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How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

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Rosaleen McGill sings her heart out at the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival this weekend.

When singer Jim McGill momentarily forgot the next stanza of the traditional Irish song he was singing, half a dozen people in the audience for “Singer’s Night” on Thursday, the launch of the Philadelphia Ceili Group’s annual music festival, called out the first few lines. It was that kind of crowd. All night, feet tapped and people sang along, even before Lancaster singer Matt Ward handed out song sheets.

Gabriel Donohue, a multi-intrumentalist and singer who toured with the Chieftains and has recorded with everyone from the Boston Pops to Liam Clancy of the Clancy Brothers, hosted the night and sang, sometimes solo, and also with his frequent partner, Marian Makins. Other performers included local talents Rosaleen McGill, Steve Stanislau, Teresa Kane and Ellen Tepper, and Courtney Malley. Singers Night was established several years ago to honor Malley’s father, the late Frank Malley, long time director of the annual festival, whose portrait in brights splashes of purple and orange held court at the side of the stage at the Irish Center in Mt. Airy.

More than many other events throughout the year, attending the Ceili Group Festival is authentically how to be Irish in Philadelphia. It’s a celebration of Irish traditional music and dance, a place to see local performers and internationally acclaimed musicians, like De Danann—called “the Rolling Stones of Irish traditional music”–who will be in concert on Saturday night, and Paddy Keenan, one of the founding members of the Bothy Band who is considered one of the best uilleann (Irish) pipes players in the world.

On Friday night, Irish folk singer Sean Tyrell will be bringing his one man musical, “Who Killed James Joyce?” to the Fireside Room, where singers’ night is held, while in the ballroom you can try out your dance moves in the very traditional set dancing event featuring the region’s best ceili band, The McGillians and Friends, featuring local legend, octagenarian Kevin McGillian and his sons, John and Jimmy, with others.

On Saturday at 11 AM, Kitty Kelly-Albrecht leads the John Kelly Memorial Session in the Fireside Room, to honor the late fiddle and conertina player from Sligo, who played a major role in the resurgence of interest in Irish music in Philadelphia in the 1970s. If you play an instrument or just love the ambience of an Irish jam session, you can join in.

There will be vendors, food, and free workshops throughout the day, including one on Irish genealogy with Lori Lander Murphy. There’s also free parking at the SEPTA lot directly across the street from the Irish Center, at Carpenter and Emlen Streets.

If you’re in New Jersey, check out the Mercer Irish Fest at Mercer County Park on Saturday, featuring live Celtic music, vendors, kids’ activities, food and a beer garden. I’m an avid gardener, but I’ve never tried to grow beer. Hmmmm.

On Sunday, the Cavan Society is holding its annual golf tournament at the Cobbs Creek Golf Course. Tee off with this always fun—and funny—group. You don’t need to trace your roots to Cavan to play.

If you’re a member of the Sellersville Theatre, you have a party to go to on Sunday. You’re going to be partying with The Young Dubliners, who are making their second appearance in the area (they were at World Café Live on Wednesday, with the John Byrne Band).

Next Friday, catch the Shanty’s at The Glenside Pub in Glenside.

Next weekend, Blackthorn will be headlining the second annual Haverford Music Festival. Get there early—we’ve heard that this festival is expected to draw thousands.

It’s also Commodore Barry Day at the Commodore Barry Bridge on the New Jersey side with a ceremony and wreath-laying by the Gloucester County Ancient Order of Hibernians. A Mass will be celebrated at the Richard Rossiter Memorial Hall in nearby National Park, NJ, with a free lunch and music.

And next Saturday is also the day of the Gloucester City Shamrock Fest. This little town just over the bridge from Philadelphia is very proud of its Irish roots and occupies a picturesque spot on the Delaware River.

