
Ceili, Feiles and Fleadh
- Traditional Irish Festivals
Craic
agus Ceol - music and good times, they're as Irish a
combination as a fiddle and bow, Guinness and oysters and the summer
months sees plenty of it with traditional Irish festivals and events
held all over the country.
Ceilis, feiles and fleadh's have been celebrated throughout
Ireland for centuries, with song, dance and storytelling in the
old Irish traditions. Providing the music would be the Irish Harp,
fiddles, uillean pipes, the bodhran player, the accordion and the
penny flute, playing out centuries old songs. They'd play
jigs, reels and polkas, for traditional set dancers to lift their
sprightly legs to, while Sean Nos singers would sing solo ballads
and storytellers would recite age old Irish folklore, as small crowds
gathered to hear. This essential part of Irish culture is alive
and well and can still be heard and seen today, from impromptu traditional
seisuns in pubs, to sell out concerts and at numerous festivals
across Ireland.
Two of the oldest traditional festivals in Ireland are the Oul
Lammas Fair in Co. Antrim and Puck Fair in Co. Kerry. On the last
weekend in August the town of Ballycastle on the Antrim Coast, plays
host to the Oul Lammas Fair, a festival which sees the town taken
over by a traditional horse and cattle market, while at night the
town is filled with the mesmerising sounds of the Bodhran and fiddle.
Puck Fair is renowned in Ireland and along with being one of the
oldest fair's it is perhaps one of Ireland's quirkiest.
For three days the town of Kilorglin in Co. Kerry, is ruled by King
Puck, a goat, crowned and hoisted onto a stage in the centre of
the town, while the town's people enjoy three days of revelry
and music of all kinds.
Throughout the summer just about every town or county of Ireland
holds a Feiles or Fleadh. You'll find the Féile Lughnasa
in Co. Kerry, the Féile Iorras in Co. Mayo, the Féile
an Earagail in Co. Donegal the Ragus on the Aran Islands, the Siamsa
Seisun in Galway and many more. All of which keep alive Irish traditional
music and dance in their own unique way.
One of the biggest festivals of traditional Irish music and Celtic
culture is the Beo in August, held at the National Concert Hall
in Dublin. The Beo can't claim to be the most authentic Irish
festival and its only been running for only 7 years, but it is fast
becoming one of the largest festivals of traditional music in Ireland,
attracting many famous names in Irish Trad, as well as the latest
talent in world music from all over the globe.
Across the country there are a huge number of less formal festivals
of Irish Trad music, attracting a dedicated local crowd of musicians
young and old. The most famous of these is the Feakle International
Traditional Music Festival in one of the counties best known for
its traditional Irish music, Co. Clare. The Feakle festival involves
workshops and tutoring schools as well as concerts by some of the
most gifted musicians in Ireland.
Many other Irish Trad festivals you'll find are named in
honour of famous musicians, dancers, storytellers and Sean Nos singers
from the town they are located. These include the Willie Clancy
Festival in Miltown Malbay, Co. Clare, the Mick and Michael Carr
Memorial Traditional Music Weekend in Carrick, Co. Donegal, the
John McKenna Traditional Weekend Festival in Drumkeeran, Co. Leitrim,
the Douglas Hyde Summer School of Traditional Irish Music, in Ballaghaderreen,
Co. Roscommon, the Dan Paddy Andy festival in Lyreacompane, Co.
Kerry, Frankie Gavin International Fiddle Festival in Galway and
the O'Carolan Traditional Irish Harp Festival in Roscommon.
If you get the chance you simply must sit in on an Irish Trad seisun.
The interaction and interplay between the musicians is fascinating.
The music is seemingly organic, played with the ease of breathing
but with a visible intensity. Songs seem to begin with a bizarre
moment of musical conversation, as the lead musicians play little
pieces of what is to be the next song to each other as if saying
‘it's the one that goes fiddly diddly dee, then fiddly
diddly doodly dee' and then they kind of nod in agreement
before launching into the tune at breakneck speed. While the haunting
voice of a solo Sean Nos ballard will surely have the hairs on the
back of your neck standing on end, and tears welling in your eyes.
It's an experience not to be missed for any visitor to Ireland.
|