Browsing Category

People

People

A Man Walked Into a Bar. . . .

Mairtin de Cogain with Gabriel Donohue at the Irish Center.

Mairtin de Cogain with Gabriel Donohue at the Irish Center.

Along with saving civilization and inventing slang, the Irish apparently also created the shaggy dog story. Or, at least, perfected it.

Shaggy dog story: A long, drawn-out, meandering story characterized by a series of irrelevant incidents, culminating in a punch line that’s often an anti-climax.

Wearing a Cat in the Hat t-shirt that read, “Cool story, bro,” Mairtin de Cogain told a few of those to the audience at The Irish Center in Philadelphia on Friday, July 21, in between singing love songs from Cork, which is where de Cogain, now living in Rochester, MN, was born.

There was the one–now bear with me and please insert Cork accent where appropriate–about the lady preparing for a major event at her home who consulted “the Google of the time, Readers’ Digest” for a special dessert recipe, landing on “wibbly wobbly stuff with cream on the top, which we call jelly but you call Jello, and sprinkles.” She had no sprinkles in the house, so she sent her husband to the village to get some. Of course, like most men, he set out on his wife’s errand not quite knowing what it was he was sent to get. He wound up at the bike shop where the knowledgeable owner thought he knew. “I betcha now it’s ball bearings she’s after,” he told them man, and tossed a few in a bag which his wife scattered over top of her “wibbly wobbly” dessert.

“They all tucked into it good-o,” said Mairtin, as the audience began to chuckle. “The dentist had a field day next week.” But later that week, two women met at Mass and began talking about the celebration.

Marlene asked, “Pauline, how did you enjoy the celebration?” To which Pauline replied, “oh, after I couldn’t sleep.” Seems she was having some digestive problems which she thought might be eased if she just released a little gas. “So I bent over and let out a blast and heard a scream. And didn’t I shoot the cat!”

I just made a long story shorter, but you get the idea.

De Cogain is a two-time All-Ireland storytelling champ who translates that into an acting career (he was featured in the film, The Wind that Shakes the Barley, and has appeared off-Broadway in the one-man show, De Bogman, in which he played 20 characters). He also sings (he did a few with only his bodhran for accompaniment then was joined on stage by musician Gabriel Donohue) and is a member of the Fuschsia Band and the Mairtin De Cogain Project. He’s also a new dad. His son, Milo, is 19 weeks old,” he told the audience, “and I haven’t had a night’s sleep since he came into the world, so I’m looking forward to tonight.”

For a little bit of the Mairtin de Cogain experience, check out our videos.

History, People

How the Irish Saved Gettysburg

Kenneth Gavin, Bethanne Killian and Peter Ryan. Photo Credit: Christopher Conley

Kenneth Gavin, Bethanne Killian and Peter Ryan Photo Credit: Christopher Conley

Bethanne Killian, Chair of Irish Network Philadelphia (better known as IN-Philly), knew she wanted to create an event for the organization that would commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, and the key role that the Irish played in it. She found the perfect speaker in Kenneth Gavin and the ideal location at the Union League in Center City.

The Union League itself was formed in 1862, in order to preserve the Union as well as to help squash the rebellion of the Confederacy. As Gavin said in the opening of his talk, “You can’t get a better venue in Philadelphia than the Union League to talk about these things.”

Kenneth Gavin, a self-proclaimed mongrel with his share of Irish ancestry, has himself participated in Civil War reanactments as part of the recreated Company C, 28th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry; he is now the company’s 1st sergeant. His day job since February of this year has been as Director of Communications for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, but his love for, and research in, the field of history continues.

In an engaging and energetic talk that lasted over an hour, but wasn’t nearly long enough, Gavin spoke not only about Gettysburg, but also about the factors that led up to the Civil War, and how the Irish came to play such a major part in the action.

His explanation of how over 150,00 native born Irish men ended up serving in the Federal ranks (Gavin estimates that when it comes to the number of first generation Irish Americans who served, the number is high in the hundreds of thousands) gave some serious insight into the social and political background of the post-famine Irish living in the U.S.

“It’s a huge, huge contribution. What motivated those men to serve? To put life and limb on the line for an adopted country, an adopted country that at best had been indifferent to them, and at worst, hostile. These are young men—17, 18, 19, 20 years old—who have no concept of war. They’re searching for acceptance socially, and they’re searching for upward mobility. Think about the conditions of the jobs they’ve been doing in factories, and in building the infrastructure of America—the poverty level living, the social atmosphere, the oppression, the discrimination that comes along with those things.

