The late Brendán Breathnach defined traditional music
as essentially the art of solo performance for which the musician or singer
devotes a lifetimes apprenticeship to learning the great traditional songs and
airs of Ireland. Breathnach, a Dublin
civil servant who died 21 years ago, had a passion for Irish traditional
music. He published during his lifetime
many scholarly works, amongst which were the three volume collection of
traditional music, “Ceol Rince na hEireann”. Na Piobairí Uilleann was founded in 1968 by
Breathnach and others to promote the playing of the uilleann pipes and it was
to its Henrietta Street premises in Dublin that a young Brian Hughes travelled
from Athy for many years to attend
piping classes. I was reminded of this
when re-reading an article which Breathnach wrote for the 1984 edition of his
Irish music journal “Ceol”. Headlined “The
Man and his Music – Liam O'Floinn”, the article opened with the line, “Kildare
does not spring to mind immediately when piping is mentioned. Yet the great pipe maker Maurice Coyne came
from that county and in olden times it was said 300 pipers used to frequent the
fair of Carbery. From that county also
comes Liam O'Floinn, probably the most widely known piper nowadays”.
The Kildare piping tradition carried on today by the
undoubted master Liam O'Floinn and by several others, including our own Brian
Hughes, follows in the wake of Kildare men such as Captain William Kelly, John
Hicks and Michael Flanagan, all of whom in their time were fine exponents of
the uilleann or “elbow” pipes.
Kelly, who was born in New Abbey in the last quarter of the 18th
century and lived until 1858, kept racing stables at Maddenstown and apart from
his musical accomplishments achieved fame as the trainer of the legendary
pugilist Dan Donnelly. However, what
interests us here was his familiarity with the chanter, drones and regulators
which required years of practice to enable him to master the uilleann pipes. And master them he must surely have done for
prior to the visit to Ireland of King George IV Kelly who was to play for him,
was gifted a set of pipes – ebony, silver mounted – which after his death were
given by his widow to Mrs. Bailey of Newtown, Bert, Athy. Her son, Sam Bailey, who was also a famous
piper played them until he died in 1895 after which they were either purchased
by or presented to the Duke of Leinster.
Their present whereabouts are unknown.
John Hicks was a prodigy of Kellys. Born in or about 1825 near the Curragh, Hicks
even as a young man earned for himself great popularity as an uilleann piper,
so much so that he was encouraged to cross the Atlantic and try his fortunes in
America. Known in America as “the
Kildare Piper” he achieved a measure of fame denied to many other
pipers. A performance of his in Chicago
in 1880 prompted a press report which claimed:
“No piper of our acquaintance is so popular with a mixed or American
audience as John Hicks”. Two years
later Hicks was murdered on the Jersey side of the Hudson River as he was on
his way home to New York city. The last
of the notable trio of Kildare pipers of old was Michael Flanagan who was born
in Carbery in or about 1850. He joined
the British Army and served in India.
His later years were I believe spent in Ireland but I have been unable
to trace any further reference to him.
Nowadays we have Brian Hughes, a native of Athy, who
encouraged at a very young age by his grandfather Christy Bracken took up the
uilleann pipes. As a youngster he was
regularly brought to the Henrietta
Street Headquarters of the Pipers Club where he learned from the great
exponents of Irish piping tradition. I
am told that he favours the flowing legato style of piping, commonly known as
the “travellers” style. It's a
style which found its finest expression in the playing of Johnny Doran who died
at the County Home in Athy in January 1950.
Doran, who was only 43 years of age when he died, was related to the
legendary Wicklow piper John Cash. He
played the uilleann pipes at all sorts of open air public gatherings and his
style of playing in a standing position with one leg placed on a T-shape rest
was a familiar sight in every county from Wicklow to Clare. His legato open style of piping can be heard
in the tunes he recorded for Kevin Danaher of the Folklore Commission in
1946. Nowadays the Dublin piper Paddy
Keenan keeps alive the dance tunes and the Doran styles of piping in such
classic pieces as “Rakish Paddy”, “The Copper and Brass” and “Colonel
Fraser”.
Brian Hughes who is also a noted whistle player has
recently produced his second album which I understand will be launched in the
Clanard Hotel on Friday night, 1st December at 8.00 p.m. Looking through the track notes on the new CD
I was struck by the links to past masters of Irish traditional music. Brian is obviously an avid collector of old
tunes and his CD shows the extent of his repertoire with tunes from many
different regions and eras resting alongside a small number of recent
compositions.
Musical associations with such greats as the Sligo
fiddle masters Paddy Killoran and Michael Coleman whose fiddle playing
energised the New York Irish traditional music scene in the 1920's and later,
are recalled in a number of jigs and reels played by Brian on the whistle. The musicians of Sliabh Luachra in West Cork
are brought to mind with a number of polkas normally associated with fiddle and
accordion playing and particularly the playing of Padraig O'Keeffe and the man
who was his pupil, Terry Teahan. The
last named was in later years a stalwart of Irish traditional music in
Chicago. Irish American musicians were a
ready source of material for Brian's CD, with Tuohys Reels named after the
Loughrea, County Galway man who toured the American music halls with his wife
Mary at the turn of the last century with a show which combined uilleann piping
with a vaudeville act. It is said that
the stage Irishness of Patsy Tuohys vaudeville antics made John McCormack leave
the United States, but then again, McCormack himself was perhaps guilty of
stage Irishness with some of the songs he selected for his concerts.
Many of the tunes included in Brian's new CD are to
be found in Francis O'Neill's “The Music of Ireland” which was published
in 1903. O'Neill was an extraordinary
man who was born in West Cork in the famine year 1848. When he was 20 years of age he arrived in
America having spent four years as a sea man.
He eventually ended up in Chicago at a time when the Irish emigrants
were a powerful force in that city and by 1901 he had become Chief
Superintendent of Police in Chicago. He
was an avid collector of Irish traditional music and he spent over 20 years
collecting tunes for his first book, “The Music of Ireland” which consisted of 1,850 airs, reels and
jigs. Four years later he published “The
Dance Music of Ireland” and both books have remained in print ever since.
Brian Hughes has brought together a wonderful
collection of music displaying his mastery of the whistle, accompanied on some
of the tracks by Garry O'Briain, Brendan O'Regan, Donnchadh Gough, Nollaig
Casey, James Blennerhassett and Bruno Stachelin. The CD will be formally launched by Clem Ryan
of Kildare FM in the Clanard Hotel on Friday.
I gather it is an open event, no invitations being needed, and admission
is free. A traditional music session
will follow featuring Brian with Garry O'Briain and Donnchadh Gough.
When dealing with matters musical I should also
mention two other CD's which have just been launched. “Ceol Galore” is a recording of
traditional music by County Kildare musicians, including our own Roddy
Geoghegan and is currently in the shops.
My neighbour, Jim O'Keeffe, has also produced a CD to follow on two
previous releases which I thought were excellent. His latest CD is called “Yeah, What the
Hell” and features 14 of his own compositions which I gather have been
getting airtime on a number of continental stations.
Plenty of Christmas stocking fillings for you all in
the three CD's mentioned this week.
Whatever you do don't forget Brian Hughes launch on Friday night. Come along and support a local talent of
which we can be immeasurably proud.
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