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| Larry Kirwan of Black 47 |
Larry Kirwan left
Wexford, Ireland, for New York City at age 19 and played local clubs in several
pub bands, including Turner and Kirwan
of Wexford in the 1970s and 1980s. In 1989, he formed Black 47, named after a traditional term for the summer of 1847,
the worst year of the Irish Potato Famine. The band built a local following by
playing extensively at two Irish pubs in Manhattan, Paddy Reilly's and, later on, Connolly's.
In short time, Black 47 attained international recognition through its albums
and international notoriety for its outspoken political stances on
British-Irish relations and the American invasion of Iraq after 9/11. The band
is presently comprised of Kirwan on lead
vocals and guitar, Geoffrey Blythe on
saxophones and clarinet, Fred Parcells
on trombone and tin whistle, Joseph
Mulvanerty on uilleann pipes, flute and bodhrán, Joe Burcaw on bass and Thomas
Hamlin on drums. After 25 years together, the group is presently on a
farewell tour. The band's final album, Last
Call, was released on March 4th.
There was nothing more Irish than being at a Black 47 concert
in Manhattan on St. Patrick's Day. At B.B.
King's Blues Club & Grill tonight, the band rocked strong in the Bruce Springsteen school of rock, yet everything
the band played had a touch of the Irish. Opening with songs from early in its
legacy, "Green Suede Shoes" and "Big Fellah," Black 47 set
out to please by playing many fan favorites. Yet even reggae, funk and hip hop-flavored
tunes got an Irish workout thanks to the ever-present sound of traditional penny
whistles and 18th century uilleann pipes. Even Bob Marley's "Three Little Birds," Them's "Gloria" and the Bobby Fuller Four's "I Fought the Law" never sounded so ethnically
Irish. But powerful? How about how Black 47 reworked the traditional "Danny
Boy" into a non-traditional interpretation that painted an ugly picture of
anti-gay violence in New York? Political injustice sentiments similarly rallied
the audience in "Fire of Freedom" and "James Connolly." Nevertheless,
songs like "Desperate", "Rockin' the Bronx" and
"Different Drummer" reinforced that this was a party and the band's excitement-infused
music was the drive. The band punctuated the party atmosphere with three songs debuted
from the new Last Call album, the
Latin-inspired "Salsa O'Keefe", "Culchie Prince" and "The
Night the Showbands Died." Midway through the two-hour set, the instrumentalists
engaged in an extended jazz jam. While the Irish identity permeated the performance,
the eclectic sound and the New York stories in the lyrics kept the band rooted
on home ground. It will be hard for New Yorkers to let go of Black 47.
Black 47 will perform at Connolly's on May 10 and its final show ever at B.B. King's Blues Club & Grill on November 15. In the meantime, visit Black 47 at www.black47.com.

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