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Philadelphia Irish Center

Music

Irish Christmas in Philadelphia

If you missed either “Once Upon a Winter’s Night” or “An Irish Christmas in America…” well, you shouldn’t have. But you’re lucky—we were there and have some videos to prove it.

“Once Upon a Winter’s Night’s” Gabriel Donohue, Caitlin Warbelow and Marian Makins have developed a lovely chemistry among their trio, both musically and as they interact with the audience. Their selection of songs for the Christmas holiday included the sublime ( “Christmas in the Trenches”) and humorous (“Miss Fogerty’s Christmas Cake), and their December 6 concert at The Irish Center set the mood for the season beautifully.

And then pair that with Teada’s “Irish Christmas in America” at The Annenberg Center 5 days later, and you have a feast of riches. Oisin MacDiarmada returned with Tristan Rosenstock on the bodhran and performing the role of master of ceremonies to great audience delight; Tommy Martin on the pipes and whistle, Grainne Hambly on the harp, with special guest Seamus Begley on the accordion and vocals. The extra special guest was guitarist Sean Earnest, who hails from Bethlehem and has made the transition to the big time.

Oh, and lest we forget, sean nos dancer Brian Cunningham with some wicked dance steps. Not for nothing that among the comments overheard at intermission were: “Oh, my…the ENERGY!!!” and “the funniest concert ever” (that was a nod to Seamus Begley who could entertain an audience with stories and limericks alone).

Watch Brian Cunningham’s dancing feet.

Two great evenings, two great reasons to be Irish in Philly at Christmas time!

Music

Musical Forecast: A Wintry Mix to Start the Holiday Season

Marian Makins, singing at the monthly Singer's Circle at the Irish Center.

Marian Makins, singing at the monthly Singer's Circle at the Irish Center.

The first time I heard Marian Makins sing was at singer’s night at the Philadelphia Ceili Group’s annual Irish music festival. This slim young woman with a cap of close-cropped dark hair came up from the audience, took the stage, and launched into one of those great, deedle-sum Celtic songs that make you tap your feet and deedle-dum a little yourself about midway through the tune.

She has a voice that seems to have been predestined to sing Gaelic songs. (One listener described it as “a voice that could melt packed ice.”) But Makins, who will be performing with guitarist Gabriel Donohue and Caitlin Warbelow on Sunday at the Irish Center in a show called “Once Upon a Winter’s Night,” didn’t come by it naturally.

She’s only tangentially Irish: Her Scottish ancestors spent several generations in County Donegal and she’s English and Welsh as well. She didn’t grow up hearing Gaelic—either the Scottish or Irish variety—and her background is in the classics, not jigs and reels.

But she’s always been a singer. The DC-born Makins, currently a grad student in classical studies at Penn, sang in the chorus in high school ( hello, “Glee”!) and as part of a small concert chorale group whose director had perfect pitch. “Imagine singing for him. Anyone is even slightly off and he’s in pain. But he was so good and so demanding that I learned so much,” she says. She was also a member of the Columbia University Glee Club and did a little recording while in college (background vocals for a fake group with a real album called Kill Lizzy, a Christian hip-hop album that was never released, and a demo for an Applebee’s commercial).

“That all happened because I was dating a music producer,” she confesses with a laugh. “but he is really talented and is now working with Dionne Warwick.”

The Celtic music happened because a friend dragged her to three sessions in New York—all in one night—culminating in the Tony DeMarco jam at the 11th Street Bar. DeMarco’s fractional Irishness (both sides of his family are Irish-Italian) translates into stylish and authentic Sligo fiddle playing and he’s considered one of the finest folk fiddlers in the country.

“That’s where I met Gabriel Donohue,” says Makins. “We walked into the 11th Street Bar and Tony introduced me to this guitar player and he said, ‘I hear you’re a great singer, what do you sing?’”

