Dai Bando’s Music Room: Who Threw the Overalls in Mrs. Murphy’s Chowder?

By Dai Bando

“It’s an Irish trick that’s true

I can lick the mick that threw

The overalls in Mrs. Murphy’s chowder”

I dislike most of what I call “green beer” St. Paddy’s Day music, but this one is an exception. My dad used to sing “Who Threw the Overalls in Mrs. Murphy’s Chowder” on St. Paddy’s Day and also whenever my mom made her awesome white clam chowder. Coincidentally, the lady who lived across the street was named Mrs. Murphy and my dad had convinced me that the song was written about our neighbor. Why not?

Now, Mrs. Murphy was lovely, but her husband was a different cat altogether. I myself would have gladly thrown my overalls in that old geezer’s chowder. Never did I get even a ‘hello’ from Mr. Murphy, even when hand-delivering his Sunday newspaper.

The Murphy’s only child Margaret was a rare thing, “fine as a beeswing” as Richard Thompson would say. Even in grade school, she was ethereal and somewhat precocious. I remember once Margaret informed me that female kangaroos “have bosoms.” I think I was in 3rd grade and didn’t have the slightest clue what the fuck she was talking about. (I did know what a kangaroo was.)

Margaret died far too young, bless her soul.

Mr. Desautel lived across the street from the Murphys, and that old bastard was so mean, he made Mr. Murphy look like Fred Rodgers. Mr. Desautel once challenged the Ice Cream Man to a fistfight because a few popsicle wrappers had blown onto his lawn. (I did witness Dougie Neederlitz brazenly toss his popsicle wrapper, though I didn’t rat him out.) Mr. Scotti, our ice cream truck driver, would’ve volunteered to throw Mr. Desautel’s overalls into the chowder with Mr. Desautel still wearing them.

“Who Threw the Overalls in Mrs. Murphy’s Chowder” was written by George L. Geifer way back in 1898. Bing Crosby had a hit with it in 1945. I prefer the Maxwell Sisters performing the song in this short film (above) from the late 1940s.

Happy St. Patrick’s Day to all !

The Parting Glass, the Irish New Wave, and Clancy MacBob: A Saint Patrick’s Day Playlist for 2024

By Dai Bando

Today I’ve compiled some outstanding and odd musical recommendations for your 2024 Saint Patrick’s Day celebration.

I begin with a group of tunes I call “The Parting Glass.” 2023 was a devastating year in terms of losing so many wonderful Irish performers, most notably Sinead O’Connor and Shane MacGowan. The second group of clips, “The Green New Wave,” features several songs by some heralded up-and-comers, including Dubliners Lisa O’Neil and the group Lankum, both of whom I was fortunate to see in concert last year. Finally, no Saint Patrick’s Day playlist would be complete without a nod to Bob Dylan, whom we affectionately refer to in our subgroup of songs, “Clancy MacBob.”

Sláinte!

THE PARTING GLASS

We lost far too many beloved performers of Irish Music in recent years. In 2023, the deaths of Sinead O’Connor and Shane MacGowan hit their fans particularly hard.

Séamus Begley “Bruach Na Carraige Báine”

If I had to choose my favorite voice in all of traditional Irish music, it would belong to West Kerry farmer Seamus Begley, who passed away January 9, 2023. In this Sean-nós classic, Begley duets with another wonderful Irish singer, Mary Black.

In an interview with Irish radio RTÉ, American actor John C Reilly recalled spending time with Séamus in Dingle and playing music together in Los Angeles for an Irish Christmas show:
“We struck up a great friendship. We had a direct connection as men and as musicians. He was just a legend of a man, it’s such a big loss … There’s something really moving about a gentle giant like that, when you hear the sweetness of a man like that who’s so strong. I think the last time I was on Seamus’ farm with him, he was literally hand lifting boulders.”
Seek out Begley’s finest work, his 1996 album with guitarist Stephen Cooney titled Meitheal. Below I’ve included links to Begley’s passing and his concerts.
Ireland’s RTE on the death of Seamus Begley | Begley & Cooney in concert | Hairy and Squarey

Terry Hall and Sinead O’ConnorAll Kinds of Everything”