Also coming up: On September 17, the annual Ciara Kelly Higgins Benefit for Cerebral Palsy golf tournament and dinner at the Plymouth Country Club in Plymouth Meeting. Dinner is at 6 PM and features music by the Paul Moore and Friends band with comic Joe Conklin. The event raises money to offset medical and therapy expenses for 9-year-old Ciara Higgins, a fourth grader at St. Philip Neri School in Lafayette Hill, who was born with a form of cerebral palsy.

The same day, the Claddagh Fund, a nonprofit founded by Ken Casey of the Boston Celtic punk band, The Dropkick Murphys, is holding its first annual Celebrity Golf Tournament. The foundation raises money for underfunded charities in Boston and now in Philadelphia.

There’s plenty more coming up this month, including the Irish Fall Festival in Cape May, Blackthorn in Sea Isle, and a variety of Irish events at Villanova. Check your local listings—and by that I mean our calendar.

Check out our photos from Singers’ Night at the Irish Center.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week (and Beyond)

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There's gonna be a lot of this in September.

September is the month that makes March seem like a breeze. There are so many festivals you could spend the entire month just eating dogs and burgers. I mean, when you’re not eating fish and chips or haggis.

Let’s just start with this weekend, shall we?

The games are underway in Pennypack Riverview Park on State Road in Philly—the North American Gaelic Athletic Association Championships, which will draw the best amateur Gaelic football, hurling, and camogie teams from all over North America to our backyard. If you’ve never see Gaelic games, this is your chance to see some talented athletes make American sports look like a kids’ tea party.

On Sunday, the first of September’s festivals, the fourth annual Brittingham’s Irish Festival at Brittingham’s in Lafayette Hill. Bring a lawn chair and listen—and dance—to the music of The Paul Moore Band, Jamison, No Irish Need Apply (the 2012 International Mary from Dungloe, Meghan Davis, is the lovely singer and keyboard player for this group), and Seamus McGroary.

Well, that takes care of my weekend. Hope to see a lot of you out there.

Later this week: Local favorite, The John Byrne Band is again opening for the Young Dubliners (since Byrne is himself a young Dubliner, it’s appropriate) at the World Café Live in Philadelphia on Thursday.

And Thursday kicks off the second festival of September—the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival of Irish Music and Dance—with Singers’ Night, hosted by Galway’s Gabriel Donohue, and will feature local favorites including Marian Makins, Rosaleen McGill, Matt Ward, and I hope, Teresa Kane, and more.

The festival runs for three days at the Irish Center. On Friday, September 7, Sean Tyrell brings his one-man musical show, “Who Killed James Joyce?” to the center’s Fireside Room, while the ballroom is turned over the the killer ceili band, McGillians and Friends, for some lively set dancing. (If you’re afraid of looking like a spaz on the dance floor, stop into the Irish Center on Thursday night; instructor John Shields will show you some moves.)

On Saturday, September 8, come to the center for all kinds of musical workshops with the night’s headliners, De Danann, and piper Paddy Keenan, plus nonmusical workshops on everything from making a St. Brigid’s Cross to genealogy, featuring our own Lori Lander Murphy, who can dig up your ancestors better than a gravedigger (she’s dug up a couple of mine).

Now Sunday, you have a choice – day of rest, or playing golf at the annual Cavan Golf Tournament at Cobbs Creek Golf Course in Philadelphia.

On the horizon: the Gloucester City Shamrock Fest on September 15; the Second Annual Haverford Music Fest, featuring Blackthorn, also on September 15; Irish boxing to kick off the AOH Irish Fall Festival in North Wildwood, which starts on September 20 and runs through September 22; a simultaneous appearance by Blackthorn those two days at LaCosta in Sea Isle City (I liked it better when Blackthorn was in Wildwood during the AOH fest—what’s the scoop there?); and then Celtic Classic in Bethlehem on September 28, 29, and 30.

There’s some fabulous Irish traditional musicians coming to town this month too, including Donegal fiddlers Peter Campbell and Caoimhin MacAoidh, who will be performing on September 23 at West Chester University, and brothers Cillian (uilleann pipes) and Niall (concertina) Vallely who will take the stage at the Coatesville Cultural Society on September 30.

