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Music

Five Questions for Harpist Ellen Tepper

The "Jameson Sisters:" Ellen Tepper on Harp, and singer Terry Kane.

The "Jameson Sisters:" Ellen Tepper on Harp, and singer Terry Kane.

Two inseparable passions drive Ellen Tepper—history and harp.

Her interest in the former begins with what she calls her “unusual childhood.” Her father was director of the American International School in Vienna. “We not only read history,” she says. “We saw where it happened. I’ve always been interested in history and finding the true origins of things.”

She recalls visiting ruins and historical sites all over Europe, including, memorably, the castle of Durnstein along the banks of the Danube, where Duke Leopold V of Austria imprisoned Richard the Lionheart in the 12th century.

It was a fertile environment for an imaginative child.

”We had no TV, only books, live music and a few English language records, one of which was the Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem,” she recalls. “I was a dreamy sort of kid, and we were encouraged to find things out for ourselves… we played Crusaders and Turks instead of Cowboys and Native Americans.”

Her interest in harp comes at about the same time. At eight years old, Tepper started learning classical harp. Though she couldn’t have known it at the time, her curiosity would, marking the beginning of a musical journey that would eventually intersect with her interest in history. She would go on to learn to play Celtic and medieval harps, the Irish wire strung harp, the Italian triple harp, and the Renaissance bray harp. She would also become an historian of the early harp.

We caught up with Ellen and posed five questions for her.

Q. Classical pedal harp and medieval or Celtic style harps seem to spring from different traditions. As someone who is trained in the pedal harp, is it difficult to make the transition to the Celtic harp? What adjustments, if any, do you need to make?
 
A. The most immediate response would be that you have to get off the printed page. The technique of playing is similar and you have to adjust to the difference in spacing and string tension. I got my first small harp when I was 16 and had begun to play early music then. There was nowhere to study this back then, and I probably played early music with modern harmonic sensibilities. Another difference is the lack of accompaniment for Irish harp music and learning how to make it work in the absence of printed sources. Then there is the ornamentation so important in Irish music, some of which I was able to translate from Baroque music. Playing and learning by ear was another issue. I’ve been blessed with a bardic sort of memory, and this seemed to follow easily, in spite of having been “paper trained”.
 
Q. How did you learn to play all the different types of traditional harps that you play?
 
A. In 1989 I attended the Historical Harp Workshop and conference at the Amherst Early Music Festival. There I found 30 other people just like me! I had bought a wire strung harp in 1979 and studied with Ann Heyman that week, learning wire technique with nails and a lot about Irish harp history. It was the beginning of my life as a self-taught musicologist. I read everything I could find about Irish harp, including Edward Bunting’s 99-page preface to his collection “The Ancient Music of Ireland,” which includes the music he collected from all the surviving harp players from 1792 to 1839.  Every summer I went back for further study on wire, and then triple strung harp, or Arpa Doppia which opened up another few hundred years of music for me. I practice like a fiend whenever I get a new technique, and also find that by teaching it, I learn it even more thoroughly. I try to find the earliest printed source for music. I am a history nerd.
 
Q. You are well-versed in the history of the early harp. How did you come by your knowledge? What do people find most interesting or surprising about the tradition?

A. I read. I study, and talk to others doing work in the same field. The tradition itself is a broken one. In antiquity (1000 or so) the harp was an integral part of the clan society’s structure. As the society was destroyed, the harp player’s role merged with those of the clan poet and reciter, which is the beginning of the Itinerant harper tradition. It was made illegal to harbor a harpist beyond the pale, and in 1580 an edict was issued to “hang the harpers wherever found and destroy their instruments”… though the penal laws were relaxed in the 17th century the damage was done to the tradition and we’ll never know what they really played. In modern times, since the 1950s, attempts are being made to restore the traditional approach to the harp.
 
Q. You’ve been performing with singer Terry Kane as the Jameson Sisters. How did you and Terry Kane hook up?

A. I had heard her name before in various e mail lists about Irish music. We met one night at the Session at the Mermaid Inn, and I accompanied her singing. Afterward, we talked and had a few drinks; Jameson’s was our drink of choice. We swapped CDs and talked about getting together. Almost a year later, Terry saw one of my educational five-minute videos on Mind-TV and called me. We started rehearsals in January of this year.

