Browsing Tag

Chieftains

Music

A Conversation with the Chieftains’ Paddy Moloney

The Chieftains, the powerhouse group that reawakened an interest in traditional Irish music 57 years ago, is headed back to the Kimmel Center on March 11 for their Irish Goodbye tour. What that means exactly is perhaps deliberately left unexplained. Does it mean we’ll never hear from the Chieftains live again? Or is there a hidden meaning altogether?

We recently chatted with the Chieftains leader Paddy Moloney to find out more about that subject, plans for the show, and to look back on more than half a century’s worth of Chieftains music-making.

Here’s what he had to say.

Irish Philly: Well, let me just jump right in here and ask about your return visit to the Kimmel Center and Philadelphia.

Paddy: One of my favorite cities is Philadelphia, I just absolutely love it. It’s magic altogether, it’s a great place to go.

Irish Philly: Well, I do know. The Kimmel Center is an especially great place to play.

Paddy: Oh the Kimmel, well the Kimmel to me is like an egg. And the people are up at the top of that egg looking down at the top of you. And everything just evolves—it’s brilliant. Coming back, I just absolutely adore the place. And we’ve been going there many times and always loved it, always loved the Kimmel. There are great people there, too.

Irish Philly: Yes. Well I have to tell you something. Several years ago, I was a drummer in a bagpipe band, and my band accompanied you guys.

Paddy: Great stuff.

Irish Philly: That was a real thrill for us, let me tell you.

Paddy: Well, we’re going to reenact the same thing again this year. With the march, “The Battle of San Patricio” and “The Andro” at the end, the people dancing around and all that. We’ve also got a choir, one of your local choirs joining in to do the songs we did on The Long Journey Home—Shenandoah, and the song that Elvis Costello wrote the words for, I did the music. And that was the anthem from The Long Journey Home. So, we have that as part of the show that’s going on.

Continue Reading

Music

A Lifetime Achievement Award for the Chieftains

Paddy Moloney

Paddy Moloney

Fifty years. Count ‘em.

That’s how long the Chieftains have been banging out Irish traditional music—along with dozens of inventive musical collaborations, from the Rolling Stones to Tom Jones to Emmylou Harris.

The band was in Philadelphia for their annual St. Patrick’s Day pilgrimage to Philadelphia, and as luck would have it, the timing was perfect for a truly special event: the presentation of the first-ever lifetime achievement award to the Chieftains by the Irish National Concert Hall.

The event, held at the Union League, was hosted by the American Ireland Fund, a philanthropic network supporting worthy causes in Ireland and worldwide.

Simon Taylor, chief executive officer of the National Concert Hall, explained why the Chieftains—and Paddy Moloney in particular, who was a board member for a time—were chosen for this honor.

“It would be hard to think of anyone more deserving. We have a number of awards we give to young musicians. We thought it was about time we gave one to, I won’t say old musicians (laughs), but to musicians for their services to music. It’s something that hopefully over the years will become the must-have award for Irish musicians.”

For his part, Paddy Moloney had only a few words to say, but he and his bandmates found a marvelous way to express their gratitude.

“Thank you so much to the National Concert Hall,” Moloney said. I’ve been watching all the great work for you’ve been doing for Ireland, and please continue to do so. I won’t be sayin’ any more, though. I’m gonna grab me old pipes and whistle, get the lads out, and let’s have a bit of fun.”

And that’s just what they did for nearly an hour, delighting the audience and filling the hall with some of the best Irish traditional music on the planet.

We were there, and have the pictures to prove it.

Check them out.

Music, People

The Chieftains Deliver the Goods Again

It was a stripped-down version of the Chieftains playing in Verizon Hall for this year’s St. Patrick’s Day concert—they were missing fiddler Sean Keane, said to be averse to making long flights at this stage of his career. Canadian fiddler Jon Pilatzke stepped in to fill the breach and—with help from Nashville bluegrass fiddler Deanie Richardson, singer/guitarist Jeff White and harper Triona Marshall—the Chieftains had no problem dazzling a Philadelphia audience once again.

Chieftains leader Paddy Moloney probably has lost count of the number of St. Patrick’s Day concerts the band has played in Philadelphia, but it’s enough so that a Chieftains concert has become an essential and expected part of the annual Delaware Valley celebrations.

