A Happy Type of Sadness: A Journey Through Irish Country Music

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CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

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PREFACE: ‘BIG TOM’ WAS THE KING

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INTRODUCTION

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1

JIM REEVES HAD TO GO BUT LARRY CUNNINGHAM

SAVED THE NIGHT

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2 ‘THE CIRCLE IS UNBROKEN’: A VERY SHORT HISTORY

OF AMERICAN COUNTRY MUSIC

39

3 ‘BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME’: COUNTRY COMES TO IRELAND

57

4 SEARCHING FOR THE PIONEERS

71

5 HOW ‘BIG TOM’ BECAME THE ‘KING’

91

6 THREE QUEENS OF IRISH COUNTRY MUSIC

106

7 THE RISE AND RISE OF ‘WEE’ DANIEL O’DONNELL

124

8 IN THE COUNTRY OF ‘REAL’ COUNTRY

135

9 GARTH BROOKS’ HAT CAN SING: GARTH BROOKS AND IRELAND 151 10 ‘YOUR NEXT DANCE PLEASE’: TRIPPING THROUGH THE WORLD OF COUNTRY MUSIC DANCING

165

11 TRYING TO KEEP IT COUNTRY: THE MEDIA AND COUNTRY

MUSIC IN IRELAND

184


12 PORTRAITS FROM THE TRADE

205

13 BORN IN THE USA: THE ROBERT MIZZELL STORY

231

14 ‘THE LONE RANGER OF IRISH COUNTRY MUSIC’: JAMES KILBANE AND COUNTRY GOSPEL 15 A NEW COUNTRY

239 246

16 THE PAST IS A FOREIGN COUNTRY MUSIC: THE RISE

OF NATHAN CARTER

262

17 FOREVER AND EVER: THE ENDURING POPULARITY OF IRISH COUNTRY MUSIC

273

ENDNOTES

291

BIBLIOGRAPHY

308

INDEX

314


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I wish to thank the following people for taking the time to speak and cor­ respond with me: Keelan Arbuckle, Charlie Arkins, Steve Bloor, Johnny

Brady, Denise Browne, Sarah Burke, Gerard Butler, Maria Carroll, Willie Carty, Paul Claffey, Michael Commins, Kathy Crinnion, dancers at the McWilliam Park Hotel, dancers at social-dancing classes in the Westport

Woods, Roly Daniels, John Farry, Mick Flavin, Denise Fogarty, Rita Gill, Tom Gilmore, Gerry Glennon, Brendan Grace, Cliona Hagan, Dennis Heaney, John Hogan, John Marion Hutchinson, Sean Joyce, George

Kaye, Dympna Kelly, Michael Kelly, Sandy Kelly, Sharon Kelly, Tom Kelly, William Kelly, James Kilbane, Uri Kohen, Niamh Lynn, Mary

from Mullingar, Jim Martin, Lee Matthews, Frank McCaffrey, Susan McCann, Hubie McEvilly, Sarah McEvilly, Charlie McGettigan, Willie

McHugh, Philip McLaughlin, Fiona Mc­ Mahon, Henry McMahon, Karen McMahon, Shauna McStravock, Robert Mizzell, Eunice Moran, John Morrison, Louise Morrissey, Howard Myers, Tom Nallen, Máire Ní

Chonláin, Hugh O’Brien, Carmel O’Donoghue, Gerald O’Donoghue, Robert Padden, Aidan Quinn, Declan Quinn, James Reddiough, Marc

Roberts, Tim Rogers, Kay Ryan, Roger Ryan, Lisa Stanley, Colin Stewart, Niall Toner and Emmet Wynne. Apologies to anyone I forgot to mention; you know who you are.

Writing a book of this nature is challenging and time-consuming; it

is easy to run down blind alleys and lose focus, finding it difficult to see the wood from the trees. In this regard I would particularly like to thank Wendy Logue, my editor at Mercier Press, from whom I have learned so


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A HAPPY TYPE OF SADNESS

much during the process of bringing this book to fruition. Her attention to detail and professionalism were remarkable and the finished product has

benefited enormously from her commitment to the project. Thanks Wendy. I would also like to thank Patrick O’Donoghue, commissioning editor

at Mercier, for his unceasing encouragement, diplomacy skills and good

cheer. The lines of communication were always open through Patrick, which is a critical factor in the completion of a project of this nature.


