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It could never be said of Patrick O’Keeffe that he was a
child of convention or even a conventional child. He
was, it seems, quite adept at tuning a fiddle at the age
of four or five. Conventional ? No!
Genius ?
- time would tell.
It has taken a long time for people to wake up to
an appreciation of the genius that was Patrick O’Keeffe.
His legacy has been brought home to us here in this
valley by the fortunate intervention of a series of
‘strangers’.
Only for the inquisitive, pioneering nature of these
people you wouldn’t be sitting in Castleisland today
reading this.
Thankfully,
one of their ilk is among us this weekend: Peter
Browne followed in the footsteps of Seamus Ennis and
Ciaran MacMathúna in the quest to unearth more
information on the Glounthane born fiddle master.
Patrick’s lack of regard for convention would manifest
itself too in later life. He threw up what some people
would regard as a sound and reliable job after only five
or six years as a teacher at Glounthane National School
- where he succeeded his father as principal.
Thereafter he spent the following four decades of his
life as a wandering music teacher.
In the recently broadcast
Sé Mo Laoch programme,
on Paddy Cronin,
the Gneeveguilla born pupil of O’Keeffe’s gave us
another gem of an insight into the master’s unconventionality:
“Patrick Keeffe came over to the window of the school
one day and raised it up and said to the teacher:
let out young Cronin there I’m teaching him back
at the house.”
No more than a handful of people recognised the traits
of his genius when he walked the roads hereabouts in the
course of his life as a free spirit and musician - and
the few who did were ‘special’ themselves. People like Willie Clancy, the renowned piper
from Milltown Malbay,
sought out
O’Keeffe and they had a couple of
great days playing in Scartaglin.
Did they ever think that they would have
festivals held in their honour in their respective
towns? - and we’re forever reminded that only a handful
of public houses here appreciated the gentle natured
Patrick as a customer.
In Castleisland you could count the number of pubs on
the fingers of one hand and not touch the thumb. Tom
McCarthy’s was a favourite of his and in fact it was the
last pub in which he drank before being admitted to St.
Catherine’s Hospital in Tralee - where he died on
February 22 - 1963 at the age of
75.
Julia Fitzgerald’s was another of his houses - in
any case it was a pub in which all Glounthane people
congregated when in town.
To stick with the vernacular culture of understatement:
Patrick O’Keeffe must have been a handy fiddler. Why
else would the likes of piper Seamus Ennis, in his
capacity as collector of music and folklore,
seek out his company in the early 1950s. There
were others:
American collector, Diane Hamilton visited
Castleisland in 1955 in the company of Liam Clancy. It
was during this raid that Clancy took the best known
photograph of Patrick in Scartaglin.
A
famous compilation resulted from the collaboration
between the two great musicians. Ennis was working for
the BBC at the time and he succeeded in getting Patrick,
along with Denis Murphy, and Julia Clifford
involved in a recording session in Charlie Horan’s pub
on September 9 in 1952.
At the time, and on the other side of the Atlantic
Ocean,
a young Republican senator was fighting for his
political life. Richard Milhous Nixon was trying to
clear his name after being accused of misappropriating
an $18,000 election fund;
he rose to that challenge and won - but fell
again later on - as history has it.
Back on this side: The recordings made by Seamus Ennis
at Charlie Horan’s that day went into the BBC Sound
Archives and emerged in 1977 as the Kerry Fiddles -
Music from Sliabh Luachra Vol.1 released under the Topic
label.
To bring the topic around to today and the reason why
we’re gathered here: Another noted piper, Peter Browne
arrived in Castleisland late in 1992 and began
researching the life and times of
O’Keeffe for RTE Radio 1. His findings led to the
broadcast in November 1994 of a four-part documentary
which looked at every aspect of the life of the
wandering, musical genius.
At the conclusion of his work in the Sliabh Luachra area
in early 1993 Peter Browne’s parting gift was to hint
that Castleisland should remember the great man somehow.
He suggested it could be done by means of a festival to
mark the 30th
anniversary of his death before the year was out. . That
happened and the event is going strong to this day.
Now,
to close the loop in earnest: That idea for the
festival was first mooted in a pub run at the time by
Mary Jones - a Glounthane native. The pub? - Charlie
Horan’s - where, you could say,
it all began on September 9-1952.
Mary Jones took up the challenge and became the
first festival president in 1993 - and here we are
today.
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