How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

She's having a good time at The Irish Center. Come on Sunday!

She’s having a good time at The Irish Center. Come on Sunday!

There are two really big events this week–open house at The Irish Center in Philadelphia and the Celtic Classic, three days of music, highland games, and haggis eating in Bethlehem.

There won’t be any haggis at the Irish Center on Sunday, but there will be authentic Irish edibles from the Irish Coffee Shop in Upper Darby (try the sausage rolls—they’re amazing!), dancers from five different Irish step dancing schools who will not only perform but will show you how to do a few steps, and music all day featuring local talent including two-fifths of Blackthorn (John and Michael Boyce) and their singing sister, Karen Boyce McCollum; sean nos singer Terry Kane; McDermott’s Handy, a duo made up of Dennis Gormley and Kathy DeAngelo, and some of the talented young musicians from The Next Generation musical group.

Festivities start in the morning at 10 with a full Irish breakfast. Vince Gallagher will be broadcasting both his radio show and Marianne MacDonald’s show (she’s in Ireland) starting at 11. There’s also a scone-baking contest (just whip up your best bread and bring it by about 2 PM) and you may be able to pick up some baking tips from the authentic Irish bakers who are entering their scone. I got some yesterday from Jimmy Meehan of County Donegal, but since Irish Philadelphia is sponsoring the competition, I’m not entering. But Jimmy is!

Face painter and balloon artist Sue Foo will be there to turn your little animals into, well, animals. There are also crafts projects for the kids, and a poster contest on “Why I Love Being Irish.” Kids can bring a poster they already made, or make one there.

There are also dozens of raffle baskets, many of them very kid-centric. Winners of the Golden Raffle—special items such as a bodhran made by Irish political prisoners, a pendant made from a 1769 Irish coin, and a Celtic Cross painted on glass—will be picked around 5:30 PM.

In Bethlehem this weekend, you can hear the Hooligans, Jamison, Searson, Burning Bridget Cleary, Cassie and Maggie MacDonald, the John Whelan Band, the Kilmaine Saints, Timlin and Kane, and many more at Celtic Fest in Bethlehem. That’s when you’re not watching big burly men toss telephone poles or border collies herding sheep or trying haggis for the first time (tastes like liver).

On Saturday, Blackthorn is headlining the Norwood Community Day and Irish Festival in Norwood. Festivities start at 10 AM and run till 6 PM.

On Sunday, the Theresa Flanagan Band will be playing at McGillicuddy’s in Upper Darby and there’s a ballad session at Fergies in Philadelphia with John Byrne.

On Monday, the first in a series of Irish language classes (Donegal dialect) starts in the Falvey Library at Villanova. These classes are free.

On Tuesday, catch Dublin-born Imelda May (now of Northern Liberties) and her band, the Bellfuries, at Union Transfer in Philadelphia. Her first CD, “Love Tattoo,” has gone triple platinum in Ireland.

On Thursday, the High Kings will be performing at the Sellersville Theater.

On Friday, the Gloucester County AOH will be holding a fundraiser in memory of Damian Gallagher that provides scholarships to students at Gloucester County Catholic High School. Damien Gallagher, a Donegal native, was a student at the high school who died at the age of 23.

Next Saturday, plan to make a trip up to Limerick for the grand opening of the new Gaelic Athletic Association field. You can see Gaelic football, hurling, dancers from McDade Cara, with special guests that include the Deputy Consul General of Ireland, Anne McGillicuddy and Gareth Fitzsimons, chair of the national GAA board in the US. This field has been many years in the making, the result of lots of hard work and fundraising by the Philadelphia GAA. Go cheer them on!

Also on Saturday, October 4, two top Irish trad musicians Matt Cranitch and Jackie Daley will be performing at the Irish Center. This is a Philadelphia Ceili Group production.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly this Week

You might run into these guys from Irish Thunder in Wildwood.

You might run into these guys from Irish Thunder in Wildwood.

Oh, do we have a weekend for you.

First of all, we’re still raising funds to help keep the Philadelphia Irish Center doors open. You can help (and have a lot of fun doing it) by trying your hand at Quizzo tonight at the Irish Center, starting at 7:30. $10 a person, teams of six. Games, prizes and tunes. We’ve mentioned it before (and it’s been on our calendar since forever), so consider this last call.

