Car Tourismo Banner
Home » Arts & Culture » New concert schedule from Sixmilebridge Folk Club
Scenes from a previous winter music festival.

New concert schedule from Sixmilebridge Folk Club

Champion Chatter

CONCERTS are back on the musical menu in Sixmilebridge, with the unveiling of a new schedule by the Sixmilebridge Folk Club.

Renowned for organising the very successful annual Shannonside Winter Music Festival and a calendar of eclectic concerts throughout the year, the activities of the folk club were adversely affected by the pandemic and the sound of music in the village was temporarily silenced.

All that is set to change as the committee has regrouped, and while it is not currently feasible to resurrect the festival in its past form, priority is being given to organising a series of concerts in Gleesons Bar in Sixmilebridge over the coming months.

The first of these will take place on Friday, February 10 at 8pm. This concert will feature Brian Donnellan and Michael Landers and will be led by fiddle player Mark Donnellan from Kilmurry, who picked up his music from his father Francie, one of the original members of the Tulla Céilí Band.

Mark has played festivals, céilís and sessions both at home and abroad for over 30 years and has been anchoring Wednesday night sessions in Pepper’s Bar in Feakle for the past 23 years.

Brian Donnellan is an accomplished concertina, bouzouki, harmonium, and piano player who hails from an East Clare family steeped in traditional Irish music. He is a member of the Tulla Céilí Band and the newly established quintet with Martin Hayes, The Common Ground Ensemble.

Brian has performed at many national and international festivals including Scoil Samhraidh Willie Clancy and The Feakle Festival as well as concerts in London, New York, and the National Concert Hall.

Michael Landers is an accomplished guitar player and singer originally from Kildare but now living in Tulla,  where he has been immersed in East Clare music for over three decades. Michael has played with many different musicians down through the years and has performed all over the country and abroad. He plays in numerous sessions, with the Old Ground session on a Sunday night being his regular gig.

Announcing the regrouping of the Folk Club committee and the return of concerts to the village, Chairperson of Sixmilebridge Folk Club, Gerry Phelan, said: The pandemic forced us to disband but we are now delighted to  be able to reorganise concerts and to keep the ethos of the Folk Club alive. The Club was formed over twenty years ago to promote live music locally through active engagement with local and visiting musicians and audience members as equal partners.

“Its purpose is to provide opportunities for community appreciation and participation and to facilitate local and visiting musicians of all genres and musical ability to learn and perform.

The concerts are the start of our plans going forward. We also hope to reintroduce weekly music classes, but we need additional committee members to help us achieve our goals. We would encourage anyone from Sixmilebridge who has an interest in music and would like to contribute to the full revival of Folk Club activities to attend our first concert on Friday, 10 February and make themselves known to any of the committee members.”

The concert in Gleesons Bar commences at 8pm with doors opening at 7.30pm. No advance booking required. A small cover charge of €5 to cover hosting costs applies.

Fiona McGarry
+ posts

Fiona McGarry joined The Clare Champion as a reporter after a four-year stint as producer of Morning Focus on Clare FM. Prior to that she worked for various radio, print and online titles, including Newstalk, Maximum Media and The Tuam Herald.
Fiona’s media career began in her native Mayo when she joined Midwest Radio. She is the maker of a number of radio documentaries, funded by the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland (BAI). She has also availed of the Simon Cumbers Media Fund to report on development issues supported by Irish Aid in Haiti.
She won a Justice Media Award for a short radio series on the work of Bedford Row Project, which supports prisoners and families in the Mid-West. Fiona also teaches on the Journalism programmes at The University of Galway.
If you have a story and would like to get in touch with Fiona you can email her at fmcgarry@clarechampion.ie or telephone 065 6864146.

About Fiona McGarry

Fiona McGarry joined The Clare Champion as a reporter after a four-year stint as producer of Morning Focus on Clare FM. Prior to that she worked for various radio, print and online titles, including Newstalk, Maximum Media and The Tuam Herald. Fiona’s media career began in her native Mayo when she joined Midwest Radio. She is the maker of a number of radio documentaries, funded by the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland (BAI). She has also availed of the Simon Cumbers Media Fund to report on development issues supported by Irish Aid in Haiti. She won a Justice Media Award for a short radio series on the work of Bedford Row Project, which supports prisoners and families in the Mid-West. Fiona also teaches on the Journalism programmes at The University of Galway. If you have a story and would like to get in touch with Fiona you can email her at fmcgarry@clarechampion.ie or telephone 065 6864146.

Check Also

Shane Kelly as Wan Word and Noel Hogan as PJ, during Sliabh Aughty Drama Group's rehearsal of Unforgiven in Mountshannon on Saturday.

Stage set for feast of drama in Scariff

IT’S CURTAIN up in Scariff for the 74th Clare Drama Festival which begins on Friday, …