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Denise Foley

News, People

The Irish Guy Behind “Hair O’ The Dog’

DJ Dan Cronin with his wife, Maria.

DJ Dan Cronin with his wife, Maria.

Dan Cronin was a party thrower from way back. So way back his first parties were, well, illegal.

“Throwing parties is a natural thing for me,” says Cronin of Mount Laurel, NJ, who heads a technology consulting firm and is the mastermind behind the black-tie do known as “Hair O’ The Dog” that every year draws out Philly’s hippest for a New Year’s Eve-style frolic.

HOD, as it’s known, takes place tomorrow night (for the 20th year in a row) at the Philadelphia Sheraton Downtown. While the theme is Gatsby, the beneficiary of its largesse—it’s part fundraiser—is The Claddagh Fund, founded by Ken Casey of the Dropkick Murphy’s which raises money for underfunded nonprofits in Boston and Philadelphia.

Cronin, who looks like the Irish version of TV chef Guy Fieri, grew up in the Bronx and North Jersey, the grandson of Irish immigrants from Cork and Donegal. He attended Dusquesne University in Pittsburgh, one of the top Catholic colleges in the US. “I was a DJ in college,” he says. “And I took my DJ money, converted the basement of the house where I was living into a bar, with a dance floor and lights, and I would pay police to make sure there was no trouble. . .I was running a speakeasy, basically. I didn’t have a license, no one was of age. . . .”

He laughs. In 1995, now a law-abiding citizen, Cronin called on his party-making skills again to “accelerate the growth” of his new Philly-based business (Chorus Communications, which he founded with childhood friend Robert Molinari) by inviting local telephone engineers and union guys who, he reasoned, would then feel kindly toward this little tech company and steer business their way. “We figured if we had parties we could get these guys tuxed up, get them a little drunk and befriend them,” says Cronin. “Well they loved it, and they helped us for quite a few years.”

Don’t get Cronin wrong. That first HOD wasn’t just a cynical ploy to get business. He had fun too—he was single then, and there were well-dressed, successful women–and he made friendships as well as deals. “To this day I still have relationships with some of the guys I met at those early parties,” he says.

That first year, 75 people paid $40 to get into the Circa Restaurant and Nightclub, now closed, at 15th and Walnut. Since then, the guest list has grown to 1,000 or more, all fun lovers who want to get dressed up and party without fighting the New Year’s Eve amateur crowd. “Actually, back in 1985 when we decided to dot his, people said, ‘Dude, you’re out of your mind. Not way is this going to be successful, Everybody blows their whole wad on New Year’s. They don’t want to go to another party and they don’t have the money,’” recalls Cronin. “But there’s always a way to get done what you want to get done financially, and everybody likes a good party.”

HOD has become a Philly institution and, in 1996, Cronin, influenced by motivational guru Anthony Robbins, added the “give back” aspect to his party—and to his life. “By then we had a pretty nice business and I heard my inner self knocking on the door saying, ‘You promised that if you became successful you’d give back,’’ Cronin recalls. “I became a Big Brother and sponsored a little kid and we added the charity aspect to HOD.”

Every year, HOD raises money for a different charity, from AIDS research and 9/11 survivors to, with a nod to Cronin’s Irish roots, Habitat for Humanity in Belfast and, this year, The Claddagh Fund, which recently expanded into the Delaware Valley where it financially supports organizations that serve children, veterans, and recovering substance abusers. “We probably give anywhere from $10,000 to $20,000 to our charities every year,” says Cronin, who serves on the board of the Irish American Business Chamber and Network in Philadelphia.

An event firm now throws the party and Cronin isn’t the only DJ spinning records. The lineup this year includes popular Australian DJ Havana Brown whose “We Run the Night” with Pit Bull hit number one on the worldwide charts; DJ Bizz; the band The Business, a Philly fave; Bryan O’Boyle, late of Mr. Greengenes, another long-running favorite Philly band; and performer Jade Starling of Pretty Poison.