It was so unexpected and tragic to lose both Terry Hall (December 18, 2022) and Sinead O’Connor (July 26, 2023) just a little over a year apart. This duet between the former leader of the Ska band “The Specials” and Ireland’s beloved warrior-daughter Sinead, was a remake of the 1979 pop hit “All Kinds of Everything”. Though it never hit the U.S charts, the original song was a massive hit in Europe for one Dana Rosemary Scallon, known at the time by her mononym stage name “Dana.” Some twenty years after recording the song, Scallon would run for President in Ireland. Her original version of “All Kinds of Everything” was featured in the 2011 film Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.
“Dana” aside, I really love Terry and Sinead’s remake. “There are lines here that if it said ‘copyright Leonard Cohen’ it would be called a work of genius,” Terry Hall said of the songs childlike lyric.
In the video, Sinéad flashes a big, beautiful smile while Hall sings his first verse. (Sigh.) Rest in Peace.

Sinead O’Connor and Shane MacGowan “Haunted”

Originally written and recorded by The Pogues for 1986’s Sid & Nancy soundtrack, “Haunted” was rerecorded by Shane MacGowan as a duet with Sinéad. Haunted indeed – two brilliant Irish artists done too soon.

John Prine and Dolores Keane “It’s a Cheating Situation”

John Prine died of Covid on April 7, 2020 and it still hard to believe he’s gone. This track is from Prine’s masterpiece In Spite of Ourselves (1999) and features the amazing voice of Galway’s Dolores Keane. “It’s a Cheating Situation” was written by legendary Nashville songwriter Curly Putnam, who also wrote “He Stopped Loving Her Today” for George Jones. Prine had a home, and spent part of the year, living in Ireland with his beloved “Irish bride” Fiona. A favorite haunt of Prine’s was Green’s Bar in Kinvara, Galway. There he played with Irish musicians like Paul Brady, Declan O’Rourke and Sharon Shannon.

“He loved the simplicity of life among the artists, musicians, writers and poets in the small communities gathering in the pub and singing songs,” said Fiona Prine. “There is so much about it that he appreciated, you just don’t get that so much anymore in America. Ireland is a unique place; there’s nowhere else like it. I’d take him back to the village I’m from in Donegal, it reminded him of his early life in Kentucky.” 

Rest in Peace, John Prine.

The Cranberries “Dreams”

It’s been over two decades since the Cranberries’ released their brilliant first album Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can’t We?, and five years since Dolores O’Riordan’s sudden death in 2019, yet listening to “Dreams” today is just as as exhilarating today as it was 25 years ago. I believe “Dreams” is as good as anything U2 ever recorded. The song experienced a rebirth when it began and ended the first season of Netfilx’ wonderful series Derry Girls. “I know I felt like this before. But now I’m feeling it even more.” RIP Dolores.

The Pogues “Dirty Old Town”

Ewan MacColl wrote his classic song “Dirty Old Town” in 1949 for a scene-change during one of his Theatre Workshop plays on the West end of London . Music critic John Leland later called the song, “a sparse melancholy reminiscence of love in an industrial sewer.” 

Ewan MacColl’s daughter Kristy MacColl was best known for her duet with Shane MacGowan on the “Fairytale of New York” which became a perennial Christmas favorite. Kirsty died tragically in a boating accident in 2000.

This clip of “Dirty Ol Town” below is from The Pogues 1985 groundbreaking album Rum, Sodomy & the Lash.

Rest in Peace Ewan (1989), Kristy (December 18, 2000), and Shane MacGowan (November 30, 2023). Thanks for the music.

Seán Tyrell “Mattie”

I first heard Sean Tyrrell perform at the historic Guinness Fleadh at the Suffolk Downs race track in the summer of 1999. The headliners were Elvis Costello, Richard Thompson and the Chieftains, yet I left the festival most impressed by this singer/songwriter from Galway. The late Boston radio host of A Celtic Sojourn Brian O’Donovan, called Tyrrell a “singular presence in Irish music. Impossible to categorize.”

Seán Tyrrell died in October of 2021. On his passing, Ireland’s then-president Michael D. Higgins said “He was one of Ireland’s finest, most talented, original and creative troubadours.”

“Whenever I performed with him I always had a sense of his incorruptible integrity,” said Irish-American musician Martin Hayes. “He could never sell out and he never did.”

Actress Brenda Fricker summed up Seán Tyrrell when she said: “If you’re lucky, you come across a voice like Seán’s once in a lifetime.  When he sings I feel alive.” 

Rest in Peace Sean, and also Boston’s beloved radio host Brian O’Donovan (October 6, 2023).

Glen Hansard & Lisa O’Neil “Fairytale of New York”

The Pogues frontman and Irish punk rock icon, who died Nov. 30 at 65, was celebrated at Saint Mary of the Rosary Church in his hometown of Negagh in the Irish county of Tipperary.

Former members of the Pogues played traditional tune “The Parting Glass” as one of the final songs of the service, the BBC reported.

MacGowan’s widow, Victoria Mary Clarke, gave a eulogy for her late husband during the funeral, saying, “Toward the end he just told everybody how much he loved them.”

Glen Hansard and Lisa O’Neill performed “Fairytale of New York” as a reflection after Holy Communion.

THE GREEN NEW WAVE

“As Ireland reimagines itself, musicians including the singer Lisa O’Neill and the band Lankum are reimagining the island’s music with an ever-growing sense of pride

– New York Times “What’s Driving a Fresh Wave of Irish Music? Tradition” 3/24/2023

Lisa O’Neil “Rock The Machine”

With a voice that sounds like it was discovered in a box of scratchy 78’s from a basement in Clare, Lisa O’Neil gave a brilliant concert a year ago at Newport, Rhode Island’s historic Colony House. Her vocals combine the dronish quality of Irish gypsy legend Margaret Barry, with a sprinkling of the otherwordly inflections of a Kate Bush. Her influences include Scot poet Ivor Cutler, early 1900’s union organizer Mary ‘Mother’ Jones and 13th-century Christian mystic Meister Eckhart.

Lankum “Hares on the Mountain”

A recent review in The Guardian described attending a Lankum show as more like an exorcism than a gig:
“To be clear, no audience members are physically harmed tonight by Lankum’s mantric take on traditional Irish music – although the Dublin foursome’s often confrontational acoustics are part of their considerable appeal. It’s the songs that tell of murders (multiple) and suicides (at least two), of grief and dread. There are mutinies at sea (the traditional The New York Trader). On land, travails are rife, nowhere more so than on Rocky Road to Dublin. Lives blighted by addiction regularly stud the band’s set list, which mixes originals, covers and avant-garde rearrangements of folk songs.”

Lankum’s Radie Peat and Darragh Lynch put together this version of the traditional song “Hares on the Mountain” for This Ain’t No Disco, an Irish Music documentary series created by Dublin musician/filmmaker Myles O’Reilly.

Ye Vagabonds “Willy O Winsbury”

Gorgeous harmonies from Carlow-based brothers Diarmuid and Brían MacGloinn, who go by the name of “Ye Vagabonds.” Willie O Winsbury is a traditional Scottish ballad that dates from at least 1775, and is known under several other names, including  “Farewell, Farewell” as recorded in 1969 by Fairport Convention with Sandy Denny on vocals.

Rufous Nightjar “I Was the Fool”

Branwen Kavanagh, Anna-Mieke Bishop and Zoé Basha met at a time described as “a golden wave of underground traditional and folk music in Dublin.”
In 2018 the three Irsih gals travelled across Eastern Europe learning folk songs, and developed a beautiful harmonious dynamic and the officially formed Rufous Nightjar in 2020. I hear some Swingle Singers, some Roche sisters, and maybe even a wee bit of the 1950s harmony trio The Fleetwoods.

Love it!

Muireann Bradley “Delia”

Did this 18 yr-old country-blues prodigy learn this song from Rev Gary Davis or David Bromberg? Well, it sure as Hell wasn’t Bing Crosby. Muireann Bradley is a young blues, ragtime, roots and folk guitarist and singer based in Ballybofey in County Donegal Ireland. She’s listened to more Mississippi John Hurt than Tayor Swift. Keep an eye and ear on Muireann.

Brigid Mae Power “I’m Grateful”

Her bio informs that Brigid Mae Power spent her early years in London and moved to Galway at 12 years old, where she learned to play the button accordion before starting to sing and play piano as a teen. She spent some time living and gigging in New York in the late 2000s (recording an EP Live at Coughlan’s from her tour with the brilliant Chicagoan Ryley Walker.) The Guardian descibes Power as pocessing a “haunting voice that raises the everyday to a near-mystical realm.” Her original songs are often political with “Me Too” perspectives, yet she’ll throw in an insanely perfect cover of Slim Whitman’s “Rose Marie”. (hear that beauty here)

Clancy MacBob, aka Zimmy MacDylan

In his 2004 autobiography “Chronicles”, Bob Dylan wrote that he originally just wanted to write songs like the Clancy Brothers. “I got to be friends with Liam (Clancy) and began going after-hours to the White Horse Tavern on Hudson Street, which was mainly an Irish bar frequented mostly by guys from the old country. All through the night, they would sing drinking songs, country ballads, and rousing rebel songs that would lift the roof.” Filmmaker Todd Haynes explored the many personas of Bob Dylan in his 2007 film “I’m Not There.” Haynes could have included an Aran sweater-wearing character named Clancy MacBob.

“Farewell” (aka “The Leaving of Liverpool”)

The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem had an Irish Top 10 hit with “The Leaving of Liverpool” in 1964. Around the same time, Dylan renamed it, changed a few of the lyrics, and began performing it around Greenwich Village. The song has since been adapted by several artists, including The Pogues, and was featured on the Inside Llewyn Davis film soundtrack.

Sinéad Lohan “To Ramona”

One of the great Irish musical mysteries is the disappearance of fabulously talented singer-songwriter Sinéad Lohan. Sinéad made two beautiful albums of original songs (1995’s Who Do You Think I Am and 1998’s No Mermaid) and then retired to the south coast of Ireland to raise a family – never to be heard from again. Lohan’s original song “Out of the Woods” appeared on Nickel Creek’s debut LP.
In this clip, Sinéad is accompanied here by Donal Lunny’s Coolfin band. The song “To Ramona” was originally recorded on Dylan’s fourth studio album, “Another Side of Bob Dylan” (1964).
Come back to us, Sinéad …unless, of course, you’d rather not.

Luka Bloom “Make You Feel My Love”

Luka Bloom’s version of Dylan’s “Make You Feel My Love” is from the Irish singer/songwriter’s excellent 2000 collection of cover songs Keeper of the Flame. Adele had a massive hit with “Make You Feel My Love” in 2008, and the song’s also been covered by Neil Diamond, Boy George, Bryan Ferry, and Pink as well. Seek out Luka Bloom’s first two albums of original material Riverside (1990) and Acoustic Bicycle (1992) – both terrific.

Bob Dylan “Belle Isle”

Belle Isle is in County Fermanagh in Northern Ireland, on the edge of Lough Erne. That’s a long way from Hibbing, Minnesota and a lot closer to Van Morrison’s childhood home than Woody Guthrie’s. Love this Irish-inflected original from Dylan’s Self Portrait  the tenth studio album released in 1970.

Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová “You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere”

Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová, those onscreen/offscreen lovers from the Irish indie film Once, perform this rollicking version of Dylan’s “You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere” from the 2007 bio/drama I’m Not There, directed by Todd Haynes. Haynes film had six different actors depicting different facets of Dylan’s public personas, including Cate Blanchett in curly wig and shades. (Blanchett was nominated for an Academy Award for what was called “the film’s most exquisitely spot-on Bob.”) Said director Haynes at the time, “The minute you try to grab hold of Dylan, he’s no longer where he was. He’s like a flame: If you try to hold him in your hand you’ll surely get burned.”

Lisa Hannigan – “Just like Tom Thumb’s blues”

I’ve always loved Dylan’s song “Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues,” and Dublin’s Lisa Hannigan has long been one of my favorite Irish singers. But I’m especially fond of this video because it was filmed in Dick Mac’s Bar in Dingle where 20 years ago, my wife photographed me and my nine-year-old daughter Caleigh in a snug sharing a pint of Guinness. We faked it, of course. Reasonably sure of that.
Check out Lisa Hannigan recordings Sea Sew (2009) and Passenger (2012). Love her.

Dai Bando’s Music Room #14: Saint Paddy’s Day / Who Threw the Overalls in Mrs. Murphy’s Chowder?

By Dai Bando

“It’s an Irish trick that’s true

I can lick the mick that threw

The overalls in Mrs. Murphy’s chowder”

I dislike most of what I call “green beer” St. Paddy’s Day music, but this one is an exception. My dad used to sing “Who Threw the Overalls in Mrs. Murphy’s Chowder” on St. Paddy’s Day and also whenever my mom made her awesome white clam chowder. Coincidentally, the lady who lived across the street was named Mrs. Murphy and my dad had convinced me that the song was written about our neighbor. Why not?

Now, Mrs. Murphy was lovely, but her husband was a different cat altogether. I myself would have gladly thrown my overalls in that old geezer’s chowder. Never did I get even a ‘hello’ from Mr. Murphy, even when hand-delivering his Sunday newspaper.

The Murphy’s only child Margaret was a rare thing, “fine as a beeswing” as Richard Thompson would say. Even in grade school, she was ethereal and somewhat precocious. I remember once Margaret informed me that female kangaroos “have bosoms.” I think I was in 3rd grade and didn’t have the slightest clue what the fuck she was talking about. (I did know what a kangaroo was.)

Margaret died far too young, bless her soul.

Mr. Desautel lived across the street from the Murphys, and that old bastard was so mean, he made Mr. Murphy look like Fred Rodgers. Mr. Desautel once challenged the Ice Cream Man to a fistfight because a few popsicle wrappers had blown onto his lawn. (I did witness Dougie Neederlitz brazenly toss his popsicle wrapper, though I didn’t rat him out.) Mr. Scotti, our ice cream truck driver, would’ve volunteered to throw Mr. Desautel’s overalls into the chowder with Mr. Desautel still wearing them.

“Who Threw the Overalls in Mrs. Murphy’s Chowder” was written by George L. Geifer way back in 1898. Bing Crosby had a hit with it in 1945. I prefer the Maxwell Sisters performing the song in this short film (above) from the late 1940s.

And speaking of films – here are my Top 10 Irish movies:

Ryan’s Daughter” (1970 David Lean)

– Critics hated it, the cast hated each other. David Lean was so traumatized by the experience, he didn’t make another movie for 15 years. I love every fame, especially the ones featuring the Dingle shore. Maurice Jarre composed the soundtrack which featured the memorable “It Was a Good Time (Rosy’s Theme)”

“In Bruges” (2008 Martin McDonough)

– Great performances from Brendan Gleeson, Colin Farrell, and Ralph Fiennes. McDonagh’s dialogue is raw, often hilarious and sometimes pure poetry.

“I Went Down” (1997 Paddy Breathnach)

– This hilarious road movie was my first taste of actor Brendan Gleeson, who might be my favorite actor in the world.

“The Quiet Man” (1952 John Ford)

– On my first trip to Ireland, a bank teller in Dublin told me I spoke “just like John Wayne.” Though not at all true, this remains the best compliment I’ve ever had.

“The Commitments” (1991 Alan Parker)

– Maybe not the best of Roddy Doyle’s Barrytown Trilogy books (I loved “The Van”), it is certainly the best film adaptation mainly because of the amazing musical performances by a truly great soul band created for the film.

“The Magdalene Sisters” (2002 Peter Mullen)

– Excellent film on the subject of Catholic Church abuse in Ireland. Be prepared to become very angry.

“In America” (2002 Jim Sheriden)

– Beautiful biographical story of Sheriden’s immigration from Ireland to NY’s Hell’s Kitchen in the sixties. Two sisters age 6 and 11, Emma and Sarah Bolger, acting for the first time, steal the movie. The movie concludes with The Corrs singing “Time Enough for Tears,” one of my favorite Irish songs.

“The Butcher Boy” (1997 Neil Jordan)

An Irish “A Clockwork Orange,” complete with Sinead O’Connor as the Virgin Mary (Sinead sings a great version of the folk song of the title.) Very disturbing.

“Finian’s Rainbow” (1968 Francis Ford Coppolla)

Despite the talents of Fred Astaire, lyricist Yip Harburg, and Francis Ford Coppolla – this thing was a mess. Still, worth it if only for Petula Clark singing, “How are things in Glocca Mora?”

“The Banshees of Inisherin” (2022 Martin McDonough)

My choice for ‘Best Picture’ in 2022. Outstanding performances from Gleeson, Colin Farrell, Kerry Condon and Barry Keoghan.

Honorable Mentions:
The Guard, Waking Ned Devine, Once, The Field, The Snapper, The Crying Game, My Left Foot, Cal, In the Name of the Father, Secret of Roan Inish, Philomela, The Van, The Boxer, Hear My Song, The General, Into the West