Browsing Category

Music

Music

New Local Group Releases CD

Call it the power of sibling rivalry, but John Gallagher reluctantly admits that he’ll be singing on stage and selling his first CD at Molly Maguire’s Restaurant and Pub in Phoenixville on Friday night, April 11, because his younger brother told him he “didn’t have the balls” to do it.

“My brother, Pat, and I were talking about art and writing,” explains Gallagher, an entrepreneur (he owns his own recruiting business) from Ardmore. “He told me I didn’t have the balls to do anything with it.” Pat Gallagher, also a recruiter, has launched a successful side career as a painter because he literally couldn’t stop “doodling,” as he called it. He was discovered in New York by an art dealer who saw him drawing in a bar and convinced him to pursue his talent.

“There’s always been a part of me that wanted to write and sing,” says John. He comes by it naturally. Both his parents, Donegal immigrants, sing; his uncle Vince Gallagher has his own band and an Irish radio show on WTMR. “I always sang for fun. After I decided I was not going to make it to the NBA, this is what my passion was.”

But, like many dreams, this one took a backseat to the practical. Gallagher needed to make a living. “I have my own company, I’m responsible for taking care of my family and my employees. I couldn’t focus on what I left behind. This is where my life took me,” he says like a man who was content with what seemed like fate.

Then, suddenly, fate laid out a slightly different path. A convergence of events—call it serendipity—sounded like a message from the universe to John Gallagher. His brother started painting and selling his work—without quitting his day job. He hired his first employee, Craig Newman, who had toured with the band, Sunflower. And his wife’s cousin is married to Patsy Ward, guitarist with the local Irish group Causeway. He, Craig, and Patsy started playing together as The Pointe. And John started writing songs.

“Last Memorial Day we went into the studio and this CD is what came out of that,” he says.

It’s called “The Other Side of the Tracks”—a reference to the fact that the Gallaghers grew up on the Main Line, but literally on the other side of the Reading line from its manicured mansions. One of the 11 songs, “Piece of Work,” is about John’s relationship with his brother, Pat. It has a distinctly country flavor and, despite the sibling rivalry that might have inspired it, it’s clearly about brotherly love. He’s already sung it a cappella at an open mike night. And he’ll be singing it Friday night at Molly Maguire’s.

“We’ll see how we’re received,” Gallagher says, his voice reflecting that same “what will be will be” attitude that guided his career. “I’m not really thinking about where it might go. Who knows what could happen? I’m doing it because I love it.”

And because, as anyone who has a younger sibling knows, he has a kid brother knew exactly what he was doing all along.

Music

Review: The Chieftains at the Kimmel Center

There are some who say the Kimmel Center’s Verizon Hall is shaped like a giant cello.

An untrained eye would make that kind of mistake. But anyone who attended the Chieftains concert at Philadelphia’s world-class concert hall could tell you: It’s a big Irish fiddle—obviously.

In a stellar Saturday afternoon show, the band managed to turn the city’s premier symphonic concert hall into an intimate Irish house party. Certainly, it had most of the required elements—whoops, foot stomping, sing-alongs and even, at the end, a bit of dancing. Indeed, our photographer Gwyneth MacArthur, in her first visit to the Kimmel, wound up—with a gaggle of other delighted audience members—dancing a kind of “hora” on stage with the show’s rubber-legged dancers Jon and Nathan Pilatzke, Cara Butler, and a whole troupe of Shirley Temple-wigged dancers from the Ryan School of Irish Dance. (Shyness was never Gwyneth’s problem.)

The show actually began on a bit of a disconcerting note. On their flight into Philly, the airline lost the band’s luggage—including the uilleann pipes played by Chieftain-in-chief Paddy Moloney. (Something similar happened fairly recently to a treasured banjo owned by Solas leader Seamus Egan, I believe. There are certain things you should just not check in.)

