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Denise Foley

News

Bring Your Legal Problems—Help is Free

Have an immigration problem? A landlord dispute? Any messy legal situation you don’t know how to deal with?

The Irish Immigration Center is offering a free Legal and Immigration Clinic with the help of the Brehon Law Society and Drexel Law School every fourth Tuesday of the month, starting on October 27, from 3 to 6 PM.

Criminal and family lawyers are also available on request.

You need an appointment for these confidential clinics. Call 610-789-6355 to make one. The Irish Immigration Center is at 7 South Cedar Lane in Upper Darby.

News

Irish Represented at This Week’s Immigration Rallies

Sarah Conaghan at Monday's Philadelphia rally.

Sarah Conaghan at Monday's Philadelphia rally.

He was eight when his father left home, reluctantly leaving his family behind to travel thousands of miles across the ocean to America to earn money to support them. He was 16 when he next saw his father. It was, he says, the meeting of two strangers.

“When he left, I was little. When I next saw him, I was taller than my father. And he was not familiar to me. He was shocked when he saw me too.”

It could be any immigrant’s story, this old familiar tale of desperation and families torn apart. But in this case it belongs to Xu Lin, a young man born in China’s Fujian Province whose father is now trapped in America without a green card.

“My grandmother passed away two years ago and in our tradition, the oldest son should be there to send his parents away,” Lin told a crowd gathered for an immigration reform rally in the shadow of Philadelphia’s City Hall on Monday, October 12. “My father is the oldest son in the family, but he could not go because of his immigration status. I feel really sad for my dad and grandmother.”

The rally, organized by the group Reform Immigration for America, was a send-off for a handful of local people who were traveling to Washington, DC, the next day to attend a larger rally at the Capitol to demand action on immigration reform before the end of the year.

Nearly 8,000 people—including representatives from Philadelphia’s Irish Immigration Center—spent the day lobbying in congressional offices and massing on the Capitol lawn to show support for new programs that will make it easier for immigrants to become citizens and for the abolition of old programs that make them criminals.

One of those local representatives was Sarah Conaghan, a Delaware County woman whose father, Tom Conaghan, founded the Irish Immigration Center. She stressed the need to “put a different face” on immigration, one that reflects the true diversity of immigrants “who come from Ireland, Honduras, Poland, every country you can imagine.”

The Pennsylvania group met with aides for Bucks County Rep. Patrick Murphy, Delaware County Rep. Joe Sestak and Senators Bob Casey Jr. and Arlen Specter, though their lobbying was preaching to the converted. Those lawmakers are on record as supporting immigration reform.

Among the proposed laws immigration reformers would like to see passed is the Reuniting Families Act, set in play by New Jersey Senator Robert Menedez, New York Senators Charles Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, and the late Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts. The bill would end lengthy wait times for foreign-born relatives of US citizens and permanent residents to be granted visas. There is currently an immigration processing backlog of 5.8 million people, or about 20,000 people a year. Supporters say that the US economy takes a hit as a result: Many of these people are at retirement age when they finally arrive so are unable to join the workforce or pay taxes.

While the rally was going on in Washington, Siobhan Lyons, executive director of the Philadelphia Irish Immigration Center, was in New York with a coalition of Irish groups meeting with Irish Foreign Minister Micheal Martin. Martin was doing the rounds of national lawmakers to take a read on the future of the reform bills now on the table. “He said that there’s a small window at the beginning of the year where we need to get comprehensive reform in,” says Lyons.

In past years, the Irish got a special pass. “The Irish have benefited from special visa programs and there has been a hope in the Irish community that we’ll get this again, but it’s not happening,” says Lyons. And, she says, it shouldn’t. There are an estimated 50,000 undocumented Irish in the US. There are millions of Hispanics.

“The whole coalition of Irish immigration organization is planning a push—it might be a postcard campaign—to make sure that the entire community gets behind comprehensive reform that applies to everyone, with no ethnic group singled out.”

She says she’s hoping the Irish have long memories. “Not long ago, the Irish were met with signs that said, ‘No Irish need apply.’ We were once the immigrants no one wanted. We know what it’s like to be the people everyone hates. It all turned out great for us. . .and everyone else.”

For Conaghan, the current immigration situation has a “there but for the grace of God go I” component. It’s personal.