We and quite a few other folks have been adding to our totally free calendar for September, including, we note, something being held in County Meath, in case you happen to be there. Check it out so you can plan ahead.

August 31, 2012 by
How to Be Irish in Philly

How to be Irish in Philly This Week (and Beyond)

The summer is fading fast; Labor Day, that great divider between the season of sun and fun and the season of back-to-school clothes and pencil sharpeners is coming up in a week.

But that’s a good thing, because it’s bringing with it hundreds of Gaelic footballers, hurlers, and camogie players to Philadelphia for the 2012 North American Gaelic Athletic Association championships. The action will center at Pennypack Riverview Fields in Pennypack Park in northeast Philadelphia.

Tickets for the entire weekend is just $45. See our calendar for the details and a link to the ticket website.

But before the games begin, there’s the annual Irish Festival at St. Patrick’s Church on this Saturday and Sunday, August 25 and 26, with food, music, vendors, and fun. On Sunday, the Rev. Gus Puleo will celebrated the Mass of the Golden Rose to honor Our Lady of Knock. After Mass, there’s a celebration at the AOH Notre Dame Div. 1 Hall with more music, food, dancing and fun.

You shore goers can catch the Broken Shillelaghs at Tucker’s Pub in Wildwood, NJ on Saturday night and Jamison at Shenanigans in Sea Isle City on Sunday.

Our friends to the north—that would be Allentown—are holding an Irish Heritage Night at Coca Cola Park, home of the Iron Pigs baseball team, a Phillies Triple A affiliate. Check our calendar for the details because there are discounts and group benefits available.

In the not-too-distant future: The Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival of Irish Music and Dance on Sept. 6-8, with DeDannann, Paddy Keenan, Gabriel Byrne, Marian Makins, the McGillians’ topnotch ceili band (for dancing the night away), and Sean Tyrell’s one-man show, “Who Killed James Joyce?” There are also workshops for musicians and some for those interested in genealogy, St. Brigid’s Cross making, the Irish language, and other topics.

Look for The Young Dubliners to head our way in early September, and both the Mercer and Gloucester City Shamrock fests by mid-month, with AOH Wildwood Weekend, the Bethlehem Celtic Fest, and Blackthorn’s shore weekend towards the end of September. That’s your reminder that you’re more than halfway to St. Patrick’s Day.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

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Irish dancers at the Phillies' Irish Heritage Night--expect more of same in Camden this week.

I love how creative the Irish are about raising money. This Saturday, the folks at McShea’s Bar and Restaurant in Narberth are hoping you’ll bet on the horses. They’re holding a fundraiser for the Beacon Lodge, a Lions Club charity and camp for adults and children with special needs, that they’re calling “McShea’s Summer Derby.” It features “10 races and cheeky narration from the British Isles” and it will be held mid-afternoon at the pub. Sounds like fun for a good cause.

And on a serious note: The Friends of Irish Freedom, an organization that supports Republican political prisoners and their families (no, not the GOP Republicans), is having an informational meeting at the William Way Community Center on Spruce Street in Philadelphia on Saturday afternoon from 3-5 PM.

For you shore goers, Jamison is performing at Shenanigans in Sea Isle City on Sunday night. They’ll be back there again on Sunday, August 26.

Get out of work early on Tuesday so you can see some team go up against the River Sharks of Camden at Campbell’s Field in the city across the Delaware from Philly. It doesn’t matter what team it is—it’s Irish Heritage Night, so there will be pregame Irish dance performances, food, and music. Plus, it’s Dollar Tuesday, so some food and drink is just a buck. See our calendar for special codes that will get you discounted tickets. You don’t need to prove that you’re Irish.

Don’t forget two great upcoming events: On Labor Day weekend, GAA players will be descending on Philadelphia from all over North America for the National Championships in football, hurling, and camogie to be held at Pennypack Park at the Riverview Fields in Northeast Philadelphia. Tickets for the entire weekend are only $45 and there will be action on five fields, plus some tasty Irish food and drink.

