Blas

Blas Tutors

 

Colin Dunne Colin Dunne

In 2008, International dancing sensation, Colin Dunne, tutored for the full two weeks of Blas 2008. Colin's agreement to join us for the full session is further evidence of his commiment to the Irish World Academy, his loyal association to the Blas Summer School and his personal attraction to tutoring on the Banks of the Shannon.

Colin Dunne is probably best known for his live and video performances in "Riverdance - The Show", and for his own critically acclaimed production of "Dancing on Dangerous Ground", for which he co-produced, choreographed and starred in with Jean Butler. See the Colin Dunne website for more information: www.colindunne.com ..>

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Danny O'MahoneyDanny O'Mahoney

Danny O’ Mahony is a traditional button accordionist from Ballyduff in North County Kerry, recognised for his unique and virtuosic style of solo playing. In May 2011, Danny released his long awaited and highly acclaimed debut solo recording ‘In Retrospect’. This album features Danny playing alongside Patsy Broderick on piano, Cyril O’ Donoghue on bouzouki and Johnny ‘Ringo’ McDonagh on bodhrán & bones. “In Retrospect is an instrumental fusion of generational tradition where nostalgic tones are enhanced by the innovative instrumentals of a serious talent. A debut delight” – Irish Music Magazine.

Danny presents and produces a weekly radio programme Trip to the Cottage which features Irish Traditional Music and Song for broadcast on Radio Kerry (www.radiokerry.ie). He has toured extensively in Europe, United States, Canada and Australia. Danny frequently attends festivals and summer schools as guest tutor, lecturer and performer. His current area of special interest is the music of Tom Carmody and the James Morrison Quartet.

Danny is regularly featured as a performer on RTÉ, TG4, RTÉ Radio One, Lyric FM, and Raidió na Gaeltachta. He has appeared on broadcasts such as Lyric FM’s Masters of Tradition concert series, RTÉ’s Céilí House and Forefront Productions’ Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann and Geantraí. In 2009, Danny revived The Shannon Vale Céilí Band. The original band was formed in Ballyduff, Co. Kerry by fiddler Dr. Mick Sweeney in 1959. The Shannon Vale Céilí Band won the prestigious All-Ireland Senior Céilí Band title at Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann, in 2011.

www.muireann.ie

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Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh

(pronounced MWI-ren Nick OWL-eve). Muireann toured and performed with various musicians and groups before joining the group Danú in 2003. In 2004 they won the BBC 2 Folk Award for "Best Group". At the same awards, the song "The County Down" by Tommy Sands that Danú had recently recorded, won "Best Song". Muireann herself won "Best Singer" at the liveireland.com Awards in 2005. Now a regular contributor to television and radio programmes at home and abroad, she featured prominently in the recent "Highland Sessions" BBC television series, celebrating the best of Irish and Scottish traditional music and song.

www.muireann.ie

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Francis Ward

Francis plays piano with Éalú, and contributes to the arrangement and composition of tracks.  Francis is a one of Ireland’s most dynamic young piano players.  He has performed all over the globe, at music festivals including Celtic Connections and the Tønder Festival, and provided musical accompaniment for all major Irish dance competitions including the World Irish Dance Championships.

In addition to performing with Éalú, Francis current performance activities include playing with bands Ciorras and the Five Counties Céilí Band (Awbeg Ceili Band).  Francis has several national TV appearances to his credit including a performance with Ireland’s most vibrant young ceili band, The Five Counties Ceili Band, at the Rose of Tralee festival, as well as on RTE’s programme showcasing young Irish traditional musicians, ‘The Reel Deal’.

Francis is also a gifted arranger and composer and his talent is in much demand by traditional musicians and Irish dance companies alike.  His compositions are recorded and performed regularly in the Irish music and dance worlds.

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Derek HickeyDerek Hickey

Derek Hickey hails from Adare, Co. Limerick. Both his grandfathers played fiddle and his own musical career began at ten years of age when his uncle left an accordion in the family home. Derek progressed to dance tunes within weeks though he didn’t begin lessons - under the tutelage of Dónal de Barra - until he was 12.

