Browsing Category

Music

Music

Órla Fallon: Living the American Dream

Órla Fallon

Órla Fallon

Órla Fallon can’t remember a time when she didn’t sing.

You’ll remember Fallon as one of the original members of Celtic Woman—she’s the one with the harp and the glorious voice. Like so many exceptional Irish musicians, Fallon grew up surrounded by the tradition.

“I’ve been singing since I was a very small child. I was singing before I could talk,” she says. “My love of music and singing was encouraged from a young age. My mother (Eileen) comes from Kerry, and her parents gave her a deep love of Irish language and folklore. When we were little, we would spend a good deal of time down in Kerry. Many of the songs I sing I learned from my grandmother (Bridget Clifford). I think of singing songs with her in the kitchen then, and singing the same songs now in America. I’ve never known anybody who has such a passion for the old traditional songs. I think she gave me the passion.”

You can hear that passion ringing through in Fallon’s stage shows (she’ll be at Bethlehem Musikfest on Thursday, October 6), her televised concerts, and on her albums, including the most recent, “My Land.”

Maybe Fallon was always going to be a talented singer. For that, she can thank her parents and grandparents. As a player of Celtic harp, she’s doubly gifted. And for that, she can thank the Sisters of St. Joseph of Cluny.

“I was a teenager, 13, when I started,” Fallon says. “I was really lucky. I went to a boarding school in Phoenix Park, Dublin, called Mount Sackville. It has a brilliant harping tradition. My mother was really excited when she heard about it. When I heard (one of) the nuns playing the tunes and found out she was friends with Derek Bell of the Chieftains, I just fell in love with it. If I had not gone there, my life would have been so different.”

With so much talent, it was clear from an early age that Fallon was never going to remain just a farmer’s daughter from Knockananna, County Wicklow.

Early on, she distinguished herself by winning the International Feis Ceoil in Dublin and the International Pan Celtic Competition for singing with harp accompaniment. And in 1996, she performed with the well-known Irish choral group Anuna.

She is, of course, best known as one of the original members of the definitive Irish “girl group,” Celtic Woman, with whom she performed from 2005 through 2008.

Fallon says she could still be with Celtic Woman, but, in that final year, after all the flash, it was time for something new.

“It was great to be part of something as successful as Celtic Woman, but I wanted to be in control of my own destiny,” she says. “It (Celtic Woman) is a big lavish production; I prefer a smaller, earthier production. I don’t believe you need a big massive production to reach out to people. And I can tell stories. I like telling stories. Then it’s really ‘me’ on stage.”

Fallon’s more intimate show these days is an engaging mix of Irish traditional music, mixed in with traditions from other places–including America.

“I like trying American songs. The band I have on tour with me are a very bluegrass-y band. I always call our show ‘a little melting pot.’ There’s a nice variety of songs. It’s nice, because it keeps it fresh. Music is a living thing.”

That she has become so popular in the United States is, for Fallon, the fulfillment of a dream she has entertained from an early age. “Someone once said to me, ‘There’s a big stage waiting for you in America.’ I always dreamed of coming to America and playing songs. I know it sounds cheesy, but I really am living the dream.”

And if you want to see Órla Fallon for free, have we got a contest for you. All you have to do is subscribe to our weekly e-alert known as Mickmail. (Alternatively, if you already subscribe, you can enter by forwarding Mickmail to a friend.) There are two pairs of tickets available, as well as a pretty nice consolation prize: four “My Land” CDs.

We pick the winners on Monday, September 26. So you gotta be quick.

Arts, Dance, Music

A Festival of Videos

Dan Isaacson

Dan Isaacson in concert with his band Simple System.

A lot can happen in three days and nights.

And let’s be honest, we couldn’t be everywhere, my partner Lori Lander Murphy and I.

Or could we …

Looking at the videos we collected at the 2011 Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival, it certainly seems like we must have violated some of the fundamental laws of space and time.

You are traveling through another dimension—a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land whose boundaries are that of imagination. That’s a signpost up ahead… Your next stop: The Twilight Zone!

OK, so maybe it wasn’t as far out as all that.

But we think it was still cool.

You decide:

Here ‘s this year’s video playlist.

