The Ian Gallaghers fabric - Exiled but Irish To The CoreA Walk Down A Memory With Ian
By Paul Francis McCann
Like the threads that stitch up a quilt Irish music has a wide array of material .
As an Irish Radio producer I talk to many Irish people about music
.
For some Irish exiles like Ian Gallagher who now lives in America
The Irish Showband era made a big impact on his life .
Recently when Ian Gallagher released an album of his own entitled
My Ireland . The album is a collection of well loved Irish songs sung by
Ian in a soft crooner kind of way . There is a slight touch of the Big
Band element there on a Glen Miller melody . All in all the album has a
hallmark of Irishness with a capital C for Class
Ian rang me from his home in New Jersey , and we spoke of the
land we love . Ireland the country of our birth
We spoke of the hard times that made us leave and we spoke of what
inspired him as an artist
to do this album My Ireland .
For the benefit of all music lovers and Irish exiles here is some
of what we spoke about .
I hope you enjoy A Walk Down A Memory With Ian .
Hello Paul . Good morning I have no idea what time it is over there . I think its in the evening sometime is it ?
Its about Six thirty . What time is it over there in the states ?
Its almost a quarter to three in the morning and I stayed up just to talk to you Paul .
Ah that’s very decent of you .
I wanted to thank you for giving me this opportunity to promote my CD out there in Australia .
Before you went to America you originally came from Roscommon in
Ireland Ian .
Could you tell us some of your memories of that place ?
Well I was actually raised in a village called Arigna in County Roscommon
.
Its actually lies on the shores of Lough Allen which is the first
Lake on the Shannon and Arigna was a mining village and it had been producing
coal there since the sixteen hundreds believe it or not . A lot of people
don’t know that about that part of Ireland but there was a big mining industry
there . The mines closed down about ten years ago around 1992. I think
they could import coal cheaper from Poland than they could mine it in Arigna
. So that’s the whole economics of the thing . My memories of that were
people had jobs and we lived pretty good there . That would be like in
the fifties in Ireland so you know we had a good time . We listened to
music and the start of my dancing days was there in that area . Drumshambo
was the closest village to me in that area which was County Leitrim . They
had a big ballroom there The Mayflower and that’s where I got my first
taste of the Irish Showbands and stuff like that . So I guess that formed
my musical background . A little bit if Irish and a little bit of
Rock And Roll and everything else .That’s what my childhood was
.
Did any other members of your family show interest with music and perform ?
Not in my generation . The music came from my Mothers side . My Mother was in a band and my Uncle played Accordion and he probably was my mentor my first instrument was a button keyed accordion I played traditional music when I was a kid and then I broke my arm in a car accident so then I picked up the guitar I guess I was in my teens at that time.. That’s when I got turned on to Rock And Roll but I came back to my musical roots probably in the late seventies . Back to the Irish music .
In Roscommon would it be true to say there’s a great love of the Gaelic football Ian .
Their Hey Day would have been in the forties I think .They havn’t won too many All Irelands . I mean I think they beat Kerry once .
What was it made you leave Ireland Ian .
Well when I left Ireland in the sixties which was a long time ago
there wasn’t much prospects for a young man coming out of national schools
. Most people had to emigrate . Our biggest export then was people .When
you go back to Ireland today its hard to imagine what Ireland was like
in the sixties .
There was just no work . You know unless you got a civil service
job or something your prospects were not very good so you had to go to
America or Australia and that was the way it was basically .Its terrible
to have to say that but that’s the way it was in Ireland then . I was back
there last year and I couldn’t get over how much progress the country has
made . Its just unbelievable .
You’re currently living in New Jersy in America . Whereabouts would you normally play your music over there ?
Well we actually play mainly dinner dances . We play mostly to the
over forty crowd who like ballroom dancing . You know people who like to
do the Irish dances like The Seige Of Ennis or The Stacks Of Barley , that
type of music .
And we mix it up with a wee bit of Sinatra, some standard’s, some
oldies . Some sixties and seventies .
A little to interest everybody here . That’s what its like here
the people like to dance and have a good time .
We Irish exiles often connect ourselves to our land by our music
and dance .
In this Album of yours it speaks well of your love for Ireland .
Have you had any help selecting the songs for the album ?
No . The music on the album were songs that I really like . If you
think of the track The Darling Girl From Clare which was written by Percy
French who was probable Irelands greatest songwriter of the last century
and of course he was a Roscommon man so I had to put that one on
.
I mean Danny Boy is the song everybody requests in this country
so if you’re going to do an album
you really have to put it on .
In the old Showband days in Ireland people loved to do ballroom
dancing .
I’m going back forty years ago and people loved to jive to Glen
Miller music .
To a certain extent it’s carried over here to this country and people
at my age group still remember those days .
How do you find it over there living in and around New York as an
Irish Musician ?
Great .They love Irish music out here . Even the younger people
here are still big with the Irish Music . I mean there are some fantastic
groups here at the moment .
Some of the younger Celtic Rock groups here which a lot of older
people are not keen on
keep interpreting Irish music their own way which keeps it alive
.
Irish music would die if people didn’t interpret it the way they
felt like it .,
So its almost like jazz Irish music . Its an old tradition and people
interpret it the way they feel .
It’s been great speaking to you Ian this evening . Thanks for calling .
Oh you’re welcome .Thanks Paul . God bless . Bye . Horizon Magazine
Paul Francis Mc Cann
Paul McCann - Producer & Presenter
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