News, People

Lost and Found

Pat Montgomery, left, with Michael Bradley, who found Joe Montgomery's blackthorn stick.

Pat Montgomery, left, with Michael Bradley, who found Joe Montgomery’s blackthorn stick.

Joe Montgomery’s future father-in-law, Patrick Joseph Collis, came over from Sligo to America in 1911 carrying one of his prized possessions, a blackthorn walking stick, what the Irish call a shillelagh.

It was, like all blackthorn sticks, thick and knotty with a large knob at the top. Traditionally, the knob served as a handle, or, when the situation called for it, as a cudgel to use against an opponent. Montgomery, who died in December 2014 at the age of 95, never used it that way. He was always a gentleman, those who knew him say. He saw it as a link to his Irish heritage, and he cherished it.

Collis had given the stick to Montgomery, who had married his daughter, Mary, shortly after Montgomery returned from the service in World War II, where he was in the US Army Air Corps. He carried it with him everywhere. In his later years, it provided added dash to the appearance of the former truck driver, member of Teamsters Local 500, and Ancient Order of Hibernians president, known for his dapper suits and rakishly tilted top hat.

But a few years ago, Montgomery, who served for 60 years on the board of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Association, slipped and fell on the muddy ground near the reviewing stand at the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade which he attended faithfully every year. An ambulance took him to Hahnemann Hospital where he was treated and released—he made a grand entrance at the post-parade party none the worse for wear—but somehow, in the confusion, he got separated from the stick.

Montgomery was heartbroken. And desperate. He contacted parade director, Michael Bradley. “He must have called me 10 times and I called all the board members, the people at CBS3 who televise the parade, the caterers and no one found it,” Bradley said recently. “He kept calling over and over and my heart was just breaking for him.”

This year, Montgomery was named to the St. Patrick’s Ring of Honor posthumously. The members of the Joseph F. Montgomery AOH Div. 65—Michael Bradley’s division—honored their fallen president by tipping their caps at the reviewing stand. Bradley, who was then in full parade directors’ mode when they made their touching gesture, had a little secret. Though Joe Montgomery wasn’t going to march in another parade, his blackthorn stick might.

“It was the strangest thing,” said Bradley, sitting across the table from Montgomery’s son, Patrick, last weekend at the Irish Center. “I was doing a radio interview with Michael Concannon [host of WVCH 740AM’s Irish Hour, which is aired every Saturday] and, I don’t know why, I started talking about Joe Montgomery’s lost stick when Mike, who has been a parade judge for years, said, ‘Hey, wait a minute, is one of these it?”

Concannon showed him two sticks, one, dark, gnarled and split, the spitting image of Joe Montgomery’s shillelagh. “I knew as soon as I saw it that it was Joe’s. Mike said , ‘One year, someone found it and handed it to me.’ I couldn’t find out who it belonged to so I just kept it.’

“After he lost it, I talked to everyone. . .but I never thought to ask one of the judges,” Bradley said.

So on Sunday, Bradley put the long lost blackthorn stick in Pat Montgomery’s hands. “When Michael called me I felt fantastic,” said Pat Montgomery. “I sure wish he was still alive to see it, but at least it’s back.”

And it may be marching in the parade next year. “At the parade, I wore the pants from the suit he always wore, and my youngest son, Brian, wore his hat,” said Montgomery. “Now everything’s together.”

See photos below for a closer look at the stick and Joe Montgomery at past parades.

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Arts, Music

Strumming a New Tune

Zakir Hussain (photo by Jim McGuire)

Zakir Hussain (photo by Jim McGuire)

Back in December, premier Irish guitarist Tony Byrne got an unusual email. Would he be interested in going on tour with Indian tabla player Zakir Hussain and his troupe of Indian and Celtic musicians?

“Are you free, are you interested?” Byrne recalls. The answer was easy. “Being on a stage like that, I couldn’t say no.”

Speaking from his hotel room outside Washington, D.C., on the fourth night of the tour, Byrne has absolutely no regrets about playing in Hussain’s show “Pulse of the World: Celtic Connections.” He joins some of the world’s best Indian and Celtic musicians: Rakesh Chaurasia, bamboo flute; Fraser Fifield, flute and pipes; Jean-Michel Veillon, flute; Ganesh Rajagopalan, violin; Charlie McKerron, fiddle; Patsy Reid, fiddle; John Joe Kelly, bodhran—and Hussain himself, widely acknowledged as the master of the Indian tabla drums, one of the most devilishly complex percussion instruments on the planet.