“And what the military is going to promise these guys—well, you get $13 a month, which was a pretty decent wage at that point in time. That’s what well paid factory workers were usually making. That’s enough to support a family, roughly. You’re getting a promise of a good suit of clothes, and whenever they wear out, the military’s going to give you a new one. You’re going to eat three fine meals a day. And you’re going to have adventure, you’re going to see the country. And the girls are going to love you for serving.

“These are the promises the recruiting officers have made since the inception of the United States of America. It doesn’t mean you’re going to get all that, but at the time, those are the promises that are out there. So, you can see where everything starts to add up that this is going to be a good idea.”

As special guest Peter Ryan, the Deputy Consul General of Ireland who traveled down from New York for the event, stated, “It’s really extraordinary, this history of the Irish people in the American Civil War; there were so many who served in the U.S. forces, in many cases before they had a chance to become U.S. citizens. And they still came and showed their devotion to their new country—while at the same time a little bit of their heart remained in Ireland.”

Here’s where you can find more information about IN-Philly, including upcoming events, and how to join.

People

Love Letter to Limerick: Niamh Dunne Launches a Stunning Solo CD

 

Niamh Dunne, photographed by Lizzy Doe

Niamh Dunne, photographed by Lizzy Doe

“I don’t know if you’re aware of it over there now, but Limerick doesn’t always have the best reputation, or get the best press,” Niamh Dunne informed me as we chatted via Skype.

“So as a proud Limerick woman, I wanted to put some songs on ‘Portraits’ that would represent the good side of Limerick, and in my own little way show that there’s great culture and great songs, that there’s an awful lot more going on than the media always portrays. It’s my own little way of celebrating Limerick.”

“Portraits” is no little debut. The lead singer of Beoga and daughter of legendary piper Mickey Dunne, Niamh forges her own musical identity on her first solo CD. Her vibrant voice has a timelessness that resonates with strength, while at the same time capturing the beautiful vulnerability of the songs she’s purposefully chosen to showcase.

With a musical pedigree that includes the late, great Pecker Dunne as a cousin, Niamh was raised in a household where music was just a natural part of the flow of things: “I grew up in a family where when you came home from school, you did your homework and then you practiced the fiddle—and both were equally as important. The two were kind of on a par all the time. I always played the fiddle—since I was 4 years old. But the singing came a little bit later. I started singing quite late, actually. I was maybe 17. I suppose I always kind of sang, and I always had a bit of a voice, but I didn’t really start learning songs and getting interested and involved in it until I went to college. That’s when I started to take it a bit more seriously.”

That was also about the time she recorded a CD with her father, Mickey, and her sister Brid, titled “The Dunne Family Legacy.” And it’s a brilliant legacy.

“My dad is from a travelling kind of background, and it would have been a very well known musical family for generations. They were travellers, and they busked, and that’s how they made a living; they travelled all over the country doing that. My dad’s family settled down when he was just a very small boy, so he didn’t really experience it firsthand, life on the road, I suppose. He says he can remember it all right, but when they settled, they all continued to play. That was their trade.

“Pecker passed away not too long ago. He was kind of the last of that generation of travelling musicians, the ones that that really travelled with the music, in a different way to the later generations. It was sad when he passed away—it’s really the end of an era.

“So, that’s the kind of stock that I come from; it’s nice to be a part of that rich musical history. I’m kind of proud of it.”

But it’s her past 7 years of performing with Beoga that put Niamh on her own musical map. The group that the Wall Street Journal heralded as “the best new traditional band to emerge from Ireland this century” has released 4 CDs and has a 10 year anniversary DVD in the works. Niamh credits them with helping her to find her musical feet.

“They were looking for a singer, and I did a couple of gigs with them, and sang a few songs. And then we decided to integrate the fiddle as much as the songs. I became a part of all the musical arrangements, and the tunes, as well as the songs. The songs kind of came first because they wanted a singer, and then I started writing some tunes for them as well, and got more involved in that side of it. I never felt like the token singer; I always felt like the songs and the singing was part of the whole thing. That was a good basis for me.

“As a singer, being with Beoga has been great because it’s given me the chance to sing anything. The lads are great. They’ll throw anything at me, or I’ll throw anything at them, and they’ll say ‘Yep! Let’s try it and see how it goes.’ And I’ve sung all kinds of wacky stuff with them, but it gave me a really good understanding of songs and an understanding of what I liked to sing. I have an awful lot to thank the Beoga guys for.”