And the Philadelphia Ceili Group is holding its annual festival of Irish music and dance (its 38th), with special guests the legendary group DeDannan and piper Paddy Keenan giving a concert on Saturday night, September 8. On September 6, Galway’s Gabriel Donohue hosts the annual singers’ night, and on Friday, Irish folk singer Sean Tyrell brings his one-man show, “Who Killed James Joyce,” to the Irish Center, which is also hosting a ceili with live music by the McGillians and Friends, the region’s best ceili band.

August 17, 2012 by
How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

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The Glengarry Bhoys want to see you at Sellersville Theatre.

Celtic Weekend, the raucous celebration of the Glagow Celtics, who are facing Real Spain on Saturday at The Linc, continues through the weekend with music (Charlie and the Bhoys from Glasgow and Raymond Coleman and Oliver McElhone from Ireland and Philly); strange sports (poolball at Fado); breakfast at The Plough and Fado; and a Celtic dance party (at Fado).

Also continuing: Musikfest in Bethlehem, featuring Celtic acts such as Burning Bridget Cleary, Fighting Jamesons, and The Prodigals.

On Saturday, meet 11-year-old Corey Hughes, who came to the US from Ireland with his family in 2010 and is facing a mountain of medical expenses resulting from a rare form of cancer called synovial sarcoma. His friends are holding a fundraising beef and beer at The District Council 21 Painters and Allied Trade Unions Hall in Philadelphia. Rusty Bass and Raymond Coleman will provide the music.

Also on Saturday, the Glengarry Bhoys from Ontario will be presenting their blend of rock and Celtic styles at the Sellersville Theatre.

If you’re down the shore, catch Jamison at Shenanigans in Sea Isle City on Saturday night.

On Wednesday, the Irish Thunder Pipes and Drums will give a free concert in a beautiful location–the Washington Memorial Chapel in Valley Forge National Park. Come early and bring your own lawn chair, snacks and drinks.

On Thursday, a freebie from Blackthorn: a concert in Rose Tree Park in Media. It’s an annual event that was washed out last year by torrential rain. In Bethlehem, remarkable fiddler Tony DeMarco will be giving workshops and participating in the session at McCarthy’s Tea Room in Bethlehem. See our calendar for details on how you can learn from the best.

It’s a few weeks away, but here’s an early call to mark your calendars for the 38th Annual Philadelphia Ceili Group Irish Music and Dance Festival, September 6-8, at the Irish Center in Philadelphia. It’s a doozy this year, starting off with singer’s night on Thursday hosted by singer and multi-instrumentalist Gabriel Donohue, a ceili dance on Friday night featuring the McGillians and Friends, one of the foremost ceili bands in the region as well as Sean Tyrell’s one-man show, “Who Killed James Joyce” for you non-dancers; and on Saturday, a host of workshops including singing in both Irish and English, Irish language, genealogy; St. Brigid’s Cross making and programs for children followed by an evening concert with world class Irish piper Paddy Keenan and De Dannan, featuring the lovely singing voice of Eleanor Shanley and some of the founding members of this Galway-based band.

August 9, 2012 by
How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

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Emily Safko and her harp are going to Ireland to compete in the All-Irelands.


This is shaping up to be one major Irish week in the Philly region, thanks to the Celtic lineup at Bethlehem’s annual Musikfest and the visit from the Glasgow Celtics on Saturday, August 11.

It all starts on Friday night with the hard-driving Tartanic at Musikfest. Most but not all of the Celtic acts are appearing at what they’re calling the Pennsylvania Lottery Volksplatz. It’s really Johnston Park, Conestoga Street and W. Union Boulevard in the Christmas city. Tartanic returns to the same stage on Saturday night as well.