Celtic Connections explores the surprising ties between the rhythms and melodies of two distinctly different genres of world music. Those connections can be close indeed.

“A lot of these styles of music are linked, especially through percussion instruments, and a lot of the wind instruments as well,” says Byrne.

Still, the instruments, the styles of playing them and the musicians themselves are different enough that the contrasts are also pretty clear—and if some of it sounds like experimentation, it’s because it often is, says Byrne.

“The Indian musicians who are playing with us will pick up on a motif in a small line we play, and then they can come back to you with a little four-note phrase. It’s like they’re echoing back to you, and call and answer. You have a match, and a mismatch at the same time.

“They can dip in and out. That’s really fun when that happens. The more concerts we do, the more that that happens. We have a blueprint, but we can all deviate from that. It’s great to see that developing. It’s almost like jam sessions. That’s really exciting.”
Earlier in his musical career, Byrne was a rock drummer, and when he learned to play guitar, he incorporated a lot of percussion into his right-hand technique. That’s good when it comes to rhythm, but Byrne has to hang in there with the melody as well, which can be complex.

“I’ll always lock into John Joe and Zakir’s playing but I also have to lock into the chords,” Byrne says. “You try and cover all the bases.”

Even though Byrne’s style of play is powerfully percussive, that’s no walk in the park, either. John Joe Kelly is most directly in Byrne’s sightline, he says, “so we naturally, almost instinctively think together what to do.”

Zakkir is a bit more challenging. “Zakkir can play in any time signature. The guy has never missed a beat in his life. Its mesmerizing to watch him do it.”

If you’re a musician, though, that kind of challenge is what you live for.

“You’re always striving and trying to making it better,” Byrne says. “You become more focused and you become really alert. It is a challenge but it’s an exciting challenge as well.”

Pulse of the World: Celtic Connections will roll into Philly on March 27 for a concert at Painted Bride Art Center, 230 Vine Street. The show starts at 7. Tickets and info here.

 

Food & Drink, News, People

The Brehons Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day at Tir na nOg

Patrick Murphy with Siobhan Sean Stevens

How do the judges, lawyers, law students (and their friends!) of Irish descent rejoice in the St. Patrick’s Day season in Philly? They gather their members of The Brehon Law Society together, get John Byrne & Maura Dwyer of The John Byrne Band to play some music and they meet at Tir na nOG in the city on March 11th. With a great turnout, and the food & drink superb, the craic was mighty.

And, with guests like Patrick Murphy, the former Pennsylvania Congressman and current host of MSNBC’s monthly program “Taking the Hill” (which is airing this Sunday, March 22, at 1PM Eastern Time), in attendance, you can always count on The Brehons to throw an exceptional shindig!

Check out our photos from the evening, and see who else showed up for the party.

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How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Tony Kenny brings his show from Dublin to Upper Darby this weekend.

Tony Kenny brings his show from Dublin to Upper Darby this weekend.

The craic never stops in Irish Philadelphia. Sometimes it slows down, but not this week.

Popular Irish singer (and veteran of Jury’s Cabaret in Dublin for more than 20 years) Tony Kenny brings his “Irish Celebration” to the Upper Darby Performing Arts Center on Saturday. With Kenny are Richie Hayes, a singer and comedian who was runner up on Ireland’s The Voice; singer Bernadette Ruddy; the Dublin City Dancers, and the Trinity Dublin Band. Doesn’t get much more authentic than that.

Also on Saturday, Linda Harris Sittig will appear at the Doylestown Bookshop in Doylestown where she’ll speak about and sign her book, “Cut from Strong Cloth,” about one of the Irish mills in Philadelphia’s Kensington section and the woman who brought it fame.

Derek Warfield and the Young Wolfetones, fresh from their White House appearance on St. Patrick’s Day, will be on stage at The Plough and the Stars on Chestnut Street in Philadelphia.

The interactive play, Lafferty’s Wake, continues at Society Hill Playhouse this week.

