Irish Music Forever

Links and Bio's

About Irish Music Forever

Name of Performer/Group      Page 21

Paddy    Keenan    Back to Artist List
        Bothy Band

Recent Album:    Poirt An Phiobaire    1983

Paddy Keenan was born in Trim, Co. Meath, to John Keenan, Sr. of Westmeath and the former Mary Bravender of Co. Cavan. The Keenans were a Travelling family steeped in traditional music; both Paddy's father and grandfather were uilleann pipers. Paddy himself took up the pipes at the age of ten, playing his first major concert at the Gaiety Theatre, Dublin, when he was 14. He later played with the rest of his family in a group called The Pavees.

At 17, having fallen in love with the blues, Paddy left Ireland for England and Europe, where he played blues and rock. Returning to Ireland after a few years, he began playing around Dublin with singer/keyboardist Triona Ni Dhomhnaill and singer/guitarist Micheal O Dhomhnaill. Fiddler Paddy Glackin then joined the three, and they asked flute player Matt Molloy to play with them shortly thereafter. Next accordion player Tony MacMahon joined the group, and then guitarist Donal Lunny was asked to listen to the six. Liking what he heard, he joined as well, and the loosely-knit band began calling itself "Seachtar," the Irish word for "seven."

Seachtar's first major concert was in Dublin. They played a few more gigs around the country, but circumstances soon forced Tony MacMahon to drop out. When the rest of the band decided to turn professional Paddy Glackin left as well; he was replaced by Donegal fiddler Tommy Peoples, (http://www.mayo-ireland.ie/CCE/Publish/Treoir/Articles/Autumn96/Aitmn962.htm or http://celtic.stanford.edu/artists/Peoples.html)who was later replaced by fiddler Kevin Burke). All the group needed now was a name. Micheal O' Dhomhnaill had recently returned from Scotland, where he happened across a photograph taken in the 1890s of a group of tattered musicians. "The Bothy Band," it was titled, in reference to the migrant Irish laborers who worked in England and Scotland and were housed in stone huts known as "bothies." Micheal suggested that the band take this name, and the others agreed. Thus was born one of the most influential bands of the 1970s, The Bothy Band.

The Bothy Band forever changed the face of Irish traditional music, merging a driving rhythm section with traditional Irish tunes in ways that had never been heard before. Those fortunate enough to have seen the band live have never forgotten the impression they made -- one reviewer likened the experience to "being in a jet when it suddenly whipped into full throttle along the runway." Paddy was one of the band's founding members, and his virtuosity on the pipes combined with the ferocity of his playing made him, in the opinion of many, its driving force. Bothy Band-mate Donal Lunny once described Paddy as "the Jimi Hendrix of the pipes"; more recently, due to his genius for improvisation and counter-melody, he has been compared to jazz great John Coltrane.

Paddy's flowing, open-fingered style of playing can be traced directly from the style of such great Travelling pipers as Johnny Doran; both Paddy's father and grandfather played in the same style. Although often compared to Doran, Paddy was 19 or 20 when he first heard a tape of Doran's playing; his own style is a direct result of his father's tutelage and influence. (From the official Paddy Keenan web site)

    CD NOW     Offical Web Site     Link #1    
                       
                   



Katell    Keineg    Back to Artist List
       

Jet

Recent Album:    Jet    1997

    CD-NOW     Offical Web Site     Link #1    
                       
                   



Brian    Kennedy    Back to Artist List
       

Recent Album:    Better Man    1996

    CD NOW     Official Web Site        
                       
                   

Back to Artist List

Go to Page 22



FastQ.com
This site hosted by FASTQ

Subscribe to Weekly AIMS News and Notes
Subscribe to Weekly
AIMS News and Notes


This site © 2002
Arizona Irish Music Society

HOME