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Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

What, are you kidding, do I have to be Irish again this week? When will this blasted month be over?

Okay, we hear some of you out there, so we have a special treat. Instead of being Irish this weekend, you can be Scottish (Celts are Celts is our motto). The Scottish folk band, GiveWay, which won a coveted “Danny Award” at the international Celtic Connection Festival pretty much their first time on a big stage, will be performing Saturday night at the Irish Center, Carpenter and Emlen Streets in the Mt. Airy section of Philadelphia.

We’ve been listening to their last CD for weeks (that will be us mouthing the words and playing air accordian) and this unconventionally traditional band is sensational. There is not a chance in the world that your feet won’t be tapping. In fact, we’re going to encourage seat jigging, or, if you can find a vacant spot, hop on up and get your Irish—or Scottish—on.

The concert is being hosted by us, www.irishphiladelphia.com, and we hope you come out and join us. In preparation, you can read our interview with one of the lovely Johnson sisters (lead vocalist, Kirsty, who is 21) and listen to their latest single, “The Water is Wide,” produced by Phil Cunningham.

There are plenty of other things going on. On Saturday afternoon, the movie, “Hunger,” a stark, realistic portrayal of the lives and deaths of the Long Kesh hunger strikers (the lead actor, playing the ill-fated Bobby Sands, transforms into a near skeleton by the end, a tribute to his dedication to the role), will be screened at the Prince Theater as part of the Philadelphia Film Festival.

Also on Saturday afternoon, AOH and LAOH 87 will be holding a benefit for the family of Philadelphia Police Officer John Pawlowski, who was killed when responding to a 911 call. He left a wife who is carrying their child.

On Satuday night, the Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann will be holding its third annual Irish Buffet and House Party at the McSwiney Club in Jenkintown. We’re pretty sure that means great food, fabulous music, and a night of Irish dancing.

You probably read this week that Immaculata researchers found what they believe are the bones of 57 Irish immigrant railroad workers who were reported to have died in a cholera epidemic and buried in a mass grave near Malvern, in a place called locally, “Duffy’s Cut.” One of the those researchers, Professor William E. Watson, is scheduled to give a presentation on Duffy’s Cut on Sunday at the Celtic Heritage Foundation at 321 Cedar Street, Bristol. The event was scheduled before the discovery, so this is a great opportunity to find out what’s behind the headlines.

More exciting stuff: Riverdance begins its farewell performances at The Kimmel Center on Tuesday, March 31. Three of the original performers are still dancing with the show, which is credited with igniting an interest in all things Irish when it first debuted with Michael Flately on Broadway. If you check the ads we’re running, you’ll see they’re offering a 15% discount right now, so here’s your opportunity.

Speaking of igniting interest in the Irish, Gaelic Storm is scheduled to appear at The Colonial Theater in Phoenixville on Friday night. If you saw the movie, Titantic, and apparently everyone did, you saw and heard this former pub band turned international Celtic sensations in the famous scene where Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet joined in the below-decks merriment (where our people were making their voyage).

Lots more coming: Next week, two great musicians from Ireland are heading our way, the Hibernian Hunger Project is holding its giant “cook-in” at Aid for Friends in Northeast Philly (volunteers welcome), and the World Irish Dance Championships are kicking off (and kicking really high) their weeklong competition in Philadelphia, the first time the annual event is being held in the US. (And they picked us!)

Go visit our calendar for all the details. And don’t forget to support your local Irish business!

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

See the McDade Dancers on Sunday, March 22.

See the McDade Dancers on Sunday, March 22.

We know what you’re thinking. After St. Patrick’s Day “do I have to be Irish this week?” No, you don’t, but if you want to, there’s plenty of ways. Let us count them:

Up in Lehigh County, they’re celebrating St. Paddy’s Day for the first time. On Saturday you can attend the “Best Legs in a Kilt” contest at Jack Callahan’s Pub in Allentown, take a pub crawl , then on Sunday attend the Allentown St. Patrick’s Day Parade.

They’re also having their parade in Gilbertsville, Schuykill County, this weekend.

The hot Irish group The Saw Doctors will be performing at the TLA on South Street on Saturday night. See our story on their New York gig.

On Sunday, there’s music and dancing on tap. The McDade Irish dancers will be performing two shows at Archbishop Prendergast which will be your opportunity to see the kids who will be competing at the World Irish Dance Championships in Philadelphia in April. There’s a St. Patrick’s Ceili-Set Dance in New Castle, DE, and Coyote Run will be on stage at the Sellersville Theatre.