But this is a band of long experience and struggles, and they soldiered on, serving up a couple of hours of brilliant, often breath-taking, Irish music. All of it was clearly rooted in Irish musical tradition, but there were the usual departures, including such tunes as “Cotton-Eyed Joe,” from the Chieftains’ 10th album. Bluegrass star Ricky Skaggs did the vocal honors on the album, but the Chieftains’ bodhran player and singer Kevin Conneff filled in more than ably.

As promised, the Chieftains also dabbled a bit in music from Scotland. Alyth McCormack, from a little island called Lewis in the Outer Hebrides, has a high, clear voice (marred somewhat by intermittent feedback). She dazzled the crowd with a display of that peculiar act of Scottish lyrical tongue-twisting known as mouth music. “You’ll see why they call it that,” she said before she sang. And, yes, we did see.

Introducing McCormack was a piper who played a lovely, haunting version of the standard pipe band tune, “The Rowan Tree.” The Chieftains blended in along the way with Matt Molloy’s flute, Paddy’s chirping tin whistle and Seane Keane’s fiddle. It wasn’t the first or the last time that night that Gwyneth’s eyes misted over.

No Chieftains show is complete without some dancing pyrotechnics from the Pilatzkes. They joined with Cara Butler for one of the most peculiar—and, at the same time, inspired—dance routines you’ll ever see, performed entirely while seated on chairs. Most of us were falling out of our chairs at the end.

Harper Triona Marshall and Irish singer Carmel Conway also joined the show in Philly. Conway performed an achingly beautiful version of the “The Foggy Dew,” and Marshall pretty much set the stage on fire with her version of “Carolan’s Concerto.” Before the concert, Paddy mentioned that it was the best version of the piece he’d ever heard. I wouldn’t argue.

The Chieftains clearly relish playing in the Kimmel—and who could blame them? It’s not really St. Patrick’s Day in Philadelphia until the Chieftains play there, in that lovely place. I wish we didn’t have to wait ‘til next St. Patrick’s Day to hear them there again.

Music

Top 10 Things Not to Do During the Singing of “Danny Boy”

A New York bar owner made headlines (and not a few enemies) recently when he banned the singing of “Danny Boy” in his midtown boozerie during the month of March.

Nothing against “Danny Boy,” Shaun Casey, owner of Foley’s, told ABC News. It’s just that a.) in March, everyone wants to sing it, and b.) they do it very, very badly. Karaoke nights, in particular, can be a real drag, Clancy said.

 “Everybody thinks—whatever race, creed or color—that after three pints of Guinness, you’re entitled to get up there and butcher the song,” Clancy said.

With St. Patrick’s Day just around the corner, of course, that can mean only one thing. It means that you probably won’t have to wait for someone to die to hear someone sing “Danny Boy.” In fact, during the month of March, genuine scientific studies prove that the average Irish person in a pub suffers through a painful rendition of “Danny Boy” precisely every 7 minutes and 23 seconds.

In the interest of Total “Danny Boy” Preparedness (TDPP), we now respectfully offer you, from the home office in Horseleap, County Offaly, the official Irish Philadelphia Top 10 Things Not to Do During the Singing of “Danny Boy”:

  1. Offer to perform the Heimlich maneuver on the singer. (He’s not choking on a live barn owl; it only sounds that way.)
  2. Suck helium and harmonize in a chipmunk voice.
  3. Dance the Hora.
  4. Clap on the downbeat.
  5. Clap on the upbeat.
  6. Pretend to sing the song in reverse, slowly and in a deep voice, and at the end drone, “Paul is dead. I buried Paul.”
  7. Bay like a beagle with a bellyache.
  8. Threaten the singer in a way that demonstrates pride in your Irish heritage, but at the same time cements your reputation as a gangsta: “Stop that racket or I’ll be after beating you with me shillelegh, fo’ shizzle dizzle!”
  9. When he hits the high note, throw your panties onto the stage. (Optional for gentlemen.)
  10. Yell, “One more time!!!!”
Music

The Chieftains Go Caledonian

The Chieftains, from left: Matt Molloy, Paddy Moloney, Kevin Conneff and Sean Keane.

