UW Ethnomusicology Archives video recordings: Joe Heaney recordings: Newport Folk Festival, 1965

Overview of the Collection

Creator
Clancy, Liam; Heaney, Joe, 1919-1984
Title
UW Ethnomusicology Archives video recordings: Joe Heaney recordings: Newport Folk Festival
Dates
1965
Quantity
1 videotapes  :  EC - 1 vct (VHS) (black & white); Duration: 1:06:00
Collection Number
2010005
Summary
Video footage of Joe Heaney and other musicians at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, followed by footage of Joe Heaney and Liam Clancy on the beach at Newport, Rhode Island, trading songs and conversing.
Repository
University of Washington Ethnomusicology Archives
University of Washington
Ethnomusicology Archives
Box 353450
Seattle, WA
98195-3450
Telephone: 2065430974
ethnoarc@uw.edu
Access Restrictions

Access is restricted.

Languages
English

Historical NoteReturn to Top

Joe Heaney (AKA Joe Éinniú; Irish: Seosamh Ó hÉanaí) (1919 - 1984) was an Irish traditional (sean nós) singer from County Galway, Ireland. He spent most of his adult life abroad, living in England, Scotland and New York City, in the course of which he recorded hundreds of songs. A magnificent singer in both Gaelic and English, Heaney sings in sean-nos, the highly ornamented style of traditional Irish song.

Liam Clancy (1935 – 2009)was an Irish folk singer and actor from Carrick-on-Suir, County Tipperary. The youngest of the Clancy Brothers, Liam Clancy played a major role in the success of the Irish folk singing group that he shared with his brothers.

Content DescriptionReturn to Top

Tape copy donated to UW Ethnomusicology Archives in April 2010 by Dr. Virginia Blankenship as part of the Joe Heaney Documentation Project at the National University of Galway; their copy of the recording came from Maire Davitt, who may have gotten it from Liam Clancy. According to Virginia Blankenship, "Liam Clancy was acting as an assistant cameraman that year with a crew making a documentary about the Festival, but he got up on stage and did a set with Joe. In addition, there is a longish sequence that Alan Lomax recorded of Joe and Liam (who arranged for Joe to attend the Festival) walking along a beach at Newport and singing some songs. This is information I got from Liam Mac Con Iomaire's biography of Joe (pp. 228-9)..."

Label on VHS tape box: A.R.I.Q. Footage Inc., East Hampton, New York.

Contents:

0:00-30:00 - footage from the 1965 Newport Folk Festival (time code and identification number ("AL-18") appears over program material throughout): session appears to have the theme "Men at Work"; Liam Clancy sings "The Shoals of Herring"; Clancy introduces Mike Seeger; cut to 3 men performing "Matilda" (sound, no picture until near the end); Seeger introduces Grant Rogers who sings a song; Clancy introduces Jimmy Driftwood, who sings a song; Clancy introduces Joe Heaney, who starts to talk about "The Rocks of Bawn," but the picture goes out and there's a cut to another singer (?); Clancy and Heaney onstage; Heaney tells the story of the "Seven Drunken Nights" and sings the song; Heaney speaks briefly; Clancy refers to "the judges" of the session.

31:38-1:06:05 - footage cuts to Joe Heaney and Liam Clancy walking by the sea (time code and number ("AL-23") visible throughout): Heaney and Clancy trade songs while seated on rocky outcropping; occasionally camera switches to person carrying a Nagra tape recorder (sound of synch tone heard); Heaney sings "The Rocks of Bawn"; Clancy sings "The Yellow Bittern" (in English), Joe sings it in Irish; picture out, song out; Heaney appears to start song again; view of sea; Clancy sings song about Annie of D___(?) and Heaney joins in; Heaney talks about courting, sings "Cunnla," and Clancy joins in; view of rocks, waves breaking; Heaney sings "The Bonnie Bunch of Roses" and talks about the song; Clancy asks Heaney to talk about the "Seven Drunken Nights"; Heaney talks about it and sings it; shots of Heaney and Clancy chatting and walking down the beach singing.

Administrative InformationReturn to Top

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top

Subject Terms

  • Ethnomusicology
  • Folk Music--Ireland
  • Rural Irish--Europe--British Isles
  • Sean-Nos

Geographical Names

  • Europe--Europe--General Europe
  • Ireland

Form or Genre Terms

  • Video recordings