Saint Patrick’s Day might have been yesterday, but I found
no need to stop doing Irish-inspired posts.
This might be the last for a bit or I’ll have one more this week, we’ll
see.
In any case, this post goes off the
topic of food and instead has to do with music.
As far as Irish music
goes, I can be a bit of a traditionalist snob.
I’ll admit that right off the bat.
I’m not one for the Celtic Woman / Celtic Thunder type stage shows and
things like that. (Just because a song
is sung with an Irish accent does not an Irish song make it. Oh, and songs from the movie Titanic are not
Irish either.) Of course music groups
have to perform, so they do have to be on stage. However, I’m a firm believer that the best
venues for traditional Irish music are in the pubs. It’s raw, real performing with feeling – how traditional
Irish music (or trad) was meant to be done.
Maybe it’s worth mentioning too that I almost only listen to
Irish music anymore. I began listening
to Flogging Molly and then migrated to the more traditional stuff. That’s where I’ve settled and now many songs
cycle through my head throughout the day.
(I’ll also sing them or whistle the melodies as well when no one else is
around.) It also doesn’t help that Joan
bought me a bodhran (the traditional Irish drum) for Christmas which I often
play along with whatever Irish music is playing through my iTunes.
With that in mind, I’ve made a set of music from tunes I
found on YouTube – you know, so you my reader can keep celebrating Ireland
beyond St. Patrick’s Day. While this list
in no way hits all of my favorite tunes or is even a list of my top favorites,
I think it touches on a variety of song styles as well as hits some of my personal
favorite groups and solo artists.
The Rising of the
Moon – The Dubliners
So ok, if I had to pick a favorite group The Dubliners would
win easily.
This song as well would be
up there as well, as it’s the one that’s in my head most often.
As the notes for this video state, this song
is about the 1798 Irish Rebellion.
Wiki
has an
article on
the song as well as
the rebellion
of course too.
Oro Se Do Bheatha
Bhaile – the Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem
While the Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem started performing
in the 1960s like the Dubliners and also sang traditional Irish music, the two
groups couldn’t be more different. The
Clancys and Tommy Makem were clean cut and always decked out in white Aran knit
sweaters. This probably helped them gain
popularity in America during the 60s with clean cut manly image being in. The Dubliners were definitely rougher looking
being all bearded, and also had a rougher quality of song style. It’s natural I suppose then that I like the
realness of the Dubliners. Tommy Makem
and the Clancy Brothers I find too oldie music sing-songy (i.e. Peter, Paul and
Mary) for my tastes. However, I couldn’t
pass up this clip when I found it. From
1962, it’s the Clancy Brothers singing in traditional Irish Gaelic, in their
trademark sweaters, and apparently in some pub in Chicago.
Rocky Road to
Dublin – The High Kings
The High Kings are about as much of a stage / theatrical
music group that I can handle. When they’re
more casual I like them, but if they play it up too much (they’re produced by
the same folks who do Celtic Woman) I start cringing. The do some ballad type songs but it’s the
fast tunes that I enjoy most.
Star of the County
Down – The High Kings
Again not much of a video here but for both this and the
previous High Kings tune, but I thought these both had the best performance
quality in the respective songs.
Peggy Gordon – The
Dubliners
Here is a classic ballad of unidirectional love from the
Dubliners. This is one of my favorite
ballads and probably the one I sing most often.
Dirty Old Town –
The Pogues
The popular Irish rock bands of today – Flogging Molly,
Dropkick Murphys, The Young Dubliners (and many more) – all would have The
Pogues listed as a musical influence.
Most popular in the 1980s, The Pogues mixed the punk rock of the time
with the trad music they grew up with.
This song is much mellower than most of their music, but it is hands
down my favorite from them. Extra bonus
is that it’s actually a music video too, the only on this list.
Oh and if you’re wondering, the band’s name comes from the
Irish Gaelic phrase “pog mo thoin” meaning “kiss my arse.”
Eoin Duignan
There were some shots of the Irish uilleann pipes during the
instrumental section in the middle of The Pogues "Dirty Old Town," but this video is all uilleann
pipes from beginning to end. While you
may see bagpipes sometimes played in Irish/Celtic tunes, those are traditionally
Scottish while the uilleann pipes are Irish.