(Hey, and if you can’t be there, you can still help with a donation. Visit our fund-raising site: http://www.gofundme.com/save-the-irish-center.

Next up, we know you love the shore, and frankly, it’s probably not going to be 90 degrees and humid again for a long while, but on the other hand, we don’t have four feet of snow on the ground yet, either.

My point: Get to the shore while the getting is good. And here’s where you should go this weekend, specifically: North Wildwood. It’s the weekend of one of the biggest honkin’ Irish festivals on the East Coast, if not anywhere.

The North Wildwood Festival actually started yesterday, but it really begins to hit its stride tonight, and on into the weekend.

You have a pretty nice weekend for it, too. Mid- to high-70s Saturday and Sunday, partly sunny.

If you’ve never been, steel yourself. The North Wildwood Irish Festival is an endurance test. How early than you get up? How late can you stay up? Because there is always something going on along Olde New Jersey Avenue, with vendors from 8 a.m. to 7p.m., and that includes some really incredible food. (We’re a sucker for the fresh-made, right-on-the-spot curly fries.)

There’s music everywhere along the avenue, much of it free, including bands like the Birmingham 6, Ballina, the Broken Shillelaghs, singer Timmy Kelly (ask him to sing “McNamara’s Band” … it’s a crowd pleaser), and our own 12-year-old fiddle phenom Haley Richardson.

There’s no dearth of pubs in North Wildwood an thereabouts, and a lot of them have non-stop music. Among the best known: Blackthorn, at La Costa Lounge on 4000 Landis Avenue in nearby Sea Isle. Talk about your crowd-pleasers.

Saturday morning, there’s a 5K starting at 8 a.m. Registration is between 1st and 2nd on Olde New Jersey Avenue.

If you don’t want to exert yourself, watch the Brian Riley Pipe Band Exhibition starting at 10 a.m. at 8th and Central.

BIG parade Sunday, starting at 12:30 at 20th and Surf, with the bands making their way up to Spruce and Olde New Jersey Avenue.

Details here:
http://www.cmcaoh.com/pdf/iff/2014/daily_events.pdf

The festivals don’t end there. One of the biggest highland games and festivals on the Coast—the Celtic Classic—starts September 26 in Bethlehem. You owe it to yourself to go. It really is one of the best.

http://www.celticfest.org

Enough with the festivals, already.

If you’re a fan of Gaelic Athletics—and you really should be—you can catch the live televised Donegal vs. Kerry All-Ireland Finals at the Irish Center Sunday morning, starting at 8:15. Pretty safe bet there will be a few folks from Donegal on hand. As in, dozens.

A quick look ahead to next Saturday: It’s the Norwood Community Day and Irish Festival with Blackthorn. Norwood Borough Lower Park. Music from 10 to 8:30, with Blackthorn closing out the day.

Please check our fabulous calendar every waking hour so you don’t miss anything!

Music

More Festival Videos Than You Can Shake a Fiddle At

FullSet members Eamonn Moloney on bodhran, with Michael Harrison on fiddle

FullSet members Eamonn Moloney on bodhran, with Michael Harrison on fiddle

Lori Lander Murphy was a busy little videographer at the 40th Annual Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival this past weekend.

She put together a highlights reel of the great Saturday night finale concert, featuring Sean Keane and the headliners, FullSet. We don’t know how she found time to edit them all, but we’re grateful that she did. We think you’ll be grateful, too. Toward the end, there’s also a nice little clip of the Philadelphia Ceili Band, which played earlier in the day.

Enjoy.

 

 

Or click on:

http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLMTKE-tr3c_KaTZfIcMQ2rNhjhoG1i7HU

News

Gwyneth and Rhys MacArthur’s Most Excellent Saturday Adventure

 

Gwyneth's favorite picture

Gwyneth’s favorite picture

 

We put Gwyneth and Rhys MacArthur to work on Saturday wandering the rooms and halls of the Philadelphia Irish Center, doing their best to document everything they saw at the 2014 Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival.

Tough job, we know.

