Irish Fridays

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  • Globaltruth
    Host
    • Nov 2010
    • 4286

    Originally posted by Padraig View Post

    Now, for something slightly . . .


    Vintage 1910s Music - Christine Miller - Oft In The Stilly Night @Pax41 - YouTube

    Oft, in the Stilly Night (Scotch Air) by Thomas… | Poetry Foundation

    Of whom was Christine Miller thinking in 1910? We know Tom Moore had some friends lost in the 98 Rebellion. We all can name missing faces and remember words once spoken.

    I like to remember too.
    thanks Padraig. A recording from mere 114 years ago. Wonderful.

    here is another version, slightly more recent and that I’m sure you know. Both mournful - and that’s fine.

    Comment

    • johncorrigan
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 10347

      The wondrous Lisa O'Neil was in session on Gideon Coe's BBC Radio 6 show on Wednesday and was in sparkling form and even included a new song in the set called 'Worsens By the Day'. Otherwise familiar songs brilliantly performed and good chat too with Gid. First song is the show opener and then three more starting about thirty-eight minutes in - she's a bloody treasure.
      ​​​​​https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0021hrp

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      • Globaltruth
        Host
        • Nov 2010
        • 4286

        Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
        The wondrous Lisa O'Neil was in session on Gideon Coe's BBC Radio 6 show on Wednesday and was in sparkling form and even included a new song in the set called 'Worsens By the Day'. Otherwise familiar songs brilliantly performed and good chat too with Gid. First song is the show opener and then three more starting about thirty-eight minutes in - she's a bloody treasure.
        ​​​https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0021hrp
        I will always remember the solo concert she did in the theatre in Dublin in lockdown.

        Forget lockdown; here she is singing one of my favourite lock-in songs...

        Comment

        • Globaltruth
          Host
          • Nov 2010
          • 4286

          Well this stopped me and Mrs GT in our tracks the other night when the devious Al and his Go Rhythms popped it up.
          Imagine being able to take one of the most hackneyed works in the Whittaker canon and making it sound new, especially after the Pogus have made a good job of doing the same a few years previous. No need to imagine any more, just click on the link...

          (I remember you went to see him alive JC and I suspect you made a wise choice.)

          Provided to YouTube by Beggars Group Digital Ltd.Dirty Old Town · John Francis FlynnLook Over the Wall, See the Sky℗ 2023 River Lea RecordingsReleased on: 20...

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          • Padraig
            Full Member
            • Feb 2013
            • 4226

            Happy weekend, a chairde. This weekend sees the Irish Open Golf Championship being held in County Down. Some nice coverage on TV of the beautiful scenery in a part of Ulster I have never visited. I'm impressed even.
            I know the songs, though. Here are one or two . . . sort of.

            Bendemeer's Stream
            bendemeer's stream - Google Search

            Comment

            • johncorrigan
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 10347

              Originally posted by Padraig View Post
              Happy weekend, a chairde. This weekend sees the Irish Open Golf Championship being held in County Down. Some nice coverage on TV of the beautiful scenery in a part of Ulster I have never visited. I'm impressed even.
              I know the songs, though. Here are one or two . . . sort of.

              I hadn't heard of John Charles Thomas before, Padraig. Loved his voice and his performance of the song. Thanks. The locals will be glad to see Rory well in the mix after the first round.

              Comment

              • Globaltruth
                Host
                • Nov 2010
                • 4286

                Is this corny and trite? Or, worst of all, according to elsewhere on the forum, - Light Music?? Heaven forfend...a future where heavy music is compulsatory??

                This music video and live performance is an excerpt from the award-winning PBS Television Pledge Special, "Rhythm of the Dance," directed by Chip Miller, who...


                By the way, here's the very same Emma O'Sullivan doing a bit of busking in Galway, encouraging a future star.

                When visiting Galway in the west of Ireland, make sure to keep and eye out for some of our amazing Irish dancers!



                she moves her arms too - the controversy never stops!

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                • Padraig
                  Full Member
                  • Feb 2013
                  • 4226

                  Originally posted by Globaltruth View Post
                  Is this corny and trite?

                  When visiting Galway in the west of Ireland, make sure to keep and eye out for some of our amazing Irish dancers!


                  she moves her arms too - the controversy never stops!

                  Certainly not in my book, Global.

                  But it's hard to place where Irish dancing is at this time. It has changed over the years eg from holding your arms stiffly down by your sides, to moving them loosely about. I used to go to ceilidhs (Irish dancing not ballroom) and though useless myself I saw how it should be done. We did 'set dances' and they are still done these days.
                  When I would go fishing in the West of Ireland I met local dancers who tried unsuccessfully to teach me their ways. They were more in the sean nos style a style that's more appealing to me and looks easier, but isn't. Watching Emma O Sullivan explains why.

                  Thanks for these links which I really enjoyed, Global. I have added a little set dance for you.

                  set dancing - Google Search

                  Comment

                  • eighthobstruction
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 6432

                    Fab , Padraig....The white shirt is a fabulous thing , and will get you in all sorts of places all over the world....
                    bong ching

                    Comment

                    • Globaltruth
                      Host
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 4286

                      Originally posted by Padraig View Post


                      Certainly not in my book, Global.

