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Denise Foley

Arts, News, People

Get Ready to Laugh: Here Comes Mick Thomas

Comic Mick Thomas

Comic Mick Thomas

Mick Thomas is from a small town in County Wexford. “That’s in the southeast of Ireland. It’s the Florida of Ireland, except without the nice weather,” Mick told me as we chatted this week on the phone. I am already laughing, then he makes it worse. “It’s 20 degrees out and people flock to the beach. [Insert high-pitched heavily accented voice here] ‘Oh God, it’s lovely out.’”

Thomas, who now lives on Long Island, is a staple on the New York comedy scene, opening for comedy greats like Colin Quinn, Dom Irrera, Louis Anderson, and the late Greg Giraldo; performing with Jerry Stiller and Christopher Lloyd; and headlining clubs like McGuire’s Comedy Club (where he recorded his first CD, Live at McGuire’s), the Comic Strip, and the Governor’s Comedy Club, among others. He also provides the comic relief on the Celtic Thunder cruises.

He’ll be appearing next Friday night, September 5, at The Irish Center, with fellow Long Island comic Dennis Rooney opening for him. It’s a fundraiser for the Center, which has fallen on hard financial times. Thomas says he likes helping causes, especially if he knows ahead of time what they are. He got burned once.

“I never say no to worthy causes,” he says. “But I once did a gig in the Hamptons before I found out what the cause was. They were raising money to hire people to scrape barnacles off their yachts. I was genuinely angry. I made fun of them for an hour and all they did was laugh. ‘Do you not understand that people are dying of cancer and I’m raising money for you to hire Mexicans to scrape barnacles off your yachts?’”

Thomas, who moved to America 10 years ago “to marry one of your women,” says that he wasn’t the funniest guy in Wexford by far. He gives that accolade to his two brothers, neither of whom does it for a living. “The two funniest people in the world are my two brothers.” They—and the rest of his family and friends back in Wexford—are also his toughest audience.

“I went back to Ireland for a tour and did a theater in my hometown and I bombed horribly,” he recalls ruefully. “Family, friends, the local people—they won’t give it up to ya. They’re out there, ‘We paid for this? We know all these stories.’ Eventually, people are shouting out the ending. ‘And you spent the rest of your life in jail. We get it. Yer wasting valuable drinking time.’”

But Thomas says he’s pretty much hardened to the effects bombing on stage. Before he became a stand-up, he was a four-time Ireland professional kickboxing champion and the European kickboxing champion. “I’ve never had any phobia about bombing on stage. I once got knocked out in front of 7,000 people. That was embarrassing. If somebody doesn’t like a joke, who gives a crap?”

He was more than knocked out. Over the nearly 10 years he spent in the kickboxing ring (starting at 16 and while also working as a banker) he was seriously injured. “If you look carefully at me, my left eye closes more than the right. My smile is crooked from a broken jaw. And I only have one kidney now too.”

That, I observed, isn’t visible. “Oh, I don’t know,” he retorts. “’Ye’ve got a weird walk on ye—ye must be a one-kidney guy.’”

When he followed his then girlfriend, now wife, Kelly, to New York 10 years ago, he decided to follow his other passion for making people laugh. “I went to a comedy class where I learned all about the business. You can’t learn to be funny. You either are or you aren’t. But it was helpful businesswise.”

He also caught the eye of Jon Starr, the actor-writer known for his role in “The Adventures of Tintin” and “Date Night.” “He took me under his wing and I started with a seven-minute set and slowly built it up, adding material, till I had an hour.”

Thomas started doing open mikes, then began getting booked for money, opening for the headliners. Lately, he’s been the headliner. He’s also done TV, including Live at the Gotham. He recently auditioned for another show that could provide a huge break—but we can’t go there yet. “I don’t want to jinx it, but they liked me,” he says.

But it was that audition where he learned something he sort of knew—that he can “get away with a lot more than the average person,” in part because of his accent and in part because, “even though I’m very honest, my comedy isn’t malicious, it doesn’t come from a hurtful place. And I’m the always the victim of my story, even when it’s about my kids.”

For example, he does a bit on going to see his daughter’s first dance recital. “She was up there for six minutes and she was by herself doing a solo—that’s what solo means–and she was dancing, and I welled up and got teary-eyed and I’m not afraid admit I realized. . .that I had wasted so much money on these dance lessons. She was absolutely shite. She was terrible, really bad at dancin’. And I’ve seen some bad dancin’. I’ve been to strip clubs in Chernobyl. Just awful dancin’.”

