People

Grab Your Blankets! The Fleadh is Coming Back!

Fun and family friendly!

Fun and family friendly!

File this piece of advice from Frank Daly away to pull out any time you’re thinking of throwing a big music event: “Never rent a park.”

Not that Pennypack Park isn’t a great venue for an Irish music festival. Daly and partner C.J. Mills rolled out their first one there last year, the very successful Philadelphia Fleadh, in a niche of this rambling, 1300-acre green space in northeast Philadelphia. Best friends, partners in American Paddy’s Productions , and members of the band, Jamison, Daly and Mills are putting the finishing touches on their second festival—scheduled for Saturday, May 3—and Daly says it was an easier sell to the Fairmount Park Commission this year.

“They weren’t difficult to deal with last year, but they weren’t inviting,” says Daly. “Frankly, they heard Irish event and they thought debauchery, port-a-potties, people fighting.”

In other words, not exactly like folks letting out of Sunday Mass. “They were there last year watching, and I think they have a much different idea,” says Daly. In fact, it’s a little more like folks letting out of Sunday Mass, only with bands, beer, and bouncy castles.

“We had 2,700 people attend last year and they were a great group of people. It was very family friendly,” he says. And the Fairmount Park Commission was impressed. “They say me and CJ out there the next day at 5 AM picking up trash,” he laughs. “They saw we weren’t throwing a giant drunkfest there.”

This year, expect more of the same—along with Irish beer. “That was the only complaint we got,” says Daly. “We didn’t have Irish beer. Well this year there’s Guinness, Smithwicks, and Harp.”

And an appealing mix of both traditional and Celtic rock acts, including some of Philly’s finest: the Paul Moore Band, Jamison, the John Byrne Band, Buring Bridget Cleary, the Hooligans, Raymond and Mickey Coleman, the Birmingham Six, the Jameson Sisters, the Broken Shillelaghs, Killen-Clark, The Ladeens, and Seamus Kennedy. This year’s import are the Mahones, a punk rock Celtic band from Canada. Last year, it was the Young Dubliners.

Instead of a DJ tent, says Daly, this year’s festival will include an acoustic tent with music sessions and workshops for those who want to perfect their tunes and a ceili dance at 1 and 3 PM where instructors will show you the steps to the Gay Gordon and Siege of Ennis so you can join in the fun.

Festival Food and Maggie’s on the Waterfront will be feeding the crowds and there are 10 vendors selling everything from kilts to t-shirts. And this year there’s a bonus—an open feis (pronounced “fesh,” it’s an Irish step dance competition) hosted by Celtic Flame School of Irish Dance that’s also free. “You don’t have to buy a ticket to the festival to go to the feis,” Daly says.

Philadelphia Fleadh is one of three Irish-themed events American Paddy’s Productions mounts every year, including American Celtic Christmas during the holidays and Paddypalooza, a tented Celtic rock party around St. Patrick’s Day.

Next year, they’ll be adding a fourth—Sober St. Patrick’s Day, a family-friendly, alcohol-free program that got its start in New York and has been enormously successful (as in, sold-out) in New York, Casper, Wyoming, Richmond, Virginia and Belfast, Northern Ireland.

“It came about because of my friendship with Katherine Ball-Weir who is involved in the local branch of Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann [an Irish organization supporting Irish music and culture among Irish people]. We met when I was doing marketing for Kildare’s pubs and we worked on bringing big name Irish traditional musicians to West Chester University who would then play at the session in the pub.”

Ball-Weir, whose teenaged son, Alexander, is a fiddler and a member of The Ladeens, managed to secure the rights to the name from the New York organization and she, Daly, and Mills are planning the event for 2015, on Philadelphia parade day.

“We’re looking for a spot—and we’re definitely not renting a public park,” laughs Daly. “They told us when we rented the park they’ve only rented out Fairmount Park two times. One was for “Made in America,” and the other was the Philadelphia Fleadh. So me and Jay-Z,” he deadpans, “are almost exactly the same.”