So, it’s no surprise that the Beoga guys feature prominently on “Portraits.”

“Sean Og Graham is the main contributor, really! He plays guitars and all sorts of stringed instruments on the album, and he recorded it in his studios, and he produced it as well. So, he’s massively involved in the whole thing. And then after that I was so lucky to have so many deadly guests. I just kept asking people if they’d play on it, and everybody said yes. It was great. Trevor Hutchinson, from Lunasa, he played the bass for me. And Caitriona McKay is a great harp player from Scotland and she did a track. Eamon Murray did the bodhran.  Nicola Joyce, who sang with Grada, did some backing vocals along with Noelie McDonnell, another great singer from Galway. It’s such a long list of people here! Damien O’Kane played the banjo on the first track.

“It was Damien who actually inspired me to make this album; he brought out a deadly song album last year. He’s an amazing singer, and he released an album with a lot of songs from the North of Ireland on it. That inspired me to take a look at my own county and my own local song tradition and local singers.

Deciding on the songs she wanted to include on the CD became a labour of love, Niamh said. “Some of the songs I’ve been singing for awhile, and they were ones that were always on the backburner. There was a lot of going through the archives and looking up well-known local singers, and their songs. It was great fun, actually, going through all the old stuff, and all the unaccompanied songs!”

The song selection is spot on. One of my own personal favorite songs is included: Shanagolden (Track 6, I have it memorized). When I mentioned this to Niamh, she responded with enthusiasm. “Oh, it’s such a beautiful story! It’s heartbreaking! I got my dad to play on that one as well, just to really hammer home the Limerick thing. And, it’s funny—that song is proving very popular in Limerick. People know it, and identify with it and remember singing it years ago. Good old Sean McCarthy! It’s a great song, and I’m really glad I put it on there.”

Another gorgeous choice is a cover of Joe South’s “Games People Play.”

“It’s a really catchy song,” Niamh explained. “Everybody had covered this down through the years. I really loved it from Dick Gaughan’s version, he just slowed it all down. It’s really catchy, and a great pop song, but actually the words in it are quite profound and there’s a lot going on in the lyrics. So, just by slowing it down a little bit, I was wanting to give what the song is really about a little more weight. I’ve been singing it at sessions for years, and it’s a great one for everybody to sing along to.”

But the song that really brings it all home on the CD is “Beauty of Limerick.” For Niamh, including it was key. “It’s a big one for me because there’s fiddle on it, and it’s a song about Limerick as well as being traditional. It reflects the album as a whole; it would be the one I would pick that would give an insight into what the entire album is about.”

This labor of love, “an itch that had to be scratched,” began taking shape about a year ago, in a little wooden cabin in Dingle. With no tv, and no distractions, Niamh and her crew just “sang songs and started to try to put a shape on different songs and figure out what would work best as a consistent musical collection. So, that’s when Sean Og and myself started to get the stuff together, and then we let it go for awhile. We didn’t start recording it until this past January, and it was out at the beginning of May.”

Her focus now is on launching “Portraits” around Ireland. She’s got a killer, or, to use Niamh’s word, deadly, band with her. “I have Sean Og, of course, and then Donogh Hennessy on the guitar and Trevor Hutchinson playing a bit of bass. It’s great having those guys, they’re brilliant! And, I have to tell you, they’re the most handsome men in Irish music, I’d say! They’re beautiful men!

“Next year I’m going to be doing a bit of touring in Germany and getting myself organized to maybe come out to the States and do a bit there. I’ve no immediate plans, but there are a couple of things in the pipe.”

All of this has made Niamh Dunne one very busy woman, but that makes her happy.

“I like being busy—it’s good to be busy, and it suits me to have a lot going on. It’s like anything—there’s good days and bad days with every job you do, and it can be difficult sometimes to get everybody together; the logistics, I’d say, are the hardest part.

“The great thing about music is that you can always get better. You can always work on things a little bit more, and improve. Ireland is full of great singers and brilliant songwriters, and I’ve been so lucky to have been surrounded by it my whole life. There’s just so much of it here, and that’s really been the best training. That’s where my inspiration comes from; there’s so much great stuff going on—it’s just exciting to be a part of that.”

For more information on Niamh, and to check out her music and order “Portraits,” visit Niamh’s website.

To watch Niamh’s videos on youtube, go to:

“When Autumn Comes”

“Beauty of Limerick”

People

Catching Up on GAA Action

Happy time

Happy time

Two big Philly GAA football matches last Sunday down at Cardinal Dougherty.