Derek’s professional career began three years later when he joined the Shannonside Céilí Band. Formed by the Liddy family the band was particularly popular in the north of the country. It also toured extensively in England and made regular trips throughout Europe.

In 1991 Frankie Gavin asked Derek to join him for regular sessions in his then leased hotel in Kinvara, Co. Galway. One year later, at just eighteen years of age Derek joined Arcady, Johnny ‘Ringo’ McDonagh’s band. Frances Black, Brendan Larrisey and Patsy Broderick were also members of the band at that time and many other household names have played in the line-up including Sharon Shannon, Cathal Hayden and Gerry O’Connor.

In 1995 Derek joined the legendary De Dannan. The De Dannan sound has always been based around the interaction between Frankie Gavin’s virtuoso fiddle and the box. Other great box players in De Dannan’s colourful history have included Jackie Daly, Mairtin O’Connor and Aidan Coffey. His pairing with Gavin proved to be one of the best box and fiddle duets ever. He toured with De Dannan until they disbanded in 2003. Derek is a button accordion tutor on the BA Irish Music and Dance at the Irish World Academy.

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Sean Og GrahamSeán Óg Graham

From Portglenone, Co. Antrim, Seán Óg Graham is one of Ireland’s most dynamic young button accordion players. He has achieved numerous All-Ireland titles and is also a gifted, self-taught guitarist.

He has several television appearances to his credit, and has appeared as guest soloist with the Irish Harp Orchestra, the Canadian Youth Orchestra and Alan Kelly’s ‘Celtic Legends’ show. He has recorded with various Irish musicians and recently he has been accompanying Solas members Winifred Horan and Mick McAuley at their ‘Serenade’ concerts in Ireland and Europe.

He is also a talented composer and a wide range of influences is evident in his music writing. Seán Óg is a graduate of the Limerick based Irish World Academy of Music.

www.beogamusic.com

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Mats Melin Mats Melin

Swedish born Traditional Dancer, Choreographer and Researcher Mats Melin has worked professionally with dance in Scotland since 1995. He has been engaged in freelance work nationally and internationally as well as having been Traditional Dancer in Residence for 4 Local Authorities. Mats co-started the dynamic Scottish performance group ‘Dannsa’ in 1999 and have been commissioned to choreograph for the Northlands and St Magnus Festivals. Mats was a former member of the Scottish Arts Council's Dance Committee. In 2005 Mats graduated with first class honours the Master of Arts degree in Ethnochoreology at the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance, University of Limerick, Ireland. He is currently working as a dance teacher and lecturer at the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance.

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Orfhlaith Ni Bhriain Dr. Orfhlaith Ni Bhriain

Dr. Orfhlaith Ni Bhriain is a registered Irish Dance teacher T.C.R.G. and adjudicator A.D.C..R.G. with An Coimisiun le Rinci Gaelacha. She has travelled extensively to workshops and Step Dance Competitions throughout Europe and North America as a tutor from the renowned Scoil Rince Ui Ruairc and dance accompanist.

In 1998 she completed a Masters in Ethnochoreology at the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance, University of Limerick. Orfhlaith is Dance Co-ordinator on the BA Irish Music and Dance at The University of Limerick and also worked as assistant lecturer in Dance in the Physical Education Department, Mary Immaculate College , Limerick. In 2010 Orfhlaith completed her doctoral thesis at the University of Limerick. Her research interests include, Irish Dance among the Diaspora and examining creative processes in the context of Competitive Irish Solo Step Dance.

Recently she completed a residency at Williams College MA where she was employed as guest artist in dance. During her residency there, she also gave workshops in Irish dance at the American Colleges Dance Festival in Plymouth New Hampshire.