The Chieftains, from left: Matt Molloy, Paddy Moloney, Kevin Conneff and Sean Keane.

For all of you who have had to make the painful choice between the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade and the Chieftains concert at the Kimmel—they seem always to happen on the same day—this year there’s no pain at all. The parade has been pushed back to Sunday, March 9, to avoid a conflict with Palm Sunday, and the Chieftains are in town on Saturday, March 15.

Paddy Moloney, leader of Ireland’s pioneering Irish traditional band, couldn’t be more delighted. For one, Philadelphia is a hotbed of Irish traditional music. For another, the Kimmel is just a great place to perform.

“It’s very warm. You look up [from the stage], and the hall is shaped like an egg. It’s almost like the people are with you in your parlor back home—a very expensive parlor, let me tell you.”

Moloney, who is on the board of directors for a new national concert hall auditorium in Dublin, says he hopes that performance venue will take a few lessons from the Kimmel, where the sound is phenomenal, yet the space seems so intimate. “I’ve shown them photographs,” he says.

Moloney and the Chieftains are always mining other genres for concert and recording material—a fact that drives some hard-core traditionalists a little crazy and bothers Moloney not at all. But this time, the Chieftains are not straying too far from Ireland.

“I’m going down the Scottish route,” he says. “I call it the Chieftains Scottish-Celtic connection.”

It’s a logical choice for Moloney, who in 2005 was inducted into the Scots Traditional Music Hall of Fame. He was the first non-Scot so honored.

Joining the Chieftains—Moloney (tin whistle, uilleann pipes), Sean Keane (fiddle), Matt Molloy (flute), Kevin Conneff (bodhran and vocals)—will be Alyth McCormack, from the small Scottish island of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides. “Her singing is just fantastic,” he says. “She’ll come on in the last section of the second half, blending our Irish with her Scottish style.”

Also on stage will be the brilliant Irish harper Triona Marshall. “She’ll do a version of Carolan’s concerto,” says Moloney. “It’s the best I’ve ever heard.” Marshall fills a gap in the Chieftains’ legendary sound left by the death of Derek Bell in October 2002.

Carmel Conway, a superb singer from Limerick with both classical and contemporary influences, will also join the show, as will Cuban-born Philadelphia percussionist Juan Castellanos, also known simply as “Cuco.” Look for the longtime Chieftains players, dancer Cara Butler and those crazy-legs Pilatske brothers, Jon and Nathan, from Canada’s Ottawa Valley, who were such a hit at the Kane Sisters’ Irish Center concert in July. Singer-dancer Maureen Fahey also rounds out the ensemble. (Look for an appearance by some local pipers, too.)

Quite the international cast—but that, too, is just fine with Moloney, who confesses, “I find the world now a very small place.”

It was quite another world when, back in 1963, the one-time accountant laid the groundwork for what would become the Chieftains.

It was a journey that began in 1938 in the northside Dublin suburb of Donnycarney, where Moloney was born and raised—and before then, really. Like so many traditional Irish musicians, Moloney was born into the music. House parties were common. Indeed, he says, “Music was the main source of entertainment in the family.” Moloney’s grandfather played the flute, and an uncle played in the Ballyfin Pipe Band. “He was a great pipe player,” says Moloney. “I grew up with this madness in me head.”

At age 6, his mother presented him with a whistle, purchased for a shilling and ninepence. He began to pick it up right away.

The uilleann pipes soon followed. “Every Saturday night [the world-famous piper] Leo Rowsome used to have a show on the radio. I listened to it all the time,” Moloney says. “When I was 8 or 9 I met his son in my school. The first time I saw them [the pipes] in reality, I was just blown away.”

Moloney implored his mother to secure a set of pipes for him. “Those pipes cost my mother a week’s wages,” he recalls. “She stuck it out and saved the money for them. Fortunately, I had the God-given gift.”

