As for the rest of the week, read “See You In September” Part 1, below, for all the great goings-on planned for the annual Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival–lots of music, dancing, and frivolity. For all you word lovers, there’ll also be an evening of readings by local Irish poets and authors. We’ll see you there!

News

She’ll Walk More Miles In Her Shoes

That's Team Ratty Shoes Captain Patti Byrd sandwiched between Blackthorn's Michael Callahan and John Boyce in the center.

That's Team Ratty Shoes Captain Patti Byrd sandwiched between Blackthorn's Michael Callahan and John Boyce in the center.

With a successful fundraiser behind her, the captain of Team Ratty Shoes, Patti Byrd, promised to walk an additional 20 miles at the next Multiple Sclerosis Society Challenge Walk (October 13-14, 2007, weaving its way through the Brandywine Valley with stops in Longwood Gardens and Winterthur) if the team raises $11,000 by September. Co-captain Christopher Burden will accompany her, stretching their 30-mile walk to a 50-mile hike.

“With the outpouring of help from the community and the sponsorship of Blackthorn, we can surely meet and maybe exceed this goal,” said Byrd, who founded the team four years ago and named it for one of her favorite CDs by the local Celtic rock band, Blackthorn. “One dollar for every person in the Delaware Valley living with multiple sclerosis is our new goal for Team Ratty Shoes.”

The volunteers held a fundraiser on July 15 at Brittingham’s Irish Pub and Restaurant in Lafayette Hill, featuring musical performances by Random Blonde, Allison Barber, Raymond McGroary, and Mike Brill. Blackthorn surprised the crowd with a performance (that’s right, singing “Ratty Shoes.”)

And the Delaware County-based group is contributing another way. They’re sponsoring a raffle whose grand prize is an Irish Weekend Getaway package – hotel accommodations and festival passes for four for the 2007 festival, September 21-23, in Wildwood, NJ. First prize is a Blackthorn Prize Package containing CDs and other merchandise. Raffle tickets will be available at the benefit, as well as at all Blackthorn shows from July 11 through August 11, 2007, when the drawing will be held at The Bolero in Wildwood, NJ.

All proceeds from the event benefit the National Multiple Sclerosis Society of the Greater Delaware Valley. For more information about the MS Challenge Walk, visit www.walk4ms.org. For more information about Team Ratty Shoes, contact team captain, Patti Byrd at Teamrattyshoes@gmail.com or 215-442-0131.

Music

Support Your Local Trad Musician

Caitlin Finley, center, with friends Emma Hinesly and Sean Earnest.

Caitlin Finley, center, with friends Emma Hinesly and Sean Earnest.

What do you do when your fiddle teachers are heading out of town a few weeks before you’re scheduled to compete in the all-Ireland Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann, the largest Irish music competition in the world, attracting more than 11,000 musicians?

If you’re Caitlin Finley, you get nervous. “Yeeessss, I’m really nervous right now,” says Caitlin, an incoming junior at Lower Merion High School. “I just picked my tunes and now I’ll have to do all the preparation on my own.”

Imagine Rocky without Mickey, Helen Keller without Annie Sullivan, the Notre Dame team without Knute Rockne. Caitlin is losing her teachers and coaches, New York fiddler Brian Conway, considered one of the best fiddlers in the US and an All-Ireland fiddle winner, and his sister, Rose Flanagan, a former member of the popular group, Cherish the Ladies. You’d be nervous too.

But there will be one thing she won’t need to worry about after Sunday–whether her fellow competitors in New York will be able to afford the trip. Electrifying fiddler Eileen Ivers and singer-instrumentalist Gabe Donohue will be headlining an all-star benefit on Sunday, August 5, from 1 PM to midnight at Rory Dolan’s,
890 Mclean Avenue, in Yonkers, NY.