She named one of the handful of tunes she sings in Gaelic (she does songs in both Irish and Scot’s Gaelic, though she doesn’t speak “this beautiful, strange language”). “And he says, ‘Oh, this one, and starts playing and I had to start singing. I didn’t even have my coat off. When the song was over, Tony said, ‘Gabe, let her get her coat off and get her a drink.’ We became friends and decided to work together.”

Donohue, who is Irish-born but now lives in North Jersey, has played both guitar and piano for the likes of Eileen Ivers, Cherish the Ladies, and the Chieftans, including six gigs at Carnegie Hall and one at the Clinton White House, celebrating the Good Friday Peace Accord. He introduced Makins to his friend, Caitlin Warbelow, who comes from Fairbanks, Alaska, and is a champion blue grass fiddler who is a regular at all the New York sessions.

“They invited me to sit in with them in some gigs during Irish Weekend in Wildwood this year,” Makins says, and the trio was born.

“I love how musically omnivorous they are,” she says. “They can both play in so many different styles. They’re very dynamic. They can both turn on a dime and it’s fun to see where they take things.”

Their concert this Sunday at the Irish Center will be, she promises, “a wintry mix,” a combination of winter-themed Irish traditional tunes, Christmas carols, Irish Christmas carols (get ready all you “Miss Fogarty’s Christmas Cake” fans) and then just some tunes they feel like singing. There’s a session afterwards, so musicians should bring their instruments and sit in.

Since the weather forecasters are also predicting a little “wintry mix” this weekend—possibly the first seasonal weather we’ve had for months—it sounds like a romantic and traditional way to start off the Celtic Christmas season.

Doors open at 4 PM and the concert starts at 5 PM. Tickets are $15 for adults, $5 for children.

News

Last Rambling House Till Next Year!

Karen Boyce McCollum, Mike Boyce and John Boyce were the house band for last week's Rambling House.

Karen Boyce McCollum, Mike Boyce and John Boyce were the house band for last week's Rambling House.

We confess: We’re addicted to the Rambling House events at the Irish Center. There won’t be another one until January and we’re looking at a month of withdrawal.

For those of you who just joined us, a Rambling House is a tradition of rural Ireland in which neighbors would gather together at someone’s house and entertain one another with their “party piece”—a song, story, recitation, something they did well. And the Irish Center’s Rambling House events, started last year by WTMR Irish radio hosts Vince Gallagher and Marianne MacDonald, are authentic. Audience members, occasionally fortified at the Center’s bar, have gotten up to sing, tell jokes, play an instrument, and, last week, to delve into local Irish history.
Part of last week’s excitement was hearing Karen Boyce McCollum sing, with her brothers Mike and John Boyce (of Blackthorn) accompanying. She was “due any minute,” and a few days later did deliver a boy, Daniel Terrence McCollum. Congratulations to Karen, Brian, and Sarah Carmel!
We were there, of course, and did the photo thing.
Music

A Night of Reavy Tunes

Laura Byrne Egan plays a tune.

Laura Byrne Egan plays a tune.

“Hunter’s House,” “Munster Grass” … and the Ed Reavy tunes just flowed in a recent Irish Center concert by singer-guitarist Pat Egan, flutist Laura Byrne Egan and fiddler Jim Eagan.

Ed Reavy Jr. introduced the trio (and occasionally chipped in some editorial comments and stories during the performance). It was all a fitting tribute to Philly’s prolific “plumber of hornpipes.”

It wasn’t all Reavy, of course, and the three Baltimore musicians tossed in some lovely instrumentals and songs like “So Do I.”

We have some photos and a bunch of videos from the concert. Check ’em out.

  • Videos:
  • “The Orchard”
    http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/orchard

    “So Do I”
    http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/sodoi

    A Set of Reels
    http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/eganeganeaganreels

    The Wounded Hussar
    http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/woundedhussar

    Another Set of Reels
    http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/eganeganeaganmorereels

    People

    Halloween at the Philadelphia Irish Center

    Four hags, no waiting.