While the air bladder of the bagpipes is filled by blown air from your
mouth, the uilleann pipes are filled with the pumping of a bellows with your
arm or elbow ("uilleann" being Irish Gaelic for "elbow"). I don’t know the title of this song (or two
songs as he switches partially through), but I thought this was a good video
since it really showed the pipes in action.
During our Ireland trip, Joan and I spent a few days in the
town of Dingle in County Kerry. We were
lucky enough to hear Eoin Duignan play the uilleann pipes both in the pub and
at a trad concert in the town’s St. James’ Church (where this YouTube video is
also filmed). Besides laying down the
tunes, Mr. Duignan had a few anecdotes about the uilleann pipes. First he joked about how the uilleann pipes
came to be. He said that a long time ago
an Irishman saw a Scotsman playing the bagpipes and thought it would be a lot
easier if you could play while sitting down.
The Irishman thought a bit further and also decided that the pipes
should be filled with air by a bellows, leaving the mouth free to take a drink
of beer while one was holding a long note.
His second bit of comedy was to tell us that if it looks like he’s in
pain while he’s playing, he’s actually just fine. It just takes that much concentration to play
the unwieldy instrument.
As a last note, if you are lucky enough to ever find
yourself in Dingle and listening to Mr. Duignan’s uilleann piping, make sure
you compliment him on his instrument. You’ll
remember it in your dreams fondly.
(That’s a bit of an inside joke.)
The Voice Squad – Banks of the Bann
This group is on my wishlist for music to buy, but I for the
meantime I enjoy listening to them via YouTube.
Multiple-part harmonies are not usually sung in Irish trad tunes, as the
melody is the driving force. However,
The Voice Squad does three-part so well.
The other great thing is that they sing these lovely ballads where? Well in a pub of course! (You have to love the shot overlooking the
bar’s pull handles at the 1:10 mark.)
Do You Love an
Apple? – Bothy Band
I don’t have a reason for this, but my Irish music library has
very few female vocalists. Maybe I just
shy away because a lot of the popular Celtic female sing tends toward the
Celtic Woman / Enya, overly ethereal type of singing. However, I love the voice of Tríona Ní Dhomhnail from the Bothy
Band in this piece and this is most definitely one of my favorite ballads.
The Kesh Jig / etc
– Bothy Band
To put it bluntly, if this smattering of songs doesn’t get
your toes tapping, then you must be dead.
The first melody is one most likely one of the most popular jigs and is
indeed probably my favorite as well.
Secondly, flautist Matt Malloy really plays the heck out of his flute at
the 3:08 mark. It’s impressively fast
flute playing. No wonder that after the
Bothy Band Malloy also was a member of Planxty and is also part of The Chieftains. Plus he’s also the owner of a pub in
Westport, County Mayo.
Willie McBride –
Mick Lavelle
While undoubtedly many people visit Matt Malloy’s pub
because of Malloy’s ownership, just as many people over the years visited the
pub to see and hear one of its regulars – Mick Lavelle.
A classic man of Ireland in every right,
Lavelle entertained with his jokes, stories, and songs.
We were lucky enough to see him entertain on
our Irish vacation and I’ll not ever forget it.
Lavelle just exuded that energy that those special entertainers
have.
I guess to sum it up – Lavelle
just loved people and loved performing.
Sadly,
Mick Lavelle passed away this past January.
I wish I could have seen him more than just that hour or so that I did
this past summer.
While Westport will
not be the same without Mick Lavelle, I think we can assume that he’s still entertaining
the masses in heaven.
(If you want you
can read more about Mick Lavelle go
here,
here,
and
here.)
The song in this clip was one of Mick’s go-tos.
The original tune is a nice song (which you
can listen to
here),
but I gather that it gets overplayed and over-requested in Ireland (much like
EVERYBODY seems to want to hear Danny Boy in the States).
Basically this is a spoof of the original,
making fun of the song and the obnoxious drunk that seems to always request it.
Whiskey on a
Sunday – The Dubliners
To finish off this list, I go back to that gravelly voice of
The Dubliners’ Ronnie Drew croon out this Irish classic. There isn’t an Irish song that makes me pine
for Ireland more. I can just imagine a
pub full of people, pint in hand, swaying to the melody, and all joining in on
the chorus. Scenes like that just cannot
be replicated here. You go to a bar in
America to drink, but you go to a pub in Ireland for entertainment.
And there you go. I really just wrote up this song list for the fun of it, but I hope this introduces some reader out there to a new song, a new artist/group, or even to traditional Irish music.