Posts categorized "Concert Posts"

April 01, 2008

CONCERT REMINDER - Patrick Ourceau & Eamon O'Leary - Traditional Irish Dance Tunes and Songs

April 4, 2008

Patrick Ourceau & Eamon O'Leary - Traditional Irish Dance Tunes and Songs

Friday, April 4, 2008; 8:00 PM


Commodore Barry Club / Irish Center
Carpenter Lane and Emlen Street
Phila., Pa   19119 / (610) 486-2220

Admission: $15, PCG members, $13

Patreek_eamon_2

At a session, Patrick with his fiddle nearly dances in his seat, both feet tapping out the rhythm, bright eyes full of humor, smiling, winking, ever ready with a warm gesture for newcomers ... Eamon, the essence of understatement and disheveled reserve, his guitar playing and his presence an anchor beneath the flights of melody.

Patrick Ourceau & Eamon O’Leary are both master musicians.

Patrick Ourceau was born in Paris, France in 1967. He first heard traditional Irish music on recordings, liked it instantly and decided it was the music he wanted to play. He is now known as a great fiddler, but it was not his first instrument of choice. “The concertina was tops on my list but it was hard to find one, living in France. And so I decided to go with the fiddle. Maybe one day I’ll still play the concertina.” He started playing at about 12 years of age, and his primary reason for coming to the US in 1989 was to play Irish music in the thriving trad scene in New York City. “I knew of fiddlers there like Andy McGann, Paddy Reynolds, Tony DeMarco and Brian Conway, and I thought it would be really good for me. Why not?” Patrick has since had a fine career in his almost 20 years in the US playing with the noted Clare concertina wizard Gearoid O’hAllmhurain and with button accordionist Paddy O’Brien’s popular trio “Chulrua”. His repertoire is dominated by his preference for the beautifully crafted, sinewy, lyrical music of the East Clare / East Galway tradition. He has become well known in that regional tradition, respected as much in Ireland - where he spent much time at the feet of master fiddlers like Paddy Canny and others - as he is in the United States. Patrick recently left New York and currently resides in Montreal, Canada.

Patrick_eamon_large

Eamon O’Leary was born in Dublin in 1972. He started playing the guitar in his teens. “I didn’t really come to Irish traditional music until, I suppose, my late teens. It was through friends that I’d made along the way who happened to play, and I just began to soak it up that way”. Eamon didn’t expect to be playing Irish music professionally when he arrived in New York in the late 1980s. “I started hanging out around a café on St. Mark’s Place where we used to play every week. It was an Irish-owned place and the enthusiasm with which they responded to the music was sort of inspiring”. Soon he was playing in sessions around the city with various musicians, including Patrick. Eamon is an outstanding guitar accompanist with a great ear for key and chord changes. He is also an accomplished tenor banjo player with an impressive repertoire.

March 25, 2008

Concert Reminder - Patrick Ourceau & Eamon O'Leary

April 4, 2008

Patrick Ourceau & Eamon O'Leary - Traditional Irish Dance Tunes and Songs

Friday, April 4, 2008; 8:00 PM


Commodore Barry Club / Irish Center
Carpenter Lane and Emlen Street
Phila., Pa   19119 / (610) 486-2220

Admission: $15, PCG members, $13

Patreek_eamon_2

At a session, Patrick with his fiddle nearly dances in his seat, both feet tapping out the rhythm, bright eyes full of humor, smiling, winking, ever ready with a warm gesture for newcomers ... Eamon, the essence of understatement and disheveled reserve, his guitar playing and his presence an anchor beneath the flights of melody.

Patrick Ourceau & Eamon O’Leary are both master musicians.

Patrick Ourceau was born in Paris, France in 1967. He first heard traditional Irish music on recordings, liked it instantly and decided it was the music he wanted to play. He is now known as a great fiddler, but it was not his first instrument of choice. “The concertina was tops on my list but it was hard to find one, living in France. And so I decided to go with the fiddle. Maybe one day I’ll still play the concertina.” He started playing at about 12 years of age, and his primary reason for coming to the US in 1989 was to play Irish music in the thriving trad scene in New York City. “I knew of fiddlers there like Andy McGann, Paddy Reynolds, Tony DeMarco and Brian Conway, and I thought it would be really good for me. Why not?” Patrick has since had a fine career in his almost 20 years in the US playing with the noted Clare concertina wizard Gearoid O’hAllmhurain and with button accordionist Paddy O’Brien’s popular trio “Chulrua”. His repertoire is dominated by his preference for the beautifully crafted, sinewy, lyrical music of the East Clare / East Galway tradition. He has become well known in that regional tradition, respected as much in Ireland - where he spent much time at the feet of master fiddlers like Paddy Canny and others - as he is in the United States. Patrick recently left New York and currently resides in Montreal, Canada.