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Dr. Catherine Foley Dr. Catherine Foley

Catherine Foley designed and is course director of both the MA in Ethnochoreology and the MA in Irish Traditional Dance Performance (one of the two streams of dance performance within the MA in Dance Performance), at the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance. She is also the director of Trath na gCos, an annual festival of traditional dance which records and contextually explores the diversity within Irish traditional dance practices; and is dance consultant for Blas the international summer school in Irish traditional music and dance at the centre. She has published internationally while continuing to perform.

Catherine is a native of Cork city whose upbringing was steeped in Irish traditional music and dance. She is a qualified Irish step-dance teacher (T.C.R.G.), and also holds a B.Mus. and a H.Dip. in Education from University College, Cork. Her Ph.D. thesis on Irish Traditional Step-dance in North Kerry, was the first on the topic in the world and this she completed at the Laban Centre for Movement and Dance, London. For six years Catherine taught music and Gaeilge in Baile Mhuirne, the west Cork Gaeltacht; she worked as a collector of Irish traditional music, songs, and step-dances for Muckross House Folk Museum, Killarney, Co. Kerry; and is an Associate of LAMDA in acting. Together with her academic work in Ethnochoreology, Catherine is a performer and a choreographer of Irish step-dance, and a musician.

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Breandán de Gallaí Breandán de Gallaí

Breandán de Gallaí is a professional Irish dancer, who is most famous for his lead role in the famed Riverdance show. Born into a family of seven, by his father Gearóid who's from Belfast and mother Nellie, originally from Gaoth Dobhair. In 1987 he went to the USA and joined the Gus Giordano's dance academy and there he studied Ballet, Jazz, Modern and Tap dancing. Back in Dublin, Ireland he worked as a teacher teaching Applied Physics and Irish after completing a four year degree at Dublin City University. He was first picked by Michael Flatley to join Riverdance for the interval of the 1994 Eurovision Song Contest. In the meantime de Gallaí set up his own dance company called Dualta with few other friends. In 1998 de Gallaí took the lead role in Riverdance and has been honoured to perform for and to meet the late King Hussein of Jordan, the Emperor of Japan, the Crown Prince of Japan, the late Diana, Princess of Wales, Prince Rainier of Monaco, Queen Sonja of Norway and Queen Elizabeth II of Britain. He states Vaslav Nijinski as one of his biggest influences. Breandán has completed Balor, a 90 minute contemporary Irish dance show to music composed by Joe Csibi. A former artist-in-residence at the Irish World Academy, Breandan is now one of the first students of the new PhD Arts Practice programme at the Academy, along with singer Iarla O Lionaird, musician Michelle Mulcahy and singer Sharon Lyons.

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Niall Keegan Niall Keegan (Flute)

Niall Keegan was born in the south east of England and began playing Irish traditional flute at an early age amongst the community of first and second generation musicians in and around London.

In 1990 Niall began studying under Dr Mícheál Ó Súileabháin for a Masters degree which he completed in 1992 with the submission of a thesis entitled The Words of Traditional Flute Style.

Since moving to Ireland Niall has performed extensively throughout the country and abroad in a variety of contexts and venues, including the Royal Albert Hall, Barbican, Project Arts Centre in Dublin, the University of Limerick Concert Hall, The National Concert Hall in Dublin, The Waterfront Hall in Belfast and the Galway Arts Centre. Niall’s solo recording, Don’t Touch the Elk, was released in June 1999 on his own independent label.

Niall is the course director of the MA Irish Traditional Music Performanceat the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance, University of Limerick.

http://www.ul.ie/~iwmc/research/niallbio.html

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John Carty John Carty

John Carty is one of Ireland’s finest traditional musicians having been awarded the Irish Television station, TG4’s Traditional Musician of the Year in 2003. He joins previous acclaimed winners Matt Molloy (Chieftains flautist), Tommy Peoples (Master Fiddler), Mary Bergin (whistle player, Dordan), Máire Ní Chathasaigh (Harpist) and Paddy Keenan (Uilleann Piper), all of whom are considered to be the leading exponents of their instruments within the Irish tradition.

