www.FeileFrankMcGann.com - Traditional Music Festival - Strokestown, Co. Roscommon - 8th to 10th October 2010
 

Traditional Music Festival Strokestown, Co. Roscommon
8th to 10th October 2010

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Failte Ireland

Arts Council Roscommon County Council

 

 

Céili

This year, Féile Frank McGann is delighted to host a second céilí over the weekend. On Friday night, the Templehouse Céilí Band will get the dancers off to a lively start and get them geared up for the Tulla on Sunday!

Céili enthusiasts from all over Roscommon and further afield will be eagerly anticipating Sunday’s Céili with the Tulla Céili Band. The Céili commences at 3pm.

Even if you haven’t been to a Céili before this is a ‘must get to’ event where the craic will be non stop. It’s the most enjoyable form of workout there is, especially after a weekend of big breakfasts and plenty of pints!

To have one major Céili band in a county is recommendation enough of the strength of traditional music in the area, but Clare has proven itself a hotbed with both the Tulla and the Kilfenora Céili bands making their own legends. The roots of the Tulla Céili Band go back to its formation in 1946, when Teresa Tubridy, a local pianist, and Bert McNulty a garda stationed there, formed the band. P.J. Hayes, an original line up member, recalls their foundation.

"Teresa's sister, Mrs Cummins, lived on the Ennis Road, and she was very much involved in music as well. She asked Teresa could she put a band together to compete at Feile Luimni and that's how the Tulla Céili Band came to be."

Their initial repertoire came very much from local sources. "Some of the tunes would be local tunes. We got a share of them from Paddy Canny's father and local musicians and of course Joe Cooley had a few Galway tunes as well. Since their inception, names like those heretofore mentioned, also fiddler Michael Murphy, drummer Martin Garrihy, accordionists Matty Ryan, Paddy McNamara and Sean Conway, pianist George Byrt, flautists J.C. Talty and Peter O'Loughlin and singers Martin Ryan and Michael Whyte have all passed through the line up."

Currently the band stands as a ten member line up for the new album. "J. J. Conway's with us. He joined the band around ten years ago - a Kilfenora man, Martin my son plays on the CD and Francie Donnelan and his son and myself, we are the four fiddle players, J.J. Conway and a young girl called Jennifer Lenihan are the flute players, Sean Donnelly a Galwayman, and Michael McKee are the accordion players and Michael Flanagan on the drums and Jim Colley on the piano."

The bands 50th anniversary album was recorded in 1996, not in a studio but in Pepper's Bar in Feakle. The setting was natural and relaxed as was the recording itself. "We just sat around the pub and played. The natural atmosphere was perfectly conducive to the music recorded." Clare music has always been possessed of a natural warmth and conviviality. That has come across on their recordings and their live appearance whether here or on their trips to England, and their visits to the USA . Their music has been timeless from the very start and is still very much so.

This will be the best Céili in the Country this year. Don’t miss it!