Patrick_eamon_large

Eamon O’Leary was born in Dublin in 1972. He started playing the guitar in his teens. “I didn’t really come to Irish traditional music until, I suppose, my late teens. It was through friends that I’d made along the way who happened to play, and I just began to soak it up that way”. Eamon didn’t expect to be playing Irish music professionally when he arrived in New York in the late 1980s. “I started hanging out around a café on St. Mark’s Place where we used to play every week. It was an Irish-owned place and the enthusiasm with which they responded to the music was sort of inspiring”. Soon he was playing in sessions around the city with various musicians, including Patrick. Eamon is an outstanding guitar accompanist with a great ear for key and chord changes. He is also an accomplished tenor banjo player with an impressive repertoire.

February 16, 2008

Upcoming Concert Reminder

APPEARING IN CONCERT ON SATURDAY, FEB. 23RD, 8:00p.m.

MATT & SHANNON HEATON

IRISH CENTER, 6815 EMLEN ST. PHILADELPHIA

This multitalented couple from Massachusetts are taking the music
world by storm with a unique blend of traditional and original Irish
tunes and songs.  Shannon on flute and Matt on guitar play and sing as
well.  They are regular tutors at the Catskills Irish Arts Week in
July and have 3 CDs to their credit, including their newest:  "A Fine
Winter's Day".  The concert starts at 8:00, tickets are $15/$13 for
PCG members.
In the afternoon on the 23rd, Matt and Shannon will be offering
workshops in the flute and guitar at the Irish Center at 2:00.  Cost
for the workshops is $25 and a workshop/concert combined ticket is
only $30.  For reservations or to register, please contact Marianne
MacDonald at rinceseit@msn.com or at (856)236-2717. 

Tickets may be purchased on line by going to: Download concert-tickets.html (5.7K)

January 02, 2008

The Music of Ed Reavy - a special concert

The Philadelphia Ceili Group Presents:

A special evening of The Music of Ed Reavy

Cdcover_lg

With Jim Eagan, fiddle ... Peter Fitzgerald, banjo
Myron Bretholz, bodhran ... Andy Thurston, guitar 

Sat., Jan. 19, 2008; 8:00 PM

Commodore Barry Club / Irish Center
Carpenter Lane and Emlen Street
Phila., Pa   19119 / (610) 486 2220

Admission: $15, PCG members, $13

For more information, go to:

Download upcoming-concerts-and-eve.html (11.8K)

September 11, 2007

A Look Back at the 2007 Festival


Two beautiful voices
Originally uploaded by Irish Philadelphia Photo Essays

As they say the festival was "brilliant!",click below for a wrap up of the 2007 Philadelphia Ceili Group Traditional Irish Music and Dance Festival.

April 12, 2007

Marie & Martin Reilly Quartet

Crossroads Music and the Philadelphia Ceili Group Present

Marie & Martin Reilly Quartet

Irish Traditional Music on Fiddle, Accordion, Flute, Tenor Banjo…

Sat., April 14, 2007; 7:30 PM

$15; $10 if you can't afford to come otherwise.

                        Their new CD, "Marie & Martin Reilly", has been called" one of the best traditional music recordings  of the year” by Irish Music Magazine.

Calvary Center for Community & Culture 
801 S. 48th Street / Phila., PA

(Corner of 48th & Baltimore, #34 Trolley)

More info:  (215) 729-1028

                                                                                                 

Marie & Martin Reilly Quartet at Crossroads Concert Series ...

March 05, 2007

Kevin Burke with Cal Scott in Concert

Friday, May 11th, 8 p.m.Kevincal

Admission: $15; $13 for Ceili Group Members

Fiddler Kevin Burke has one of those names that just pops up everywhere, and with a lot of respect attached to it at that.  From the seventies with the legendary Bothy Band to the present, he has always been one of the top musicians on the traditional Irish music scene.  Burke is London-born of Sligo parents, one of the top living Irish fiddlers, and an acknowledged master of the highly ornamented Sligo style.  Kevin is one of the most influential musicians to emerge from the Irish traditional music revival of the last 30 years.  His inimitably silky, lyrical style was a cornerstone of the legendary Bothy Band and he remains an active member of such supergroups as Patrick Street and Celtic Fiddle Festival.

Cal Scott was working on a TV documentary about the Troubles in Northern Ireland and engaged Kevin in the project as a consultant.  When the documentary was done Kevin and Cal continued to meet mainly for the purpose of investigating further some of the various musical possibilities that arose during the collaboration.  The friendship and musical relationship grew and the decision was made to record some of their ideas just to see where they might lead.

The Philadelphia Ceili Group is proud to welcome Kevin Burke back to our stage at the Irish Center, in this exciting new duet with guitarist Cal Scott.