You can order tickets for the Fleadh by clicking on the Fleadh ad on our pages, or by going to their website.

News

The Resurrection of Big Green

Big Green at home in its Delco firehouse.

Big Green at home in its Delco firehouse.

When the members of Firefighter John J. Redmond Ancient Order of Hibernians division marched past the reviewing stand in the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day parade, they were missing their most important publicity vehicle: a well-worn 1975 Seagrave pumper truck called “Big Green.”

“It didn’t make the parade because it was sidelined by some last-minute issues,” says the division’s publicity chairman Jeff Jackson. Among other issues, the power steering pump failed. If you’re going to maneuver a truck weighing several tons—a truck without water can tip the scales at 12, 13 or more—you better have power steering.

Big Green, stored away in an old firehouse in Lester, Delaware County, has been sidelined for a couple of years by a host of other problems, some of them mechanical and more than a few cosmetic. A T-shirt campaign last year helped the division raise enough money to replace some vital components, including a new starter, new batteries and new filters.

In hopes of getting the truck parade-ready, members of the division had hoped to continue working on it through the winter. But with the kind of winter we had, those hoped were dashed.

“We haven’t been able to do anything with the truck,” Jackson says. “It was a pretty harsh winter. We kept getting snow. In order to work on it properly, if it’s running, we need it to be outside.”

Adding insult to injury: “There was some damage to the roof of the firehouse because of the weather. Some debris fell on the truck. There was some cosmetic damage.”

And this, to a truck already in need of a facelift.

Now, the division is hoping for a bit of financial help to get the truck into running order. They plan to get it at a big beef and beer bash at their division hall at 415 North 5th Street in Philly on May 30. Headlining the event, entitled “The Resurrection of Big Green,” is Jamison, acclaimed as the best Irish rock band in America. Opening is a five-piece cover band called Rita’s Fog, featuring classic rock and R & B.

It might seem a little early to be plugging an event scheduled for the end of May, but the division is banking on a big turnout, and they’re hoping the truck benefit will start to gain traction—so to speak—right from the start.

The division has big plans for the old pumper, and a big bash seems like a good way to get there.

“We want to get it up and running, to make it roadworthy,” Jackson says. “Depending on how things go, hopefully we can complete our project, maybe put benches in the back and rig it out for parties.”

Jackson says the big party is attracting a lot of early interest. “We’ve got Jamison, and they’re a top-notch draw.”

So for now, Jackson says, the job is to get the word out: “by e-mail, Facebook, smoke signals—any way possible.”

Want to party for Big Green? Buy your tickets here.

People

Mother-Daughter Tea Leads Up to the Rose of Tralee Selection

2013 Philadelphia Rose, Brittany Killion, singing "Rose of Tralee."

2013 Philadelphia Rose, Brittany Killion, singing “Rose of Tralee.”

On April 11 at the Radnor Hotel, 27-year-old Congressional caseworker Brittany Killion will be giving up her crown as the Philadelphia Rose of Tralee. The Rose of Tralee is one of Ireland’s oldest festivals, celebrating Irish culture, heritage, and the beauty and talent of young women of Irish descent. Thousands flock to Kerry in August for the festival and even more watch it on television.

So last Saturday’s Rose of Tralee Mother-Daughter Tea in Radnor was bittersweet—like the song, “Rose of Tralee,” Killion of Glen Mills sang to the dozens of young women—the little Rosebuds and tween and teen Rose Petals and some of this year’s Rose candidates—who attended the event.

The Rose of Tralee Selection will be held at the hotel on Friday, April 11, starting at 7 PM, with CBS3’s consumer reporter Jim Donovan repeating his role as master of ceremonies. The judging panel will be chaired by David Brennan, GM of the Wayne Hotel. He will be joined by the 2007 Philadelphia Rose, Colleen Gallagher and the President of the Glenside GAA Club, Brendan Gallagher.