You bet he did. Not long after he started taking lessons from Rowsome (who also built his pipes), Moloney scored a first in the Dublin Feis. Next, came All-Ireland championships.

It was quite the time. “I was very lucky in Donnycarney,” he recalls. “There were five pipers there, including Leo, Danny O’Dowd, and myself. We went to one anothers houses. There was also lots of open-air music playing and ceili dancing, and various traditional concerts. There were a few good music clubs.”

Through it all, he was sustained and inspired by the more experienced pipers in the crowd. “I got tremendous help from the older people,” he says. “They saw in me the continuation of good piping.”

You can see for yourself why the old ones were so encouraging when the Chieftains return to the Kimmel March 15 at 3 p.m. A dinner with the Chieftains follows the concert.

Music

Review: Celtic Fiddle Festival’s “Equinoxe”

We’re not even two months into the new year, but I think we already have a serious contender for best Celtic music CD of 2008.

It’s “Equinoxe,” the latest incarnation of Celtic Fiddle Festival—featuring the phenomenal Kevin Burke, Christian Lemaitre and André Brunet. Guitarist Ged Foley, Burke’s Patrick Street partner, accompanies the fiddlers throughout. (He also gets a chance to shine on the solo “Sydney Smith’s March,” which has a lush Baroque feel to it.)

Released on Burke’s Loftus label—on February 19, technically, though it’s already up on Amazon—“Equinoxe” is 11 solid tracks highlighting the various Celtic musical contributions of Ireland, Brittany and Quebec. So you’ll hear tunes as diverse as “Jig de Valcartier” and House of Hammill,” by Philly’s own master tune plumber Ed Reavy. At times, as on the opening track—“Twilight in Portroe,” “Austin Tierney’s” and the aforementioned “Hammill”— the boys play together. At still other times, a single fiddler is accompanied only by Foley.

It’s all masterfully presented, but for my money, the tracks that just cry out to be jacked up to 10 on your car stereo (and you’ll probably hit “RPT,” too) are those in which the three fiddlers and Foley play together. My personal favorite is the seventh track, a set consisting of “Reel de Napoleon,” ”Reel en Sol” and “Guy Thomas.”

(And I want to take this opportunity to apologize to the poor lady in the car next to mine at a red light on Route 1 in Plainsboro, N.J. I didn’t mean to “whoop” that loud. I’ll pay for the Depends, I promise.)

And lucky us—we get to hear Celtic Fiddle Festival Sunday, February 24, at 7:30 p.m., at the Sellersville Theater. It will be the band’s only area appearance.

Music

His Life Was Music and Family

Ed Reavy Sr. and Andy McGann at the Irish Center in the '50s.

Ed Reavy Sr. and Andy McGann at the Irish Center in the '50s.

After publishing the Ed Reavy Sr. song book in 1980, the famed composer’s sons, Joe and Ed Jr., sat down with him after a reception in his honor at Cheltenham High School, where a popular ceili band of the time, the Taproom Band, played some of the hundreds of tunes Reavy had written.

“We asked him if he could come up with 100 traditional Irish tunes that were good for listening and for dancing, some that were easy to play and others that were more difficult,” recalls Ed Reavy Jr.

It seemed like a logical request. The elder Reavy, now considered one of the most important composers of Irish traditional music, was known for his computer-like memory for songs. “We had people from all over the world come to Ed Reavy’s house, not to listen to his latest composition, but because he was the greatest man in the world to have in a session,” says Ed. “His musical recall was unbelievable. He would start on a tune, and you’d hear a musician sputter, ‘Ed, how did you bring that up? I haven’t played that since I was 16,’ and he’d say, ‘Oh, I play it every once in a while.’ There was never a point in the session if Ed Reavy was there that he couldn’t plug in a tune or a set of tunes. One would remind him of another, a sister tune or something from the same era. That would charm the musicians in the session and that’s why they flocked to Ed Reavy’s house.”