“I’m the daughter of two immigrants and when they came here in the 1970s, there was a road to citizenship then and they took it,” says Conaghan. “Since 1996, our community been devastated something called the Illegal Immigration Reform Act, which removed every legal road and bridge for Irish immigrants to become citizens. It eliminated the path to legalization. Their punishment: Those who remain 180 days after their visas are up can be barred from returning to the US for up to 20 years. The result of all this is that people who remained because they had put down roots—they settled down and had kids—have been trapped here, living in the shadows for over 15 years. I know some of these families and they haven’t been able to go back to see grandparents who live in Ireland.”

Roughly 20 percent of Pennsylvania’s population has Irish roots, with a million Irish and Irish-Americans living in the Philadelphia metropolitan area.

“Yet our historic contribution to this country has been ignored,” says Conaghan. “This is such an important issue for our community locally, and every community. Our country was built by immigrants.”

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

It’s beginning to look a lot like ball season. The Cavan Society is having theirs (the 102nd) on Friday night at the Springfield Country Club, with the Vince Gallagher Band providing the music. Next up, Mayo, followed by Donegal, but there’s still a little time to drop five pounds to fit into that dress. . . .they’re not rocking till next month.

A couple of benefits this Saturday: AOH/LAOH Division 87 is holding its annual scholarship fund golf outing at Juniata Golf Course in Philadelphia. And in Delco, the group Misty Isle is providing the music for the Be True to Your School Beef and Beer, which raises money for Catholic grades schools (and you get to choose your own school as beneficiary), at the St. Denis parish gym in Havertown.

Also on Saturday, wear your scariest costume. Or not. But the Irish Club of Delaware County is holding its Halloween party at McGilllicuddy’s on West Chester Pike in Upper Darby.

On Sunday, the New Castle, DE, Irish Society is running its 16th annual Irish fest at the Irish Center on Rodney Street in Wilmington. It starts at 11 AM with mass, and entertainment by the Seven Rings Band and the Willie Lynch Band follows at noon, along with homemade baked goods and “tae”—that’s tea to you—and a raffle for great prizes, including a two-night stay at a Chesapeake Bay B&B. There will also be Irish vendors, so you can get some of your Christmas shopping done. Remember, Irish sweaters save energy costs.

Gloucester City, NJ, resident Ken Doyle, co-author with his brother, Patrick, of “Mother From Hell,” a shocking memoir of their horrific abuse as children at the hands of their mother, will be at the Irish Center in Philadelphia at 4:30 PM to speak and sign copies of the book. If you haven’t read this Irish bestseller, you should. You won’t soon forget it. Read our interview with Ken Doyle.

We added a new session to our session finder this week—Monday night at the Rocking Stone Bar & Grill in Paulsboro, NJ. Local musicians Fintan Malone and Kevin Brennan are the anchors.

On Wednesday, Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, daughter of Robert Kennedy, will be at the Church on the Mall in Plymouth Meeting to talk about her book, “Failing America’s Faithful: How Today’s Churches are Mixing God with Politics and Losing Their Way.”

Don’t forget the jive and ballroom dancing classes at the Irish Center on Thursday nights. Isn’t it about time you learned to shake your groove thing? And consider watching the baseball playoffs in the comfort of the center’s Fireside Room. They just installed three 42-inch plasma TVs and are offering free food (hotdogs, popcorn, and pretzels). You’re allowed to cheer for any team you want. Within reason. Don’t forget to tip the bartender.

If your group is having an event, you can list it on our calendar for free. You can even put it up there yourself. Click on Events on the upper left hand of the home page, then on the highlighted phrase “Notify us about your Irish events,” and follow the instructions. If you need help, just hit the “contact us” button and one of us will get back to you. Our calendar lets your prospective attendees add your event to their e-calendar, send them an email, or even a text message reminding them of the date and time. If your event is on our calendar, we mention it in our weekly “How to Be Irish in Philly” feature. You may have to put up with some snarky comments, depending on our mood, but you get what you pay for.

Arts

Look Out! Irish Comedy Tour Heading This Way

Comic Pat Godwin was the song parody guy on the old Morning Zoo radio show in Philadelphia. (Not a mug shot.)

Comic Pat Godwin was the song parody guy on the old Morning Zoo radio show in Philadelphia. (Not a mug shot.)

Did you ever sit around with your Irish-American friends, cracking each other up with stories from your childhood? The crazy relatives. The wise-cracking relatives. The relatives who never met a mixed drink they didn’t like.