You can watch the bit here.

He laughs when I bring up the bit, which I loved. “It happened again,” he tells me. “I picked her up from karate this week and watched for a while and thought, jeeze, she’s terrible. But of course I said, ‘good, honey, keep at it you’re doing great.’ She has no coordination, good God. She gets that from her mother. But really, how many parents are on the sidelines thinking that?”

Show of hands?

Many comics today measure their success by whether they get their own sitcom. While he wouldn’t turn it down, Thomas says his passion was, is, and always will be standing in front of a live audience, making them laugh. “It goes back to when I was a kid, when I was five. I remember allmy family members saying, ‘oh, he’s funny’ and I thought this was what I wanted to do for the rest of my life, make people laugh for a living. Of course, I didn’t know what ‘for a living’ meant. I thought it as like an episode of ‘Bob the Builder’ and the doctor made the same money as the baker and my role would be to be the funny one. I didn’t understand ‘pay scale.’”

You can see Mick Thomas and also help raise money to scrape the barnacles off the Irish Center on Friday, September 5, starting at 7 PM. Tickets are $25 and are available at the door.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Wa-hoo!

Wa-hoo!

If you’re hankering for an Irish festival this weekend, you’re in luck. There are two! And even more to come!

On Saturday, go to St. Patrick’s Church in Norristown and join them for their 21st annual Irish Festival, featuring ceili music and dancing (thanks to Tom McHugh, Kevin and Jimmy McGillian), homemade food, and fun, all for $3 (which you get back in food tickets). We have a map to St. Patrick’s on our calendar.

On Sunday you can head out to Tabora Farm and Orchard in Chalfont. Patricia Torrice, a first-generation American, has imported the McLean Avenue Band direct from Ireland and matched them up with the Fitzpatrick School of Irish Dance and the Loch Rannock Pipe Band for a day of Irish music, food, and frivolity. Kids under 2 are free—and there are lots of kids activities—and admission for everyone else is only $5. You can find a map on our calendar.

And if you want to feel especially holy, there are two special Masses on Sunday: St. Patrick’s Church Mass of the Golden Rose in Norristown at noon, and at 2:30 PM at the Irish Center, the annual Lady of Knock Mass, followed by a dinner, sponsored by the Mayo Association of Philadelphia. (Word to the wise: The Mayos will behave during Mass, but at the dinner, watch out—these are party animals. You may want to lie and say your family comes from Mayo just so you can join up. )

Also this weekend: Jamison is at Keenan’s in North Wildwood on Saturday, while The Broken Shillelaghs are at Tucker’s Pub in Wildwood and the Shantys are at the Anglesea Pub in North Wildwood. It will be possible to see all three groups if you hustle.

Also on Sunday, join all the dancers at McGillicuddy’s in Upper Darby where they’ll be moving and grooving to the Theresa Flanagan Band.

On Sunday, Jamison heads to Shenanigan’s in Sea Isle City.

You know we’re quickly approaching the only time outside of March when the Irish events come fast and furious—September, the halfway to St. Patrick’s Day month.

There’s a night of comedy with Mick Thomas on September 5, and on September 6, a screening of an important new film about the 1916 Rising, called “A Terrible Beauty,” which will be held at International House Philadelphia, and is jointly sponsored by the Irish Immigration Center, AOH Dennis Kelly Div. 1, and the Irish Easter Rising Centennial Commemoration Committee. Also that weekend, an Irish Festival at Canstatters featuring Irish boxing along with music. Following that: The Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival, Quizzo fundraiser on September 19 at the Irish Center (September 11-13), Brittingham’s Irish Festival, Irish Weekend in N. Wildwood, and Bethlehem’s Celtic Classic. I’m going away for a week in September. I must be nuts. Or smart.

News, People

Philly’s Rose Becomes the 2014 International Rose of Tralee

Maria Walsh, the 2014 International Rose

Maria Walsh, the 2014 International Rose

The crowd at Maggie O’Neill’s Restaurant in Drexel Hill on Tuesday were sitting on the edge of their seats as they heard Daithi O’Se, host of the International Rose of Tralee Show on Rte1, intone, “Ladies and gentleman, the 2014 International Rose of Tralee. . . “ which was followed by the world’s longest drum roll. It seemed to go on for minutes.