So it shouldn’t have been hard for the man from Cavan to produce 100 songs, even with all the parameters set by his sons. But two and a half months later, their father still hadn’t mentioned it. “I was working with him in his plumbing business at the time,” recalls Ed. “We were tearing out an old galvanized pipe in the home of one of his fiddler friends, and I asked him, ‘Dad, are you done with those 100 tunes?’ and he said, ‘No, I’m still working on it.’ I said, ‘Dad, a hundred tunes should be a piece of cake.’ And he said, ‘Eddie, you don’t understand. Five hundred tunes is a piece of cake. One hundred is not.’ He had to whittle down the 100 tunes we wanted from 500 tunes he had in his head. Amazing, and he was in his 70s at the time.”

Weeks later, he brought his sons a marble copybook with eleven pages, both sides, filled with tunes. “He threw the book down in front of me on the desk and said, ‘Here’s the cursed thing and I never want anything to do with it in the future!’ I told him, ‘put some of yours in there,’ tunes he loved, and he did include about 7 of his own songs. But the thing was driving him crazy.”

When Ed Reavy Sr. arrived in the US as a teenager in 1912, it’s hard to know how many songs he carried with him in his head. He settled in the part of West Philadelphia then known as Corktown, because of the many Irish immigrants who lived there. It was a serendipitous place for a musician to land because, no matter where in Ireland people came from—Mayo, Donegal, Cavan—there were the old traditional tunes to bind them and give them solace so far from home. St. Agatha’s Parish Hall is where the music lived and thrived, as well as in the local taverns, private clubs, and ubiquitous house parties.

Reavy may have been inspired early on, but he didn’t begin composing himself until the 1930s. Over 40 years, he became one of the most prolific creators of Irish traditional tunes, each one so uniquely handcrafted that defining an “Ed Reavy tune” is nearly impossible. “Louis Quinn, the famed promoter and fiddler, was once asked, ‘How can you tell an Ed Reavy tune,’” says Ed. “Well, he rubbed his chin like he did, and said, ‘That’s a loaded question. Let me put it this way, if a tune does not have a good melody, an original good melody, and if it doesn’t have rolls and runs and triplets and double stops that are actually part of the tune, not ornamentation, and it doesn’t play from the E to G string, it’s probably not an Ed Reavy tune.’”

If you’re a musician, you probably got that. But if you’re not, like me, that’s a little too “inside baseball.” So I asked Ed what he meant. “Always something new every time was what he was after,” he explained. “He often commented that the basic problem with Irish traditional music is that it’s played on the first two strings of the fiddle and none of his tunes played on just the first two strings of the fiddle. He felt strongly about that and it’s reflected in the tunes he composed. He composed in keys no one else composed in, and would sometimes change keys in the middle of a tune.”

In these modern times, when surveys reveal the greatest goals of American children is “fame and fortune,” you might think that Ed Reavy Sr. was a fortunate man. Though there’s generally little money in traditional music, he certainly experienced fame in his lifetime. His tunes were played in sessions all over the world, and his recordings—homemade and otherwise—aired on Irish radio programs both here and in Ireland, turning them quickly into standards.

But it didn’t much matter to Reavy. “He was very humble, he was so humble to the point that he was a pain in the ass,” laughs his son. “He was the kind of a guy who would stand in the back of the room and not blow his own horn. I would say, ‘For God’s sake, Dad. Let people know what you’ve done.’ And he would say, ‘Oh Eddie, you know that’s sinful.’ He was a very devout man, very devoted to his Catholic faith. He was really a living saint. And I would say, ‘Well, you’ve got a lot of sinful people composing garbage and pushing it on us.”And he would say, ‘Well, that’s true, Eddie, that’s true.’”

It was still impossible to compliment him. “I remember that he thought (Limerick-born fiddler and noted music teacher) Martin Mulvihill was a genius because he taught so many champions,” recalls Ed. “ Martin loved Dad’s composition, ‘Munster Grass,’ the hornpipe. He said it was the greatest hornpipe ever written. And Dad said, ‘That’s not true. Martin just says that because it suits his style of playing so beautifully.’ That’s just the way he was.”