“Last year everyone got a huge amount of money toward the trip which paid for a lot of the kids’ airfare,” says Caitlin, who will be traveling to Ireland with her parents. (This is her second trip to the Fleadh; last year, her ceili band, The Pride of Moyvane, earned the right to compete, which requires that you come in either first or second in the local Fleadh, held each year in Pearl River, NY.)

Caitlin and her current group (including flutist Emma Hinesly and guitarist Sean Earnest) have been burning up the local trad scene for more than a year: playing for the Irish ambassador Noel Fahy; entertaining at the Philadelphia Flower Show and at Kildare’s; sitting in with Mick Moloney and Tommy Sands at St. Malachy’s annual fundraising concert, and opening for premier button accordionist James Keane. You can also find Caitlin at sessions from here to Reading: Fergie’s, The Plough and the Stars; The Shanachie; Tir na NOg, and the Irish Center, where she often leads. 

Though she’s been playing fiddle for 8 years, she doesn’t think it will become a career. Most Irish trad musicians don’t make enough to quit their day jobs. “And I don’t want it to be my job,” she says. “I want it to be something that I love forever.”

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to be Irish in Philly This Week

This is an easy one. There’s plenty of music to remind you that you couldn’t afford to go back to Ireland this year (there’s always next year).

Stoke that homesickness starting on Thursday, July 26, when the Irish group, Anuna (think choirs of heavenly angels, think Riverdance, think, wow, how do they hit those notes and where did they find that many good-looking people who can do that?), appears at two area Borders to perform (for free) and sign copies of their new CD, “Sensations.” They’ll be accompanied by reps from WHYY which will air an Anuna special in September. At 12:30 PM, you can catch a glimpse, take a listen, buy a CD, and get it signed at Borders at 1 Broad Street, Avenue of the Arts, in Philadelphia. At 7:30 PM, they’ll be at the Borders in the Springfield Square Shopping Center, 1001 Baltimore Pike, Springfield, PA, in Delaware County.

On Saturday, July 28, you can catch the equally lovely and talented Kane Sisters (Liz and Yvonne), fiddlers extraordinaire from Galway (originally from Letterfrack, Connemara) who will be performing at 8 PM at The Irish Center, Commodore Barry Club, 6815 Emlen Street, Philadelphia, PA 19119. The Kanes recently released their second album, “Under the Diamond,” on the heels of their first, The Well-Tempered Bow,” chosen one of the top traditional albums of 2003 by the Irish Echo newspaper. For more information, go to www.philadelphiaceiligroup.org.

If you haven’t sated your appetite for a slip jig or chantey, on Sunday you can hear the sibling group, the Barra MacNeils, at the Sellersville Theater, Main and Temple Streets, Sellersville, PA 18960, starting at 7:30 PM. Called “Canada’s Celtic ambassadors,” the Barra MacNeils grew up in Sydney Mines on Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia (a hotbed of Celtic music) and have been featured on NPR and PBS. For tickets, call 215-257-5808 or go to www.st94.com

News, People

Support Team “Ratty Shoes”

About six years ago, Patty Byrd worked with a young woman with multiple sclerosis. “She had such a great attitude–she was so funny about everything, even though she had to take a cocktail of medications just to function,” says Byrd, a banking officer for BSC Services in Philadelphia. “Her disease was so unpredictable. She was planning her niece’s First Holy Communion party—she was devoted to her—and the day of the event her bowels and bladder stopped working. But she never lost her great attitude.”

Then, it seemed, everywhere Byrd went, she saw posters and pamphlets for the MS Society’s Challenge Walk. “It was 50 miles in three days and I thought to myself, ‘Oh, I don’t know about that. Oh, no!’ I was still smoking and about 60 lbs heavier than I am now. But I decided to tell people I was going to do it so I would be obligated. But they all said, ‘Are you nuts?’ Maybe, I said, but I’m going to do it.”

And she did it. It took a lot of training (and some weight loss), but Byrd not only walked the 50 miles that year, she’s walked it every year since, picking up other brave strollers on the way. “My second year I had a hodgepodge team with no name. Then the third year, something happened. It was a chilly day in spring. I was about to go out walking and I put on my shoes and realized they had no insoles. I thought to myself, ‘These are ratty shoes.’”