Q. I think I can guess, but why the Jameson Sisters? Where does that name come from?

A. I was given a “nom de pluck” by my friend Dregs Malarkey (not his real name) one night. He told me I needed an Irish name, and I picked “Maura.” He asked Maura what? And I looked at the bottle of Jameson’s on the table. I told Terry about it and she said she would like to be known as “Lessa.” And so Maura and Lessa Jameson became the Jameson Sisters.   

You can hear the Jameson Sisters twice this week: First, at Fonthill Museum in Doylestown at 7 o’clock Tuesday night; and on Thursday night starting at 7 p.m. at the Mount Airy Train Station, 7423 Devon Street. Rain date is Friday night.

Music

Come on to Their House–for Some Great Music

Newlyweds Bob Hendren and Bette Conway outside the Irish Center, which was one of the reasons they moved to Philly.

Newlyweds Bob Hendren and Bette Conway outside the Irish Center, which was one of the reasons they moved to Philly.

When she was house hunting, Bette Conway probably looked at the same things most home buyers do—structural soundness, good location, maybe even updated kitchen and baths. But she had other things in mind too: Acoustics, parking, enough room for audiences. Conway wasn’t just buying a house—she was buying a house concert hall.

The 120-year-old three-story house on Third Street in Lansdale was literally a dream come true. “It was a dream I always had, and Bob shared that dream with me, to have a house big enough for our musician friends from up and down the coast and Ireland to be able to stay with us,” says Conway, a fiddler, jewelry maker, and senior geologist with the US Environmental Protection Agency in Philadelphia.

Bob is Bob Hendren, the man Conway married on May 8 in their new home, Spring Hill House, and now home to Spring Hill House Concerts. The two, who met at a musical house party, moved from Indiana to start a new life in the Philadelphia which is to them the well spring of Irish and old-time music. “The Commodore Barry Club (Irish Center) is one of the reasons we moved out here,” says Conway, who lived in the area about 20 years ago and remained as much a part of the music scene here as she could in absentia, coming in yearly for the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival and the Philly Folk Festival.

Music is so much a part of their lives and relationship that when Hendren, a lawyer and environmental consultant, talks about their wedding album, he isn’t thinking about photographs. “A friend of ours recorded the music from our wedding, mostly old-time, on two CDs,” he says, laughing. “I’ll have to get you one. They’re top notch players, fabulous musicians.”

There’s no doubt about that. Between the two of them—she had house concerts in her Indiana home, he produced and promoted concerts, both were plugged into the Irish music scene at Indiana University—they have some remarkable friends. A few weeks ago, some of their friends from the Midwest stopped by for the first of the Spring Hill House Concerts—legendary button accordian player Paddy O’Brien and guitarist and singer Pat Egan, two- thirds of the trad group, Chulrua (the other member is Patrick Ourceau). Next week, friend Albert Alfonso, noted bodhran player and maker, will be stopping by with his friend Skip Healy, celebrated wooden flute maker and performer who has played solo at Carnegie Hall and with Mick Moloney, Paddy Keenan, Kevin Burke, Aoife Clancy, Joannie Madden and many other “names” from the Irish traditional music world.

(Alfonso and Healy will conduct workshops in their respective instruments on Wednesday, July 22, 6-8 PM, at Spring Hill House, 136 E. Third Street, Lansdale. Afterwards, they’ll sit in on the session at the Mermaid, 7673 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia. Then on Thursday, they’ll be playing a house concert at Spring Hill House starting at 8 PM.)

“This house is really acoustically fine for music,” says Conway. “ One of the first parties had here, we had (Philadelphia accordian player) Kevin McGillian in the front room with Irish music going on, and blue grass in the family room, with all the doors open, and they didn’t clash. I love the high ceilings and the way the music resonates through here. When I saw this place I just knew, oh my goodness, this is the perfect place.”

It sits on an unusually large lot in a small, quiet neighborhood a few blocks from Lansdale’s downtown in a very old subdivision called “Spring Hill” on historical town maps. “The realtor explained that the sideyard was a ‘Hollywood’ lot—one that they used to raffle off at the theater,” explains Conway. And she learned quickly why the area was known as Spring Hill. “We have a spring in the basement,” she laughs. “The owners had turned it into a well.”

Conway and Hendren plan to refinish the third floor “so we have additional room where our friends can stay.” As it is, they have their first long-term house guest, fiddler and metalsmith Louise Walisser of the group Tenaigin who is helping Conway with her jewelry business.

Conway came to music early. As a youngster in Indiana, she played concert violin. “Then I became bored with it and quit,” she explains. “But when my daughter was two [she is now 16], I decided we needed to have some music in the house. I took some old-time lessons with Brad Leftwich, the famous old-time fiddler. Then one day I was helping a friend move into an apartment and met a friend who played Irish music. He offered to teach me a few tunes and I fell in love with it.”

Hendren has played guitar and banjo “for many years, but it doesn’t show,” he jokes. “I’m sort of a beginner in everything I do forever. I play bluegrass music on the banjo, plus I’ve played folk music and write oddball music myself. Coming here, this is a whole new thing—the level of the music, the quality, is just a lunar leap. We had good sessions and players in Indiana, but overall the tradition of the music here and the openness is just a delight. Not only is it a delight to be here, but to bring other musicians here.”

The difference, says Conway, is that in the Midwest, musicians came to Irish traditional tunes because they loved the sound. “Here, they come to it because it’s in their families. They grew up with it. As a friend here says, it was another member of the family.”

She remembers one of her visits to Philly with the girlfriends she used to lure from Indiana to the Philly Folk Fest (where she’s still known as Bette Fiddler). They were visiting with Kevin McGillian and his wife, Mary, “and they let us stay there all day, drinking tea and playing tunes with Kevin all day. ‘Do you know this one?’ ‘How about this one?’ And I thought, it seems like family to me. That’s what I want.”

It’s hard to avoid that family feeling when you’re listening to a superlative Irish musician playing in a living room in front of the bay window. But be forewarned: Once you go to a house concert, you may never want to hear music any other way.

Music

Following in the Family Trad

Shawna and Angelina Carberry, after their show on July 11 at the Irish Center in Philadelphia.

Shawna and Angelina Carberry, after their show on July 11 at the Irish Center in Philadelphia.

Her great-great grandfather Peter played the melodeon and her great-great grandmother crooned traditional tunes to her grandchildren in “The Holla” near Kenagh, County Longford. Her great-grandfather Kevin played banjo for County Longford ceilis and house dances alongside his pipe-playing brother, Peter. Her grandfather Peter is a stalwart of Irish traditional music, renowned for his accordion and banjo playing, as well as the Manchester trad bands like Toss the Feathers, Skidoo and Good Tradition that he formed. 
And her mother Angelina has performed with the all-girl trad group The Bumblebees, and is an outstanding banjo player whose flowing confident style is celebrated for being steeped in the tradition.
So it should come as no surpise that there’s a new kid on this musical block now, and she got to shine onstage at The Irish Center last week alongside her mother, Angelina, and her stepfather Martin Quinn. Shawna won’t turn 12 until August, but she has already discovered her own passion and talent for playing the fiddle.
“I’ve been playing the fiddle for about 7 years I think. I played the piano, too, but I got bored with it. I know 3 or 4 tunes on the banjo, and I took Kathleen Coneely’s class on the whistle at The Swannanoa Gathering in North Carolina,” Shawna told me when we sat down for a chat after her lovely performance. “I don’t really read by music, I learn by ear. Listening to the tunes and then learning them. Most days I practice for an hour. I did get really lazy for a bit, and went off it for a month,” Shawna laughed, “but now I’m always playing.”
Her teachers have included Connemara’s highly acclaimed fiddler Liz Kane, as well as step-dad Martin. “I like playing with him and my family. It’s more fun practicing with them.”
Shawna has so much fun playing with her family, in fact, that she has started a band with her aunt Roisin Carberry, 10, on the box, and her cousin Hannah Lane, 12, who sings and is learning the banjo and whistle. “We play in the pubs and at sessions. I like doing it, it’s really fun. We need more practicing but since we moved to County Longford from Galway last year we’re closer now and see each other more.”
Moving back to Longford also means she gets more lessons and encouragement from her grandfather Peter, as well. “Whenever I see him, he always asks ‘How are ya hon, have you been practicing?’ and if I say no, he says ‘Why not?’ and starts giving it out to me,” Shawna giggled. “But if I say yes, he says ‘Good woman. What tunes have you been learning?’”
All that practicing is paying off in a big way; Angelina revealed that Peter is going to ask Shawna to play on the CD that he’s currently recording. Pretty exciting stuff, as Shawna’s hazel eyes grew wide and her smile beamed even brighter, “He is? I didn’t know that!”
But for the next few weeks, this lovely and talented young musician is going to be kept busy touring the States. “It’s my third time here,” she says. “ I get to travel with my parents when I’m not in school and I like when I get to play a few tunes at the gigs with them.”
She also has found a way to preserve a little of the trip to take home with her, “When we’re going from place to place, I have my video camera with me, and I take video as we’re driving, telling a little bit about where we are.”