Dance, Music

The 2011 Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival in Pictures

Shannon Lambert-Ryan

Shannon Lambert-Ryan of Runa, the opening band at the Saturday night concert.

Anna Ryan was up to her elbows in thin reeds, patiently twisting and turning the slender stems into something delicate and uniquely Irish in its symmetry: St. Brigid’s crosses. Now and again, kids would make their way over to the table in the Philadelphia Irish Center’s Barry Room, gracelessly grab reeds like hands full of pickup sticks and, with patient instruction from Ryan, begin to learn how to craft something sacred from nothing more than spaghetti-like strands of dried grass.

Ryan looks forward to the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival, which celebrates Irish culture through music and dance, of course, but also through the arts, history, genealogy and more.

Ryan has been a fixture at the event for years. “I don’t know how many years it’s been,” she says,” when asked about her ties to the festival. “It’s been over 10 years, anyway.”

For many of the organizers and participants, it’s been at least that long—and often longer.

And yet, it never gets tired. You see a lot of the same faces year after year, but the thing about the Ceili Group festival is this: It’s feels like a kind of Celtic renewal. Fluters and dancers, harpers and artisans flock to the Irish Center every September in the way Monarch butterflies return to Mariposa. Or maybe it’s like a Philadelphia Irish version of Burning Man—except with banjos and hard shoes instead of naked people who paint themselves silver.

Whatever.

We captured the spirit of the thing in photos.

Here ya go.

Music

In Memory of Mike Rafferty

Mike Rafferty, playing at the Philadelphia Irish Center in 2006.

Mike Rafferty, playing at the Philadelphia Irish Center in 2006.

When Mike Rafferty played flute, it was with the unmistakable lilt and lift of his native East Galway. Named a National Heritage Fellow in 2010 by the National Endowment for the Arts, he was a bona fide national treasure.  Through his teaching, recording and performing, he passed along the tradition to new generations.

Mike Rafferty, who was certainly no stranger to Philadelphia-area Irish musicians and fans of Irish music, died last week at the age of 84. Local flute players likely will not soon forget what a rare honor it was to sit by his side and soak of knowledge from a master, as they did at the Tom Standeven-Liz Crehan Anderson Tional at the Philadelphia Irish Center in 2006.

Rafferty’s passing struck a sad note with many, many musicians who knew him well, including singer-songwriter Gabriel Donohue (himself no stranger to Philadelphia).

Here is Donohue’s remembrance:

A lovely man was Mike Rafferty.

I met Mike Rafferty on what I believe was my first weekend in New York. ( I met Joe Madden one block over on the same night.) I had gotten a room above Christy O’Connor’s apartment off of Mosholu Parkway and every night would have to pass Kingsbridge Road to get home. Unless of course I wanted to take the short cut that bypassed Durty Nellie’s, The Archway and the Old Brogue, which was earlier called the Bunratty. Andy McGann and Johnny Cronin would hold court there and it was a magnet for people who loved the pure drop, surrounded by tenements, bodegas and across from the armory. The Irish still held out in these neighborhoods where cheap rent was the main attraction and, secondly, the pub scene which anesthetized them from the despair brought about by having traded the bucolia of Galway and Mayo for the tar and cement of New York.

“Raff” showed up there on occasion and would play till the wee hours, his wife Terry documenting everything on her tape recorder. Her personal archives are a virtual repository of all the sessions he played over the years, I’m quite sure. She adored the man and obviously his music. No wonder his daughter Mary has accomplished so much as a fine exponent of East Galway music on the accordion. Mary also could not help exhibiting her adoration for the father who carefully and gently passed on his riches of music to his little girl. Her husband Donal also made his affection for his Da-in-law clear when he joined them both on many concerts and a couple of the later albums.

I made a few records with them in the mid-’90s, The first was the “Dangerous Reel.” I think the second was “The Road to Ballinakill.” It was great having them in my studio, to be getting the stories that went with every tune. And there were stories. Mike Rafferty was never just stringing notes together. He was weaving a tapestry with love, pure love. For the people who gave him the tunes, and the people who came play with him to learn or just listen. Some were new, as was “The Caucus of Secaucus,” written by Canadian Jean Duval; many were old and gotten from his dad Barrel Rafferty. Barrell lost his eyesight in mid-life, and Mike’s mother thought it might be because of the flute playing. That always got a good laugh. One thing for sure he had that barrel D sound prized by lovers of flute music.