The Mary O’Connor Spirit Award, which honors Irish and Irish American women who have made contributions to the community, will be presented to Aisling Travers, a college student who has traveled to Honduras with Amigos de Jesus to work with children and who, while still a student at Great Valley High School, started a program called Kid to Kid which recruited more than 150 student volunteers to work in the Child Life Center at Nemours/Alfred I. Dupont Hospital for Children in Wilmington, DE.

Here are some photos from the Mother-Daughter Tea. You can also click on the slideshow at the top of the page.

You can win a $100 gift certificate by posting a photo of your favorite Irish eyes on Facebook or Twitter with the hashtag #2014IrishEyes.

People

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

A St. Baldrick's celebration--like this one with the Second Street Irish Society--involves serious hair loss--for a good cause.

A St. Baldrick’s celebration–like this one with the Second Street Irish Society–involves serious hair loss–for a good cause.

This Saturday morning, Archbishop Charles Chaput will celebrate the 17th annual cultural heritage Mass at the Cathedral Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul in Philadelphia. Members of the Irish community are invited to attend along with other ethnic groups served by the Philadelphia Archdiocese.

On Saturday afternoon, the Theresa Flanagan Band will perform at a fundraiser for St. Lucy School for the Blind at the Holy Innocents School Hall in Philadelphia.

The Shantys will be on stage at Molly Maguire’s in Lansdale on Saturday night.

Then on Sunday, the Broken Shillelaghs will be providing the music as the Collingswood Firefighters for a Cure will be having their heads shaved as part of the St. Baldrick’s Fundraiser for Pediatric Cancer at Scottish Rite Auditorium in Collingswood.

The Derry Brigade will be at the Anglesea Pub in North Wildwood, NJ on Friday, April 4, followed by the Shantys on Saturday.

Also on Saturday, April 5, spend an evening with Gerry Timlin. The popular singer and storyteller will be at Act II Playhouse in Ambler.

On April 6, view the documentary, “The Ballymurphy Massacre,” about a controversial case of 10 people by British soldiers in West Belfast in 1971, with a Q&A following with some of the victims who will be answering questions via Skype.

Look for more details on our calendar.

People

Welcome Home, Mick

Mick Moloney, Athena Tergis, and Billy McComiskey

Mick Moloney, Athena Tergis, and Billy McComiskey

How much do they still love Mick Moloney in Philadelphia? When the Limerick-born musician and folklorist, who sparked new interest in Irish culture in Philadelphia when he moved to the city in 1973, brought a few of his musically gifted friends to the Irish Center recently, it was standing-room only. And that’s after the concert was shifted from the small Fireside Room to the larger Barry Room to accommodate the overflow crowd.

Moloney studied and later taught at the University of Pennsylvania, where he earned his PhD in folklore and folklife studies. Though he currently teachers at New York University, he makes at least one trip to his first American home every year, to play in the annual fundraising concert for St. Malachy’s Church and School in North Philadelphia in the fall. Billed as “Mick Moloney and Friends,” the gig showcases some of the best traditional music talent in the world–from Billy McComiskey and Athena Tergis to Tommy Sands and Robbie O’Connell–with the added spice of local musicians like 12-year-old All-Ireland fiddle phenom Haley Richardson, Dublin-born fiddler Paraic Keane, and folk singer Dick Swain.

And his Irish Center appearance was like the St. Malachy’s concert, but without the stained glass and holy statues. He was joined by accordion player Billy McComiskey, a Brooklyn native. Athena Tergis, a fiddler from San Francisco, Michelle Mulcahy, a virtuoso harpist (All-Ireland in harp, accordion, concertina and fiddle) from Limerick, Dick Swain, who delighted the crowd with his rendition of “Off to Philadelphia in the Morning,” a tune set to a satirical poem by Rudyard Kipling, and Gerry Timlin, who sang “The Rose of Aranmore.”

Here are some photos from the evening and a video of Gerry Timlin’s performance, thanks to Rosaleen McGill of the Philadelphia Ceili Group, which sponsored the concert along with The Irish Center and www.irishphiladelphia.com. You can also click through the slideshow at the top of the page.

