On my first St. Patrick’s Day in New York, Turner &
Kirwan of Wexford played four sets in the Pig & Whistle on 48th
Street before hopping the RR Train to Bay Ridge and knocking off another four sets
in Tomorrow’s Lounge.
Endurance
and Southern Comfort were the name of the game. Hey, if that sweet sticky
liquid gave Janis Joplin a boost, it might put the power of god in two hayseeds
from Wexford!
I played
a number of St. Patrick’s Days on the road – once at some god-forsaken college
in West Virginia where we were warned not to leave the grounds with long hair,
as we would definitely not return with it – such was the hostility of the local
rednecks.
Another
March 17th we were prevailed upon to play ten sets in a New
Hampshire establishment. To protest this injustice we threw a huge party
afterwards in our lodgings. Next morning the owner returned unexpectedly to a
scene out of a Paddy Fellini movie. It was not my happiest March 18th.
New York
City is unequivocally the place to be on St. Patrick’s Day. There’s a wildness
in the air. I trace it back to the “Famine Irish” who on that one day of the
year defiantly stepped out from their urban hovels to the beat of: “we have
survived, we have arrived!”
Back in
the 1970’s with a struggle against discrimination going on in the North of Ireland one dug deep and summoned up
the many rebel songs that were part of our DNA.
With his
tightening of Section 31 of the Broadcasting Act in 1976, Dr. Conor Cruise
O’Brien blockaded that rebel musical avenue on Irish radio and television, and
Ireland lost a vital link to its heritage.
When we
formed Black 47 Chris Byrne and I set out to renew the link by writing our own contemporary
rebel music with the help of Reggae, Hip-Hop, and Rock beats. Thus came James
Connolly, Time To Go, Fire of Freedom and other songs that challenged the political
status quo.
Our
mantra was to use the beats from the street but always keep the link – and the
faith - with the past.
Saint
Patrick’s Days were a riotous blur for twenty-five years with Black 47. We’d
arrive back in the city from some late night gig, do an early morning TV show,
then load in for Conan, Letterman or Fallon. With fatigue and adrenaline
battling it out, I once forgot a line of James Connolly on national television.
Few noticed but I died a hundred deaths.
We insisted
that our St. Patrick’s Night gigs be open to all ages – it was important that
the youth be introduced to the old Irish political traditions. And, oh those
nights were full of life, and the triumph and tragedy that attend it.
When BB
King’s called and asked me to put together a band for March 17th, I
hesitated; I’ve been enjoying playing solo since Black 47 disbanded, exploring
the lyrical side of the band’s anthems.
But
there was a need for a big midtown gig on St. Patrick’s night in this centenary
year of 2016.
Besides I had written a new song about Sean MacDiarmada, the
spark plug of the Rising.
And so I
reached out to some unique musician friends to form a band for the night. My
old comrade, David Amram, who pioneered the Poetry/Jazz fusion with his friend Jack
Kerouac, will even sit in.
Chris
Byrne will join us after his set with Lost Tribe of Donegal. John McDonagh from
Radio Free Eireann will MC and present a piece from his successful Cabtivist
show. My son, Rory K, a hip-hop artist will play – the next generation deserves
its night also.
But the
link to the past will as ever be bone-deep. We’ll tackle some of the score of my
musical, Hard Times, set in The Five Points in 1863 when the “Famine Irish”
were beginning their ascent up the social and political ladder.
The unruly
spirits of Sean MacDiarmada, Stephen Foster, James Connolly, Michael Collins -
and god knows who else - will collide on 42nd Street this St.
Patrick’s night. See you at BB
King’s!
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