Tribute to Tommy Makem - (November 4, 1932 – August 1, 2007)

by Maireid Sullivan | August 5, 2007 at 08:46 pm
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Tribute to Tommy Makem - (November 4, 1932 – August 1, 2007)

Tribute to Tommy Makem - (November 4, 1932 – August 1, 2007)

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uploaded by Maireid Sullivan

Here is my small offering in tribute to the great Tommy Makem RIP

Please feel free to download and share my rendition of Tommy Makem's sad, yet beautifully poignant "The Curlew's Song".

(the spoken intro. is a short Yeats poem)
http://maireid.com/Never_Drift_Apart/5.The_Curlew.mp3%20


Poem and Song Lyrics:

The Curlew's Song, by Tommy Makem

and W.B. Yeats' poem, 'He Reproves the Curlew'


He Reproves the Curlew

By W.B. Yeats

Oh! Curlew! Cry no more in the air
or only to the water in the west.
Because your crying brings to my mind
passion dimmed eyes and long heavy hair,
that was shaken out over my breast.
There is enough evil in the crying of the wind.

The Curlew's Song
By Tommy Makem

I heard a Curlew singing low
On a moor where wild winds blew.
And the sound of his sad lonesome song
Made me feel lonesome too.


Cold winter came and the moorland froze
The winds blew loud and strong
I of'times have gone through the snow
And heard a Curlew song.


Soft sun-warmed days of summer came
Through green-leaved days of spring
I soon forgot that lonesome song
I heard the Curlew sing



The following tribute is posted to the Dublin Irish Festival website:


Tommy Makem was an internationally celebrated folk musician, artist, poet and storyteller from Ireland, most known as a member of The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem. He played the banjo and tin whistle and sang in a baritone. He was sometimes known as "The Bard of Armagh" (taken from a traditional song of the same name) and "The Godfather of Irish Music".

He was born and raised in Keady, County Armagh, Northern Ireland. His mother, Sarah Makem, was also a successful folk singer, as well as an important source of traditional Irish music, who was visited and recorded by, among others, Diane Guggenheim Hamilton, Jean Ritchie, Peter Kennedy and Sean O'Boyle. After moving to the United States in 1955, he teamed up with the Clancy Brothers, who were signed to Columbia Records in 1961. The same year, at the Newport Folk Festival, Makem and Joan Baez were named the most promising newcomers on the American folk scene. During the 1960s, the Clancy Brothers with Tommy Makem performed sellout concerts at such venues as Carnegie Hall and made television appearances on shows like The Ed Sullivan Show and The Tonight Show.


Read more here:

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Brian A Kennedy
Brian A Kennedy
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 03:42 on August 6th, 2007

Maireid Sullivan, excellent memorial -- thanks for this.

0
Maireid Sullivan

I hope you'll enjoy my rendition of his song too, Brian!

Maireid 

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