But when he finally finished his sentence with the word, “Philadelphia,” the crowd erupted in screams and applause. You almost couldn’t hear him say her name: Maria Walsh. (See video below.)

The 27-year-old Philadelphia transplant whose short hair, neck tattoos, and confident demeanor (and probably her Irish accent) were a delight to the Irish press, appeared as surprised as she did when she was chosen to represent Philadelphia in April at a gala event at the Radnor Hotel. She’s been blowing up Twitter and on the front page of every newspaper in Ireland for days, particularly in Mayo, where the Boston native grew up from the age of seven.

“I am so happy that there’s a video of that moment at Maggie O’Neill’s because it’s such a blur,” said Karen Conaghan Race who, with her sister, Sarah Conaghan, founded the Philadelphia Rose Center 12 years ago. “We had a really full house and it was a Tuesday afternoon. I like that everyone was there and not at work!”

That fact reflects “the strong base of support in this community that a lot of other centers don’t have,” said Race. “The Irish community in Philadelphia is unbelievable. This wouldn’t be possible without it.”

Race said she’d been monitoring the Internet and “I’ve never seen such an overwhelmingly positive to an international Rose, ever. Usually you’ll see comments like, ‘it should have been this person,’ but when they announced her win in the International Rose of Tralee site it got 13,000 likes and hundreds and hundreds of comments that are positive, which on the Internet is a rare thing.”

She attributes that to Walsh herself. “Who she is on stage is who she is. She’s a comfortable, natural person, so effortless. She doesn’t have to put any of it on. She has a special way about her—people take to her instantly.”

For example, Walsh told the crowd at The Dome in Tralee that after returning to the US several years ago after graduating with a degree in journalism and visual media from Griffith College in Dublin, she lived in New York, then traveled south to Philadelphia for the job at Anthropologie. “She said she was glad she moved to Philadelphia, where she’s lived for three years,” said Race. “New York is intense and didn’t provide her with the life-work balance she wanted. She said Philadelphia is a great city for young people who want a career and a life.”

Check out a video interview she did with The Independent.

She also told the story behind the three ladybug tattoos she has behind her ear—they were a favorite of her cousin, Teresa Malloy, who died in a car crash at the age of 19 in November 2009. “It’s moments like this, like being in the Rose of Tralee, that make you really seize the day and appreciate life and take everything as it comes,” Walsh said. “She has given me a lot of good luck to date, so I know she’s looking down on me and my family.”

She also talked about being a Pioneer—part of the Pioneer Total Abstinence Association of the Sacred Heart, a program for Catholic teetotalers—and how difficult it is for Americans to comprehend that some Irish just don’t drink.

In April, CBS3’s Jim Donovan, host of the Philadelphia Rose event, asked her what superpower she would choose if she could, Walsh drew cheers and applause from the large Mayo contingent in the room when she said she would choose the power to guarantee that Mayo would bring home the Sam Maguire cup, the prize for the winner of the Gaelic football finals in Ireland.

So, no surprise, Walsh decided to stay on in Ireland to watch Mayo take on Kerry on Sunday in this year’s All-Ireland football quarter finals. She herself played Gaelic football in Philadelphia with the local women’s senior football club, the Notre Dames.

When she returns, she faces a year of “adventures,” starting with media inerviews as well as touring all the Rose Centers in the US and working for a charity which is selected by the International Rose of Tralee committee.

“I think she’s going to heighten the profile of this festival so much, not just in Ireland but everywhere,” said Race of the first Rose ever grown in Philadelphia. “Right now, we can’t wipe the smiles off our faces. Talking to you right now, I’m grinning like a fool.”

Take a look at our photos from Maria’s two experiences at the Philadelphia Rose of Tralee event–and a few of her on the Gaelic football field with the Notre Dames.

News, People

Happy Birthday, Vince!

Vera and Vince Gallagher

Vera and Vince Gallagher

Vincent Gallagher, president of the Commodore Barry Club, recently celebrated his 70th birthday at a party at The Irish Center–along with a belated birthday for his wife, Vera.

Karen Boyce McCollum performed with Gallagher’s band–and even got guest, singer Gerry Timlin, up to sing a song or two.