Pat Godwin and Derek Richards did, and even though they grew up in different Irish Catholic neighborhoods—Godwin in Wilkes-Barre, Richards in Detroit—they found they lived on common ground. “We all realized we had relatives with drinking problems—I know, go figure, who saw that coming?” quips Richards. “The funniest thing though was when we all realized we had mug shots. We’d all been arrested at some point. It was not like we’d ever hijacked an armored car, but we’d all been in the situation where we’d had too much booze with the wrong people.”

Then, they took this conversation on the road.

Godwin (you may remember him as the song parodist from the John DeBella Morning Zoo and later the Howard Stern radio shows) and Richards, along with Jim Paquette and Mike McCarthy are the comics that make up The Irish Comedy Tour (‘they’re Irish, they’re American, and they’re not holding back”). Godwin, Richards, and Paquette will be bringing it to the Sellersville Theatre on Sunday, October 25.

The four met on the comedy circuit, and one thing led to another. Listen to Richards and see if any of this sounds familiar:

“We were sharing stories over some Jameson and some beer and we started noticing a common thread in personal backgrounds. And I thought, can we take what we talk and joke about here and bring it to stage?”

They could. The Irish Comedy Tour started in 2005 as a one-off St, Paddy’s Day thing. This year, it’s taking its nose-bashing, (you have to check out their website to get that one) Irish-pubby sense of humor from Michigan to Key West. “It’s kind of like an Irish pub and comedy show that you put in a food processor,” says Richards, who was a semi-finalist in Comedy Central’s Open Mic Fight.

Paquette and Godwin are both musicians as well, so there are some tunes in that comedy Cuisinart too. “Pat does a hilarious song about the lack of birth control in the Irish community called ’13 Kids and Counting.’ He also does a version of ‘Black Velvet Band,’ with a comedic twist,” Richards says. (Few songs deserve it more.)

If you saw “Last Comic Standing,” you saw judge and “Cheers” alumn John Ratzenberger nearly swallow his mustache when contestant Godwin started singing that pre-K favorite, “Bingo (was His Name-O)” as Bono (“this is for all the dogs in shelters!”). “That was funny,” Ratzenberger said as Godwin left the stage.

In fact, Godwin started as a musician before he turned to stand-up and acting. “I was playing down at Smokey Joe’s at Penn and it was pretty clear what they wanted was cover songs and things they could sing to. But I was talking in between the songs, satirizing rock and roll stars and singing funny stuff, and that turned into my act. [Philadelphia comedian] Todd Glass saw me and suggested I do an open mike and that’s how I was hired to do the DeBella show.”

When the Morning Zoo was shuttered, Godwin turned to the guy who was to blame, Howard Stern, who hired him to churn out topical song parodies for his pre-satellite radio morning show. “I left there and moved to LA,” Godwin says. “I didn’t do any more songs. I had a few failed pilots, knocked around LA with my girlfriend at the time, wasn’t successful at much of anything. I failed in LA once as an actor at 18, then as a songwriter at 26, then again as a comedian. It’s LA 3, Pat Godwin, zero.”

But now he’s on the Irish Comedy Tour, and things couldn’t be better. Both he and Richards say this is the most fun they have all year. They get to reach deep back into their childhoods and bring up the funniest bits, even the ones that weren’t funny at the time.

“For me,” says Richards, “a lot of it is the sense of humor I grew up with. My grandfather was my biggest comedy influence. Growing up, down in the basement in my mother and father’s house, myself and my brother would listen to Dad and Grandpa trade the most wrong jokes ever. (Even though it’s an adult show, we won’t be doing any of those.) As long as we never told our mother and grandmother, we could stay down there and listen.”

Godwin, who is a descendant of the writer Mary Shelley (“Frankenstein”), grew up with “the drinking thing.”

“I mind my Ps and Qs with alcohol, because I’ve seen a lot of smart, creative people ruin their lives,” he says. “On the road I drive for those two wackos so they can tear it up after the show.” But he’s found a way to give it a comic spin. “I wrote a song called, ‘Switch to Beer,’ about the way some Irish people handle their drinking problems—putting down the whiskey and switching to beer. It came from seeing the Irish actor Richard Harris in the Bahamas, completely bombed, after he’d been on the Letterman show a week before talking about how he’d solved his hard drinking problem. I went up to him at the roulette table where he was completely trashed and I asked him about it. He said he stopped drinking the hard stuff. He switched to beer.”