    Four hags, no waiting.

    The witches didn’t both waiting for the witching hour. In fact, the whole darn coven—four altogether ugly hags—showed up for the start of a special Rambling House party at the Philadelphia Irish Center Friday night.

    And they weren’t the only creepy crawlies at the bar that night. There was an especially strange looking thing in a dashiki, for one.

    But of course, it was all in good fun, and host Marianne MacDonald kept the fun rolling all night long. There was music, for sure, as there always is. And there was dance, as there always is, but with monsters on the Irish Center floor this time around.

    A ghastly time was had by all.

    News, People

    Ireland’s “Immigration Bishop” Visits Philadelphia

    Derry Bishop Seamus Hegarty with his Phillies shirt, a gift from the Philadelphia Derry Society.

    Derry Bishop Seamus Hegarty with his Phillies shirt, a gift from the Philadelphia Derry Society.

    As he prepared to say a Requiem Mass for the souls of the faithful departed at Philadelphia’s Irish Center on Tuesday night, Dr. Seamus Hegarty, the Bishop of Derry, Ireland, paused to acknowledge the living who are far from peace.

    The chairman of the Irish Episcopal Council for Emigrants, in Philadelphia briefly on a multi-city tour to meet with immigrants, was clearly moved by the stories he heard from undocumented Irish who had lost loved ones in Ireland and were forced to grieve alone, far from family and friends, because they could not return home. Illegal aliens can’t risk returning to their country of origin for fear that they will not be allowed back in the United States where they may have American-born children.

    “It’s one of the things that really got to me,” said the Bishop, who has served the Derry diocese since 1994. “It’s a double tragedy for people who have lost someone and then aren’t able to go home and grieve with their families. I lost my own mother when I was seven, so I know how they feel.”

    Bishop Hegarty spent part of the day at the Irish Immigration Center in Upper Darby. But not far from his mind were the immigrants he’d met in Boston. “They’re hurting very badly there,” he said. “I met many people who were bereaved and unable to go home and they were just devastated.”

    He used the message of the Gospel to urge those in attendance to put pressure on the political powers-that-be to pass comprehensive immigration reform bills that would create legal pathways for the undocumented to become citizens. In Matthew 25:31-45, Jesus promised that those who fed the hungry, gave drink to the thirsty, welcomed strangers, clothed the naked, cared for the sick, and visited those in prison will sit to the right of him in heaven “because whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.”

    “The attitude that ‘as long as I’m allright, I don’t care about you, is not the Irish way,” he said in his homily. “We had nothing and we shared our nothingness with each other. You need to forge a community here that carries out the message that the interest of one is the interest of all. Reaching out to people is a gift and certainly will not go unrewarded.”

    The Philadelphia Donegal Association and the Derry Society participated in the Mass and the reception that followed. Bishop Hegarty also renewed old acquaintances, including Mary McHugh of Lindenwold, NJ, who knew the bishop as a youngster in Kilcar, County Donegal, where he was born. “I was born and raised in Scotland, but my mother grew up in Kilcar and my father was from the next village, so I spent my summers there,” she said. “The bishop is actually related to me through my mother. When you grow up in these little towns and villages, you keep the connections.”

    Bishop Hegarty was on his way to Washington, DC, to meet with US legislators about immigration issues and was clearly aware of the effect the visit of one Irish bishop would have. “I’m sure they’ll be very gracious and as soon as I’m gone they’ll forget all about it,” he said to laughter. “That’s why you need to pressurize them. . . You can do something. We are all responsible for one another’s welfare. Use your voice in a responsible and constructive way to try to improve the welfare of immigrants.”

    Siobhan Lyons, executive director of the Philadelphia Irish Immigration Center, was Bishop Hegarty’s host for much of the day.

    “We were delighted to welcome Bishop Hegarty to Philadelphia.,” she says. “The Irish Apostolate has been a strong supporter of the Irish diaspora and we deeply appreciate the work they do on behalf of the Irish community in the United States. I particularly welcome their efforts in the campaign for comprehensive immigration reform and wish the bishop the best of luck in Washington DC.