Her mother smiled as Shawna relayed this information, clearly quite delighted with every facet of her daughter–this brightly emerging talent in the next generation of the Carberry musical dynasty.

If you missed the Carberry-Quinn concert, and can’t wait for Shawna’s appearance on Peter Carberry’s upcoming CD, listen to her here.

Check out our photos too.

And see even more photos of the event.

Music

Harp Guitar Performer John Doan Brings Celtic Music and Mysteries to Newtown

When he was a teen-ager, John Doan says he was “suspicious something might be wrong with me.” There weren’t many two-neck guitar players in garage bands, but Doan was one of them. But his affection for unusual musical instruments didn’t stop there.

Always on the lookout for something new, Doan was studying guitar in college when he happened on a lute. Not too long afterward, he was playing it. And not long after that he had an encounter with a bizarre-looking instrument called the harp-guitar—a guitar, yes, with six strings on one side, but with an extended body that plays host to any number of fixed, fretless harp strings.

His reaction was perhaps predictable:

“I thought … wouldn’t that be cool? I ended up getting an old Gibson harp guitar sometime maybe around 1979. I had it repaired. I’ve been at this thing now, 30 years or so. It goes places that guitar goes … but then it goes beyond.”

Doan, now a professor of music at Willamette University in Oregon, taught himself to play the harp guitar. Along the way he also acquired other weird and wonderful musical instruments, including a three-necked affair called the harpolyre and another strange critter called the banjuerine. (They’re both so weird and strange, my spell-check thinks I misspelled them.) But the real star of our story is the harp guitar; Doan is considered an expert on its history and one of its foremost practitioners.

It’s an instrument that lends its ethereal, bell-like tones to many forms of music—including Celtic/New Age. In fact, a recent Doan recording, “Eire: Isle of the Saints (A Celtic Odyssey),” on the Hearts of Space label, is highly acclaimed. It’s a Billboard Magazine critic’s choice.

On Sunday, Doan is bringing his 20-string harp guitar and his Celtic music to Newtown’s Temperance House in a multimedia show called “A Celtic Pilgrimage” that blends tunes with story-telling. It’s based on Doan’s travels to the Emerald Isle.

Doan first visited Ireland in the ‘80s—roughing it, hitchhiking, sleeping under the stars. One night, he says, he yearned for a real bed and a shower, and he scraped together enough cash for a stay in a bed and breakfast. The two aged “aunties” who ran the place kept him well entertained, he said, and they told him that when he went back to the States they should look up their nephew Billy, who also lived in the Pacific Northwest. “Tell him he should visit us,” they said.

When he got back home, he called the phone number he’d been given and starting chatting up Billy, who turned out to Billy Oskay, the fiddler and producer of Nightnoise.

Over the years, the two became friends, and Oskay became a fan of the Doan’s harp guitar. In the ‘90s, Oskay asked Doan to contribute an Irish-sounding piece for the first Celtic Twilight album from Hearts of Space. By the time Celtic Twilight 2 came along, Doan had composed more Celtic music. Some bright soul suggested an entire album of Celtic harp guitar. Doan was sold.