We were there and got these photos of family and friends enjoying an evening at the Irish Center.

The Irish Center is facing a financial crisis as the result of a citywide real estate reappraisal which upped the center’s taxes by about 300 percent. Maintenance and repair costs have also contributed to the perfect storm of woes. You can  help the center out of its temporary problems by sending a donation to the Irish Center, Commodore Barry Club, 6815 Emlen Street, Philadelphia, PA 19119, or online.  The Center is almost halfway to its goal of $50,000 for the year.

In addition to bringing gifts for his birthday, Gallagher said, many friends brought checks for the Center. “It really made me feel good,” he said.

 

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

Maria Walsh, the Philadelphia Rose of Tralee

Maria Walsh, the Philadelphia Rose of Tralee

The second of a series of fundraisers for the Philadelphia Irish Center is this Sunday and it promises to be lots of fun. Performer Cahal Dunne (Jeff Meade interviewed him this week and emailed me, “He’s a charmer”) will take the stage at the Center for some music, storytelling, and laughs, with room for dancing. The native of County Cork, who has a sizeable local fan base, volunteered to help raise money for the center. Kudos to you, Cahal!

Another volunteer is New York (via Wexford) Irish comic Mick Thomas (who is also a former European kick-boxing champ—hecklers, take note) trained with the Upright Citizens Brigade (one of their comedy alums is Amy Poehler) and you may hae seen his hour special on the comedy series, “Live at Gotham.”

Mick will be appearing at The Irish Center on September 5. For a taste of his comedy (I’m still laughing), check out this clip from youtube.

A third fundraiser, Quizzo Night at The Irish Center, is slated for September 19, the week after the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival, featuring the super group, Full Set, Sean Keane, and a host of local performers (September 11-13)

This Saturday, catch Slainte (that’s Frank Daly and the airborne fiddler CJ Mills of Jamison) at Keenan’s in North Wildwood; they’ll be with the whole crew later that night at Casey’s, just down the street. On Sunday, they’ll perform at Shenanigans’ in Sea Isle.

Barleyjuice is on stage at the Sellersville Theatre on Saturday. They’re a kick-ass Celtic rock group that will have you jigging in your seats.

On Monday, rte.ie starts its broadcast of the Rose of Tralee pageant in Ireland. Maria Walsh will be representing Philadelphia. Born here, she was raised in Mayo so is our first Philly Rose with an Irish accent! On Tuesday, Maggie O’Neill’s Irish Restaurant in Drexel Hill will have the final night of the Rose pageant on screen from 3-7 PM. It’s $12 for food and kids get in free.

Next weekend., St. Patrick’s Church in Norristown holds its 21st annual Irish Festival, with music, ceili dancing, and homemade food.

Check our calendar for the full details.

News

Map of Ireland on Your Face?

Photo from iStockHoto

Photo from iStockHoto

Skin cancer is on the rise, so much so that a couple of weeks ago the US Surgeon General Boris Lushniak, himself a dermatologist, called it a major public health problem. In the US, more skin cancer cases are diagnosed each year than breast, prostate, lung, and colon cancer cases combined.

And if you’re of Irish descent, you have a great big target plastered on your lilywhite skin. When you read any list of skin cancer risk factors, having fair skin is always at the top.

Cherie M. Ditre, MD, an associate professor of dermatology at the University of Pennsylvania, says that the Irish are better off embracing their whiteness or, failing that, finding their tan in a bottle, cream, or spray booth.

“I had an Irish grandmother from Leitrim who stayed out of the sun and still had beautiful skin the day she died at the age of 84,” says Dr. Ditre. “My Irish patients all wish they had darker skin but I always tell them, ‘your skin is really the most beautiful, really clear and pretty and white. Learn to see it that way.’’”

Lauraileen O’Connor, a musician and branch member of the Mid-Atlantic Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann, an international organization that promotes Irish music and culture, wishes she had. “I grew up in California and as a kid I would slather myself with baby oil and I would really burn—there wasn’t any sunscreen back then.”

Both her mother and grandfather had skin cancer, and a few years ago, her primary care doctor noticed a suspicious spot on her back and advised her to “have that looked at.” She did. “The doctor said, ‘yeah, we’re taking that off!’” It was brown, irregularly shaped and raised and about ¼ inch across. It was basal cell carcinoma, a slow-growing cancer and probably the most common of the skin cancers.

