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The DublinersThe Dubliners are an Irish folk band, one of the older bands in music today. Band membersThe founding members were Ronnie Drew, Luke Kelly, Ciaran Bourke and Barney McKenna.
Drew and Kelly sang most of the songs, and there was a nice dynamic between their two very different voice colors. InstrumentalsThey also played many instrumental tunes, mostly traditional reels, jigs and hornpipes. In the early days when they played at O'Donoughue's, Bobby Lynch and violin/tin whistle player John Sheahan would play during the breaks, and sometimes they stayed on stage after the interval. When Luke Kelly left for England in 1964, they were asked to join the group. During this period without Luke Kelly, their 1965 CD 'In Concert' was recorded; Lynch can be heard singing 'Roddy MacCorley' (with Ciaran Bourke), Dominic Behan's 'Patriot Game', 'The Kerry Recruit' and 'The Leaving of Liverpool' (with Ronnie). When Kelly returned, Lynch left the band and Sheahan stayed. Bobby Lynch eventually died in 1982. PopularityThe Dubliners became very well known, not just in Ireland; they were also pioneers for Irish folk in Europe and also (though less successful) in the United States. They had hits 1967 with 'Seven Drunken Nights' and 'Black Velvet Band'. They spent the late sixties and early seventies touring, playing, but mostly and most importantly: drinking. Then in 1974 disaster struck for Ciaran Bourke: he collapsed on stage after having a brain hemorrhage. First he made a miraculous recovery, but then he collapsed again, this time paralyzed on his left side. Bourke died in 1988. The band always kept hoping for his return; they never officially took on an official fifth member before his death, and they never stopped paying him. Also in 1974, Ronnie Drew decided to quit the band, to spend more time with his family. He was replaced with Jim McCann. Before joining the band McCann had a TV show in the early seventies called 'The McCann man'. He is best known for his incarnations of 'Carrickfergus', Makem's 'Four Green Fields', and 'Lord of the Dance'. He stayed with the band until 1979 to start a solo career; then Ronnie Drew rejoined the band. 25th anniversaryIn 1987, the Dubliners celebrated their 25th anniversary. They recorded a double CD, produced by Eamonn Campbell, long time friend and guest musician. He introduced them to The Pogues, and their collaboration resulted in a hit with "The Irish Rover". Christy Moore, Paddy Reilly and Jim McCann also featured on the CD; Moore sings a tribute to Luke Kelly, and McCann sings the song "I Loved the Ground She Walked Upon", written by Phil Coulter and Ralph McTell. In 1996 Ronnie Drew quit the band, and Paddy Reilly came on to replace him. Reilly, a long time friend of the group, toured with them before on several occasions; he was already a successful solo artist in Ireland, scoring hits with "The Fields of Athenry" and "The Town I Loved So Well" In 2002, they temporarily reunited with Ronnie Drew and Jim McCann, for their 40th anniversary tour. During this tour, they recorded their first DVD. Sadly, Jim McCann was diagnosed with throat cancer after the tour, and though he fully recovered his voice was severly damaged, and he will probably never sing again. In 2005 Paddy Reilly decided to move to the United States, and Patsy Watchorn joined the group. Watchorn made name for himself with The Dublin City Ramblers; like Luke Kelly he accompanies his songs on the banjo. After 43 years, the band still tours Europe every year, though instrumentalists Barney McKenna and John Sheahan are the only original members left in the band. Partial discography
This article is licenced under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Dubliners". |
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