“I said I’d like to go to Ireland and make musical pictures,” he recalls. “I had already written a bunch of stuff. Billy said go for it.

“Well, I had just read ‘How the Irish Saved Civilization.’ It’s about how Ireland became a sanctuary for saints and scholars during the Dark Ages. That’s the very time of Saint Patrick. I thought I would follow in the footsteps of Saint Patrick.”

Doan focused on pilgrimage places—places where the separation between heaven and earth is believed to be thinner than in other places.

“I went to these places and started improvising,” he says. “I took my tape recorder with me. This place opened up to me. As an artist I could translate it into music; it was timeless. I captured these stories that I think are the underpinning of the Irish mystique. It was just so moving to go to these places and have them be places that were still filled with beauty, charm and resolve.”

Those stories are precisely the ones Doan plans to share with his Newtown audience. You can add to your Irish cultural education and hear a rare performance at the same time. (Here’s a preview on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bUkxR21OVx0)

The show begins at 7 p.m. at the well-known restaurant, at 5 South State Street.

Music

Making Musical Memories

Between numbers: Angelina Carberry and Martin Quinn.

Between numbers: Angelina Carberry and Martin Quinn.

If you missed Friday night’s concert with tenor banjo player Angelina Carberry and button accordionist Martin Quinn, you missed an opportunity to hear a particularly pure form of traditional Irish music.

This is not a slam against the Irish supergroups and other, perhaps more commercial Celts, who often blend other forms of music into the traditional. Hey, there’s lots of room in our big music tent.

But there were moments during the Carberry-Quinn performance—many moments, in fact—when it seemed like you were hearing the music in a raw, unadorned form, when the lily was unquestionably ungilded.

Carberry, with her distinctive percussive style, and Quinn, with his long, lingering chords, took Irish Center listeners on a journey back to the source. Angelina and Martin made me feel like I was sitting in a bar in Doolin or Westport.

Adding to the enjoyment was Angelina’s 11-year-old daughter Shawna, who sat in on fiddle for a couple of numbers.

We’ve preserved many of those moments for you—including an impromptu traditional music session that sprang up post-concert.

Check it all out:     

Check out the videos:

A Blazing Set of Reels
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/carberryquinn01

Angelina Carberry and Martin Quinn Play “The Princess Royal”
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/carberryquinn02

Button Box Player Martin Quinn Sits in at a Philadelphia Irish Music Session
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/carberryquinn03

Reel Time With Angelina Carberry, Daughter Shawna, and Martin Quinn
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/carberryquinn04

A Set of Jigs Featuring Angelina Carberry, Daughter Shawna and Martin Quinn
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/carberryquinn05

Music

Carberry and Quinn: In Concert at the Irish Center

A few weeks ago, I was listening to a few reels from Martin Quinn and Angelina Carberry’s eponymous CD and felt unusually relaxed. I couldn’t figure out why. I was heading off on vacation and I had a pile of laundry to do the size of Mount Agamenticus. I had a story to turn in virtually the minute we got back from Maine. I hadn’t even gotten the suitcases down from the attic.

It took me a while, but I figured it out: It’s the banjo (her) and the button accordian (him). Those are the instruments the anchor musicians play at my local session at Ambler’s Shanachie Pub. On the Tuesday nights that I’m there, I don’t have a care in the world. And one night, I even saw Angelina Carberry and Martin Quinn sitting in with Fintan Malone and Kevin McGillian.

Carberry and Quinn will be coming to the Irish Center this Friday night, July 10, for a concert sponsored by the Philadelphia Ceili Group.

Born in Manchester, England, Angelina Carberry came to Irish music naturally—her father, Peter, and her grandfather were both musicians. She gravitated to the tenor banjo as a child after a stint on the tin whistle. And Martin wasn’t the first accordian player she teamed with. In 1998, she released a CD called “Memories of the Holla” which she made with her father on accordian and John Blake on guitar. She has since released a solo album (though Quinn, now her husband, can be heard on a few tracks) called , “An Traidisiun Beo.”