Mike Rafferty was never just stringing notes together. He was weaving a tapestry with love, pure love.

I recall Mike Rafferty played a silver flute in those days and later he told me it was “mean strength and ignorance” that kept him playing it. He returned to the wooden flute eventually and it was then I believe his sound came into its own. This may be just my prejudice as I adore that instrument. Joanie Madden has found a way, through embouchure manipulation to mimic its sound on her lovely Miyuzowa instrument—and of course the ability to travel in all keys makes it more ideal for an all-rounder such as she. But the gentle East Galway music benefits I believe from that lovely dark timbre imbued by the, well, dark timber.

Speaking of the Maddens… I think of Mike’s love for Joe and his inability to talk about music without mentioning his best friend. They were cut from the same East Galway cloth and were visibly connected on so many levels through a sub-genre whose depth perhaps can not even be understood by younger players who never heard a curlew crying over the woodlands of Portumna, Woodford or Ballinakill. Or experienced this music before technology came into their homes and the carefully cultured boredom of long winter nights were usurped by TV and computer screens. It’s easy to find the tunes online these days, but you cannot recreate the feeling between the notes without the life experience which made the relevant to the older generation. Whether by their connection to the parish dances or to “The Old Fireside,” as Mike would say. Of course they do have their own relevance in modernity but it’s just different from what it represented to the people in those small rural communities.

Many times when I would run into Mike around New York he would quote the poem below which mentioned my little parish Kilconoiron/Clostoken, famous for very little but for “rough hurlers” (Father Charlie Coen would say) and being the birthplace of piper Patsy Touhy. It is no crude sporting tome, especially where it rhymes my parish with the esteemed poet Lord GG Byron. I hope Terry has a recording of him reciting it as I would cherish it as I do memories of this lovely, softhearted, gentle man, who had so many tunes going around in his head. A lifetime was hardly enough for him to play them.

The last time I saw Mike was in his backyard in Hasbouck Heights. We had a session in his garage. It was a farewell party for Mary and Donal and the kids on leaving for a new life in Ireland. Joanie and Helen Madden were there. Father Charlie, Mattie Connolly. Don Meade, Deirdre Connoly, Felix Dolan and Martin Mulhaire. He was in great form and really looked like he’d be around for a long time.

He’ll be sadly missed. Thanks to Mary and Terry who supported him in recording many albums, he left us lots of tunes.

Woodford Hurling team 1914

By Michael Power (Powerscross)

From Woodford town of old renown, went our sturdy team one day,

From the hillside brown the streams rushed down, Barkhill beside the bay.

We’re proud of you, brave hurlers true, we’re proud our parish bore you,

Throughout the soil of Erin’s Isle, you have beaten all before you.

Could I lines unfold like Moore of old, were I Thackeray or Byron,

I would sing for you the praises due, for twice beating Kilconoiron!

On the Loughrea train, one day again, we went with pride and joy,

To view our fifteen hurling men, in the town of Athenry.

We reached the station midst animation, of both the East and West,

From Woodford Bay to Claregalway, we were known to be the best.

But to decide it on the field we tried it, ‘neath Summer’s scorching sun,

In weather glorious we were victorious, now we’ve the County honours won.

The whistle sounded, the ball was grounded, Stanley found it and sent it high,

While opponents feared him, all men cheered him, on the Gaelic fields of Athenry.

He is straight and tall and admired by all, you could compare him to no other.

You could Ireland pick to rival Dick, our gallant captain’s brother.

With the Coens in back we fear no attack, from German, Greek or Turk,

Submarine or bomb, let Zepplins come, they’ll be manned by Conroy and Burke.

The Fahys three and Jack Grady, are worthy of our attention,

With Kelly and Page on the fullforward stage, the Gormans here we’ll mention.

Now we have named our team that was famed, in North, South, East and West,

On that bright June day, when all Galway did say, Woodford are again the country’s best.