If you’re a fan of the popular local Irish group, Blackthorn, (Byrd calls herself “an addict) you can probably guess what happened next. “Ratty Shoes” is the name of the group’s 2001 CD and a catchy paean to the magical powers of comfortable old “ratty shoes” that can take you anywhere you want to go. And what CD was Byrd listening to when she made the observation about her own sneakers?

Of course, it was fate. And it prompted Byrd to shoot off an email to the group, asking if she could use the name for her walking team. “They said sure, and they even donated merchandise for raffles,” says Bryd. “Then, last year, (lead singer) Mike Boyce kind of realized, ‘Hey, they’re not going away,’ so the group has really gotten behind us in a big way.”

On Wednesday, July 11, when the band performs at the Pennypack Park Bandshell, Welsh Road and Rowland Avenue in Philadelphia, they’ll be selling raffle tickets to help raise money for the team (each person needs to come up with $1,500 in pledges to participate in the walking event). They’ll be selling them at every performance till August 11, when a drawing will be held at The Bolero Resort in Wildwood, where the band is performing. The prize: A complete package (accomodations, food, and tickets) for four to attend Blackthorn’s (huge) part of Wildwood’s Irish Weekend, September 21-23, at The Bolero. They’re also donating $2 from every sale of Blackthorn merchandise from July 11 to August 11 (buying a CD or a t-shirt will automatically get you a raffle ticket, which is also available without a merch purchase for $2 each). For more information and a schedule of band appearances, go to www.irishthing.com.

You may also run into band members on Sunday, July 15, when Team Ratty Shoes holds an MS Benefit at Brittingham’s, 640 E. Germantown Avenue, Lafayette Hill, featuring a host of performers including Random Blonde, Raymond McGroary, Allison Barber, and, possibly, Paul Moore, the co-author (with Blackthorn’s John and Mike Boyce) of “Ratty Shoes,” co-founder of the group, and currently with the band, Paddy’s Well.

Doors open at noon and the Irish frivolity goes on till 4 (Oliver McElhone appears on stage at 5, so you might want to stay). And it’s all in a good cause.

“We have a great team,” says Byrd. They are Tom Wyatt of Duncannon, PA; Christopher Burden of Warminster, whose wife, Michele, has MS; Leslie Bell Moll of Pottstown and Lorraine Porcellini of Philadelphia, who both work for WXPN Radio. “But it’s more than the walkers, our team includes and army of other people who support us, like Blackthorn,” says Byrd.

They’re living proof that there is some magic in those old “ratty shoes.”

Music

Head Up to the Irish “Woodstock”

If you’re a die-hard Irish trad music lover, getting the chance to see Martin Hayes, Daithi Sproul, Billy McComiskey, Brian McNamara ,The Kane Sisters, Willie Kelly, Tony DeMarco, Randall Bays, Mike Rafferty, and Myron Bretholz, all playing on the same stage, you’d think you’d died and went to heaven. Those of you who aren’t die-hard fans but want to be, trust us, this is the concert you want to hear.

And you can see and hear all of these incredible performers—and more—on Saturday, July 21, at the Michael J. Quill Irish Cultural & Sports Centre in East Durham, NY, at The Andy McGann Traditional Irish Music Festival.

The concert marks the end of a week of arts instruction, ranging from piping with Brian McNamara and fiddling with Tony DeMarco to learning the art of oil painting from painter Vincent Crotty or Irish stone carving with Laura Travis. Tuition for the week ranges from $150 to $350, depending on how often you want to take lessons. Accommodations are extra. You can find more information on the festival, including driving directions, at www.east-durham.org/irishartsweek/index.htm .