Martin Quinn, a native of Armagh, comes from a long line of musicians and story tellers. He’s considered one of the finest exponents of the button box, which he teaches, and has toured Europe with the groups Dorsa and La Lugh.

I talked to Martin Quinn a couple of weeks ago by phone from his home in Longford, Ireland. Here’s what he had to say.

How did you and Angelina get together?
Well, we met in Milltown Malbay at the Willie Clancy Festival.  We were both playing a session at Queally’s Pub, and ended up playing a few tunes together. So yes, the music brought us together and we’re playing together for nine years.

Do you play concerts all year?
Mostly during the summer. We’ll do occasional concerts on weekends during the year, but don’t go away for weeks at a time because Angelina teaches lot of music, and I tune and repair accordions.

What does that entail?
I get them, take them apart and put them back together. Hopefully. [Laughing]

In your bio, your family is described as. . .
Raconteurs, yes. I have uncle  who’s quite a famous storyteller, a real character from Armagh, Michael Quinn, he’s 83 now, and he’s actually performing at the Catskills this year.  He’s a great character, a carrier of old songs and local history.  His father, my grandfather, was the same as well.

How about you?
I can tell the odd lie. But that would not have been my main pursuit.

Where did the music come from?  
My mother plays the accordian. She wouldn’t play in public, but she taught me my first tunes. Both grandfathers played fiddle and melodeon, and both  were singers. My mother can sing too. I have lots of cousins who play music and an auntie of mine plays banjo as well. And my sister plays the accordian too.

You apparently gravitated toward traditional music, but were you ever tempted to play more modern tunes?
When my mother played, it was usually a  hornpipe or a jig. That’s what I learned first.  I played with a few ballad bands when I was in my teens—people will ask you to fill in for somebody. But I always had jigs and reels ringing around inside me head.

One of the things I love about Irish traditional music is how musicians learn tunes not so much from recordings but from each other. I just heard Paddy O’Brien at a house concert and he not only remembers something like 3,000 tunes, but who he learned them from. Is that how you learned?
I probably learn tunes every week from someone. It’s inevitable that you’ll go to a session and hear something you haven’t heard before. Of course, they might have learned it off a CD themselves beforehand. You don’t know. [Laughing.} We moved away from Armagh when I was 12 to live in County Meath and we were quite close to an old fiddle player, Joe Ryan, from West Clare. I used to see him at music sessions every week, playing his unique style. It really inspired me. When he turned up it was very special and I looked forward to it. When I met Angelina I met her father and her uncle. I would sit and listen to them rather than play with them and picked up a lot. I was definitely inspired.

The other thing I really love about traditional music is that even the most famous players will take the time to pass along songs to whoever shows up at the session.
That’s beauty of traditional music.  The most famous musicians will welcome you into their houses and sit down a play a tune with anybody. That’s the way the music is. It’s what we’ve all come from. If it goes any other way, it will be lost.

Carberry and Quinn will play on Friday night, July 10, at the Philadelphia Irish Center, Carpenter and Emlen Streets, starting at 8 PM. Tickets are available at the door or online. 

Music

A Video Tour of Irish Philly’s Music Scene

Our pal and wandering videographer Lori Lander Murphy has been everywhere these past couple of weeks, with a particular focus on music.

Let’s start with Lori’s piece de resistance, Celtic Woman. She offers a few views of a recent concert at the Mann. There’s video of the band Cruinn at the Mermaid, and a session at St. Stephen’s Green.

Without further ado:

Celtic Woman performs “Danny Boy” at The Mann, Saturday, June 13, 2009
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=twBbdC_uig4

Mairead Nesbitt, with Celtic Woman, performs at The Mann
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iTTbEZeNmxg

Celtic Woman, “Isle of Hope, Isle of Tears,” with Tommy Martin on the pipes
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bNVNQwtS2bU

St. Stephen’s Green, Friday, June 12, 2009 ~ 40th Birthday Party Session
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zNYDSrJJ8ko

Tommy Martin, Darin Kelly and Padraic Keane on the garden patio at St. Stephen’s Green
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPgs06MSF2M

Paraic, Paddy, Darin, Tommy and Sean
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i7SmXY1LoXs

Cruinn performs “The Town I Love So Well” at The Mermaid June 17, 2009
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mVhxX_455u4

Cruinn and “The Boys of Barr na Sraide” at The Mermaid June 17, 2009
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=10CPwPVVSHU

Cruinn performs “Hard Times” at The Mermaid June 17, 2009
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_gkXupUGPc

Jim McGill sings “Stuttering Lovers” at The Mermaid June 17, 2009
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwN1yB-3JsA

Music

Young Fleadh Winners Bound for Tullamore

Mina Hauth, 11, took first in under-12 harp.