He was also a man who loved two things more than anything, says his son. “Music and family—that’s all he ever thought about.”

You can meet some of Ed Reavy’s family, and hear his music played by a group of talented trad musicians, on Saturday, January 20, at 8 PM at the Irish Center in Mt. Airy. See our calendar for more details.

To learn more about Ed Reavy Sr., go to the Web site of the Reavy Foundation, where there are CDs, videos, and song books for sale.

Music

Let Ed Reavy Jr. Tell You a Story Or Two

If Ed Reavy Jr. ever says to you, “Let me tell you a story,” grab a cuppa, pull up a chair, and prepare to listen.

Reavy is not unlike his father, the legendary hornpipe king of Cavan and Philadelphia, who, session legend has it, could fiddle without stopping all night because one tune always reminded him of another. The younger Reavy can’t tell a story without it bringing up another and then another. If you have the time, it’s a delightful cascade of funny, poignant tales of a life steeped in music, humor, and love.

We were talking the other day (well, he talked, I listened) about the upcoming Ed Reavy Sr. tribute, scheduled for January 19 at the Irish Center in Mt. Airy. Fiddler Jim Eagan, who has recorded a CD of the elder Reavy’s tunes, will be joined by banjo player Peter Fitzgerald, bodhran player Myron Bretholz, and guitarist Andy Thurston in this tribute to the plumber from Cavan who began composing in the 1930s in Philadelphia. Reavy’s traditional tunes, mostly hornpipes, are now played worldwide by everyone from mediocre session players to top trad performers like Eagan, John Carty, Maeve Donnelly, Liz Carroll, Mick Moloney, and many others. (Carroll and fiddle virtuoso Eileen Ivers played Reavy tunes when they won their All-Irelands.)

Ed recalled the first time he met Jim Eagan, a tale that morphed into the back story of one of his father’s “lesser” compositions, “Hughie’s Cap” and a recounting of how his brother Joe’s unceasing dedication and sacrifice saved their father’s music. The story starts with a phone call from bodhran master Myron Bretholz, asking if he and Eagan could talk to Ed and his brother, Joe, about recording a CD of Reavy songs. But, here, let Ed tell it:

“Jimmy came sat in my livingroom and we said, ‘What are you going to play for us? And he said, ‘I can play anything you want.’ I looked at my brother Joe and Joe looked at me. We asked, ‘Don’t you have tunes you already learned to play?’ He said, ‘No, I read them out of the song book.’ So I said, ‘How about playing Kipeen Scanlan’s Horpipe,’ which is my favorite and the most famous Ed Reavy hornpipe in Cavan town. So he opened to book and played it perfectly. We asked him to play Never Was Piping So Gay, and he played that one just about perfectly. After that, he played 8 or 10 more tunes out of the book. Then he said, ‘I also like Hughie’s Cap.’ Well, Joe and I laughed. We thought it was among the least of Dad’s tunes. But we’d heard Seamus Egan and Solas play it, the North American Scottish fiddle champ had put it on his CD, and John Carty of Ireland came up with it as one of his signature tunes. When I met John at the Irish Center, I asked him about it. ‘Hughie’s Cap,’ he said”—here, Reavy shifts into an Irish accent—“’Aw, that’s an awesome piece of music.’ I said, ‘Jesus, John, I don’t believe it. Here, let me tell you a story.’”

This next story takes us back decades, when Philadelphia was an even more Irish city than it is today, and you could go to a house party—where they invited local musicians and pushed the furniture aside for dancing–just about every weekend. Let Ed pick it up again:

“Dad played at house parties all the time. He played in Grays Ferry many many times with John McGettigan, a singer and a bit of a fiddle player. At every house party in Grays Ferry, Hughie McCorkle was invited. Now, he looked for every inch of him a club fighter. He had the pug ears, the flat nose and no hair at all, and he wore this old cap pulled down over his brow. Whenever there was a question of a quarrel or a fight in Grays Ferry, Hughie was there to stick his head in to say”—Reavy raises his voice—“’What’s the problem here?’ and the problem would go away.”