If you saw last year’s Kimmel Center concert, this year’s version was virtually a carbon copy of last year’s. If anyone noticed, they didn’t seem to mind. By this point, the Chieftains have their act down to a science. The band played selections highlighting the various stages of their career, from the traditional jigs and reels to tunes from “Down the Old Plank Road,” one of their forays into American bluegrass and country.

But the Chieftains always have a “next” project going, and they offered a preview. The next recording heads down Mexico way for a musical commemoration of the San Patricios, a band of Irishmen who fought on the side of Mexico in the Mexican-American war. “They were shooting Catholics down there in Mexico,” said Moloney in an unusually succinct summary of the Irish volunteers’ involvement, “and they didn’t like that.”

For this selection, the Chieftains were joined on stage by a group of pipers and drummers from City of Washington Pipe Band, one of just three grade 1 competition pipe bands in the United States. Together they played a “March to the Battle,” filling Verizon Hall with the droning sound of pipes, leading into a stirring lament, featuring Moloney on uilleann pipes.

Of course, traditional Irish is what this St. Patrick’s crowd came for, and the Chieftains were only to happy to oblige. Just because a Chieftains performance has become a somewhat predictable commodity doesn’t overshadow the fact that they’re still masters of their art. They’ve been at it for 45 years, but they easily match the energy of much younger bands.

Joining Moloney, flutist Matt Molloy and Kevin Conneff, the Chieftains’ singer and bodhran player, was Scottish singer Alyth McCormack, who delivered a memorable version of “The Foggy Dew.”

As is the custom with Chieftains shows, dance also figured prominently, with frenetic performances by the Jon Pilatzke and brother Nathan, and Cara Butler. The highlight of their performance was a crazy legs little dance featuring all three seated in chairs.

Coming to the stage late in the show were members of the Ryan-Kilcoyne School of Irish Dance.

A standing O was also predictable—and richly deserved.

Music

A Chat With The Chieftains’ Kevin Conneff

“In 1976 I got a phone call from Paddy Moloney. I was working in a print shop, doing layout design and lithographic plates. The phone rang in the darkroom and he asked me if I’d consider doing bodhrán on a couple of tracks.”

So began Kevin Conneff’s long career recording and touring with the Chieftains. Conneff took a week off from the job, traveled from Dublin to London, laid down those “couple of tracks” on what would become the Chieftains’ sixth album, “Bonaparte’s Retreat.” And he figured, well, that’s that.

But Moloney had other plans. Conneff didn’t know it, but Peadar Mercier, the Chieftains’ second bodhrán player, was retiring. “Toward the end of the week, he (Moloney) asked me if I’d consider making it full time,” said Conneff in a call from Birmingham, Ala., halfway through the Chieftains’ latest tour—a tour that will bring them back to Philadelphia’s Kimmel Center Sunday, March 15, for a show in Verizon Hall at 3 p.m.

Conneff, secure and happy in his print shop job, had to think about it. “I remember thinking I’d do it a couple of years and I’d go back to the print shop, maybe start up my own” Conneff said with a laugh.

With each new Chieftains success—and there were many—it seemed less and less likely that Kevin Conneff would ever again lay hands on a lithographic plate. What followed instead was a remarkable career as the Chieftains’ singer and drummer.

For most of the Chieftains, some kind of lifelong involvement with traditional music was preordained. Not so for Conneff, who first became enamored of it when he was in his teens.

“I’m not really like Sean (Keane) and Matt (Molloy) and Paddy,” Conneff said. “They heard the music from the womb. My parents had a mild interest in Irish music and dance, but I just barely happened on it. Some of the lads I was working with were into Irish music.”

Conneff, a Dublin kid whose musical interests up to that point ran more to jazz and popular music, suddenly found himself criss-crossing the countryside in search of fleadhs and sessions on weekends.

“The first place I really encountered the music was in Mullingar in the midlands of Ireland when I heard these people playing, farmers really. I was absolutely knocked out,” he said. “I remember thinking; these guys are as good as the (jazz) musicians like Charlie Parker I’d been listening to on records.”

Getting to work on Monday morning in anything like decent shape was sometimes a challenge. “I went back the job very often still smelling of hay barn and Guinness,” he said.