                      But it's hard to place where Irish dancing is at this time. It has changed over the years eg from holding your arms stiffly down by your sides, to moving them loosely about. I used to go to ceilidhs (Irish dancing not ballroom) and though useless myself I saw how it should be done. We did 'set dances' and they are still done these days.
                      When I would go fishing in the West of Ireland I met local dancers who tried unsuccessfully to teach me their ways. They were more in the sean nos style a style that's more appealing to me and looks easier, but isn't. Watching Emma O Sullivan explains why.

                      Thanks for these links which I really enjoyed, Global. I have added a little set dance for you.

                      set dancing - Google Search
                      Thanks Padraig. Glad you enjoyed them. We saw her dance once on the street in Dublin. Didn’t know who she was and almost walked past - glad we didn’t, a busked world class performance is a rare experience.

                      What I’d really like to see though is one of your lessons….

                      Comment

                      • johncorrigan
                        Full Member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 10347

                        One of my pals sent me the tiny desk performance from a few years back of Gaelyn Lea. Gaelyn, from Duluth in Minnesota, has brittle bone disease and holds the fiddle like a cello and plays with a looping player. She played a tune that she describes as an old Irish tune - 'South Wind'. I will post the track from her record -


                        ...however worth checking out the Tiny Desk recording to see what this remarkable woman does, if you haven't seen her before. 'South Wind' is the second piece on the video.

                        Happy Irish Friday.

                        Comment

                        • Globaltruth
                          Host
                          • Nov 2010
                          • 4286

                          Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
                          One of my pals sent me the tiny desk performance from a few years back of Gaelyn Lea. Gaelyn, from Duluth in Minnesota, has brittle bone disease and holds the fiddle like a cello and plays with a looping player. She played a tune that she describes as an old Irish tune - 'South Wind'. I will post the track from her record -


                          ...however worth checking out the Tiny Desk recording to see what this remarkable woman does, if you haven't seen her before. 'South Wind' is the second piece on the video.

                          Happy Irish Friday.
                          A triumph of the human spirit.

                          Comment

                          • Padraig
                            Full Member
                            • Feb 2013
                            • 4226

                            Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post


                            ...however worth checking out the Tiny Desk recording to see what this remarkable woman does, if you haven't seen her before. 'South Wind' is the second piece on the video.


                            Happy Irish Friday.
                            Thanks for that sequence, a Sheain. I add to Global's star rating.

                            The South Wind is a favourite tune for many players, sometimes attributed to Carolan. The title is often rendered in Irish; The Chieftans called it An Gaoith Aneas, or A ghaoith o nDeas (O wind from the South - see what I did to your Irish name above, O John.) A is O vocative; An is the, definite article.

                            an gaoth aneas - YouTube sic

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                            • johncorrigan
                              Full Member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 10347

                              Originally posted by Padraig View Post

                              Thanks for that sequence, a Sheain. I add to Global's star rating.

                              The South Wind is a favourite tune for many players, sometimes attributed to Carolan. The title is often rendered in Irish; The Chieftans called it An Gaoith Aneas, or A ghaoith o nDeas (O wind from the South - see what I did to your Irish name above, O John.) A is O vocative; An is the, definite article.

                              an gaoth aneas - YouTube sic
                              Thanks, Padraig. The Chieftains sound great drifting through the house this morning.

                              Comment

                              • Padraig
                                Full Member
                                • Feb 2013
                                • 4226

                                Here is a poem for Irish Friday. It could have been a song - it's in Jig time.
                                A little ballad with crafty rhyme and rhythm.

                                Juniper Hill

                                I climbed to the summit of Juniper Hill
                                To observe the grand view of the shore.
                                And indeed I could easily be standing there still
                                Without having finished observing my fill
                                From Magilligan Point to Bengore,
                                Though it's often I've seen it before.

                                When I turned to the right 'twas a beautiful sight
                                To look down on the town of Portrush.
                                And I thought to myself that I very well might
                                Have the time to walk down there before it fell night
                                To buy a new whitewashing brush
                                Or a billhook to thin out a bush.

                                Then I looked to the left and below me as well
                                Were the neat little streets of Portstewart.
                                And at once I remembered of having heard tell,
                                Though they might have no whitewashing brushes to sell
                                That the girls are all fond of a coort
                                That reside in the town of Portstewart.

                                I thought of the lasses so lovely and gay
                                And the notions ran round in my head.
                                Will I go to Portrush or the opposite way?
                                Will I squander my money on dancing and tay
                                Or buy a new billhook instead,
                                And go quietly home to my bed?

                                And while I was thinking the shadows grew long
                                And I turned on the heel of my fut
                                And went into Portstewart, and perhaps I was wrong
                                To go hunting for kisses and wenches and song
                                When the house wanted whitewashing, but -
                                Sure the shops would be sure to be shut.

                                Anonymous, 1940
                                from Ulster's Other Poetry, John Wyse Jackson and Hector McDonnell, The Lilliput Press 2009.

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