The Ceili Group is planning its 40th annual festival for this September and is running a crowd-sourcing campaign to bring hot new trad musicians Full Set to Philadelphia. You can contribute to the campaign, which closes on April 1, by clicking here.  There are some great incentives–including a stay in an Irish cottage–for donating.

 

Food & Drink, News

St. Patrick’s Day 2014 at Brittingham’s

Tom Webster and Richie Maggs from Down By the Glenside

Tom Webster and Richie Maggs from Down By the Glenside

One of the area’s best known and beloved Irish pubs underwent a facelift last year. We wanted to experience St. Patrick’s Day in the Lafayette Hill eatery’s light and airy new digs.

The day started with a great buffet. The hash was the best we’d ever tasted.

Things got off to a slow start, but business picked up pretty quickly–not long after local singer-raconteur Oliver McElhone started to sing rebel songs, and whatever else anybody wanted to hear, from a stage not far from one of Brittingham’s two bars.

And both bars were pretty busy when we left.

St. Patrick’s Day at Brittingham’s attracted a pretty diverse crowd, including two guys from a band called Down By the Glenside who had played there the night before, and two off-duty nurses who had just come off the night shift. “It’s our happy hour,” they said.

Early or late, it was a pretty happy hour for everybody.

We snagged a few photos. Check them out, up top.

And one video of McElhone himself, singing … of course … a rebel tune. Feel free to sing along. We did.

People

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

The reigning Philadelphia Rose of Tralee, Brittany Killion.

The reigning Philadelphia Rose of Tralee, Brittany Killion.

If you’re not tired of being Irish, there’s still plenty to do this week (though nothing to match last week’s revelry, and may we say as our Granny used to, “Thanks be to God!”)

This Saturday, there’s a mom and daughter tea at the Radnor Hotel that’s free to all the participants, from Rosebuds to Petals to Roses, in the upcoming Rose of Tralee pageant. Even if you can’t go, you can win a $100 gift card by posting a photo of your favorite Irish eyes (selfies are fine) to the Rose of Tralee Center’s Facebook page (https://m.facebook.com/PhiladelphiaRoseCentre) or tweet with the hashtag #2014irisheyes @phillyrose.

Also on Saturday, St. Anne’s Shamrock Fest, featuring the group Ceili Rain, will take place at the Lancaster Marriott at Penn Square. This is an annual fundraiser for the school.

First Highland Watch—bagpipes go rock ‘n roll—will be performing at Molly Maguire’s in Lansdale on Saturday to celebrate the release of their new CD.

On Sunday, the McDade Cara School of Irish Dance holds its annual “Step into Spring” Showcase at Archbishop Carroll High School where you can see some of the school’s world champion dancers (they recently competed in Scotland).

On Thursday, at Delaware’s Hagley Museum in Wilmington, you can learn about the lives of the Irish immigrants and their descendants who settled along the banks of the Brandywine Creek, many employed at the DuPont Company’s powder yards—a dangerous job involving explosives. Yet, these employees remained grateful and loyal to the DuPonts who helped them to emigrate, provided free or low-cost housing, interest-bearing savings accounts and widows’ pensions.

On Friday, Andy Maher and his band will be playing songs from the ‘70s and ‘80s (suitable for dancing) at The Irish Center in Philadelphia.

There are other, regular events on our calendar that might interest you. Give it a visit.

People

Bucks County Celebrates St. Patrick’s Day

Who could resist?

Who could resist?

Homemade floats, string bands, Irish step dancers, AOHers, dogs in green gear, babies in green gear. . .Bucks County’s annual St. Patrick’s Day Parade, held on a March 15 as warm as spring, was everything you’d want from a small town parade. Even more–they had the Shriner’s on motorcycles too!

Gwyneth MacArthur was there and took photos of the parade as it wound its way through Levittown. View her pictures here.