“They really took quite a chunk out of me, about 3.4 of an inch, to get all the margins,” says O’Connor, who is a meteorologist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Maryland. “I developed an allergy to the tape they used to cover up the site and got cellulitis,” a potentially serious bacterial infection. “It was not pleasant,” she says.

“Basal cells cancers are what I see most often in my Irish patients,” says Dr. Ditre. “I always say that if God said I’m going to give you cancer but you get to pick one, pick basal cell, because for the most part it stays local, meaning doesn’t go to the lungs or liver, and the treatment is not disfiguring.”

Somewhat more dangerous is squamous cell carcinoma because it can travel to the lymph nodes, small, bean-shaped glands that normally carry fluid, nutrients and waste throughout the body, but which can also carry cancer cells. Actinic keratosis—scaly or crusty growths caused by sun damage—can develop into squamous cell cancer if they’re not treated. If you spend a lot of time in the sun, have blonde or red hair, and blue, green, or gray eyes, you’re at higher risk than others of developing one of these precancers.

The most dangerous of the skin cancers is malignant melanoma, cancers that develop in the pigment cells in the skin called melanocytes. They’re often triggered by intense sun exposure which causes the cells to mutate and multiply rapidly, though there’s research suggesting that some melanoma may also have a genetic basis.

Holly Conboy isn’t sure what to blame for her melanoma. Conboy says she got a few bad burns when she was a child—including some that blistered—which is a strong risk factor for melanoma. But she also has a couple of cousins who’ve had it too.

But about 10 years ago, the insurance broker from Philadelphia noticed that a mark on the bottom of her foot that she had since an injury she got when she was 15 was suddenly sore. “I was switching to summer slide-one shoes and it started irritating me. It looked like I had a blister there,” she recalls.

She thought it would heal, but instead it got worse, so she went to the doctor who did a biopsy. “A week later he called me, and told me, ‘you have melanoma,’” she says. She was shocked, but not as much as she was when he told her he wanted to amputate her leg below the knee. “I wasn’t in denial, but I knew I needed a second opinion,” she says.

A second doctor thought a more modest surgery—one that would still take about a third of the bottom of her foot—would take care of the cancer. A plastic surgeon used remaining muscle to fill in the hole left by the excision. Then she underwent chemo and other treatments. She’s been cancer free since then.

There are  many other treatments for skin cancer, including surgery, which can be disfiguring if your cancer isn’t caught and treated early. Melanoma can be survivable, but it still kills almost 10,000 Americans a year. Your best defense: prevention.

For the Irish and others with fair skin, there’s one cardinal rule, says Dr. Ditre: “Thou shalt wear sunscreen.” All the time.

In fact, she advises people of Irish descent to follow the Australian commandments: Slip, slap, slop. “Australians have the highest rate of melanoma in the world,” says Dr. Ditre. No surprise—that can happen when so many people of Irish descent live in one of the sunniest places on earth. “Australians are told to slip on a shirt, slap on a hat, and slop on the sunscreen.”

Rule of thumb for sunscreen: Look for skin protection factor (SPF) of a minimum of 30, says Dr. Ditre. She recommends several products, including Anthelios sunscreen with Mexoryl, which is the trade number for several chemicals that absorb both kinds of ultraviolet rays, UVA and UVB; TiZo, and Neutrogena Pure and Simple which contain the UV-ray-blocking minerals titanium dioxide and zinc, which are safe even for babies. “Titanium and zinc can absorb into the skin and they’re chemically inert so they don’t cause any problems or controversy. If we put zinc oxide on baby’ s bottoms [for diaper rash], why not?” she says.

If you have trouble with the esthetics of being the white spot in the sea of tan on the beach, console yourself that your skin will stay beautiful longer than that tanned bikini babe or buff lifeguard.

“Scientists have done studies of identical twins, one who lives in North Dakota, and the other in California or Florida, and the one who lives in the sunny climate can look 20 years older than the twin from the north,” says the dermatologist. “Sun exposure can turn your skin into leather.”

And really, that’s not a good look for anyone.

Read more about skin cancer and how you can prevent it at the website of The Skin Cancer Foundation or the American Academy of Dermatology. 

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

mick and dave
Two great trad performers are joining their prodigious forces in an intimate concert on Sunday at the Irish Center in Philadelphia.