Ladies, if you play or would like to learn to play Gaelic football, there are Ladies Gaelic Football open play days on two Sundays, March 22 and March 29, at Edgely Field in Fairmount Park (off Belmont Avenue) sponsored by the Notre Dame Ladies Gaelic Football Club, currently the only ladies team in Philadelphia. They run from noon to 2 PM.

Also on Sunday, the Passion for Peace Award will be given to Irish mental health nurse Patricia Campbell at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Chestnut Hill. Tyrone native Campbell has worked as a community psychiatric nurse in Belfast. She has seen firsthand the trauma of war, first in her own country, then in Palestine. She is president of the Independent Workers Union. Dublin-born and now Philadelphia-based fiddler Paraic Keane will perform at the event, which starts at 2 PM.

Keane also anchors the sessions at Sligo Pub in Media, where, he reports, his uncle, famed button box player James Keane, will make an appearance on Monday night.

If you’re anywhere near Sewell, NJ, Tuesday, they’re having an Irish-themed “tea at 10” at the McGuinness Funeral Home (don’t let the location scare you) with a guest speaker who will talk about Irish lore.

This week you have two opportunities to hear a remarkable trad duo, Martin Hayes and Dennis Cahill, in the area. The duo, who with Iarla O’ Lionaired, Caoimhin O’ Raghallaigh, and Thomas Bartlett “Doveman” form the new group, The Gloaming, just won the Irish Meteor Choice Music Prize for their self-titled recording which comes with a 10,000 euro cash award. Hayes and Cahill will be at the Sellersville theatre on Tuesday night, then at the World Café Live at the Queen in Wilmington on Wednesday.

The Irish conversation group at Villanova resumes chatting on Thursday.

Find out more by checking our calendar.

Dance, Music, News

Philly’s First-Ever Sober St. Patrick’s Day

Family-friendly fun

Family-friendly fun

It seemed like four-time All-Ireland fiddle champion Dylan Foley and his bandmates hadn’t gotten through more than a few lines of a jig set when people had taken to the dance floor. When the tunes were over, he looked out to the audience in the auditorium at WHYY, gathered for the first-ever Sober St. Patrick’s Day party, and marveled—albeit in a cheeky way.

“We’ve been trying to get people to dance to our music for years. Who knew all we had to do was take away the alcohol.”

Foley’s quip drew laughs, but in a way he was right. A St. Patrick’s Day bash without booze is inexplicably freeing. Well over a hundred people crowded into the auditorium on Sunday following the Philadelphia parade—so many of them, in fact, that organizers had to scramble to find more chairs. Everybody seemed relaxed, and maybe it was because they could just be themselves. They didn’t need booze to have fun. In fact, it was precisely because no alcohol was served that many party-goers in recovery really could relax at a St. Patrick’s Day party for the first time in years. That’s if they’d ever gone at all.

The place was filled with families, too, and that’s not something you’re likely to see during a St. Patrick’s Day pub-crawl, either. Hot dogs moved, well, like hotcakes, and everybody noshed on cookies, chips, soda bread, cheese, and other party foods. Some of the best musicians you could find anywhere played for hours. Dancers, still fresh from the parade—they’re kids, so they don’t tire the way we do—pranced about the floor as party-goers clapped. The only thing that was missing was the one thing that precisely nobody missed at all.

“The appeal is great music, great dancing, and a place to go where you don’t have to worry about drinking,” said Katherine Ball-Weir, who, with partner Frank Daly, pulled off the spectacularly successful event.

Hosting a first-ever event of any kind can be a little nerve-wracking. You can never predict how it’s going to over. “Nobody knew what to expect,” said Ball-Weir.

At first ticket sales were a bit slow. That changed. “Every time somebody bought a ticket, I got a notice on my phone,” said Daly. His phone didn’t buzz much at first. But “in the last four to five days, ticket sales picked up,” says Daly, “which is typical.”

And some people decided to go really late in the game.

“Somebody bought seven tickets at 4:42,” Ball-Weir laughed. “The party started at 4.”

Now that they’ve proved the concept, Daly said, “I think it’ll grow every year, absolutely.”

No one could have been more thrilled than William Spencer Reilly, founder and producer of Sober St. Patrick’s Day, a concept now taking hold in many cities, including New York, Dublin, Belfast, Richmond, Va., Casper, Wyoming, and Avon Lake, Ohio.