If on those lines you muse, I pray you’ll excuse, if the composer has been unruly,

For in haste did he stitch these lines on the ditch, and as ever he remains yours truly.

Music, News, People

Brittingham’s Irish Festival 2011

Daddy-daughter dance

Daddy-daughter dance

The weather has been unpredictable and, at times, near catastrophic lately, but the sun shone brightly on Brittingham’s 2011 Irish Festival. And with all that sun, fans of Irish music, dance, food and merch made plenty of hay. Figuratively speaking.

Jamison is always a big hit with fans, but on this one gorgeous day on a big lot behind the Lafayette Hills pub they brought festival-goers to their feet. After all the rainy days, maybe we all just needed an afternoon of dancing.

And speaking of dancers, the kids of Celtic Flame performed frequently throughout the afternoon. A big hit, as always.

Later in the day, we caught former Blackthorn guitarist Seamus Kelleher’s act. He’s every bit as much fun as a solo.

Columns, Music, News, People

Aon Sceal?

Emmett Ruane will be at WTMR on Sunday to reminisce about Emmett's Place.

Last weekend, Hurricane Irene washed out the planned Emmett’s On-Air Reunion and Pledge Drive for “Come West Along the Road,” Marianne MacDonald’s Sunday Irish radio show on WTMR 800 AM. The waters have receded (well, here at least) and the electricity is on (well, here at least), so the show is going on this Sunday at noon. Special co-host is Emmett Ruane, former owner of Emmett’s Place in Philadelphia, a which was a popular watering hole and music venue for the city’s Irish set and ceili dancers.

Sunday’s show will feature local music, a few trips back in time, and live, in-studio performances. If you were a fan of Emmett’s, call or email Marianne at 856-236-2717 or rinceseit@msn.com to join the crowd in the studio.

If It’s Tuesday, I Must Be with Amos Lee

Andrew Jay Keenan, possibly the workingest musician in Philly, plays with The John Byrne Band (Irish folk), Citizens Band Radio (country-rock), and Amos Lee (folk, rock, and soul). If you’re a fan of any of those bands, you’ve seen Keenan at World Café Live. Or maybe the Ellen Show, David Letterman, Jay Leno, and Jimmy Kimmel Live. That’s with the Amos Lee band. You can catch Keenan (to the right of Amos) in this clip from their recent Jimmy Kimmel appearance. You can catch him live wherever those three bands are playing in Philly (try September 25 at the Philly F/M Fest at World Café Live with The John Byrne Band).

Happy Birthday, Baby!

One of the things we like best about Facebook is that it reminds us of birthdays. So we’re going to steal a page from Mark Zuckerberg and wish a happy September birthday to our Irish Philly peeps.

Happy Birthday to Patti Byrd (9/4), Cara Anderson Boiler (9/4), Oliver Mcelhone (9/6), Helen Henry Degrand (9/8), Kathleen Trainor (9/9), Maria Gallagher (9/13), Paddy O’Brien (9/13), Trish O’Donnell Jenkins (9/15), Thomas Staunton (9/18), Patricia Burke (9/19), Carol Swanson (9/20), Frances O’Donnell Duffy (9/20), Michael Callahan (9/20), John Egan (9/23), John Boyce (9/25), Kiera McDonagh (9/26), Fil Campbell (9/27), and Mairead Timoney Wink (9/28).

Good Luck to the Mairead Farrells

Our own Mairead Farrell Ladies Gaelic Football Club is headed to San Francisco this weekend to defend their title as national senior champs. Keep the cup, ladies!

 

Aon Sceal means “what’s the story?” in Irish. If you have a story you want us to tell, email denise.foley@comcast.net. Don’t make me come after you.

Music, News, People

Celtic Rockers’ Charity Comes to Philly

The Dropkick Murphys' Ken Casey. Photo by Brian Mengini. Image may not be reproduced without the photographer's permission.

They said their goal was to  be “the AC/DC of Celtic rock,” and, if you’ve ever heard their kickass version of “The Fields of Athenry,” it’s pretty clear that Dropkick Murphys can scratch that one off their bucket list.