First up, St. Pats Donegal came out and played strongly to top Tyrone 0-11 to 0-2.

The second game was closer, with the Young Irelands over the Kevin Barrys, 3-11 to 1-14. Our pal Gwyneth MacArthur, who has a real knack for capturing GAA action, was on the sidelines, and she caught all of the action, on and off the field.

If you’ve not seen Gaelic Athletic Association sports, we recommend it highly. You could watch the Phillies’ relievers squander yet another lead, or you could watch a bunch of crazy guys playing all out in a sport that makes major league baseball look like tai chi.

From the Philly GAA, here’s what’s on at Dougherty this Sunday:

  • 6/30/2013 12:00pm Division 1 St. Patrick’s v. Kevin Barry’s Tyrone (Out Of Town Ref) Pat Na Toraidhe
  • 6/30/2013 1.30pm Hurling Na Toraidhe v. Allentown Young Irelands TBD
  • 6/30/2013 3.00pm Junior B Young Ireland v. Kevin Barry’s Allentown TBD
  • 6/30/2013 4.00pm Division 1 Tyrone V. Young Irelands Kevin Barry’s (Out Of Town Ref)

We recommend that you keep up to date on the Philly GAA Facebook page.

Music, People

“I Can Rewind If I Get It Wrong”

Mike Concannon

Mike Concannon

It started out with his business, Round Tower Travel, which specialized in trips to Ireland. Mike Concannon had been running ads on The Irish Hours radio show on WVCH 740 AM, hosted by the legendary Will Regan.

When Regan passed away in 1995, Concannon placed a call to the station to find out about his ad, and when it might start running again. The answer: As soon as we get a new host. Without hesitating, Concannon asked: How about me?

The station owners met him at Cawley’s on West Chester Pike for an interview, at the end of which they told him, “get a show together on cassette tape, and we’ll see from there.”

As anyone who listens to Irish radio in the Delaware Valley knows, Mike Concannon got the job. “Since ’95, that was it. I’ve been doing it ever since.”

Concannon has a compact studio setup in the basement of his Delco home, an old-fashioned brick of a microphone dangling on a boom over the countertop of a corner bar, stacks of CDs and cassette tapes sharing space with bottles of Jameson and other Irish libations. The walls are festooned with Eagles regalia. A piraña-type fish, about the size of a saucer, is the lone occupant of a large aquarium off to the side. There used to be other fish in the tank, Concannon says, but they didn’t last long.

In the early days, it took hours to put the two-hour show together, splicing cassette tapes over the course of four or five hours. The recordings were then dropped off at the station for play on Saturday. For the past three months, Concannon has been recording electronically and emailing the show in. It now takes exactly as long as the show to produce. Pre-recording hives him an advantage over  Regan’s live broadcast. “I can rewind if I get it wrong.”

Sitting on a stool behind the bar and wearing a tweed Irish cap, Concannon seems just as thrilled doing the show as he did way back at the beginning. “Mostly I do it because I love Irish music, and now I’m hooked on it,” he says. “It’s a nice way to get in touch with your Irish roots.”

We interviewed Concannon recently. You can watch the video, above.

 

People

A Trio of Triumphs

Liz and Pearse Kerr

Liz and Pearse Kerr

If good things truly come in threes, you don’t need to look any further for proof than Temple heart transplant nurse Liz Kerr.

Kerr has always been inspirational—certifiably so when, in 2010, she was selected to be one of the first Inspirational Irish Women. She is also extremely active in the Ladies Ancient Order of Hibernians, co-founder of Brigid McCrory Division 25.

But within the past month or so, Kerr racked up a trio of triumphs:

  • She graduated from Arcadia University with a master’s in fine arts in writing.
  • A short story she wrote won first prize for fiction in the City Paper’s annual writing contest.
  • Franklin’s Paine Skatepark opened on a large, open tract just off the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, culminating many years of work and bringing to fruition the most fervent desire of her son Patrick, who died in a skateboard accident in 2002 at the age of 15.

We met on a sunny Sunday afternoon at the skate park—it seemed fitting—and we found a reasonably shady spot out of the way of the kids on boards and two-wheel scooters hurtling by.

Kerr is particularly proud of her degree. It’s tough to see how she fit it into her already jam-packed life, but she was powerfully motivated.

“It took two years. It was really intense, but in a good way,” she said. All the same, she laughed, “I finally have my life back.”