Carty already has three solo fiddle albums, two banjo albums, two group albums and a sprinkling of recorded tenor guitar and flute music recordings under his belt so it's little wonder he should have joined such elusive ranks. John is a tutor at the Irish World Academy.

www.johncartymusic.com

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Martin HayesMartin Hayes

Martin Hayes’ accomplishments extend far and wide, both artistically and geographically. He has been an All-Ireland fiddle champion six times over, and has taken home a National Entertainment Award, the Irish equivalent to the "Grammy."

Born in Ireland and now residing in Seattle, Martin plays in the slow, lyrical style of his native East County Clare. He grew up playing traditional music with his father, P.J. Hayes, leader of the famed Tulla Ceili Band. The younger fiddler has a great reverence for the old players, whose music contains the longing and essence that moves you at the level of your soul. Martin brings that same depth to his own playing, rendering it unique with passion and intimacy.

(Extracts from the official Martin Hayes website: www.martinhayes.com)

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Donal Lunny

Donal Lunny is an Artist-in-Residence at the Irish World Academy, University of Limerick. He is the first traditional music-linked member of the Irish Arts Council-sponsored Aosdána and has been a central thread in the tapestry of Irish traditional music in its most creative interactive modes over a generation. He was was born in Tullamore Co Offaly before moving to Newbridge, County Kildare. In 1971, he was one of the founding members of Planxty, for whom he wrote the countermelodies and arranged harmonic structures and chord patterns for guitar and harmonium. He also played bouzouki, guitar, keyboards and bodhráns on all Planxty's recordings. 'Planxty' recorded three albums in the period 1971-1973 and redefined traditional Irish music. Their albums included 'Cold Blow and the Rainy Night' and 'The Well below the Valley'. In 1975, he joined the Bothy Band, producing four albums in four years including 'Out of the Wind and in to the Sun' and 'After Hours'. In 1980, Planxty reformed and Donal produced the three resulting albums before finally forming Moving Hearts with some of his former Planxty band-mates. Moving Hearts', who were responsible for such albums as 'Dark End of the Street' and 'The Storm,' were a hybrid, incorporating contemporary folk music, jazz and other influences with elements of rock. Donal has also composed for stage and television including the soundtrack for 'Eat the Peach' (1985) and 'This is my Father' (1997) and the opening title music for the series 'Bringing it all Back Home' (1991) and 'River of Sound' (1997). In 1996 he won the IRMA Producer of the Year award and in 1998, the National Entertainment Award.

His residency at the Irish World Academy to date has included an intensive week-long workshop at the Blas Summer School in July 2009 which will be repeated at the 2010 summer school. He has also worked intensively with students of the Academy’s BA and MA Irish Traditional Music Performance as part of this year-long residency.

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Sandra JoyceSandra Joyce

A native of Tuam, Co. Galway, I am a graduate of University College, Cork. I am currently finishing my PhD at the University of Limerick under the joint supervision of Professor Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin, University of Limerick and Dr. Paul Everett, University College, Cork. The subject of my research is Turlough O' Carolan, the late seventeenth- / early eighteenth-century blind harper / composer. (I have been asked to contribute a paper entitled "An Introduction to O' Carolan's Music in Eighteenth-Century Printed Collections", to the forthcoming publication Proceedings of the Maynooth International Conference, 1995, due to be published early 1996). I have also done some research on the ballad and ballad singing in Ireland, especially among the travelling people of my own home area, and this is of great importance to me.

I have taught and continue to teach extensively in a variety of capacities. I am currently involved in the teaching of an Irish Music Studies course at the University of Limerick, which is aimed primarily at Study Abroad American students and Erasmus students. I also teach ear / notation classes at Maoin Cheoil an Chláir , based in Ennis, Co. Clare, a music school which equally recognises and promotes Irish music and European classical music.

However, my first love is Irish traditional music and singing. My main instrument is the bodhrán, and I play mostly with the innovative flute player Niall Keegan . I am also a singer of traditional songs in the English language.