During one house party, a shoving match broke out on the porch. The owner of the house called to a young man at the party. “Go down to the cellar and get Hughie.”

“That’s where the booze was,” Reavy explains. “By God, though, when Hughie came up he didn’t have his cap on, so he didn’t look as menacing. So the owner calls to the boy, ‘Hey kid, run down and tell Annie to give you Hughie’s cap. It’s an emergency.’ So Hughie put on the cap, went out to the porch and said”—Reavy’s voice gets loud again—“’What’s the problem here?’ And then the fight broke up. Joe and I always said that the best thing about the tune was the story.”

Ed and I were both laughing, and it occurred to me that the story he was telling was his Dad’s story, passed down, like the music, to generations. But if it hadn’t been for Ed’s brother, Joe, Ed Reavy’s music might not have been passed down credited to Ed Reavy. Perhaps the finest tribute to his tunes is that they sound like they’ve been handed from one musician to another for centuries, like folklore, so they’re sometimes still found attributed to “anonymous” or, worse, to other composers. “By other noted composers,” Ed adds.

It’s understandable. With the advent of faster, cheaper travel between the US and Ireland and better recording devices (Reavy recorded his own records on a “monstrous” recorder “with about 150 tubes in it” at home, says his son), Reavy’s hornpipes and reels easily made the transatlantic crossing in the ’40s and ’50s. Ed recalls sometimes having to sleep on the floor to accommodate an Irish musician who’d come to Philadelphia to meet with the composer of “Reavy’s tunes,” as they were often called. And fiddler and promoter Louis Quinn, an Armagh man from New York, often brought Reavy recordings to Ireland, where they quickly became part of performers’ repetoires and session staples and were played on Radio Eireann. As Mick Moloney once wrote, the Reavy tunes were happily “adopted,” but in some cases, since they weren’t written down, took on the name of their adoptive “parents.”

But in the 1960s, Joe Reavy began transcribing and annotating his father’s music, not only from the homemade 78s, but from the elder Reavy’s head. It took him seven years, but Joe, who graduated from Penn, eventually produced the first Ed Reavy Sr. songbook, the one that Jim Eagan played from in Ed Reavy Jr.’s livingroom. “No one really knows what that man did for his father’s music,” says Ed admiringly. “He has a disabled daughter, so it was a terrible sacrifice for him and for his wife. I don’t know how he did it, but his wife insisted that he do it.”

Then there were the ones that got away. “Let me tell you another story,” Ed said. “Yes, please,” I answered.

“Before I went back to college I worked with my father in his plumbing and heating business. Every Wednesday I would stay over and work on estimates and bills at an old desk , one of those where the center portion pulled up and a typewriter would come up with it. Dad insisted on doing all the typing, which he did with three fingers on both hands. There was a stack of homemade recordings in the corner of the desk against the wall. It was at least 10 inches high. I had never really noticed them until one night, when he was typing, the vibrations caused them to fall into the typewriter well. He reached in a put them back in the corner, then went on typing. Well, they fell down again, so he took the whole batch and threw them in the wastebasket. I asked him why he did that. He said, ‘They’re getting on my nerves and they’re just barn dances.’ I didn’t know he was composing barn dances (a type of Irish tune). So I asked him again why he threw them away. He said, ‘You know, Eddie, I give a tune an hour, and if I can’t do anything with it, I discard it. I won’t discard it if I like the melody, and if I like the melody, I make a barn dance out of it. Now Eddie, barn dances are here today and gone tomorrow and no one cares who composes them.’

“Well, I’m a dancer,” says Ed Reavy, Jr, who has the enviably slim build to prove it . “So you would think I would have reached into that wastebasket and pulled those records out. But I didn’t. I still don’t know to this day why I didn’t. If I had, we would have had a whole book of Ed Reavy barn dances today.”