Despite running a successful business–and an equally successful event–he’s  out there DJing on the side, often for Irish crowds. He did his thing at the Philadelphia Fleadh, a showcase for Irish and Irish-American music produced by American Paddy’s Productions, last June in Pennypack Park, and was the DJ at American Paddy’s “American Celtic Christmas” event this December in Bensalem.

“I’m very diverse and have an unparalleled range as a DJ,” says Cronin, who grew up in a family that played Irish music (and who does a more than passable Irish accent, thanks to his Cork cousins). “If someone wants to hear ‘The Town I Loved So Well,’ I know to ask if they want the Phil Coulter version or the Shane McGowan version.”

So don’t think of Cronin, now married and the father of three, as someone who relegates his fun to one night a year. “I have a reputation as a party guy and I’m still a party guy,” he laughs. And  now he’s available for your party too.

Dance, Music

Tribute to the Wren

Little Timoney dancers entertained.

Little Timoney dancers entertained.

One of the critical parts of taking photographs for Irish Philadelphia is capturing the mood of the moment–when people are smiling, laughing, rapt, or sad. But at this year’s Comhaltas Wren Party, held at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Glenside, there was so much laughing, smiling, and s good cheer that it was a cinch.

Here, see for yourself, in our photo essay.

 

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly

Mary Patrick and Joe Roan competing in the 2013 Dancing Like a Star event.

Mary Patrick and Joe Roan competing in the 2013 Dancing Like a Star event.

This may be a first—there are no big events on our calendar this week. Given the vagaries of our weather, that’s probably a good thing. Of course, there are music sessions and ceili dancing from Philadelphia to Bethlehem as there are every week, but there are some big things coming up that you should know about.

First the Irish American Business Chamber and Network is holding its Ambassador Awards on February 20 at the Hyatt at The Bellevue on Broad Street in Philadelphia. SAP USA, a an international business software company with an office in Newtown Square, will receive The Ambassador Award from Anne Anderson, the Irish ambassador to the US at the luncheon event.

Also honored will be Denis P. O’Brien, senior executive vice president of Exelon Corporation and chief executive officer of Exelon Utilities, a provider of energy services who will receive the Taoiseach Award, and Ann Claffey Baiada, a founder and director of Bayada Nurses, a home health care company headquartered in Moorestown,NJ, will accept the Uachtaran Award.

For more information, contact the Chamber via its website.

The Delco Gael’s annual fundraiser, Dancing Like a Star, is scheduled for February 21 at the Springfield Country Club in Springfield, Delaware County. And it’s not too soon to order tickets. The event regularly sells out. Money from the event helps support the Gaels, a youth Gaelic sports club that’s the largest in the Philadelphia area, with more than 300 children playing footballs, hurling and camogie last year.

The dancing contestants this year: Siobhan Trainor and James Conboy; Anita Robbins and Joe McCormick; Laurie McGarrity and Bill McClafferty; Kathleen Seward and Tom Farrelly; MaryAnn Klein and Tom Ivory; Amy McKeever and Brian Gondek; Genevieve Smith and Paul Welsh; Charlotte Comasky and Caine Donaghy.

I shouldn’t play favorites, but this is my all-time favorite fundraiser of the year. The Gaels know how to put the “fun” in fundraiser and if you’re free that night, you’ll have a great time—guaranteed.

For more information or to buy tickets, go to the Gael’s website where you can also find out about the Delco Gaels Open House and Indoor Leage. The open house is on Tuesday, January 11, at Maple Zone Aston, 1451 Conchester Highway, Garnet Valley, and the indoor league follows over the next six weeks.

 

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish In Philly This Week

Wren boy hats--you'll see them at Thursday's Wren Party.

Wren boy hats–you’ll see them at Thursday’s Wren Party.

Merry Christmas to all of you from all of us!

Christmas is on Wednesday this week. There are some Wednesday events that recur weekly on our calendar so those are likely to be cancelled this week—but check. Some dancers will leave their Christmas table if there’s a good eight-hand reel to be had.