They spent the day shooting photos of face-painted kiddies, talented young bodhran and flute players and singers, sitting in while musicians of all ages banged out jigs and reels, taking in the marvelous dance steps of the Cummins School dancers, and munching on genuine Irish chow.

And then, at the very end of a long, wearying day, a grand finale concert featuring some of the finest Irish musicians on the planet, the singer Sean Keane and a hot young band, FullSet.

You’re wondering where to sign up.

Alas, too late, the festival is over, but Gwyn and Rhys are happy to share their memories.

[flickr_set id=”72157647758592912″]

Music, People

Sean Keane: Honoring the Past and Forging a New Future

Sean Keane Performing at the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival

 

“I don’t really know much about singing. I don’t know an awful lot about songs. I’ve just been at it all my life.”

While the third part of that statement is undeniably true, anyone who heard Sean Keane sing at the Philadelphia Ceili Group’s 40th Annual Festival, or attended his rarely given singing workshop at the Irish Center this past Saturday, would be quick to argue the first two points.

The Keane Family of Caherlistrane, County Galway, has long been recognized and revered for not only their own musical talents, but for their role in preserving the songs and tunes of Ireland when the old ways were changing, when “the people wanted to shed that era of the darkness…and the music was being thrown out with a lot of the antique furniture and the thatched houses, and it wasn’t acceptable in a lot of the pubs.”

Sean, the youngest of the seven siblings in his generation, became aware at a very young age that he was part of a family steeped in music.

“By the time I was born, and by the time I was old enough to become aware of my surroundings, my grandmother’s house was well established as a place where musicians and singers would have been coming for a long, long time to play songs and tunes.  I grew up in a house of music. When I was maybe six years of age, I became aware of being in a family that had singing going on. I remember it as vividly as if it happened this morning. It was a summer’s day, and I was running through my grandparents’ house and there was an old man—well, he seemed old to me because I was so young—and he was sitting with my grandmother. And she was writing out a song. She collected songs from all sorts of people. A lot of different people would come to visit the house and and she would exchange songs and tunes with them. As a result of it, when she passed away, or even before she died, if we were looking for a song, she had a big old brown leather suitcase and it was just full of handwritten songs. It was a great source of material for us.”

But on that particular summer’s day, Sean’s grandmother, Mary Costellow Keane, was arguing with the man over the words of the song he was dictating to her. It stopped Sean in his tracks, and he listened as his grandmother said, “I’m not writing that down. It’s not right.” And the singer pushed back, “Will you write it down, woman, I’m telling you ’tis right.” But Mary Keane crumpled up the paper she’d been writing on, and threw it into the fire. And Sean thought, “Wow, that’s that.” But what stuck with him were the lines they were arguing about. “I don’t know why those lines would have any kind of influence on a six year old, but it was ‘I had seven links upon my chain, For every link a year, Before I can return again, To the arms of my dear.’ Just those lines, I never forgot them.”

That song was “Erin’s Lovely Home,” and Sean ended up recording it on his first album.

It was right after he became aware of the kind of singing that surrounded him that he entered his first Fleadh Cheoil being held in the nearby town of Tuam. The song he chose was “The May Mountain Dew” and he won. He continued on competing and winning, and it took him to Dublin. And then he was hooked: “Travel was the the one thing that attracted me to the competitions because I’d get to different towns and so on and that was great. The excitement of actually going to a new town—that would give me the boost to to sing and to learn new songs—and to get better and to hone it. I thought if singing a traditional song could bring me to Dublin, I’m going to learn them all.”

He went on to win thirteen consecutive All-Irelands before the draw of being a teenager caught up with him, and though he stopped competing, he never stopped singing, or absorbing the music that enveloped him.

His aunts, Sarah and Rita Keane, “they had something unique going on as well. When they used to sing together, it was in unison—not using harmonies, but singing along in unison. And that was a bit unusual at the time, and I suppose it kind of is unusual because traditional songs are so personal and your ornamentation and the way you would sing it, and the phrasing, is a very personal thing. But they just knew the way each other would sing the song…It set them apart. They generally sang together and that’s why they became Rita and Sarah—you never hear one mentioned without the other. But Mary, their other sister, used to sing with them as well. So there were three of them singing the one song in unison and it sounded like one voice all the time.”