Kerr chose the Arcadia program because it strongly promoted the idea of submitting your work for publication—which she did, with relish. Last year she was fortunate to be the runner-up in the fiction category of the City Paper’s annual writing contest. But this year, her short story “After the River,” an unvarnished examination of ordinary lives and loss set in Philadelphia, snagged the top prize, earning the following jaw-dropping review from judge Bee Ridgway:

“After the River” is a gorgeously crafted short story. The first sentence shows us that we are in the hands of a master of American style: the image that cuts to the core of the story’s meaning. The larger shapes of the story are woven together perfectly. The personal loss that traps the main characters becomes the loss that defines the city … and that we see mirrored in other cities across the nation. This is a love story to Philadelphia—and also a eulogy. It is, in my opinion, a heartbreaking triumph.

Kerr also recently published a short story for a compilation, Rust Belt Rising Almanac, published by The Head & The Hand Press. The story, “Radium Girls,” is about female factory workers who developed cancer after exposure to radium while painting watch dials early in the 20th century. It seems like a long time, but women factory workers worldwide, she said, are still exposed to risk. “It just makes me sad to think about the girls who were dying then … and they’re dying now.”

Kerr read from the story recently at a release party–something she doesn’t like to do. “I’m a terribly nervous reader,” she said, “but my family was there, so that kept me calm.”

More stories are on the way, she added. As much as she loves writing, how could it be otherwise?

“Nursing is a great career, but my fun thing is to write. I’ve always wanted to write. It’s just so exciting to get published,” she said.

As the conversation continued, Kerr stopped now and again to say hello to some of the kids on skateboards she has come to know, and to chat with suitably impressed first-time visitors. Kerr is proud of many things, but Franklin’s Paine Skatepark would have to be high on the list.

Patrick Kerr was an early advocate for safe places to pursue his sport–places where, as in Love Park, skateboarders wouldn’t be hassled for doing something they loved, probably more than anything in their lives.

Kerr, for her part, never understood the inclination to criminalize the kids. Skateboarding, she said, “kept kids out of trouble. They made friends, they stayed healthy. They were out in Love Park doing something rather innocent, I thought.”

The climate changed, she said, when John Street became mayor. In him, the skateboard community found a receptive audience. And at the same time, members of City Council—notably Jannie Blackwell—took up the cause.

After Patrick’s death, Kerr threw her lot in with other skateboard advocates to bring safe, hassle-free parks to the city and surrounding areas. Franklin’s Paine might be the most ambitious of all the projects, and Kerr expects it to become known nationwide as an outstanding example of how to blend skateboarding into an urban environment.

Of course, it’s impossible to forget the inspiration behind her support for the cause. Patrick is memorialized with a plaque on a wall overlooking the park. But his spirit is there in yet another way. The contractors who were pouring concrete for the job asked the couple if they had anything of Patrick’s to blend into the mix.

They chose a lock of Patrick’s hair, and one of his guitar picks.

“That’s what we did,” she said, clearly moved. “Some people might think that’s a strange gesture, but to us, we wanted him here.”

People

Thanks For Coming Out!

Karen Boyce McCollum singing "Peggy Gordon."

Karen Boyce McCollum singing “Peggy Gordon.”

It was literally raining buckets on Friday night, June 7, but that didn’t stop dozens from attending the launch party of our new CD, Ceili Drive: The Music of Irish Philadelphia, at the Irish Center. Fortunately, many of them were the musicians whose talents we captured, like a snapshot of Philly Irish musical history, on the CD, so there was beautiful music–and delicious food provided by Tullamore Crew–all night.

You can hear some snippets of the CD at the bottom of the page. If you like what you hear, you can buy it at our shopify website.

News, People

Rest in Peace, Mary O’Kane

Mary O'Kane

Mary O’Kane

A well-loved member of Philadelphia’s Irish community has passed away. Radio personality Mary O’Kane died Thursday night in hospice, attended by daughters Bonnie Kelly and Teri McQuaid.

Local radio host Marianne MacDonald remembered Mary O’Kane as “a great friend.” MacDonald will be doing a tribute show in her usual noon slot on WTMR 800 AM. Tune in to “Come West Along the Road,” and share your memories.

A funeral Mass will be held at Sacred Heart Church, in Manoa, on June 5 at 10:30 am. Burial at Holy Cross Cemetery. Reception to follow at Sacred Heart Parish Hall. All are welcome.

We’ll have more to share in days to come.