As much as Conneff appreciated the instrumentalists, it was the singers who stole his heart. He started picking up the words to the old ballads and gradually, tentatively tried them out in sessions.
“I was always interested in singing,” he said. “I used to sing pop songs and whatever. I was into Ella Fitzgerald singing ‘How High the Moon,’ which bowled me over … and still does. The very fact that it (singing traditional songs) was just an interest, a hobby made it easy. I was just doing it for my own sake and to be a part of these sessions and not be peripheral to it.”

“If it became known that you sang a couple of ballads you had to sing them really well to be accepted in a session. It was quite a thing when one of the older players would say, ‘Let’s have a song.’”

Much later, Conneff learned to play the bodhrán, the traditional goatskin frame drum. And he also learned to practice restraint, to patiently wait to be invited to play.

“if you’ve respect for the musicians and the music, you hold your fire,” he said. “In those days, particularly a lot of the older players would frown at a bodhrán coming into a session. The last thing they wanted was some obnoxious, thundering, banging bodhrán to cover up all their talent. You just have to learn to be humble.

“Unfortunately, the bodhrán attracts a type that comes in, and very often they’re flamboyant in their dress or have bits of fur hanging off the drum and they just hammer away. They just have no sensitivity to the music.”

Conneff’s respect for the music led to his involvement in a pioneering venture called the Tradition Club, a gathering place for local Irish musicians at Slattery’s at 129 Capel Street in Dublin. It was while helping to run that club that Conneff rubbed shoulders with Moloney and other local stars of the traditional scene.

Conneff and the other organizers saw the Tradition Club as an alternative to the guitar-and-ballad style that was popular in folk music in the late ‘60s. The club was also a warm and welcoming venue for many of the country musicians—the ones who so impressed Conneff in his earlier days—who would be brought in to share their gifts.

“The guitar and ballad thing was more prominent in Dublin than the real thing, so to speak,” said Conneff, “so myself and some friends started the Tradition Club where the emphasis was on the traditional player and singer. We’d bring in people from rural areas to play for a night. That was a great education for those of us running the club. We hosted people like Willie Clancy and Seamus Ennis—the greats of the Irish music scene in those days.”

Conneff was still helping run the Tradition Club when he joined the Chieftains. The club continued on for a number of years.

Some would say the Chieftains have taken a few detours away from the tradition over the years. Probably a different way of looking at it is that they’ve helped to popularize the music by showing what it has in common with other forms of music. For example, the Chieftains are currently at work on a recording drawing on the story of the San Patricios Battalion, a group of largely Irish ex-pats who fought against the United States on the side of Mexico. “A lot of them were executed on the outskirts of Mexico City,” said Conneff. “To this day there is a pipe band called the San Patricios. Every Sunday they march out to this memorial at a convent where the soldiers were executed. Paddy has been working with this connection. He’s put together some wonderful music with a Mexican Irish theme. We’ll be doing some of that in the concert. We’re doing an album of the music. It should be completed by September.”

Conneff has also been pursuing a non-Chieftains project with three other phenomenal musicians. Fittingly, it’s called The Tradition Club. Along with Conneff, the band features Gerry O Connor of Dundalk on fiddle, Dubliner Paul McGrattan on flute and the Breton Giles Le Bigot on guitar.

With luck, you’ll get a chance to hear the results of the quartet’s handiwork. “We put down a few tracks and will try to put together an album toward the end of this year,” said Conneff. With one member of the band on the Continent, recording and playing concerts can be challenging, Conneff said. “The logistics of it are a bit difficult. Any time we do gigs he (Le Bigot) has to come over to Ireland. Very often the fees go to pay his expenses. It’s very enjoyable to be doing something like that.”

While you’re waiting for that musical experiment, you’ll just have to content yourself with Conneff’s other band, which arrives in Philadelphia for a concert (unfortunately) the same day as the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day parade. The Chieftains’ annual visit to Verizon Hall usually coincides with that event. After so many concerts and so many years on the road, many venues tend to blur together. Not so, Verizon Hall. For the Chieftains, it’s one of the best places to play.

“That’s a fantastic venue,” Conneff said. “Any time we’ve played there, it’s been an afternoon show. A lot of the times, we’ve had to detour going to the theatre because of the parade. Sometimes the older venues are the best from an acoustic point of view. But of the newer venues the Kimmel Center sound is wonderful.”

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

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.