On Sunday, Lazy Lanigan’s Publick House in Sewell, NJ, is the scene of a ceili to benefit Haley Richardson and Emily Safko, two pint-sized Irish music phenoms, who will be competing again in the All-Irelands this year. Haley is the four-time under 12 Mid-Atlantic fiddle champ, while Emily is the two-time under 12 Mid-Atlantic harp slow air champ. And they are both as cute as buttons. Lazy Lanigan’s is donating 10 percent of its profits to the girls.

Also on Sunday, the Philly GAA’s Notre Dames ladies football club is sponsoring a benefit at Daly’s Pub in Philadelphia for fellow footballer Alisha Jordan. Jordan, who came from County Meath, Ireland to New York this summer to compete in the GAA games, was attacked and seriously injured as she and her friend walked to their home in the Bronx on July 14. Jordan suffered a broken bone in her skull, a broken nose, broken teeth and lacerations, including a cut on her face that took 15 stitches to close. Proceeds will help pay for reconstructive surgery and a metal plate to hold her skull together. The young woman has no insurance.

The fundraiser will follow a critical matchup between the Dames and the national champs, the Mairead Farrells, at Cardinal Dougherty fields on Sunday afternoon. The Dames are two up in a best-of-five for top berth in the nationals, which are in Philly this year over the Labor Day weekend.

Catch singer-comic Seamus Kennedy on Tuesday at Musikfest—he has two shows.

Carbon Leaf, a five-piece indie rock band with a Celtic flair from Richmond, VA, will be doing a Tuesday evening concert at Musikfest.

On Wednesday, catch the Killdares, a Texas-based group known for its alternative Celtic rock, at Musikfest.

And on Friday, you can see Philly’s own John Byrne Band at 5 PM, as well as the Lehigh Valley’s band, Amarach in the afternoon.

On Friday, Celtic Weekend starts in Philadelphia. There’s a host of events planned to herald the soccer match between Glasgow Celtic and Real Madrid scheduled for The Linc on Saturday. An estimated 20,000 Celtic fans are expected to descend on Philly for the weekend festivities, which includes concerts by Glasgow-based band, Charlie and the Bhoys, as well as local favorites Raymond Coleman and Olive McElhone.

Most of the activities are centered at The Plough and the Stars at Second and Chestnut streets and Fado Irish Pub on Locust. There’s breakfast every morning at both pubs and music every night. Fado has two poolball tournaments planned (think pool, but you’re the cue and it’s soccer, not billiard balls), as well as late night dance parties.

Freelance journalist Phil MacGiolla Bhain, who exposed and brought down the Celtic’s archrivals, The Rangers, for tax evasion, will be speaking on Friday afternoon at Fado. There will be a blessing and a huddle on Friday night at the Irish Memorial at Front and Chestnut Streets. Father Bryce Byczynski of the Marist Brothers in New Jersey will offer a blessing. (The Celtic team was founded in Glasgow by a Marist brother in 1888.)

Check out our calendar for all the details of Celtic Weekend and Celtic acts at Musikfest.

And mark your calendar for Saturday August 11 for a fundraiser for young Corey Hughes, who moved to the US from Ireland with his family in 2010. Corey was diagnosed the following year with a rare form of cancer that affects his knee. He is currently undergoing radiation to shrink the tumor so it can be surgically removed. His family needs help with medical expenses. The Beef and Beer will be held at the District Council 21 Painters and Allied Trade Union Hall on Southampton Road in Philadelphia. Raymond Coleman and Rusty Bass will be providing the music and there will be beaucoup de raffles and auctions.

August 2, 2012 by
How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

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Michael Boyce of Blackthorn, who latest project, Alanna, was born a couple of weeks ago. Congrats!

The weather’s going to be hot, but the action at the shore is even hotter, so that’s where you should go this weekend.

First, there’s rugby. The annual War at the Shore matches will be held at Dealy Field in Sea Isle City on Saturday, with the PA Bulls facing the Northern Raiders of New York, the New York Knights taking on the Northern Virginia Eagles, and the Bucks County Sharks (there are sharks in Bucks County?) vs. the Connecticut Wildcats.