Sean also played with his family’s Ceili Band, Keane’s Ceili Band. He started out playing the flute and whistle during summer holidays, sitting behind the others learning tunes and just playing away. His father sang and played the accordion and drums. Rita played the accordion. Sarah played the fiddle.  One uncle also played the accordion and another played flute, and Mary sang. “They had different roles in the band, but they all sang and they all played. They would have been brought round to any weddings, christenings, funerals—any kind of occasion that was in the area. They were kind of the musicians of the area. They would always play, and there was never any money exchanged hands. It was never about that. It was my grandmother’s motto that you don’t get paid for a God given gift. It’s your gift and you’re meant to share it and you don’t charge for that. Because we’d be at this whether we got paid or not—that was the attitude I was given, and that’s the attitude I’ve kind of maintained.”

At 17, like many of his generation, Sean left Ireland for London, but not for singing. “I went over there working. In Ireland at that time, we all had to emigrate. The way I put it, there weren’t enough stones on the road to kick for us all. I was an engineer, and did a load of other things in my life as well. I’ve always been working with my hands. And I enjoy that as well. I’ve done a bit of everything—engineering, steel fabrication, building houses, digging holes in London, woodworking. I love woodworking and I still have my workshop at home where I do little bits for myself and little bits for friends.”

After a few years, he returned home, but soon after began touring professionally with the London based band, called She Gui, which in English is Fairy Wind. “A fairy wind,” Sean explained, “is on a summer’s day, you see little leaves or bits of particles of dust rising in the air like a little tornado. On a summer’s day in Ireland, you’ll see it in the hay fields, and you’ll see little wisps gathering in one place like a tiny twister. And they call that a fairy wind.” The band toured a lot in Europe, in England, and then in Ireland. But after about two years, most of the band was ready to move on, and Sean later joined up with the band Reel Union along with his sister Dolores, her then-husband John Faulkner, Mairtin O’Connor and Eamonn Curran.

He stopped playing music professionally when he got married. “We had a child, and a new home and a mortgage, and all the rest of it. So I was just out working. It was my wife, Virginia, who encouraged me to sing. She said, ‘You need to record an album and do this because it’s really what you should be doing.’ And I said ‘Well, I will, if you manage me.’ And she was a schoolteacher, and said, ‘Well, I don’t know anything about music and the management.’  And I said, ‘Well, I’ll teach you the little bits I know.’ So we went from there. She was my manager for 22 years. She passed away four years ago.”

“It was a very short time after Virginia passed away and the phone was ringing with managers saying ‘Oh, we’ll look after your work, and oh, we’ll do this and we’ll do that.’ But I didn’t want to do that. So I stopped for a few years.”

The break, however, is over. Sean got a new manager last year, and this past December he recorded a new album called “Never Alone.” It’s a 45 track, 3-pack CD of some of the songs he’s recorded over the years, as well as six new songs.

“I went back at it last year. Johnny B. Broderick wrote a song he wanted me to record, called ‘Paint Me a Picture of Ireland.’ And we did it for The Gathering that was last year, and released it. Johnny was the manager of a special needs center in Ireland, and that’s how I got to know him. I used to go in there and sing songs, and he’d give me a ring and say, ‘Sean, come in and do a few songs’ and I’d do that a few times a year. He’s also a poet and when he wrote ‘Paint Me a Picture of Ireland,’ I knew there was something to this song. And Johnny is now my manager. I asked him, “Johnny, would you be my manager?’ And he said, ‘Manager? I know nothing about managing music.’ And like with Virginia,  I said, ‘Well, I can guide you.’ So, he’s doing it now, and I love working with him.”

“This new CD is like the end of an era, and the beginning of an era. I decided to take a compilation of all the stuff we had up to that time, and then also on it are the new songs. I recorded the Beyonce song ‘Ave Maria’ and Dylan’s ‘Make You Feel My Love.’  They’re not traditional songs, but they’re just songs that I love to sing. I don’t care where they come from—what genre they are or anything else. I don’t like to analyze it too much, but it’s like the soul of the song. If you get into the soul of the song, and present it that way—and that’s where I receive it so I think that’s what people receive when they listen to it. You can have your words and your melodies and everything else, but it’s where it comes from when you’re singing that’s the important thing. It’s as simple as that.