    “But Bishop Hegarty is right when he says we can’t sit back and wait for other people to solve our problems,” Lyons says. “We must use our voices and our votes to advocate for the most vulnerable in our community, and that includes the undocumented. I hope everyone will listen to his message and make sure their representatives know that the Irish community supports comprehensive immigration reform. “

    People

    The Ghost and Paul Gallagher

    Kathleen Murtagh listens to Paul Gallagher tell his ghostly tale at the Irish Center.

    Kathleen Murtagh listens to Paul Gallagher tell his ghostly tale at the Irish Center.

    Paul Gallagher is used to being the last man standing at the Irish Center on Friday nights. After the final patron leaves, the longtime bartender closes up the center, latching windows, flicking off lights, locking doors. His last job is to clean up after the weekly Friday night Texas hold ‘em game in the front dining room.

    But, on one Friday night just a few weeks ago, as he was just about to scoop up the poker chips, he discovered that his solitary work wasn’t so solitary. He was not alone. Someone was supervising the job.

    “The doors were locked and I’d just closed the window and I don’t know who it was, but I felt something cold pass through me, like a breeze, right through my chest right here,” says Gallagher, patting the center of his chest. “And then I heard someone say, ‘What are you going to do now, Paul?’”

    Later, he says, he took it as a philosophical question. But at the time, the answer was simple and practical. “I left the chips there, turned out the light, locked up and got out of there,” says the South Philly native, who says he’s not easily shaken. “I was scared to death.”

    On his way home, he decided to stop at his neighborhood after-hours club for a stiff one. “I walked in and the bartender there who’s a friend of mine says, ‘Jesus Christ, Paul, you look like you’ve seen a ghost.’ I said, ‘I didn’t see one but I felt and heard one.’”

    Gallagher has no explanation for the phenomenon. He’d just learned that morning that a friend and longtime patron had died, but he didn’t recognize the voice he heard. “I’ve heard stories about this place and other people have said they thought it was haunted.” In fact, confirms Irish Center manager John Nolan, one of his predecessors died in the office that Nolan uses now in the more than century old building that has been, variously, a car club, a Jewish center, and a caterer’s hall before it was purchased in 1958 by the Commodore Barry Society.

    Gallagher had a previous close encounter with the ghost of Emlen Street, but only by proxy. “My girlfriend said that when she was sitting at the bar she felt a cold breeze brush by her legs. But this is the first time something has happened to me.”

    His ghostly encounter hasn’t stopped Gallagher from being at his post on Friday nights, and he should be there this Friday, October 30, for the Samhain Rambling House event—an evening of jokes, songs, dancing, and stories to celebrate the Irish version of Halloween.

    Maybe, if you ask him, he’ll tell you a real ghost story.

    The Samhain Rambling House costs $5 and will feature music by Vince Gallagher, Kevin Brennan and Patsy Ward; quizzes with prizes; special awards for the best costume, scariest story, and best performance; and free refreshments and drink specials. Bring your best party piece, or just enjoy everyone else’s talent.

    If none of that gets your broomstick off the ground, the center recently installed three new 42-inch plasma screen TVs where you can watch “Ghost Whisperer.” Or your favorite sport.

    Or you can sit in on the Texas Hold ‘Em game. If you dare.

    Music

    Captain Mackey’s Goatskin and Stringband Marches into the Irish Center

    The band played on.

    The band played on.

    It wasn’t all soldiers’ songs, of course, but most of the night these two brilliant Irish performers shared songs of those who served (albeit, sometimes unwillingly). The night was brought to you by Rambling House Productions.

    The audience often sang along, as many of the old tunes were immediately recognizable. These guys know their way around a ballad, and the folks in the seats appreciated it.

    We’ve captured some of the high points.

    View videos: