Birth name Darach O Cathain Genres Sean-nos song Role Singer | Name Darach Cathain Labels Gael-Linn Records Record label Gael-Linn Records | |
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Occupation(s) Farmer, Writer, Composer Associated acts Sean O Riada, Ceoltoiri Cualann Albums Traditional Irish Unaccompanied Singing Similar People Sean O Riada, Ceoltoiri Chualann, Louise Mulcahy, Joe Heaney, The Buachaills |
All Tracks - Darach Ó Catháin
Darach Ó Catháin sings "Óró sé do bheatha 'bhaile"
Darach Ó Catháin (30 September 1922 – 29 September 1987) was an Irish sean-nós singer, that is, of traditional Irish language folksong. Along with his fellow Connemara-native, Seosamh Ó hÉanaí (Joe Heaney), he was one of the most prominent sean-nós singers of his day and was praised by Seán Ó Riada. Ó Catháin left Ireland for work and set down in Leeds, West Yorkshire where he lived out the rest of his life.
Contents
- All Tracks Darach Cathin
- Darach Cathin sings r s do bheatha bhaile
- Early life
- Career
- Personal life
- Documentary
- Songs
- References
Early life
Ó Catháin was born on 30 September 1922 at Maimin, Lettermore, Connemara seventh in a family of twelve children. In the English-language records of birth he is noted down as Dudley Keane, son of Coleman Keane and Monica Faherty. In 1935 his family moved to new government created Gaeltacht of Rath Cairn, in Co. Meath. His love of singing and many of his songs were learned from his mother.
Career
By the late 1950s he was established as one of the finest sean-nós singers in the country. In the early 60s Seán Ó Riada had begun to broadcast a series of radio programmes, Reacaireacht an Riadaigh, on RTÉ Radio 1. These programmes were to transform the traditional music. Darach Ó Catháin was the singer in those programmes. In 1962 a commercial recording was issued. Out of all of this came Ceoltóirí Cualann and eventually The Chieftains. But in the meantime, Ó Catháin disappeared; he fell in love and married when he was 19.
While he was performing with O Riada he was also working as a labourer on the building sites of London and the north of England. By 1963 he'd become convinced his family's future was in Leeds. In that year his wife, Brid, sold the family home and moved to Yorkshire. In the intervening years Ó Catháin released another recording, Traditional Irish Unaccompanied Singing (1975). It cemented his reputation as a singer. Indeed, for many it established him as the greatest of the sean-nós singers. Darach Ó Catháin became an iconic figure within the Irish music tradition.
Personal life
But Darach Ó Catháin was never wholly Darach Ó Catháin, he was also Dudley Kane, the name by which he was known to his family and friends. Darach Ó Catháin was a stage name, the name O Riada gave him. When The Kane family sold their family home and moved to Leeds they were beginning an experiment that would not prove a total success. The Kanes are still in Leeds.
Dudley Kane – Darach Ó Catháin – is here in Leeds (RTÉ) follows that journey through the eyes of three of Darach's seven children and their mother, Brid. When the family made that journey the eldest daughter, Barbara, was 16 and already in Boston. She was later to rejoin her family. Bridie (15) and Monica (9) recall their early days in Leeds, their sense of dislocation – at loss in a language they had little knowledge of and the love they had for their father and his musical inheritance.
Documentary
He was also the subject of a major television documentary Cérbh É? Darach Ó Catháin on TG4, first broadcast in November 2009. In this programme, one of a series in which major figures in contemporary traditional music, profile and pay homage to a master of their craft from a bygone age, Iarla Ó Lionáird traced the life and legacy of Ó Catháin. This can be viewed for 35 days after transmission on the channel's Webcast website www.tg4.tv (then select Ceol Cartlann and the programme is called Cerbh E (in Irish with English subtitles).
A quote from Darach Ó Catháin— "When you've music in you, you're hearing music always."
Songs
Sail Óg Rua
Caoirigh Na Japs
Caiptín Ó Máille