This Celtic punk band, born in 1996 in the basement of a Quincy, Massachusetts barbershop, is best known for its hard-driving beat and its working class political leanings. In 2010, those pro-union sentiments spawned a re-release of their tune, “Take ‘Em Down,” to show their solidarity with public union workers in Wisconsin who had taken over the state capitol building to protest Gov. Scott Walker’s plan to curtail collective bargaining rights. The band also produced a T-shirt they sold to benefit the Workers’ Rights Emergency Response Fund.

But what many don’t know about the band is that since 2009, the Dropkick Murphys have been doing all kinds of good things through The Claddagh Fund, founded by front man Ken Casey. Honoring the three attributes of the Claddagh ring—love, loyalty, and friendship, they’ve sought out and supported largely underfunded community-based groups serving the most vulnerable populations, including children, veterans, and recovering substance abusers.

The first year they started in their backyard, funding Massachusetts charities including the Dorchester Boys & Girls Club, The Franciscan Hospital for Children, and the Greater Lowell YMCA. Since then, they’ve gone international, donating to The Belvedere Youth Club in Dublin Ireland, Springboard Opportunities in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and the Hope for Haiti Children’s Center in Port Au Prince.

When the Dropkick Murphys come to Philadelphia on September 18 at the Electric Factory with their Shamrock-N-Roll Tour, they’re bringing the Claddagh Fund with them—to stay. They’ve chosen Philadelphia—where they have a huge fan base—as the next target of their largesse. The first organization they’re supporting is Stand Up For Kids, a little known program, staffed almost entirely by volunteers, that does outreach with homeless and street kids.

“One of the things that the Claddagh Fund can bring to the table for an organization like Stand Up for Kids is to give them the kind of exposure that they would not ordinarily get,” says Ken Casey.”Through our family, friends and fans, the Dropkick Murphys can make sure people hear about all of the great things organizations like StandUp for Kids do. Since we have partnered up with StandUp for Kids in May, they have already been setting up tents and tables at Electric Factory events assisting with raising awareness and increasing their volunteer base which inevitably makes fundraising easier.”

Kate McCloud, director of the Philadelphia Chapter of The Claddagh Fund, says the Claddagh Fund was born out of Ken Casey’s own giving nature. “This comes right from Ken’s heart,” she says. “He just wants to give back and to assist those communities that have supported the Dropkick Murphys on their journey.”

The idea to create the fund, says Casey, “came up during a conversation with Boston Bruins legend Bobby Orr while we were planning a Golf Tournament. One of the things I really liked was the idea of establishing a formal nonprofit that gives fans an even clearer picture of where their donations are headed.” Next was figuring out how to harness the energy of Dropkick fans outside of New England and spread the Claddagh Fund’s themes of friendship, love and loyalty. Casey says that his decision to expand to Philadelphia was an easy one. “It is just a natural fit. There are so many similarities between the two towns. They both love their communities, families, and sports teams. Philadelphians are good hardworking people and have always been good to the Dropkick Murphys. We want to do what we can to give back to a community that has been so good to us.”

From the beginning, the Claddagh Fund, which raised more than a half a million dollars in its first year, has deliberately adopted lesser known charities. In Boston they give to hospitals,for example, but tend to avoid giving to the larger ones. The sentiment is simple. “Those institutions are well established. We want to find those organizations that no one sees, the ones that are helping those in our communities that otherwise would not have any assistance.” says Casey.

The Claddagh Fund’s local board members are also a resource. They include Bryan Dilworth, well known Electric Factory concert promoter; Mike McNally, general manager of the Electric Factory; sports radio personality Al Morganti; Dan Rudley from Comcast Sports Net; Greg Dupee of RBC Wealth Management; Robert Coyle, who serves on the executive board of District Council 47, of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees; Kathy McGee Burns, a local realtor and president of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association, and several other influential Philadelphians, some of whom volunteered, says McCloud with a laugh, “because they’re die-hard Dropkick Murphy fans.

Stand Up for Kids, which has its headquarters in Atlanta and chapters around the country, is the perfect choice for the fund’s first Philadelphia effort. “We want to reward folks who are doing the work for the right reasons,” says McCloud. “We want to be their tipping point, so they can continue to do great things.”