So, by now you’ve figured out that the Irish Comedy Tour isn’t the place to take the kiddies. “This sense of humor is part of our upbringing, which might be a little off-color and politically incorrect, but it’s not dirty,” says Richards. “It’s all in good taste.”

And, he says, it might remind you of sitting around with your pals at a pub, sharing a frosty one and some memories. “People come up to us after the show, even people right from Ireland, and tell us this is everything they talk about,” he says. “It’s a fun party atmosphere. It’s a party—that’s the best way to describe it.”

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

You may know Mark Doherty from his standup, or his stint as Father Alan on the popular British series, “Father Ted,” about a group of off-kilter Irish priests, or from his acclaimed film, “A Film With Me In It” in which he starred with Irish funny man Dylan Moran. You can get to know his genius and wit this weekend as the Inis Nua Theater Company presents, “Trad,” Doherty’s award-winning play, Sunday night at 8 at the Irish Center.

How can you go wrong with a story whose characters are both over 100—a farmer and his son who have set off looking for the son’s offspring (who is 70 if he’s a day), conceived in a rare—possibly first and only–moment of passion? The play explores the culture shock of two rural denizens who encounter 21st century Ireland on the road. And since Doherty is a comic, you can expect laughs along with the biting commentary.

But let’s back up a moment. On Saturday night, settle back for a wonderful “evening of Irish music, dancing and storytelling” with the Martin Family Band and the Hooley Irish dancers at the Bucks County Community College Library Auditorium. There’s also a post-concert reception featuring fresh-baked Irish breads (we can smell them now!).

The Irish Club of Delaware County is holding its monthly meeting at the Irish Immigration Center in Upper Darby at 2 PM on Sunday. This relatively new group celebrates Irish culture and heritage, so this is your chance to join up.

And talk about your embarrassment of riches. The Scottish pipe and drum group (if you’ve never seen them, don’t be imagining any band you’ve ever seen in a parade), Albannach, will be appearing at Brittingham’s in Lafayette Hill on Sunday at 7:30 PM. They’re a unique act with a huge following. They put the barbarian back in pipe-and-drum music–where it belongs.

On Monday, join other members of the Irish community at an immigration reform rally at Philadelphia’s City Hall. Representatives from the Irish Immigration Center will be there. Executive Director Siobhan Lyons asks that you wear green as a reminder that some of the nation’s undocumented workers have Irish accents, a fact often lost in the national discussion on immigration reform.

Don’t forget that there are now ballroom/ceili dance classes at the Irish Center on Thursday nights. The county balls are coming up (Cavan’s is next Friday night!), and so are the holidays. And at $10 a lesson, it’s way cheaper than the gym. Did you know that you could burn 204 calories just by doing the foxtrot or cha cha? That’s the calorie equivalent of nearly three glasses of wine (which you can have at the Irish Center bar afterwards because, calorically speaking, you paid for them). Irish dancing earns you 306 calories which gets you almost 4 glasses of wine (not recommended if you have to drive home, but you can eat a Snickers bar and then some).

“Happy Days,” by Samuel Beckett is still running at the Lantern Theatre Company in Philadelphia. It’s Beckett’s most cheerful play (written, it’s said, because his wife suggested he lighten up a little), although truth be told a play about a wife who is buried up to her waist in soil and has a gun in her purse, but still manages to look good is not necessarily anyone’s idea of a laugh riot. What can I say, it’s Beckett and he’s Irish. You know it will be good.

Check out our calendar. Lots of fun stuff coming. And a reminder to support your local Irish pubs, restaurants, gift shops, and organizations. These are tough times and many of your brothers and sisters are struggling. Let’s keep the Irish community strong and vital! Hope to see you out and about.

News

Put the Green In Immigration Reform

You may not know if from the national controversy over immigration reform, but some illegal aliens have Irish accents. And with double-digit inflation in Ireland, the number of undocumented Irish in the US is bound to increase.Put on something green and head down to City Hall on Monday, October 12, at 11:15 AM for a rally to support immigration reform.

“It is vital that the Irish community plays a visible role in the campaign for immigration reform, and I would love to see a green bloc at the rally,” says Siobhan Lyons, executive director of the Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia.