If you missed Tony Kenny’s Celtic Nights, which appeared at various venues this season, you can catch the show at the Upper Darby Performing Arts Center in Drexel Hill on Tuesday night.

We’re gearing up for the Scottish girl group, GiveWay, which is coming to the Irish Center next weekend. We’re hoping to see a lot of you there. Come up and introduce yourself.

Don’t forget the Frank McCourt play which is heading into the home stretch at The Kimmel, and the farewell performance of “Riverdance,” with several of the original dancers, coming in a week. (They’re offering a 15% discount so you have to go!)

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Oh come on, if you don’t know how to be Irish this week, you need to join a new ethnic group. The Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade steps off the curb at noon on Sunday, but don’t stake out your usual spot on Broad Street. It won’t be marching down that avenue, but starting out around 16th and JFK—a course correction to save some money. It’s the biggest parade ever, with bands from as far away as Ireland, Connecticut, and Maryland. A Mass will be celebrated before the parade at 9 AM by Cardinal Justin Rigali at St. Patrick’s Church at 20th and Locust.

You can watch the parade on CBS3. But it’s a good time, even in bad weather (\we know, we froze our Irish off last year), so come on out. Bring a nonperishable food donation with you. The Philadelphia Inquirer and Daily News–new parade sponsors this year–will have volunteers along the parade route to collect them for the needy.

There are after-parade parties all over, but we’ll probably wind up at the Irish Center where there will be great food and wonderful music.

But let’s not skip over Saturday:

There are at least seven parades on Saturday: Levittown, York, Conshohocken, Trenton, Wilmington, New Castle, and Springfield, Delaware County (look for us in Springfield this year, a first for us!). In the morning, take the kids to Willow Creek Orchards in Collegeville where they’re holding a shamrock cookie decorating workshop (you need to pre-register).

On Saturday afternoon, the Erin Express—the drink fest you can really enjoy because the bars provide buses—is happening in Center City Philadelphia (see our calendar for the participating pubs).

At Archbishop Prendergast, there’s a freebie Saturday—St. Malachy’s College Music Tour from Belfast is there thanks to the Dennis Kelly AOH, Division #1, Havertown and the new Junior AOH Division #1 at Monsignor Bonner High School.

Also Saturday night: Burning Bridget Cleary will be heating it up at the Tin Angel, The Broken Shillelaghs are repairing to The Blue Martini at Bally’s in Atlantic City, The Morrigan (a trad group) is bringing some civilization to the Scots at Braveheart Pub in Hellertown, and The Boys of County Bucks will be entertaining the wine drinkers at Crossing Vineyard and Winery in Washington Crossing.

The Boys will also be performing on Sunday. Also on tap for Sunday: Singer Tommy Sands will be doing two shows at Longwood Gardens, and Paddy Moloney and The Chieftains will be making their annual pilgrimage to the Kimmel.

And it’s not over yet. It’s not even St. Patrick’s Day! On Monday, the Marple Sports Arena is holding a Family-Friendly St. Patty’s Sports Night with skating to Irish music.

Then, Tuesday dawns. Here’s a rundown of just some of the things you can do on the 2009 St. Paddy’s Day:

Have a big Irish breakfast at Fado Pub in Philadelphia to benefit the Patrick Kerr Memorial Scholarship at Roman Catholic High School.

You suburbanites: Head to Brittinghams in Lafayette Hill or The Shanachie Pub in Ambler to hear music all day. Don’t play favorites—go back and forth between the two.

Plan on having a ham and cabbage dinner with the New Castle County Irish Society, or with musicians Mike and Kitty Kelly-Albrecht at the Spring Mill Café in Conshohocken, or with Shades of Green at Crossing vineyards and Winery in Washington Crossing.

Then, if you have any energy left (and you’ll need it), those crazy boys from DC, Scythian, will be holding “the Big Jig” at The Trocadero on Arch Street in Philly.

In Sellersville, Bill Monaghan and Celtic Pride are appearing at The Sellersville Theatre, and you can have your St. Paddy’s Day meal next door at The Washington House.

The amazing Solas is appearing at World Café Live.

Sir James Galway is performing with the York Symphony Orchestra in York.

The Broken Shillelaghs are appearing at Oh! Hara’s Pub in Gloucester City, NJ.

Frank McCourt’s “The Irish and How They Got That Way” is on the bill at the Kimmel Center till the end of the month.

The remarkable Irish trad group, Slide, is appearing at the baby grand @ The Grand in Wilmongton on Thursday. Check out our story, photos and six videos from their recent show at The Irish Center. Wow.