Sandra is the Course Director of the MA Irish Traditional Music Performance

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Siobhan PeoplesSiobhán Peoples

Siobhán Peoples is a mighty fiddle player, and a highlight of a trip to Ennis for many a musical tourist has long been the chance to hear her play in a session around town. With the recent release of a duet album with accordion player Murty Ryan, Time On Our Hands, many more people will have the pleasure of hearing her play. She is also a strong argument for a gene of musical talent that’s yet to be found on the DNA maps: her father, of course, is the legendary Tommy Peoples, and her grandmother on her mother’s side was Kitty Linnane, the piano player with the storied Kilfenora Ceili Band. For all that one might expect a certain quest for fame, or sense of self-importance, but Siobhán is interested only in the music. In here own words, she’s “mad for it.”

She may be a Clarewoman but Siobhan Peoples is also heir to a peerless Donegal fiddling tradition. The precision and intricacy of her performance of both Clare and Northern music has made her one of our most sought-after fiddlers. She has carved a niche as an outstanding performer and teacher. Siobhan presently lives and plays music in Ennis. There is a huge catalogue of recordings by Siobhan, the most recent being Time on our hands, a collaboration with box-player Murty Ryan. Siobhan is a fiddle tutor on the BA Irish Music and Dance at the Irish World Academy.

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Ernestine HealyErnestine Healy

Ernestine hails from County Mayo. From an early age she was surrounded by music. A qualified secondary school teacher, she is presently working as a lecturer in the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance, in the University of Limerick. Having occupied the position of Acting Course Director on the Graduate Diploma in Music Education postgrad programme during 2008/09, she is now lecturing on the BA in Irish Music and Dance undergraduate programme.

Ernestine is an internationally recognized concertina player, as well as a tutor and producer on the Irish musical scene. She has been engaged for events such as the ‘Milwaukee Irish Music Festival’, workshops in Germany, ‘Tocane’ in France, ‘Scoil Eigse’ as part of the All Ireland Fleadh, ‘Eigse Mrs.Crotty’ in Kilrush, Co Clare, Corofin Traditional Festival, as well as numerous other festivals & workshops around Ireland, Europe & America. Ernestine is a regular performer on both local and national radio, and has made numerous TV appearances including ‘The Fleadh Programme’ & ‘The Reel Deal’ (2009 Broadcast).

In addition to being an engaging performer and teacher, Ernestine’s portfolio also extends to research on Irish traditional music, Composition & Music Education for which she was duly awarded a First class Masters degree from the University of Limerick in 2008.

She is also a well-known composer of traditional Irish music in Ireland, with compositions featuring on numerous albums. In 2004 along with a school colleague, she composed and scripted her first musical based on the children’s story ‘The Wind in the Willows’. After completing her Masters in 2008, she scored her first suite ‘The Meitheal Suite’ which was performed by a 100 strong orchestra of Traditional Musicians as part of the Meitheal Summer school week subsequently followed by a performance in the National Concert Hall in Dublin. Ernestine is currently working on a recording project utilizing numerous of her compositions and arrangements for traditional music with string, brass & percussion ensembles, along with recording an album with her band ‘The Attic Jacks’.

Having worked as the Director of Meitheal Residential Summer School since its inauguration in 2004, she was appointed the Director of Blas International Summer School for Traditional Music and Dance in January 2010.

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Dennis CahillDennis Cahill

Dennis Cahill is a master guitarist, a native of Chicago born to parents from the Dingle Peninsula in County Kerry, Ireland. He studied at the city’s prestigious Music College before becoming an active member of the local music scene. Cahill’s spare, essential accompaniment to Martin Hayes’ fiddle is acknowledged as a major breakthrough for guitar in the Irish tradition. In addition to his work with Martin, Dennis has performed with such renowned fiddlers as Liz Carroll, Eileen Ivers and Kevin Burke, as well as many Irish musicians on both sides of the Atlantic. He is a sought after producer for musical artists whom he records in his own Chicago studio and is also an accomplished photographer.