The Msgr. Bonner high school rugby team from Drexel Hill will also take on the Salesianum School rugby team from Wilmington, DE.

There’s a free cookout, music and entertainment, kids’ activities, and a nearby beach. Plus, there’s no admission fee.

While you’re down the shore, pop over to Wildwood to catch Blackthorn on the beach. Really, right there in the sand. And Jamison Celtic Rock is at Casey’s in North Wildwood. Both on Saturday. Jamison will also be at Shenanigan’s in Sea Isle on Sunday.

There, your weekend—all planned.

If you’re in Pennsylvania, Timlin and Kane will performing at the Sands Casino in Bethlehem on Saturday.

On Sunday, Alex Boatright, a 2007 All Ireland harp champion and fiddler, and her husband. Duncan, a percussionist and composer, will be holding a weekend workshop in West Chester for students of Irish music, both big and small. There will be an opportunity to show off what you learn at the session at Molly Maguire’s in Phoenixville on Sunday. See our calendar for how to sign up.

On Monday, spend happy hour at Fergie’s on Sansom Street with members of the Inis Nua Theatre Company, who will be conducting their version of a British panel quiz show called “I Got it Off the Telly.” For your $10 cover, you get a complimentary drink and appetizers, plus a chance to win raffle prizes.

You can catch Blackthorn again this week at Hometown Heroes Night at Pennypack Park on Wednesday and a free summer concert in Collegeville on Friday.

On Wednesday, August 1, the Young Ireland and St. Patrick’s Gaelic football teams go head to head as the race to the finals comes to a close. Action starts at 6:30 PM at the very crispy Cardinal Dougherty fields.

And catch Jamison again this week—on Friday—at Curran’s Northeast.

July 27, 2012 by
How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

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Floriane Blancke and Dermot Byrne in Philly on Friday, July 27

It’s a mix of Scottish and Irish events at the Graeme Park Celtic Heritage Festival in Horsham on Saturday. You can enter the haggis eating contest, watch sheep herding and women’s highland athletics, or dance to the sounds of the Barley Boys or the Celtic Marins, or pick up a few steps from some real Irish dancers.

Performer Danny Quinn is the latest offering in the Irish music series at Catherine Rooney’s Pub in Wilmington on Saturday.

Sunday brings Gaelic sports galore—four championship match-ups at Cardinal Dougherty fields. Check out calendar for times.

You can also catch Fermanagh-born Tom McGrath on the road on Sunday as he visits AOH Div. 1 in Bristol Borough and Div. 39 in Tacony on his way to Annapolis. The New York bar owner and marathoner is raising awareness of and money for the new Commodore John Barry Memorial at the Naval Academy in Annapolis. Barry is a homeboy—born in County Wexford, he made his home in Philadelphia when he wasn’t on the high seas in America’s first navy.

If you’re downashore, Jamison is at Shenanigans in Sea Isle City.

Kathleen Boyle and Grainne Murphy of Cherish the Ladies are stopping by on Thursday for a house concert on Bainbridge Street in Philadelphia. Space is limited so you must make a reservation by emailing barnstarconcerts@gmail.com.

And on Friday, the Philadelphia Ceili Group is presenting Altan accordionist Dermot Byrne, Parisian harpist and vocalist Floriane Blancke, with fiddler Brid Harper from Donegal in concert at the Irish Center.

On Saturday, July 28, there’s an Irish Music Mini-Camp featuring former All-Ireland harp champion Alex Boatright, and her husband, Duncan Boatright, an award-winning composer and steel pan player, in West Chester. The weekend will culminate in a session at Molly Maguire’s in Phoenixville on Sunday. Space is limited and reservations are required. See our calendar for the details.

And Blackthorn is going to playing on the beach in Wildwood on July 28—go down and get some sand in your sandals.

July 20, 2012 by