This year, the concert has been renamed to honor a longtime teacher and Sligo-style fiddler Andy McGann, who died in 2004. “It was my first year as artistic director and Andy passed away during Arts Week,” says Paul Keating. “It was a poignant time–he was a hero to many of the people on our teaching staff. But there was a comfort factor in us all being together at the time. He was a very humble, soft-spoken guy who never sought the spotlight and I know he wouldn’t care a fig about us naming the concert after him, but he’s the man who looks over Arts Week for all of us symbolically.”

Arts

Book Club, Irish Style

Now, here’s a concept we can get behind. Tonight (Friday, July 6), at 7:30, writer Daniel Hennessy will be signing his newly published book, TwoFer, at the MacSwiney Club, Greenwood and Walnut Streets in Jenkintown, where the conversation more often revolves around the latest issue of “Set Dancing News.” Hennessey will also answer questions and the South Jersey Irish Book Club will be discussing his book, published by AuthorHouse.

The book discussion will be followed at 8:15 by socializing and then set dancing to tunes played by Kevin and Jimmy McGillian till 11:30 PM.

Now, that’s the way to run a book club!

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philadelphia This Weekend

She’s cute as a set of pearl buttons on a twinset, and Angelina Carberry can play the heck out of a tenor banjo. She joins her accordionist husband, Martin Quinn, on center stage on Saturday, July 7, at  the Coatesville Cultural Society, 143 E. Lincoln Highway in Coatesville. Like many traditional Irish musicians, Carberry and Quinn come by it naturally: Angelina’s father, Peter, and grandfather, Kevin, were both musicians; Quinn comes from a long line of Irish musicians and storytellers. (If you’ve been to a trad concert, you know that most musicians, whatever their instrument, almost always have a way with words too. Be prepared to grin. And expect a good toe-tapping time.)

The concert begins at 8 PM and is part of Frank Dalton’s superlative Irish music series.

Perhaps memories of Meryl Streep’s Irish accent will dance through your head –she played stern Mundy sister, Kate, in the 1998 film version of “Dancing at Lughnasa.” But Brian Friel’s play was meant to be seen live, and it’s playing for only 5 more performances at The Barn Playhouse, Christopher Lane and Rittenhouse Boulevard in Jeffersonville, not far from King of Prussia. This 1991 Olivier Award-winning play tells the story of the five Mundy sisters, seen largely through the eyes of Michael, the illegitimate son of Chris, the youngest Mundy. Set in 1936, the action revolves around the Mundy’s first wireless radio, whose broadcasts release previously unarticulated emotions in the five women, who spontaneously break into song and dance–itself a fine Irish tradition.

You can see the various ways in which sisterhood is powerful on Friday, July 6 and 13, starting at 8 PM; Saturday, July 7 and 14, also at 8 PM. There’s also a matinee on Sunday, July 8, at 2 PM.

Got restless feet syndrome? On Friday,  July 6,  head over to the Knights of Columbus Hall in Palmyra, NJ (321 E. Broad Street)  for the monthly hooley–that’s every kind of Irish music you can think of, plus dancing–with Pancho, Kevin and Jimmy. The craic starts at 8 PM.

See the calendar for more information.

And hey, you sports fans: Why not add Gaelic football and hurling to your Sunday afternoons? This Sunday,  July, 8, starting at 12:30 PM (or thereabouts), you can see an entire afternoon of some of the fiercest, rough-and-tumble action ever to be called a sport on the playing fields of Cardinal Dougherty High School, 6301 N. Second Street, Philadelphia. It’s “footies” first, with  the Kevin Barrys squaring off against Tyrone at 12:30 PM. At 2 PM, it’s Eire Og vs. the St. Patricks. At 3:30 PM, the Young Irelands take on the Kevin Barrys. And rounding out the afternoon, it’s the Brian Borus vs the Shamrocks in a rousing game of hurling, described by a local wag as part hockey, part lacrosse, and part assault with a deadly weapon.

Just be aware that the games, though scheduled, don’t always come off as planned. If the Irish aren’t there, the Asian soccer teams might be, so it won’t be a total loss.