If you want to learn more about the Claddagh Fund and Stand Up for Kids, buy tickets to the Shamrock-N-Roll concert at the Electric Factory on September 18. You get to hear the Dropkick Murphys along with Street Dogs (featuring former DM frontman Mike McColgan), the Mahones, and the Parkington Sisters, among others. Also on the bill: “Irish” Micky Ward, the Boston fighter played by Mark Wahlberg in the film, “The Fighter.” And you’ll learn how you can help support the house that Celtic punk rock built.

For more information now, contact Kate McCloud at kathleen.mccloud@claddaghfund.org

Music

Review: Moya Brennan and Cormac De Barra at the Sellersville Theater

Cormac De Barra and Moya Brennan

Cormac De Barra and Moya Brennan

The last time Moya Brennan appeared in concert at Sellersville Theater, there was a frog in her throat the size of a Volkswagen Beetle. In short: She was not in good voice, and she canceled all concerts on the tour after that.

Appearing in concert this past Saturday night, she admitted, she felt bad about that concert, and she greatly appreciated the audience’s forbearance at the time.

No vocal amphibians appeared to sabotage the act Saturday night. In fact, Brennan’s performance was a spot-on demonstration of how wondrously well the voice can continue to serve a singer when well tended, even after 40 years.

Brennan’s voice is truly one of a kind, a blend of airy delicacy and barely restrained power, with resonant lows and tremulous, silvery highs. Her vocal range seems to have lost nothing at either end.

Brennan was joined in the performance by harper Cormac De Barra, one of Ireland’s most acclaimed performers on the instrument, with whom she released  choice little CD, “Voices & Harps,” in June. Accompanying the two was Brennan’s 19-year-old daughter Aisling Jarvis, playing guitar and whistle and singing harmony.

Brennan and De Barra set the tone for the night with the traditional Irish folk standard “She Moved Through the Fair,” the first track off “Voices & Harps.” Brennan shimmering high notes were a perfect complement to the soft strings of the harp, masterfully played by De Barra. (Brennan occasional joined in on a harp of her own.)

In many ways, this was a very different Moya Brennan than the Maire Brennan who fronted for the pioneering Irish band Clannad. Indeed, the trio performed several old Clannad tunes, including “Dúlamán,” from the 1976 Clannad album of the same name, “Theme From Harry’s Game,” a tune released by the band in 1982, and the encore “The Two Sisters,” from the 1975 Clannad album “Clannad 2” and the 1998 “An Díolaim (The Collection).” Several tunes from Brennan’s long solo career also made an appearance: “Against the Wind,” Brennan’s first solo single, released in 1992, as well as “Tapestry” and “I Will Find You” from Brennan’s 2006 recording “Signature.”

In this concert, all the old tunes were stripped down to their bare, acoustic essentials, absent the reverberating multi-layered harmonies, drums and synthesizers. It was like being re-introduced to old friends who had mellowed with age and yet have held up surprisingly well. Brennan acknowledged as much. Speaking of “Harry’s Game,” she said, “If you can sing a song and it can stand up to any style, then it’s a good song.”

So it went through the night… a blend of old Clannad and Brennan’s solo hits, coupled with several tunes from “Harps & Voices,” including “My Match Is a Makin’,” “An Seanduine Dóite/The Burnt-Out Old Man,” and “Carolan’s Concerto.”

On the latter, De Barra showed why, as Brennan insisted, he is possibly the best harper in all of Ireland. The “Concerto” is a complex old tune in the Baroque style, and it takes a gifted hand to play it with expression, bringing forth all its subtle beauty. DeBarra accompanied Brennan on harp all the night, but the word “accompanied” doesn’t really do him credit. The performance was a marriage of equals. De Barra also has an expressive tenor voice, his harmonies a strong counterpoint to Brennan’s breathier vocals.

De Barra showed off his stuff on another Carolan standard, “Miss McDermott,” paired with a perky piece, written by De Barra, called “Hobnobs”—after the chocolate biscuits he and Brennan munched in the studio while recording their CD.

And let’s give a round of well-deserved applause to Brennan’s daughter Aisling, a budding guitarist whose light, bright harmonies proved a lovely addition.

Let there be no doubt: Brennan’s Sellersville fans got their money’s worth this time around.