Mina Hauth, 11, took first in under-12 harp.

When she sits in a chair, her tiny feet don’t touch the floor. At 6, she is always the youngest fiddler, by far, playing in any local traditional Irish music session. But Haley Richardson has big talent, and she can hold her own with the grownups. Need proof? How about a first-place finish in the under-12 category at the Mid-Atlantic Fleadh Cheoil in Pearl River, N.Y.?

Haley’s win was no cakewalk. The May competition in which the Vineland, N.J., girl took part started at 11:30 a.m. with 22 young fiddlers. It ended, after several grueling rounds of competition, at 4 p.m. Haley didn’t break a sweat. “I’m not usually nervous,” she says.

All the more remarkable, she adds with a smile: “It was my first time at the Fleadh.”

With one challenge down, Haley is going to travel to Tullamore, County Offaly, in late August to match skills with under-12s from throughout the world in the Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann—the all-Ireland music festival. (And you can help get her there. More on that in a moment.)

Haley’s musical interests started early. She has been playing violin since she was 3 years old and fiddling for almost 2 years.

“At two and a half years old, Haley used to play around with our electric piano that had songs already pre-programmed into it,” he mom Donna recalls. “I asked her if she wanted piano lessons and she said, ‘No, I already know how to play piano. I want to play violin.’ It took me a few months to find her a teacher and she started Suzuki lessons a month after her 3rd birthday.”

When Haley was four and a half years old, she saw a small poster at the local library advertising a concert being given by famed Irish fiddler Kevin Burke and guitarist Cal Scott. “I decided to take her so she could hear another type of ‘violin’ music,” Donna says. “She immediately fell in love with Irish music and during the intermission, begged me to buy her Kevin’s ‘How to Play Celtic Fiddle’ DVD. The first day I put it on for her, she learned the first song in five minutes. She did the same the next day so I began to search for a fiddle teacher. If I remember correctly, someone from Irish Philadelphia gave me Kathy DeAngelo’s name.”

Haley is one of several DeAngelo students who fared well in Pearl River this year. Harper Mina Hauth, 11, of Chesterfield, N.J. finished first in the under-12s. Mina is bound for the all-Ireland competition, too. She is the daughter of Air Force Lt. Col. Christopher Hauth, who returned in December from a five-month deployment in Iraq, and mom Shymali.

Like Haley, Mina was a first-timer at the Pearl River Fleadh. She confesses to being “a little nervous,” but since she also performs Irish dance with the Peter Smith School, Mina says she’s used to public performance.

Mina has played harp for a little over a year. “When I was in 4th grade, Mom said I had to choose an instrument,” Mina says. “I said I wanted to play the harp. I like Celtic music, and Kathy is close to us.”

Mom Shyamali, another DeAngelo student, also performed well at the Fleadh, placing third in the senior division. She confesses to being as nervous as her daughter was calm.

Mina, too, will head for Tullamore in August—fulfilling a promise by her parents. “I told her that if she placed first, we’d make it happen,” says Shyamali.

Other DeAngelo students who did well in the Fleadh:

• Katie Ely, third place, 12-15 harp
• Katherine Highet, second place, senior harp
• Haley Richardson and Alexander Ball-Weir, third place, under 12 fiddle duet

As for helping Haley get to Ireland, here are the details: Mom Donna and dad Stewart are hosting a fundraiser on July 25 at 7 p.m. at Fuelhouse Coffee/Bain’s Deli at 636 E. Landis Avenue in Vineland, N.J. Someday, when she’s famous, you’ll be able to say you knew her when.