Going up till Christmas, we have some local groups performing: The Shanty’s at Paddywhack’s in Philly and Jamison at RP McMurphy’s in Holmes on Saturday.

On December 26, head over to the Knights of Columbus Hall for the 14th annual Wren Party, with live music and dancing and parade of wren hats. For more about the Wren tradition, read our story and check out some photos and a video from a past party.

On Friday, The Broken Shillelaghs will be at Dubh Linn Square in Bordentown, NJ.

Check back to see if more events are added to our calendar this coming week. We won’t be publishing, but we will be updating and letting you know on our Facebook page.

Music

A Musical “Nollaig Shona Daoibh” from Us

A very Merry Christmas from the Father Ted family--and from ours.

A very Merry Christmas from the Father Ted family–and from ours.

“Christmas in Killarney” isn’t the only Irish Christmas song there is. (And it’s really Irish American, written by three men—John Redmond, James Cavanaugh and Frank Weldon—in 1950.) We scoured the web for some interesting takes on Irish Christmas music, from the Dropkick Murphy’s to Moya Brennan to the Knocklyon Gospel Choir. We hope these YouTube videos will help make your spirits bright—they did wonders for ours.

To start off, a little Father Ted Christmas. There’s no music, but there are laughs, and it goes with the photo.

Then, download the John Byrne Band’s “St. Stephen’s Day” Christmas mp3, which will resonate with those of you born in Ireland and long to be home for the holidays

You can’t possibly be in a bad Christmas mood– Or feel like you’re the only one in the world with a wackadoodle family–after hearing the Dropkick Murphy’s “The Season’s Upon Us.” This one is brilliant! God bless you, every one.

“There’s mischief and mayhem and songs to be sung. . . .”

“Fairytale of New York.” This is arguably the most played Christmas song when two or more Irish people gather together. It’s funny and sad and features the late great Kristy MacColl with Shane McGowan and the Pogues and the City of New York Police Pipes and Drums.

“So happy Christmas, I love you baby, I can see a better time when all our dreams come true.”

Even if you’re not a fan of Windham Hill compilation albums—I think of them as something massage therapists play while kneading the stress out of you—you may still like this version of “The Wexford Carol.” It will at least be relaxing.

Not working for you? This version of “The Wexford Carol” by Moya Brennan from her “An Irish Christmas” CD may be what you’re looking for.

I love this in-studio performance by “Cherish the Ladies,” doing a medley of Christmas tunes with Michael Holland dancing. It reminds me of a house concert, the only way to hear music as far as I’m concerned. Lovely, ladies!

Enjoy a snippet of “Irish Christmas in America” with Teada, Grainne Hambley, and the amazing Brian Cunningham doing his sean nos dancing. I saw this show at the Irish Center a few years ago and it was amazing.

Hooray for Christmas Day, boys! A medley of hits from the Irish Rovers Christmas TV special, including “Grandma Got Run Over by a Raindeer” with Irish accents.

Myself, I prefer their version of “Merry Bloody Xmas,” Irish country style.

It wouldn’t be Christmas without “Miss Fogarty’s Christmas Cake,” this one by Mick Moloney, Athena Tergis, and John Doyle a few years ago at The Shanachie in Ambler.
Sing along with the chorus:

There were plums and prunes and cherries,
There were citrons and raisins and cinnamon, too
There was nutmeg, cloves and berries
And a crust that was nailed on with glue
There were caraway seeds in abundance
Such that work up a fine stomach ache
That could kill a man twice after eating a slice
Of Miss Fogarty’s Christmas cake.

Local harpist Ellen Tepper does a wonderful program of Christmas carols. Here she plays one by Irish composer Cornelius Lions.

A song by one of my favorite Irish singers, Don Stiffe, from his Christmas album, which I got as a gift this year (thank you, Lori Lander Murphy!).

A truly lovely original Christmas tune by the Knocklyon Gospel Choir of Knocklyon, a suburb of Dublin.