The rally is scheduled the day before a major rally and march on Washington, DC, where immigration reform groups from all over the country will converge.  The Irish Immigration Center is sending a delegation. For more information, contact the center at 610-789-6355.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Sure and you’re all worn out from Irish Weekend in Wildwood or Celtic Classic in Bethlehem, but there’s still lots to do.

On Friday, October 2, for instance, you can come out to the Irish Center in Mt. Airy and hear Northern Irish singer Fil Campbelll perform the music of five female singers of the 1930s to the 1960s. We heard her up in Bethlehem this past weekend and shot a few videos to give you a taste of her show.  

Speaking of taste, the inaugural meeting of the Eastern PA Whiskey Society is scheduled for Friday night at Maggie O’Neill’s Irish Pub in Drexel Hill. We have been assured that this is a bone fide organization with an interest in the complexities of good whiskey, and not a cover for. . .well, anything. 

On Saturday, there’s a fundraiser for the Shelby and Benjamin Chestnut Trust at the Legion Hall in Narberth. These two youngsters were born with severe disabilities—Shelby with a form of cerebral palsy and Benjamin with a rare neurological disease. Neither child can walk or talk, and their care is expensive.

There’s a second fundraiser on Saturday, this one to raise money for the Police Survivors Fund. It’s being held at Maggie’s Waterfront Café in Philadelphia and features Blackthorn.

And you thought the festivals were over: The Trenton Irish Music Festival is scheduled for Sunday at the Trenton AOH Grounds. On the bill: the Willie Lynch Band, the Bogside Rogues, Jamison, Barleyjuice and others. There will also be a tribute to longtime Trenton Irish publican, the late Billy Briggs.

Did your family come from Ulster? The Ulster-American Society is holding an informal meet-up at Kildare’s Pub in King of Prussia on Monday night from 5-9 PM. Ten percent of your food and drink receipts will be donated to the group.

On Wednesday, the legendary singer-piper-actor Finbar Furey returns to the Shanachie in Ambler with Brian Gaffney. 

On Thursday, another great musical event at the Irish Center—and listen up all you history buffs. Jimmy Crowley and Mairtin de Cogain are bringing to life the songs of the Irish at war with their Captain Mackey’s Goatskin and String Band show, which was a major hit at this year’s Milwaukee Irish Fest. They’re both fabulous singers, and Mairtin is an actor. If you saw the chilling film, “The Wind that Shakes the Barley,” you saw Mairtin. It should be an amazing evening. So buy your ticket, grab your beer, and travel back in time. . .

And on the theater front: Samuel Beckett’s “Happy Days” is at the Lantern Theater, and the Inis Nua Theatre Company’s production of “Trad,”–which was nominated for a top award at the New York Theater Festival this year–is coming to the Irish Center on October 11 for a one-off performance, thanks to the Philadelphia Ceili Group.

Music

Songbirds: Nostalgic Music from Ireland’s Fil Campbell

Fil Campbell, photo by Khara Pringle

Fil Campbell, photo by Khara Pringle

Even through pints of amniotic fluid and layers of mom, an unborn baby hears music. Studies show that a year after they’re born, babies recognize and prefer the music they were exposed to in the womb.

That may explain why Irish singer-songwriter Fil Campbell was so drawn to the songs of Delia Murphy, who died while Campbell was still a child in Beleek, County Fermanagh. “Delia Murphy’s was the music I grew up with,” says Campbell, who is bringing her award-winning show, “Songbirds: The First Ladies of Irish Music” to the Irish Center in Philadelphia on Friday, October 2.

From a very early age, Delia Murphy songs were the ones she remembers her parents singing. Murphy’s recordings were always on the record layer or the radio when she was young. So it was natural for Campbell to add the tunes she may have heard before birth to her repertoire when she started singing professionally at 16.

Before it was a road show and a CD, “Songbirds” was a series that Campbell co-produced and hosted which aired on the RTE network in Ireland to great acclaim. It chronicles the life of Murphy, a child of wealth from County Mayo, and four other female singers who each left indelible impressions on successive generations of Irish from the1930s to the 1960s.

There was Margaret “Maggie” Barry, a ribald traveler who left an unhappy home to sing on the streets and market fairs and later influenced a young folk singer from Minnesota who called himself Bob Dylan and Irish balladeer Luke Kelly.

