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West Clare Fiddle Playing

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Uploaded by on Feb 25, 2007

http://www.setdancingnews.net/wcss/wcsst.htm
http://www.eigsemrscrotty.com/
The late John Kelly from County Clare playing with his two sons James and John Jnr.
John Kelly (1912-89)
Fiddle and concertina player John Kelly was a central figure in Irish traditional music in the middle decades of the past century. Without him we would very probably have had no recording of the piping of Johnny Doran. In fact he is the only musician known to have recorded with Doran.
Born in 1912 in Rehy, Cross, Kilballyowen in south Clare, he was one of eight children of Michael and Eliza Kelly. His interest in Irish music stemmed from an early age as both his mother and uncle Tom were concertina players. Some of his earliest memories were of weddings and house dances in the Cross area which was Irish-speaking up until the mid1930s.
Another area to influence the young Kelly was the island of Scattery near the mouth of the Shannon. His grandmother was born on the island and he had cousins there. His first evening on the island at age 18 was an excuse for a house dance. His music made him extra welcome among his relatives and he spent most of the remaining week there playing the fiddle.
The island had a strong maritime connection and some Continental styles and waltzes found their way there. But more significantly the island provided a link to north Kerry music and it was through this connection that John learned about polkas, slides and single jigs.
Back home Mary Holohan in Kilballyowen gave John concertina lessons. Another important influence around this time was Nell Galvin, a fiddle player from near Kilkee. A close friend of the great Clare piper Garret Barry, she gave John Kelly five tunes that she herself had gotten from Barry, including his version of The Ace and Deuce of Piping. But the person from whom he got most of his tunes was a neighbour, Patsy Geary.
In September 1932 he met the travelling piper Johnny Doran at Kilkee races and they struck up a friendship which lasted until the piper's death in 1950.
John Kelly moved from west Clare to Dublin in 1945 when he married Frances Hilliard from County Wicklow and settled down in Capel Street. Doran was a regular visitor to his music instrument shop there, The Horse Shoe. It was in November 1946 that Kelly arranged for the well-known folk collector, Kevin Danaher, then with the Irish Folklore Commission, to tape the playing of Johnny Doran. About 20 tunes were recorded and it was planned to record more. But in January 1947 Johnny Doran suffered a broken back when a wall fell on his caravan in Dublin's High Street. He died in hospital in 1950. The tapes are now in the UCD Folklore Department and copies are on limited sale at Claddagh Records.
Following the decline of the country house dances due to the Dance Hall Act of 1935, Irish music reached a low ebb in the Ireland of the Forties, particularly so in Dublin. But John Kelly's Capel Street premises was to become an important stopping off point for visiting musicians such as Willie Clancy, Bobby Casey and Joe Ryan from Clare and Niall O'Boyle from Donegal. John joined the Pipers Club then in Thomas Street and met up with other musicians like Leo Rowsome, Tommy Reck, Tom Mulligan, Sean Seery, Sonny Brogan and Tommy Potts. Another favourite gathering place was the home of Tommy Reck in Hyde Street where younger musicians would pick up tune settings and playing techniques. In this meliu was born Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann, na fleadhanna and the gradual revival in Irish traditional and folk music.

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Uploader Comments (clarebannerman)

  • John Kelly and Joe Ryan played a regular gig in O'Donoghue's Pub, Dublin for many years in the '70's. He also played in the Four Seasons Pub at the top of Capel Street of a Thursday Night (great sessions).Many is the good night I had listening to beautiful music like this. Rest in peace John.

Top Comments

  • Clarebannerman for President!!!

  • john kelly is a legend

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  • @bungalowct uhhh sorry.... I guess I just got mad :P It's the only thing about celtic music that pisses me off..... Although it's not even the music but the people that play it.... Thanks though :D (I've been told it's a tune and not a song a million times over again already)

  • @allendupras Your welcome. I wasn't responding to criticize but to give the name of the reel. Maybe also to save you future embarrassment;)

  • @bungalowct tune... song.. who F$@%##ing gives :P It's music

  • @allendupras Caher Rua reel (tune, not song)

  • whats the name of the first song???

  • I think that was Paddy Glackins father behind them with his arms folded.

    John was a great caractor as he prnounced it.

  • Frank Harte in blue on the left hand side?

  • @shitamerica1 good one, good one, too funny.......

  • @HEADSUPBERKELEY

    James is living in Miami Florida now.

  • @clarebannerman was often in O'Donoghues on those nights with the late Eddie Clark....inside the side door!

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