wash your language

  • All Posts
  • Publications
  • Services
  • Contact
  • Fairies at the Stone Circle
You are here: Home / Archives for Music

Tunes in an Empty Pub

July 2, 2021 by EmmaP 2 Comments

Never mind a pint. What I’d kill for at this point in the pandemic would be to play some tunes in a pub. To join a few other séisúin-deprived musicians one afternoon, and settle into the snug near the front door, the smoked-up window holding us in and the world out.

For the sake of the afternoon, we’ve been certified Covid-free, and being free of masks would be especially nice for those of us who want to sing, or blow into an instrument.

There’ll be a few fiddles and a flute, a button box, and a banjo, a decent guitar to keep us all in line. A mandolin or a low whistle would be welcome, but I won’t be fussy. As for me, I’ll have my whistle: I’m not the best player, but I’ve learned enough jigs and reels over the years to sidle my way into most sessions. 

We’ll miss the hum of having a crowd inside, the warmth of human laughter and banter. But we’ll survive. A quiet, near-empty pub is something that many a session musician would be delighted to avail of in normal times. That’s because we have music to attend to. And today, it feels like it’s been a long time coming. Playing along to YouTube sessions or old voice recordings on our phones while locked up for the last 15 months – well, it really wasn’t the same.

As we settle in with our pint or pot of tea, there’ll be a bit of chat, enough to feel connected, to catch up and commiserate, all of us nodding that – yes, it has been a crazy time. But the real connection starts when we pick up our instruments and let our minds and bodies move back into the flow: brains and fingers working their magical marriage to find their way into the music.

After a nice warmup set of three reels we all know well, the box player might start into an unfamiliar jig, so we’ll sit back with hands down but alert, listening and absorbing, our minds working to think if we’ve heard it and where, the patterns and feel of the tune seeping into our heads as we listen to it one more time, asking the player “arís!” so we can grab it and play a sketch of it before we feel the shift into the next tune coming up ahead of us. The beat forever moving us onward.

Morrissey’s, The Lark in the Morning, Julia Clifford’s, The Connaughtman’s Rambles, Old Hag you have Killed Me, Jennie’s Chickens, Tabhair dom do Lámh. Reels, jigs, polkas, slow airs, marches, slip jigs, hornpipes, waltzes, mazurkas, slides. And songs.

We’ll bow our heads when a singer airs a song – its story unfolding through words, over the arcs and troughs of its melody, each time repeated afresh while we players band together into the shadows of it, dropping with unspoken agreement into the gaps between each verse, picking up and dropping the tune, and embellishing as we hear it. A combination of detail and mood and creativity that will never be repeated the same way again.

Our fingers now fully loosened and tunescapes unleashed, I’ll get a nod to start a set so I’ll launch into my favourite hornpipe. Towards the end of it, I’ll catch someone’s eye and nod, or smile – as best I can with my lips pursed around the whistle – to show I have one to follow it. Sure, they all know Chief O’Neills and we’re off again, going along with the tunes wherever they take us

A fiddler will lean across the table to me: “What was the name of that one again?” “I know it as the Wicklow Hornpipe,” I’ll say, “I picked it up in Canada”. “Ah d’you remember,” says the guitarist to her, “that’s Delahunty’s, we’d play it after Harvest Home”.

The bit of chat won’t last long, we only have the afternoon: just a few hours to let the tunes out to air, blow out their staleness. We’ll feel satisfied that we’ve brought some life back in to them. And to ourselves and to each other.

At some point, the angelic landlord will give us the nudge to leave. We’ll follow the lead of whoever first pulls their instrument case off the floor and each of us will start to loosen the bow, wipe down the box, dismantle the flute, placing each piece, now tuneless, into its bed of velvet.

We’ll gather our stuff in silence, letting the tunes settle into the scratched wooden tables and tobacco-stained wall, from where the signed photos of visiting musicians watch us as we walk towards the door. Politely taking our leave, heading in any and all different directions: to the Luas, or the bus, bike or car.