PREFACE ‘BIG TOM’ WAS THE KING The ballrooms in this country are living proof today,

Of a man who is now a legend from Wicklow to Galway.

We love our country music, to us it’s everything,

It don’t matter what they tell you, Big Tom is still the King. From ‘Big Tom Is Still The King’1

On Friday 23 October 2015 The Late Late Show, Ireland’s most popular

television chat show, dedicated the entire night to a celebration of Irish

country music for the first time. It attracted an astonishing fifty-two per cent of the national audience.2 An average of 740,000 people tuned in for the show, while the total viewership over the course of the programme

reached 1.3 million. Programme host Ryan Tubridy – a country music fan – was not surprised at the viewing figures when he discussed them on

his radio show on RTÉ Radio 1 the following Monday: ‘We knew that

country is huge when we decided to have this special so it’s no surprise to us that so many people tuned in on Friday night. It was truly one of the

most enjoyable Late Late Shows I’ve ever presented.’3 He was par­ticularly moved by his interview with singer ‘Big Tom’ McBride, as were many of the

viewing public. McBride looked a little frail and his voice sounded a little


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faded and shaky as he sang his most famous country song, ‘Four Country

Roads’, but the audience were entranced. They could not dance because they were confined to their seats, but as the camera panned through the crowd the entire mass of people swayed and sang along together. It could

have been a cult worshipping an all-powerful leader, such was the devotion on their faces. Here was an old but still physically imposing man, singing

about a small village in County Galway, surrounded by a large group of

worshippers gazing at him as if he was revealing the secret to everlasting existence. Faces shone and eyes glistened as the big man sang about the four country byways to his heart. There was nothing less than love in the

eyes of the audience. Nothing else mattered; this was the man. They had come to worship at the feet of their king.

DJ and highly regarded country music historian and journalist Michael

Commins wrote about the show in his column in the Irish Farmers Journal: The Late Late Show country music special last October cemented Tom’s special place as the iconic star of the country scene in Ireland. It was as if

the entire show was building up to that magic moment when Tom came

into the room. The standing ovations and crescendo of emotions that spread out from the RTÉ studio in Dublin was a massive endorsement of

the place this man from Monaghan commands in the hearts of so many Irish people.4

In the world of Irish country music ‘Big Tom’ was the king.


INTRODUCTION When I was a teenager my house had many American country records that

my mother had brought home from visits to her sister in the United States, and I would often play Tammy Wynette, Hank Williams, Patsy Cline, Don

Williams and Freddy Fender on the record player. What always amazed

me about these songs was how great they were at telling a story in a few short verses. This was often a sharp counterpoint to the lyrics of much of

the contemporary pop and rock music at the time, where the narrative was frequently lost in a smokescreen of sound effects and synthesizers. The

foregrounding of the voice and the elemental nature of the lyrics in country songs had an appeal that a lot of contemporary fare did not have. Although

I had no musical ability myself – I had to carry the flag in the school band – even I could see that in country music there was no hiding place for the

singer. To get the message across you had to be able not only to sing, but also to emote.

Since then I have listened to all types of American country music

and know the subject well. But while I had a wide knowledge and love

of American country music, when I noticed the proliferation of home-

grown country music programmes on Irish television, particularly on TG4, over the last number of years, I realised I did not know nearly as much

about how country music had developed in Ireland. I decided it was time I learned more, and that interest culminated in what you are now reading.

This book is not intended to be a complete guide to Irish country

music. It is a mixture of research, interviews and attendance at all sorts of happenings and events, which allowed me to take a journey through the


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world of Irish country music and along the way to meet and talk to some

of the hard-working and talented people who have chosen to make their

mark in that world. This is their story. I want to thank all the people who

took the time to help me, talk to me on the phone or at various venues

and guide me in the right direction when I was researching the book. To all of them, and to all the fans out there who support them, I say, ‘Keep it country.’


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