Then, on Friday, the inimitable Karan Casey will appear at the World Café Live. We saw her in December during the Teada Christmas tour at the Irish Center, and she blew us away.

There are more parades coming up, including Allentown’s and Girardsville’s, and plenty more Celtic events this month, including our own: GiveWay, a quartet of young talented sisters from Scotland who play and sing traditional music with a jazzy style. And they are way cute. That’s coming up on March 28. Hope to see you there!

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Well, you know it’s St. Paddy’s month now. The “Erin Express”—Philly’s 30-year-old pub crawl—leaves for the first time this year on Saturday at noon. Ten buses will take revelers to some of the city’s best Irish pubs and you don’t need a reservation or a ticket. Check our calendar for participating establishments, and drink responsibly.

The first of the region’s parades steps off the curb on Saturday—Mount Holly, NJ’s march is expected to be the biggest ever.

And here’s the rest of the lineup for Saturday:

•Conshohocken will hold its parade grand marshal’s ball in Jeffersonville.
•Queen of Peace Parish in Ardsley has scheduled its annual Irish night fundraiser.
•Sean nos singer Terry Kane and her partner John Beatty will be performing at Porter’s Pub in Easton, part of the Celtic Cultural Alliance’s Celtic music nights.
•Incredible harper Grainne Hambley and her musical partner William Jackson will perform at Calvary Church in Philadelphia.
•Solas is appearing at the Appel Farm Arts and Music Center in Elmer, NJ
•Gloucester County Div. 1 AOH is holding its St. Patrick’s Day party at Richard Rossiter in National Park, NJ.
•Danu is appearing at the Annenberg Center.
• Frank McCourt’s “The Irish and How They Got That Way” is in the beginning of a four-week run at The Kimmel Center.

Then, on Sunday:
Head over to the Springfield Country Club to hear Blackthorn—they’re playing a fundraiser for the Philly St. Paddy’s Day Parade, which came up $40,000 short in the city’s budget crunch.
Before you go, fortify yourself with a full Irish breakfast spread laid out by AOH Div. 22 at Smoke Eater’s Pub—it too is a fundraiser for the parade and other AOH charities.

The rest of the week:

• Scottish group Malinky will appear at the Bethlehem BrewWorks, a fundraiser for the Celtic Cultural Alliance, on Tuesday night.
• Folklorist and musician Mick Moloney will give a musical talk on Jewish and Irish collaborations in Vaudeville and early Tin Pan Alley at the Falvey Library Lounge at Villanova on Tuesday night. The following night, Gerald Dawe, Heimbold professor of Irish studies, will give a talk and reading.
• On Thursday morning, the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick will hold its annual wreath laying ceremony at City Hall, and Mayor Michael Nutter will read a proclamation marking St. Patrick’s Day in the city. A luncheon follows, and Ring of Honor winners, including Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey and District Attorney Lynne Abraham and families of slain Philadelphia police officers will be honored.
• In York, Barleyjuice will be performing on Thursday night, and in Borders in Springfield, golf writer Tom Coyne, author of “A Course Called Ireland,” about his own personal golf tour and genealogy trip to Ireland, will do a book signing.
• AOH Div. 1 in Swedesburg has its annual Irish Coffee Contest on the schedule for Thursday night—it’s always a lot of fun, and there’s a two-time winner that’s facing some steep challenges this year.
• Also on Thursday, Black 47 will raise the roof at the World Café Live, the second “Rambling House” evening of entertainment will be happening at the Irish Center, and Cathie Ryan will be performing at the Montgomery County Community College in a benefit for victims of domestic violence served by the Women’s Center of Montgomery County.
• Friday’s lineup: Bell X1 at the World Café Live, the coronation of the King and Queen of the Allentown Parade, Flogging Molly in Atlantic City, a benefit party sponsored by the American Ireland Fund’s Young Leaders of Philadelphia, and Burning Bridget Cleary burning it up in Spinnerstown.

Next weekend it’s the big Philadelphia St. Paddy’s Day Parade, and much, much more.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

The acclaimed Irish group, Slide, is coming to town.

The acclaimed Irish group, Slide, is coming to town.

“They can sing, they can write, they can dance across fingerboards and piano keys, buttons and bows, and by crikey can they play.” Wish we’d written that, but it was reviewer Alex Monahan on the 2003 Slide release, Harmonic Motion. The five young Irishmen (who are waaaaay cuter than the Jonas Brothers) will be appearing on Saturday night at 8 PM at the Philadelphia Irish Center. In Ireland, they’ve been called “the next big thing” in traditional music. Listen for yourself.