Bridie Gallagher becameknown as “the girl from Donegal” after her eponymous debut LP in the mid-1950s. She sold millions of records over the last half of the twentieth century and influenced countless singers, including Daniel O’Donnell.

Ruby Murray first appeared on television as a singer at the age of 12 and made her first recording just a few years later. Murray achieved dazzling success in 1955 when five of her songs appeared on the Top 20 in the same week. It’s a feat that has never been beaten, and was only matched this past July—posthumously–by Michael Jackson.

But Murray, the sweet-voiced girl from Belfast whose biggest hit was the unforgettable tune, “Softly Softly,” came to a hard end. She died at 61 of liver cancer after years of alcoholism.

Mary O’Hara’s was a life tailor-made for a Hallmark movie. Married at 21, a widow 15 months later, this harpist with the crystalline soprano voice joined an English monastery in 1962 and lived there for 12 years. She made a comeback in 1972 and quickly sped tothe top of the world again, appearing solo at Carnegie Hall in the late ‘90s. In his autobiography Memoirs of an Irish Troubadour, Liam Clancy writes that the music of Mary O’Hara inspired and influenced him and others of the Folk Revival period of the 1960s and ‘70s.

Their voices and styles—and clearly, their lives–are as different as chalk and cheese, but together they form the nostalgic soundtrack of an Ireland long gone.

The Ireland of Fil Campbell’s childhood is also long gone. “We lived out in the country and there was no cinema or anything. All we had for entertainment were ceilis or going to a relation’s house where everyone would do their party piece,” she recalls. “There was a lot of music in my family. My father was a really good singer and his brother and sister were musical too. His brother, Gerry Campbell, was a wonderful accordian player and he spent most of his life in Yonkers, NY. On my mother’s side of the family, they were all in ceili bands.”

Once she went to school,Campbell got her second dose of music education. “I come from the little village of Belleek right on the border with Donegal,” she says. “The first day I went to school in Eniskellin, the nuns made everybody as first years sing or dance, and if you showed any ability at all they just instantly handed you instruments and you got on with it.”

She started performing in her teens, then bounced between jobs on the periphery of music—promoting entertainers, doing radio—before taking up music as a career. “In the beginning, I did mostly my own songs,” says Campbell. “Then after attending the North American Folk Alliance event in the Catskills a few years ago I started thinking about doing more traditional music.”

She immediately thought of Delia Murphy. “I wanted to do an album of Delia Murphy songs. I thought she was an amazing woman and such fun.”

And, like the other Songbirds, she had a remarkable back story. As she does in her show, let Campbell tell it:

“Delia’s father grew up during the famine in Ireland and like a lot of people he emigrated to America, making it to the west coast at the tail end of the Gold Rush. He had vowed when he left Ireland to buy the house the landlord lived it. He wound up making his fortune in America, managing a silver mine, and came back to Ireland and bought the house, with the result that the family was brought up as upper class citizens. They had a big estate, with hounds kept for the hunt, and they mixed with royalty and film stars. Delia grew up wth an incredible panache about her. She was college-educated which was unheard of for a Catholic girl. Though she came from a gentrified background, she had a broad west of Ireland accent (she was the first Irish singer to record in her own accent) and she sang songs of the common people and wound up marrying an ambassador. ”

Ultimately, of course, Campbell wound up collecting songs from other remarable female singers she’d heard growing up. She calls them traditional, though she knows not everyone will agree.

“It’s a really gray area,” she says. “There’s so much snobbery about Irish traditional music. Every traditional song was written at some point. Somebody wrote it. A lot of the songs associated with these women are known by the derogatory term “come-all-ye,” referring to songs that have a chorus that goes ‘come all ye, sing along with me.’ It’s a song everybody knows and can join in. Some of the songs, like ‘The Boys from the County Armagh’ and ‘WildRover’ are come-all-yes. Everybody knows them so everyone sings along.”

This is a bad thing? Campbell doesn’t think so. She encourages it. “We want everyone to have a good time,” she laughs. “It’s a light show. We don’t take ourselves seriously.”

here are times, she says,she thinks, “four years and here I am still Songbirding.” The show has played to packed houses in Ireland, England, and Germany, and the Irish Center show is the first time she’ll be performing it for American audiences. “I’m a bit nervous about it but it went well everywhere else,” she says.

“It’s great fun. I love doing this material–despite the fact,” she laughs, “that I’m closet rocker Bonnie Raitt in my head!”