Danny Meehan: The Navvy On The Shore
Bowhand Records 001CD.
with
Dermot Kearney: guitar, banjo and mandola
Guest Musicians,
Michael McConnell: accordion
Reg Hall: piano
Danny Meehan is a big man, tall and powerful, with great shoulders on him. He's what they call a skilled paving mason, laying slabs of concrete and stone cobbles in the thoroughfares of London for a living. He is a great presence in any company and once you've known him you would never forget him. Amusing, witty, generous to a fault. thoughtful and philosophic with insights that can stop you in your tracks, he maintains a fine balance between being completely self-assured, knowing exactly who he is and what he stands for, and being genuinely modest and sometimes even self-depracating about his abilities and achievements. Reg Hall
Dermot Kearney, long term musical partner of Danny's since the old days of The Favourite and The Victoria playing with Jimmy Power. It is mainly due to Dermot's enthusiasm that Danny was persuaded to record.
Danny says of the much younger Michael O'Connell, "He's a great pal of mine. I could sit in a hut for a thousand years with him. A rare breed of man. I love his music".
The Humours of Whiskey:
O'Donnell's Air:
The Lowlands of Scotland:
- The Navvy on the Shore/Cathal McConnell's Reels
- The Japanese Hornpipe/McCormacks.
- Johnny's So Long at the Fair/The Trip to the Cottage. Jigs
- Kitty Sean's Barndance/Jamesy Byrne's Downfall. Reel
- The Humours of Whiskey. Slip Jig
- Tom Ward's Downfall/Crossing the Shannon. Reels
- Dr Gilbert/The Donegal Peter Street. Reels
- Herlihy's Rant/Con Cassidy's. Jigs
- The Dovecot-Lament/Docherty's Strathspey.
- Rakish Paddy. Reel
- The Longford Tinker/Paddy Canny's. Reels
- O'Donnell's Air.
- Jamsey Byrne's No 1 & 2. Reels
- Casey's/Jimmy Meehan's. Polkas
- Dermot Byrne's Delight-Strathspey/Drowsy Maggie. Reel
- Napoleon's Grand March.
- The Shaskeen. Reel
- Johnny Docherty's-Piece/Father O'Flynn. Jig
- Sean Dún na nGall-Air/Bean a tí ar lár. Reel
- The Lowlands of Scotland. Reel
- Tarbolton/Over the Moor to Maggie. Reels
Press Reviews
Dirty Linen Reviews.01/02
Danny Meehan comes form southern Donegal, and his primary influences are from his own family and local players, though he also has ties to the great John Doherty and the tradition of travelling musicians he represents.
Meehan moved to London in the 60's and has been part of the lively Irish musical community there ever since.
He was a member of a loosely knit band called, Le Cheile, who put out two exciting records in the mid 70s, but Navvy on the Shore is, incredibly, his first solo effort. Meehan is a strong player with the forceful attack typical of Donegal players.
He still plays many of the tunes learned as a youngster, but he has also added melodies from all over Ireland, tipping his hat now to Coleman, now to his old comrade Raymond Roland. His version of "Humours of Whisky", should not be missed.
In fact, all three of these releases are graced with superb liner notes, and all should be eagerly sought by lovers of Irish Music. Duck Baker.
Musical Traditions Web Magazine
'As you were close to the Favourite scene in the '70s and '80s' stated our editor as the criterion for offering this review to me - and I admit that I feel more confident reminiscing about the pubs of North-East London than analysing the remarkable and eccentric fiddle style of Danny Meehan. At least it gives me a place to start.
Two good reasons, then, for buying this one straightaway: to enjoy this excellent and unique music and encourage the next release from Bow Hand.
Roger Digby - 30.10.00
With this recording we have a wonderful opportunity to listen to yet another of the under-recorded masters of Donegal fiddle music.
Danny Meehan was born in 1940 and grew up in Mount Charles, just west of Donegal Town. There, he was exposed to the music of a relatively unrecorded, apparently under appreciated circle of musicians, mainly fiddlers.
The influence of the Dochertys and their relatives was strongly felt, as it was in other parts of southwest and central Donegal. The liner notes, by Reg Hall, nicely elaborate on these influences.
Other influences on Danny's playing, however, seem to my ears equally strong. As a young man Danny moved to London, where he fell in with the now famous London Irish music scene that included the likes of Bobby Casey, Michael Gorman, Margaret Barry, Reg Hall, and many other musicians, many of them brilliant.
The liner notes also state that Danny was also very much taken with Coleman. The result in Danny's playing is the blend of a staccato, attacking Donegal style with a more understated southern style perhaps somewhere intermediate between the styles of Gorman, Casey, and Jimmy Power.
Danny's style is nonetheless unique--a very lively, bouncy, attacking style, which is highly ornamented, featuring rolls, cuts, triplets, and quite a bit of unison double stops.
Having listened to the CD twice, I already have some favourite tracks. The first, "The Navvy on the Shore/Cathal McConnell's" is rightly highlighted, since the playing swings along confidently, is cleaner than on some other tracks, the fiddle is higher in the mix, and the tunes too are nice and well-performed.
"Humours of Whiskey," a Donegal slip jig, is played unaccompanied, very briskly, with great spirit, in two octaves, and in a setting somewhat similar to (but also different from) that played by Francie and Mickey Byrne and recorded by Altan. Danny does a fine job on some Donegal showpieces, including "The Japanese Hornpipe" and a couple of strathspeys. I was particularly taken with his playing of "Rakish Paddy," not the Donegal version, but a nonetheless wonderful, elaborate, four-part version. We are also treated to a duet of Mick O'Connell, an All-Ireland accordion champion who apparently learned a great deal from Danny, backed by Reg Hall. Very nice playing on that track--Mick definitely has the touch. There are 21 tracks in all, and definitely you're getting your money's worth in terms of sheer amount of music, especially considering that the CD is reasonably priced.
From the point of view of the Donegal fiddle aficionado, the CD is valuable not only for the above-mentioned reasons, but also because there are a few tunes recorded here that are not recorded on any other commercially available recordings of Donegal music--indeed, there are a few Donegal-sourced tunes I'd never heard before. One is based on a song Danny's grandmother used to sing, called "Johnny's So Long at the Fair." Another is a polka, sourced from his father, called "Jimmy Meehan's." There's a very nice strathspey Danny calls "Dermot Byrne's Delight," which, the liner notes say, "comes from a much younger fiddle player ... who is now playing with Altan." Finally, there's a piece, either a song tune or a march, called just "Johnny Docherty's." Many of the other Donegal-sourced tunes--about half of the several dozen tunes--are in settings close to those of players such as James Byrne and Con Cassidy, while others are interestingly different. Unfortunately, Danny did not record "Danny Meehan's," the reel so masterfully played by Tommy Peoples on The High Part of the Road as one of "McCahill's Reels."
I'd recommend this to any fan of Donegal fiddling and anyone interested in the London Irish trad scene. The playing is very solid, listenable, and traditional. Larry Sanger