Slide will be ringing in the month of March. Take your vitamins and get plenty of sleep, sweeties. There’s going to be plenty of ways to be Irish this month. (In fact, you can sneak a peek at our special 2009 St. Patrick’s Celebration calendar to make your plans now.)

The AOH Division 22 is holding a Celtic tea on Sunday at the Firefighters Union Hall in Philadelphia. We don’t expect lace napkins, but we could be surprised.

Derek Warfield and the Young Wolfe Tones will be bringing their great sound to the Springfield Country Club late Sunday afternoon too.

You can support the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade on Sunday by attending a fundraiser at Finnigan’s Wake on Third and Spring Garden in the city. Philly’s budget deficit is infectious—it’s left parade organizers about $40,000 short for this year’s abbreviated event (another cost-cutting measure). Philadelphia Newspapers CEO Brian Tierney has vowed to match dollar-for-dollar the first $20,000 raised for the parade. Paddy’s Well provides the entertainment. Next week, Blackthorn raises the roof and some money for the parade at the Springfield Country Club.

And, on the same night (get used to this), the Three Irish Tenors will be performing at the Colonial Theater in Phoenixville. Lovely voices, nice lads.

Mid-week, Irish singer Tony Kenny, star of Jury’s Irish Cabaret in Dublin for years, brings his show to the Sellersville Theatre (it includes Irish comic Joe Cuddy, fiddler Sarah Rogers, and some great Irish dancers).

Thursday, the Celtic Tenors are coming to the Keswick, and Kildare’s in Manayunk is beginning the first of four weeks of Theology on Tap, an evening with guest speakers on many aspects of religion, with a free buffet.

If you missed the legendary Finbar Furey when he appeared at The Shanachie Pub and Restaurant in Ambler on October, you have your chance to see him on Thursday, when he makes a return visit with The Boatmen. It was an amazing night, not to be missed—don’t make the same mistake twice.

And Friday marks the return of the hit Broadway show, “The Irish and How They Got That Way” at the Kimmel Center in Philadelphia. The Frank McCourt (“Angela’s Ashes”) play is an irreverent but affectionate history of the Irish in America told in song and story. We’ll have a review in the next couple of weeks.

Also, next Friday, Shanachie owner and entertainer Gerry Timlin will play your favorite Irish tunes and keep you in stitches at a special concert to benefit the Courage to Create Capital Campaign for the Montgomery County Community College’s Fine Arts Center in Blue Bell.

The first of the many parades is next weekend (Mt. Holly kicks the marching season off) and the activities start to ramp up and they don’t stop even at the end of March. Check our calendar and start making your plans now. Pace yourselves!

And remember to buy Irish!

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

After last weekend’s Midwinter Scottish-Irish Festival in Valley Forge, I’m all pumped for St. Patrick’s Month. If you missed last weekend’s craic, you’re in luck. There’s more this week.

Remarkable Tipperary-born uilleann piper Michael Cooney will be appearing at the Coatesville Cultural Center on Sunday night. Winner of multiple All-Ireland championships in pipes and whistle, Cooney will be accompanied by guitarist/singer Pat Egan.

On Sunday morning, AOH Div. 22 is hosting an Irish benefit breakfast at Smoke Eater’s Pub at Franklin and Sheffield Streets in Philadelphia. And who is the recipient of this benefit? Aside from you, the money will go to the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade, the Hibernian Hunger Project and the charities sponsored by Division 22.

In the Lehigh Valley, the Dublin Philharmonic plays Russian classics at Lehigh University’s Zoellner Center on Sunday afternoon. In York, PA, the Screaming Orphans (you may have seen them last weekend in Valley Forge) will perform at a benefit at the Harp and Fiddle Pub and Restaurant for the York St. Patrick’s Day Parade. Irish items will also be up for auction.

There’s also a benefit for the Allentown St. Patrick’s Day Parade on Sunday at Callaghan’s Pub on Tilghman Street.

Sunday night (yes, we’re still at the weekend), Irish singer-songwriter Noellie McDonnell will open for folk-pop winger Patty Larkin at the World Café Live in Philadelphia.

McGillins, a great Center City Irish pub, has some fun events planned this week, including its popular St. Patrick Daze—Countdown to St. Patrick’s Day event. Music will be provided Bostonians Patsy & John. On tap: Authentic Beamish Irish Stout, Seamus Irish Red Ale and O’Reilly’s Irish Stout from Sly Fox Brewery in Phoenixville, plus Chocolate Leprechauns. To eat: bangers and mash (Irish sausage and mashed potatoes), Shepherd’s pie, Irish lamb stew and corned beef with cabbage throughout March.