“Good night. Slán”, we’ll say to each other as we slip our masks back on. “Thanks for the tunes”.

Filed Under: Ireland, Music Tagged With: Music, Session

A Blog and More

I write about language and the quirks of our family life in Dublin and previously in Italy and Norway. Read More…

RSS
Facebook
Facebook
fb-share-icon
Twitter
Visit Us
Tweet
Instagram

Instagram

Facebook

Cover for Wash Your Language
234
Wash Your Language

Wash Your Language

Musings on language and daily life in Ireland with memories from Canada, Italy and Norway

Wash Your Language

5 months ago

Wash Your Language
When you police a language ... See MoreSee Less

Using 'go' to cheer on sports teams is now OK, says Quebec language watchdog | CBC News

www.cbc.ca

Quebec's language watchdog has changed its tune on whether it's acceptable to use the word "go" to cheer on sports teams.
View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Wash Your Language

7 months ago

Wash Your Language
A few coincidences.As I walked past our local takeaway today, I spotted this manhole cover at my feet. It commemorates an event on the Dublin Easter Rising of 1916 - which was marked today, as always, on Easter Monday, 109 years later. The image shows the man who first raised the Irish Republic flags on the roof of the GPO, one of the main buildings held by the rebels that week. His name was Éamonn Bulfin, he was about 24 and along with many others, he was arrested and sentenced to death by the British authorities when the rising was quashed. But the Argentine ambassador intervened, because Éamonn was an Argentinian citizen - so he was deported instead, back to Buenos Aires. He had been born there in 1892 to 2 Irish parents who had emigrated to Argentina and had 5 kids. The family moved back to Ireland (presumably by slow boat over many weeks) when he was about 10. He went to St. Enda's School, became a fluent Irish speaker and a republican and so got involved in the Rising.After being deported back to BA after the rising, the Argentine government felt the need to arrest him for "skipping out on military service" though it was probably trying to appease the British government who they were already fighting with over the Falkland Islands. This is 1917.After 2 years in prison, Éamonn moved to Ireland again after independence, after doing a stint as the first ambassador of the new Irish state to Argentina. Why? Because Argentina absorbed tons of Irish emigrants - today it's thought 500k to 1 million Argentinians claim Irish heritage!He farmed in Offaly, wrote short stories in English and Spanish, moved to Donnybrook when he retired and after he died in 1968 (buried near Birr) a road in Inchicore was named after him.Oh and one of his sisters married Sean McBride who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1974 for co-founding Amnesty International.And, of course today Argentina is in the news today as dear old Papa Francesco came from Buenos Aires (Italian heritage) though I also just learned that he never went back to that city after becoming pope.So that's the manhole cover that pops up in a few places around Ireland, and outside our local takeaway.(Photo from Society for Irish Latin American Studies) #EasterRising #manholecover #irishhistory ... See MoreSee Less

Photo

View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Wash Your Language

7 months ago

Wash Your Language
Time for another trip to London! ... See MoreSee Less

A revolutionary new tube map shows where London Underground trains are in real-time

www.timeout.com

See exactly where London’s tube trains are at any given time.
View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Wash Your Language

10 months ago

Wash Your Language
What Americans think will happen when they visit Ireland. Paul Mescal on SNL ... See MoreSee Less

Irish Americans - SNL

youtu.be

In this Cut for Time Sketch, an American couple (Andrew Dismukes, Ashley Padilla) visits a pub in Ireland.Saturday Night Live. Stream now on Peacock: https:/...

Video

View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Wash Your Language

11 months ago

Wash Your Language
Remembering a bone-cold, damply-quiet December visit to stunning Venice 6 years ago ... See MoreSee Less

Photo

View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Wash my language?

Språkvask is the Norwegian word for proofing text. Literally it means “language wash”; a more poetic way of saying it!

Blog comments

  • Donna on The Wall of Pink Covid Hearts
  • EmmaP on Tunes in an Empty Pub
  • Cathy Hogan on Tunes in an Empty Pub

© 2025 · Handcrafted with d by 2 Pups Design Co.