And bringing up the rear, a real treat: “Little Drummer Boy” performed by The Priests and Shane McGowan of The Pogues.
Pa-rum-pa-pa-pum!

 

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

Cathy Maguire will be performing a Christmas Show in Jersey.

Cathy Maguire will be performing a Christmas Show in Jersey.


Snow may scotch your plans for the weekend. We’ve already had one cancellation—no Rose of Tralee Christmas party on Saturday. Call ahead to see if your event is going on like the US Postal Service—in spite of rain, snow, sleet, and freezing rain.

For instance, Timlin and Kane will be performing, God willing, at the Sands Casino in Bethlehem, one of the best cities in the world in which to be snowed-in at Christmas time.

On Thursday, local singer-songwriter and former Blackthorn guitarist Seamus Kelleher will be opening for fellow Irish singer-songwriter Pierce Turner at The Tin Angel in Philadelphia.

On Friday, Eileen Ivers & Immigrant Soul will be appearing at Sellersville Theatre while Cathy Maguire will be performing music from her CD, Ireland in Song, along with Gabriel Donohue and Vonnie Quinn, at a special Christmas concert at Our Lady Mother of the Church in Woodcliff Lake, NJ.

Music, News, People

Do You Believe in Magic?

John Byrne and Kim Killen taking their bows with the Celtic Flame dancers.

John Byrne and Kim Killen taking their bows with the Celtic Flame dancers.

Dancing candy canes, ballerinas, a fiddler who can play behind his back, on the floor, and airborne, and Santa. . .oh, and snow indoors. You really could believe in magic at An American Celtic Christmas, the Irish-American show featuring Jamison Celtic Rock, John Byrne, and Kimberley Killen at Bensalem High School last weekend.
Celtic Flame School of Irish Dance and Bucks County Dance Center along with singer Carley Fuhrmeister and DJ Dan Cronin and holiday-themed short films by Bensalem students added to the spirit that drew more than 1,000 people to two shows. Jamison’s Frank Daly and C.J. Mills produced the show, which benefited the Bensalem Education Association.
We were there (and it’s going to be part of our family holiday traditions from now on). Check out our photos.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish In Philly This Week

Bernadette Devlin as interpreted by the Bogside Artists in Derry.

Bernadette Devlin as interpreted by the Bogside Artists in Derry.

Another embarrassment of riches this weekend as Solas comes to the World Café Live in Philadelphia and American Celtic Christmas featuring Jamison and John Byrne and the Celtic Flame Dancers, among others, happens in Bensalem.

Then, on Sunday, Irish Network Philadelphia holds its annual Christmas fundraiser at Tir na Nog in Philadelphia, featuring food, drink, live music and a visit from Santa. Proceeds will benefit the Kevin Neary Trust, to help the young Delaware County man who was shot and paralyzed in an apparent robbery attempt.

Also on Sunday, George Donaldson of Celtic Thunder will do his solo show at The Plough and the Stars in Philadelphia.

Please note that due to unforeseen circumstances, the Philadelphia Rose of Tralee Center’s Christmas party slated for this weekend has moved to December 14 at Maggie O’Neill’s in Drexel Hill. Lots of activities for the kiddies, plus a visit from Santa. The Center is collecting nonperishable foods for local food pantries.

On Wednesday., the Garden Theater in Princeton, NJ, will be screening an award-winning documentary on Bernadette Devlin, the Irish civil rights activist, which contains footage of the firebrand during the Troubles as well as rare interviews with her today. “Bernadette: Notes on a Political Journey” starts at 4:30 PM.

On Thursday, the Irish American Business Chamber and Network will be holding its annual 12th Night Before Christmas party at The Stotesbury Mansion (also known as the Philopatrian Club) at 1923 Walnut Street. Enjoy a pint and appetizers in front of the fire in this elegant mansion off Rittenhouse Square.

And to round out the week, the Broken Shillelaghs and the Culchies will be performing at the Gloucester County AOH on Friday night, and Jamison will be at Building 24—is that anything like Area 51?—in Wyomissing, PA.