On Friday, Irish Ambassador Michael Collins will be in Philadelphia to give out the annual Taoisech and Ambassador’s Award at a luncheon at the Ritz Carlton in Center City sponsored by the Irish American Business Chamber and Network.

If you’re in Kennett Square on Friday night, head over to Kennett Flash for an evening of Irish and American folk music with Danny Quinn.

At Finnigan’s Wake in Philadelphia, there’s a beef-and-beer fundraiser Friday night for the Cardinal Dougherty soccer team. Music will be provided by The Hooligans, the Bogside Rogues, and No Irish Need Apply.

As we always remind you, check our calendar for all the details. And in these tough times, support your local Irish pub and merchant! Eat, drink, and shop Irish!

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

We’re gearing up this week for what’s shaping up to be three slam-bang months of Irishness in the Philadelphia region.

First, this weekend the Cumann Rince Naisunta 2009 Regional dance championships will be held at the Irish Center, starting early Saturday morning with a parade of Irish dancers. Winners of this competition will be heading to Dublin in May for the world championships.

On Saturday night, Blackthorn will be performing at Archbishop Ryan High School, while the Barley Boys will be on stage at Porter’s Pub in Easton.

On Sunday, the Braveheart Pub in Hellerstown is launching the latest session in the area—the second Sunday session which will, of course, occur every second Sunday of the month.

You can take your favorite squeeze to the Springfield Inn in Springfield, Delco, for a Valentine’s dinner and dancing or head to the Sellersville Theatre to hear the McDades, a five-piece Canadian ensemble of siblings who fuse Celtic sounds with everything from jazz to global music.

On Wednesday night, The Grand in Wilmington, DE, is hosting an Irish Spectacular, featuring Irish performers Gerry O’Connor, Emer Mayock, Frankie Gavin, Cora Venus Lunny, Robert Harris and Regina Nathan with the Dublin Philharmonic Orchestra.

Make your way over to Camden, NJ, on Thursday night for a treat—the annual fundraising concert for Sacred Heart Parish featuring Mick Moloney and Friends, who this year includes legendary Northern Ireland singer and activist Tommy Sands (look for Sands to return in March to appear at Longwood Gardens with his daughter, Moya). Special bonus: There will be a raffle for a trip to Ireland with only 150 tickets available for $50 each. We like those chances.

Starting on Friday, there will be three days of Irish music, vendors, and whiskey tastings at the 17th Annual Scottish and Irish Festival at the Valley Forge Convention Center in King of Prussia. The lineup is incredible and includes the Tannahill Weavers, the McDades, Dublin City Ramblers, Brother, Five Quid, Searson, the Hooligans, and many, many more. This is one of those don’t miss events for the entire family. And the food is usually pretty good. Best of all—there’s lots of parking and it’s all free.

We’ve been updating our calendar almost daily, so if you want to take a peek ahead, please do. You’re going to get as excited as we are about what’s coming up this month and next.

Remember, support your local Irish merchant and if you have a few extra bucks, think about donating it to the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Committee, which runs the annual parade. Philly’s budget cuts have left the parade organizers $40,000 in the hole. Contact them at info@philadelphiastpatsparade.com.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

It’s almost too quiet out there. Oh, if you don’t count the sessions that run every night of the week in the Philadelphia region. We’re lucky. A reader recently asked us about sessions in Atlanta where he was heading on a trip. We did a little search and didn’t turn up much. Oh, they have their Irish pubs, but most of the music is either provided by DJs or patrons using the karaoke machine. Now, there’s a little bit of hell for you.

There is one great event this weekend you won’t want to miss. The Next Generation, a group of local youngsters who are following in the footsteps of some of the great session musicians we have here, will be performing at the Garden State Discovery Museum in Cherry Hill on Saturday.

And we have one correction. The Ambassador’s and Taoiseach Awards luncheon of the Irish American Chamber and Business Network that has appeared on our calendar for this Sunday is actually scheduled for February 27. We apologize for the error. So don’t be showing up at the Ritz Carlton this weekend.

Since there’s a light schedule now, we want you to rest up, because the events are starting to build up in February and March, when you won’t have a moment to even think. But if you have some time, get out for a pint and some craic at your local Irish pub. They need the business, and we need them.

On the horizon: The World Irish Dance Championships are coming to Philadelphia in early April (thousands and thousands of curly wigs—imagine it!). To get yourself ready, there’s a regional dance competition next Saturday at the Irish Center you an attend. Trust us, it will put a smile on your face. And we need that too.

Check out our calendar for all the details. Most of them correct, we hope.