“Both of these guys did a terrific job. I’m just thrilled,” said Reilly. “More than any other city, we wanted it here because of its history. You couldn’t have asked for a better team to do this. I have no doubt it’s going to grow in Philly.”

The party is also likely to do things for the local branch of Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann, which sponsored the event, Reilly said. (CCE is the world’s largest organization dedicated to the preservation and promotion of traditional Irish music. Many people who previously haven’t been exposed to the tradition could become dedicated followers as a result.

Musicians like the party, too, but for another reason.

“Brian Conway (one of the top fiddlers in the world) put it best,” Reilly said. “He described it as ‘an oasis because people actually listen to me.’”

We have pictures from the party. Check them out.

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News, People

How We Spent St. Patrick’s Day

Karen Boyce McCollum and her uncle Kevin McGillian performing at The Plough and Stars.

Karen Boyce McCollum and her uncle Kevin McGillian performing at The Plough and Stars.

We had breakfast at the Plough and the Stars, watched Irish dancers and a flag-raising ceremony at the Irish Memorial, went to the supermarket for potatoes–George’s Shop ‘N Bag in Dresher, because we heard they had live Irish music in the bakery and they did–and had lunch with the  200 seniors who filled the ballroom at the Irish Center for ham and cabbage, shepherd’s pie, and a couple of different kinds of spuds and dessert, a joint production of the Irish Center, the Irish Immigration Center, and 11 stalwart volunteers.

Then, we took naps. It’s a grueling couple of weeks covering everything going on in Philly’s vibrant Irish community, but undeniable craic–Irish for fun.

We took our cameras with us, so you can see where we were on Tuesday.

What did you do?

 

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News, People

Philly St. Patrick’s Day Parade Number 245-Check!

Philly Parade Grand Marshal Kathy McGee Burns.

Philly Parade Grand Marshal Kathy McGee Burns.

There were more than 200 groups marching, about half a dozen Pope Francis imitators (and one Elvis), and in some places the crowds were five- and six-people deep, despite the bitter cold temps and wind that swept up the Parkway like an icy punch. That’s the definition of success for the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade which went off without a hitch on Sunday.

Many of the Saturday parades were called or postponed, so along with Philly Grand Marshal Kathy McGee Burns, who was president of the parade association for two years, there were two other grand marshals in the parade–Mickey McBride from the Conshohocken parade (postponed till March 28), who marched with McGee Burns at her invitation, and William McCusker, GM of the cancelled Springfield Township, Delco, parade, who marched with Cardinal O’Hara High School, where he served as president for 13 years. Parade Director Michael Bradley contacted all the organizers of the parades that were weather casualties and invited them to join in Philly’s celebration.

At one point he delighted the crowds at the reviewing stand by donning a curly Irish dancer wig for a time as he coordinated between the parade participants and the CW-Philly and CBS3 crew filming the event. He later explained that he did it to cheer up McDade-Cara dance school owners Sheila McGrory Sweeney and Maureen Heather Lisowski, whose father, John McGrory, died recently.

We were there from beginning to end with four photographers. Click on the links below to view our photos.

Parade Photo Essay 1. 

Parade Photo Essay 2.

Parade Photo Essay 3.

Parade Photo Essay 4.

 

News, People

Michael Bradley Honored by Friendly Sons of St. Patrick

Michael and Linda Bradley

Michael and Linda Bradley

At its 244th annual St. Patrick’s Day Gala at the Union League in Philadelphia, Friendly Sons of St. Patrick President Bernard Buckley gave the president’s award to Michael Bradley in honor of his years of service to the Irish community.

For the past 13 years, Bradley, a former president of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade Association, has been director of the annual St. Patrick’s Day parade which marches down the Benjamin Franklin Parkway the Sunday before the holiday rain or shine. Or as Bradley always puts it, “dry or liquid sunshine.”

In the past two years, along with serving on the boards at Cardinal O’Hara High School, which his two sons, Colin and Mickey attended, and Penn State where he earned a degree in business and marketing, he has been chairman of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia’s Advisory Council for Elementary Education in Delaware County. The council is working on a strategic plan to keep the 23 archdiocesan grade schools still open in the county alive and well.

Bradley, accompanied to the gala by his wife, Linda, appeared surprised when Buckley called his name and was visibly emotional as he accepted the award.

Photos from the event are below.

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