David Munnelly has been described as being “born with a button box in his hands,” his playing effortless and bold with “the energy of a box of dynamite.” He’s played with the greats—The Cheftains, De Danann, and Sharon Shannon, among others. He’s joined by fiddler Mick Conneely, also a De Danann alum.

Irish comic Tommy Tiernan (find him on YouTube for some great laughs) described the duo’s CD, “Tis What It Is,” as “a raucous encounter between chaos and melody.”
There are workshops with the two before the concert, but you must reserve a spot. Go to the Philadelphia Ceili Group website to claim a spot and buy tickets.

On Saturday, Musikfest features two Celtic acts, including Blackwater and Bastard Bearded Irishment. Check our calendar for locations and times.

Jamison is taking the stage for the Wildwood Crest Summer Music Series on Saturday night. They’ve been down the shore most of the summer. Where do I get a gig like that? Irish Philadelphia at the Shore? Anyway, they’ll be at Curran’s in Tacony in Philadelphia on Friday.

And Timlin and Kane are at the St. James Gate Pub at the Sands Casino in Bethlehem. That’s a guarantee of phenomenal playing, singing, and comedy—throw them a few chips.

Mark your calendars for next Sunday when the great Cahal Dunne will be doing his cabaret show at The Irish Center as a fundraisier. There will be opportunity for dancing and raffle ticket buying. You will probably see me there. Not dancing, but taking your money.

Look for other fun-raisers at the Irish Center, including an evening of comedy with Mick Thomas, who often opens for The Chieftains, on September 5; and Quizzo Night on September 19. An Irish Center open house is planned for September 28 with music, dancing, sports, kids’s activities, raffles, food, and relentless craic.

Mark your calendars also for the Philadelphia Ceili Group’s 40th Annual Festival of Irish Music September 11-13, featuring a singers’ night, ceili and set dancing, a rambling house (a traditional night of music, dancing, joke-telling, and poetry reading during which you’re encouraged to bring your “party piece” to share) and a concert with one of the hottest groups in Ireland today, Full Set, along with the Sean Keane band from Galway. This is the real deal—authentic Ireland, no plastic Paddys.

And a word about the Philly Folk Festival, which starts August 15—next Friday. It also has some Celtic offerings, including Tempest from California, fiddler Natalie MacMaster from Canada, and John Byrne of the John Byrne Band. In fact, on Sunday, August 17, you can have an entire Celtic afternoon with Byrne, MacMaster, the Steep Canyon Rangers, and Scottish singer-songwriter Archie Fisher. And you will certainly run into lots of local Irish singers and musicians just jamming in their respective camps.

 

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Solas is coming to Bethlehem for Musikfest.

Solas is coming to Bethlehem for Musikfest.

Here is my dream: I have the entire next week off, I’m staying in Bethlehem, and rolling out of bed every day to music, music, music. And goodies from the Moravian Book Shop.

It’s Musikfest time in the Christmas City and they have the big names—Sheryl Crow, Keith Urban, Alan Jackson, Steely Dan (I love Steely Dan), the Moody Blues (I love the Moody Blues), not to mention our peeps: the John Byrne Band, Solas, Seamus Kennedy, Scythian, Blackwater, and Barleyjuice. There’s even a group called Bastard Bearded Irishmen appearing next Saturday at one of the platzes (Pennsylvania Lottery Volkplatz) which is what they call stages in Bethlehem.

I just put the Celtic acts up on the calendar so check it out so see when you want to make the trek northward.

This Saturday, you down-the-shore types will find Jamison at The Wharf in Wildwood and on Sunday, they move over to Shenanigan’s is Sea Isle City. Next Saturday you’ll catch them at the Wildwood Crest Summer Music Series. This is a busy band that always puts its gigs up on our calendar and takes advantage of the free publicity. Smart band too! They know that Facebook events don’t reach as many people as you think. Facebook wants you to pay to get to more people. No one wants to do that. Zuckerberg is rich enough.

But I digress. On Sunday, August 10, look for two terrific Irish trad musicians, Mick Conneely and David Munnelly playing at The Irish Center in the nice, cozy dining room. It’s a house concert in a public place–very up close and personal. If you’d like to sign up for workshops with these two remarkable musicians, please go to the Philadelphia Ceili Group’s website. They’re sponsoring this event.