Music

One More Time for “Rip”

Probably not for the first time, "Rip" McDonald takes the cake.

Probably not for the first time, "Rip" McDonald takes the cake.

“Rip” McDonald’s career in the Mummers began casually enough. He was 15 years old at the time, and he knew how to play harmonica and guitar. “One day, some of the fellas said, ‘Hey, let’s join a string band,’” McDonald says. “I said ‘OK.’ So we joined the Uptown String Band. That was in 1938.”

Since then, James “Rip” McDonald’s commitment to the musical tradition that is Mummery has been anything but casual. He just turned 84 and has made more than 60 trips up Broad Street—with a few years off during the Second World War, when he was in the service. On New Year’s Day 2008, weather permitting, he’ll strut his stuff in his last Mummer’s Parade, marching with the unit he started in 1998, the Irish American String Band.

Before Irish American, Rip—a spry, talkative Bridesburg resident with a thick grey brushy moustache—was a member of the Ukrainian American String Band. “I was a member for five years,” he says, “and each year we came in last. I said to the guys, ‘If we come in last one more time, I’m gonna leave this band.’ Well, we came in last again. A few of the guys said, ‘Rip, whatever band you go to, we wanna go with you.’ But I said, ‘I’m not going to join another band. I’m gonna start the Irish American String Band. And in 1998, on St. Patrick’s Day, I started the band.”

Irish American is one of countless string bands that McDonald has belonged to, if not had a hand in starting. His devotion to the tradition is all-consuming. After World War 2, when Mumming was starting to become a bit more polished, he learned a new instrument, saxophone, which he still plays.

“When string bands first started, they were all string instruments—banjos, mandolins, guitars, violins. After the Second World War, they wanted harmony to get a better sound, so they started to add saxophones. You just can’t get the harmony sound with string instruments. So I had one of the great old-timers teach me sax.”

Not long afterward, observing the constant turnover in string band musical directors, he resolved to do something about it. “They had a lot of music directors, but they couldn’t seem to keep them,” he says. “So I went to the Granoff School of Music (at 17th and Chestnut in the old Presser Building, where Dizzy Gillespie and John Coltrane later attended) to earn an associate’s degree in music. It took me seven years. Then I became music director for several string bands, and started making arrangements.”

Since then, it’s hard to think of a string band leadership post McDonald hasn’t held at one time or another. It’s become something of a family tradition. One son Brian is the Irish American String Band’s music director (a position initially held by Rip).

Of course, being a Mummer is not a full-time position, and it’s far from his only extracurricular interest. Years ago, he owned a tavern at Rising Sun and Wyoming, the Sun House Tavern.

Rip has also served as chaplain of several veterans’ organizations. Not a bad set of accomplishments for the son of a one-time Girardville coal miner and, later on, Philadelphia paper hanger and occasional political speech writer. “That’s where I get my ‘gift of gab,’ from my father Joe McDonald,” he says. By all accounts, he says, his grandfather, who was born in Ireland, was at least equally garrulous.

Though he does not know where in Ireland his grandfather was born, Rip—like so many Irish Americans—feels a fierce attachment to the country. In 2002, when the Irish American String Band traveled to Ireland to perform in the Dublin St. Patrick’s Day Parade, Rip had an opportunity to reinforce those emotional bonds just a bit. It was his first trip to Ireland. “What a thrill it was for me,” he recalls. “I got off the plane, kissed the ground and said, ‘Grandma and Grandpop, I’m here.’ I never thought that would happen.”

(Bonus: The band won the “Spirit of the Parade” prize, a glittering Waterford cup.)

As memorable as that parade was, though, nothing can top the thrill of marching in the Mummers Parade for this longtime vet. “I’ve been playing for 70 years, but every year when I get to the judge’s area, I just fill up. I think: Here we are again. I love it.”

Update: In the 2008 New Year’s Day Parade, Irish American came in 16th out of 18 bands; the band’s Kelly Marie Mahon was ranked 15th of 17 string band captains. (One band, Pennsport, had no captain.)