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Majella BartleyMajella Bartley (Flute, Tin Whistle)

All Ireland champion flute player, Majella Bartley, hails from Corcaghan in Co. Monaghan. She is a respected flute and fiddle teacher, tutoring at the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance as well as at national and international summer schools and workshops such as Scoil Egise, Fiddle Festival of Wales, Kilenny Celtic Festival. She holds the TTCT traditional music teaching diploma awarded by Comhaltas and is also a qualified adjudicator and has adjudicated many competitions including the all-Ireland fleadh. She has toured with Comhaltas in Britain and Ireland in 1995 and 1997 respectively and has travelled America, Germany, France, Cyprus, Finland and Belgium playing at various festivals and events. Majella holds a Masters in Irish Traditional Music Performance from the University of Limerick.

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Geraldine CotterGeraldine Cotter

Geraldine is a well-known teacher and performer on both the tin whistle and piano. She has written two best selling tutors for traditional Irish music - Geraldine Cotter’s Traditional Irish Tin Whistle Tutor and Seinn an Piano, the first such publication for the playing of traditional Irish music on the piano.

She is a music graduate of both University College Cork and the University of Limerick. She taught for twenty-five years as a secondary school music teacher and presently teaches and lectures at the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance at the University of Limerick. Here she designed and teaches the keyboard skills course in the BA degree. She also teaches every year at the Willie Clancy Summer School, in Milltown Malbay, County Clare and at Blas at the University of Limerick. She has also participated at other schools such as Gaelic Roots at Boston College, Aonach Paddy O Brien, Nenagh County Tipperary, and at the Rhine Valley Irish Music Festival in Alsace.

http://www.geraldinecotter.com/geraldine.html

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Jim HigginsMatt Cranitch

Matt Cranitch is renowned as a fiddle-player and teacher, both at home in Ireland and abroad. He has performed extensively at concerts and festivals, on radio and television, and has presented lectures, master-classes and workshops on various aspects of Irish music. He has won All-Ireland Fleadh Cheoil titles, as well as The Fiddler of Dooney and Oireachtas Crotty Cup. Author of The Irish Fiddle Book, first published in 1988 and now in its fourth edition, he has also contributed to other books on Irish traditional music. He has made various albums including three with Sliabh Notes, in addition to Éistigh Seal which consists entirely of slow airs. His most recent recording is The Living Stream with Jackie Daly. He is an authority on the music of Sliabh Luachra, and received a PhD from the University of Limerick for his study on the fiddle-playing tradition of this region. A long-time consultant for the Geantraí series on TG4, he is also an advisor to the Arts Council Deis scheme for the traditional arts, and has served on the board of the Irish Traditional Music Archive (2007–2010). In 2003, he received the Hall of Fame Award from University College Cork where he currently teaches a number of courses in Irish traditional music.

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Jim HigginsJim Higgins

Jim hails from Renmore in Galway. Born into a musical family, he went on to study music in University College Cork under Micheal O Suilleabhain amongst others. While in Cork, Jim caught ‘the bodhran bug’, playing alongside players such as Mel Mercier, Colm Murphy and Frank Torpey. During this period Jim was an active member of ‘The Stunning’ rock band playing trumpet and keyboards as well as percussion. He went on to play drums with fellow Galwegians ‘The Sawdoctors’ following a four year stint with ‘The Riverdance Show’ which took him around the world.

He is an honorary member of the Donegal based traditional group ‘Altan’ having recorded and toured extensively with them for the last fifteen years from the Hollywood Bowl to the Sydney Opera House. He has recorded and performed with such luminaries as Paul Brady, Christy Moore, Liam O’Flynn, Donal Lunny, Bill Whelan, Martin O’Connor and Lunasa. Jim also specializes in ethnic percussion encompassing the djembe, the darabukkas, the dumbeq and the mbira.