“The title track, ‘Never Alone,’ is a track I got from a guy named Colm Kirwan. He lives down in Nashville now, and he’s the son of Dominic Kirwan who’s a well-known singer in Ireland. Colm is writing songs, but he sang that song, which is a Lady Antebellum song, one night in Nashville at a place we play called McNamara’s. It’s loosely based on the old Irish Blessing, ‘May the road rise up to meet you,’ and I thought, ‘God, there’s another song I want to sing.’

“I have my own recording studio, but now I record with my guitar player, Pat Coyne, and he has a studio called Mountain View Studios in the mountains of Connemara. And we just go back there and and we sit in and we record. When I go home from this tour, I’m recording a Christmas album—or maybe slightly, loosely based on Christmas. I’m hoping to have it out this year.

“So now I’m back at it again with as much enthusiasm as I’ve ever had for music, which is a great thing. I’m glad to have that back. It’s the most important thing. I suppose those few years have left me treating the love for what I do as even more precious than I ever did before. It’s just as my grandmother said, if you have a gift that you’ve been given, you cannot sit around with it—you have to go and use it. I think that applies for everybody, no matter what you do. So that’s what I’m doing. I’m just trying to keep up to the gift that I was given, bring it to wherever it’s going to go and enjoy every minute of it.”

And that is the legacy of the Keane family from Caherlistrane living on.

 

Follow Sean Keane on Facebook

Watch the video of The May Morning Dew

Watch the video of the title track from Sean’s new CD Never Alone

Watch the video of Sean singing Home

Watch the video of Paint Me a Picture of Ireland

 

 

Music, News

How Big Was the Saturday Night Festival Concert?

Sean Keane in concert ... and, no, he wasn't telling a fish story.

Sean Keane in concert … and, no, he wasn’t telling a fish story.

Sean Keane opened a night of incredible music at the Philadelphia Irish Center, and found a hugely enthusiastic audience, grateful to spend time with an old friend.

Then FullSet, an incredible band of multi-talented young people, hit the stage and blew the roof off the doors. It’s a pretty safe bet they made more than a few friends of their own, eager to see them again.

We have lots of photos from a great night or Irish tunes.

[flickr_set id=”72157647351104609″]

Dance, Music

Saturday Afternoon Fever

Grrrrrrrrrrr!

Grrrrrrrrrrr!

If you wanted to be Irish in Philadelphia, Saturday at the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival was a total immersion experience.

If you are a musician or just plain love Irish music, you could tune up your fiddle and sit in, or take workshops in Irish singing or bodhran playing. You could listen to the young musicians of the Converse Trio Plus One (named after the famous sneakers), the Jameson Sisters, the great Philadelphia Ceili Band, and more.

If you love Irish dance, you could dance until the soles of your shoes wore off at the enthusiastic prompting of John Shields. The Cummins School dancers were on their feet off and on throughout the day.

For the kids there was plenty to do. You could get your face painted—tiger faces were big—or lay your little mitts on a stretchy balloon sword, make St. Brigid’s cross (the adults were in on that, too), or just use the entire wide-open Irish Center as your personal running track.

We’re running out of energy just talking about it. Better to just show you. Here are the pictures.

[flickr_set id=”72157647754061961″]

News, Sports

Fight Night at the Festival

A Holy Family boxer, getting ready to rumble

A Holy Family boxer, getting ready to rumble

It was a packed house at the big tent set up behind the Canstatter Club in Northeast Philly. Outside the tent, it was unbearably hot. UNDER the tent, it was like that scene in “Bridge on the River Kwai,” where they lock Alec Guinness in a small dark iron box in the hot sun in the middle of a Burma jungle for days.

Amazingly, the heat didn’t seem to bother the Harrowgate fighters of Philadelphia—or the Holy Family boxers of Belfast who came across the cold dark Atlantic to face them for a long night of tightly scripted bouts. And they were the ones who were exerting themselves.

It was a raucous affair that seemed to draw a lot of spectators, old boxing hands who really knew what they were looking at, along with a lot of families who probably knew less, but thought it might be a nice night out.

Unless you were getting your body pounded in the ring, it really was a good night out.

See for yourself.

[flickr_set id=”72157647116438597″]