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Michael RyanAileen Dillane

Flute and piano player with interests in ethnomusicological theory and practice, critical and cultural studies and traditional, ethnic, and popluar musics of Ireland, USA and Australia.

  • Undergrad: B. Mus, University College Cork
  • MA thesis: The Ivory Bridge: The Introduction of Piano Accompaniment to 78rmp recordings or Irish Traditional Music in America, 1910-1945 (UL 2000)
  • PhD thesis: Sound Tracts, Songlines, and Soft Repertoires: Irish Music Performance and the City of Chicago. (University of Chicago 2009)
  • Fulbright Scholar and Century Fellowship recipient
  • Ethno Editor on the Journal for the Society of Music in Ireland.
  • Lecturer on of the BA in Irish Traditional Music and Dance
  • Currently vamping with the Templeglantine Ceili Band (Munster champions).
  • Learning the trad bouzouki, doing a little song-writing (with guitar) re-engaging with classical music repertoire on piano.
  • Avid sci-fi fan, interested in all things green (sustainable living), eclectic reader, listens to trad, techno, ambient, singer-songwriter, pop, art music, some jazz…

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Kevin CrawfordKevin Crawford

Born in Birmingham, England, Kevin Crawford’s early life was one long journey into Irish music and Co. Clare, to where he eventually moved while in his 20’s.

He was a member of Moving Cloud, the Clare-based band who recorded such critically-acclaimed albums as Moving Cloud and Foxglove, and he also recorded with Grianán, Raise The Rafters, Joe Derrane and Sean Tyrrell and appears on the 1994 recording The Sanctuary Sessions.

Kevin now tours the world with Ireland’s cutting edge traditional band, Lúnasa, called by some the “Bothy Band of the 21st Century,” with six ground breaking albums to their credit; Lúnasa, Otherworld, The Merry Sisters of Fate, Redwood, The Kinnity Sessions and Sé.

A virtuoso flute player, Kevin has also recorded two solo albums, D’Flute Album and the more recent In Good Company.

Read more: http://www.myspace.com/kevincrawfordlunasa

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Michael RyanMichael Ryan

Michael Ryan is a native of Co. Tipperary and has been teaching Irish-dancing for over 20 years throughout Waterford, Cork and Tipperary. There are 400 pupils currently in his school, which is recognised internationally as one of the premier Irish-dancing schools. Competitive solo dance is taught as well as the traditions of figure and ceilí dance. Pupils have won Championship titles in such competitions as All-Ireland, Munster, Great Britain, British Nationals, All-Scotland, and of course the World Championships. His classes are well-known for the extremely high standards that they set, and students train hard to achieve their fullest potentials.

These standards are also expected in his classes in the University of Limerick, where he is a tutor of the B.A. and M.A. programme in The Irish Academy of Music and Dance. When not in class in Ireland, he is often invited to teach dance workshops in Australia, Canada and the U.S.A.

Michael is also well-known for his part in the choreography of such well-known shows as Ragús, Flames of the Dance, Draíocht, as well as our own "Booley House" show. He has been involved in "The Booley House" since it's inception in 1991, treating us to more varied and intricate routines year after year. He believes in encouraging his pupils to take part in these shows, when they are not busy practising for dance championships. "Traditional shows like the Booley House lie at the heart of the living tradition of music and dance in this country, and are a great showcase for the student's talents" comments Michael. As a result, many of his former pupils have gone on to have successful dance careers in their own right.

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Accreditation

Tutors for 2012 ...

 

Donal LunnyBreandán de GallaíMartin HayesDennis CahillSiobhán PeoplesJohn CartyDanny O'MahoneyJim HigginsOrfhlaith Ni BhriainSean Og GrahamSandra JoyceNiall KeeganMats MelinCatherine FoleyGeraldine CotterAileen DillaneMajella BartleyColin DunneMuireann Nic AmhlaoibhDerek Hickey

Michael RyanFrancis Ward

Matt CranitchKevin Crawford