Greengrass

Greengrass
Greengrass

Clan Suibhne at Espresso Joe's ~ Keyport, NJ

Clan Suibhne at Espresso Joe's ~ Keyport, NJ
Clan Suibhne at Espresso Joe's ~ Keyport, NJ

Clan Suibhne

Clan Suibhne
Clan Suibhne @ Bogart's Books & Cafe ~ Millville, NJ

Clan Suibhne @ Cafe Improv

Clan Suibhne @ Cafe Improv
At The Cafe Improv ~ Princeton, NJ

Clan Suibhne = Greengrass

Clan Suibhne = Greengrass
Clan Suibhne = Greengrass

Clan Suibhne

Clan Suibhne
We're Not Just a Band,We're a Clan

Saturday, January 21, 2012

The Irish Blessing Song

Up next ~ Clan Suibhne is working on a music accompaniment to the Irish Blessing.

The songs' sound is definitely in the scope of our Greengrass Music genre...pure, raw and simple.

Our version song lyrics:

May the road rise to meet yah
May the Wind be always at your back
May the Sun shine warm upon your face
May the rains fall soft upon your fields

And until we meet again
And until we meet again
May God hold you in the hollow of his hand
May the rains fall soft upon your field
May the rains fall soft upon your field
May the rains fall soft upon your field




 We'll soon post a link to the song!

Thursday, January 12, 2012

The Saints Among Us


"The Saints Among Us" is an instrumental song. The song's melody and harmonics embraces and depicts the works of the saints.  It's a tribute to all the unknown saints. To the saints that don't even know that they are saints. The people around us that share good works, virtues and do things for others...helping to create an environment of love and peace.

The song is currently a work in progress and a bit different than our Greengrass genre but definitely not outside our scope of sound.




To listen to a preview ~ click on Saint Patrick above...clicking will also help drive out those snakes.

Enjoy!

Released 1/12/2012 CWF

Sunday, January 8, 2012

The Music of Clan Suibhne (Sweeney) – A Review

The Music of Clan Suibhne (Sweeney) – A Review By:  Carla Ives (http://GhostWriteHer.com

On October 1st, I was sitting in Bogart’s Bookstore & Café in Millville, New Jersey, waiting for the music to start. Being a lover of Irish Trad (traditional) Music, I was waiting to hear Clan Suibhne (Sweeney).  I watched three somewhat ordinary-looking guys set up their instruments and the other accoutrements of their band.   Well, maybe not so ordinary, as there was a very authentic-looking Leprechaun in the center!  I saw guitars, an Irish Tenor Banjo, an electric bass fiddle, tin whistles, an Irish Bodrhán (hand drum) and lots of other musical things.  And then it was time for the show.

After some chit-chat with the audience and a brief introduction, the music began.  I came expecting a traditional Irish Band playing traditional Irish music.  Well, they’re Irish, all right, but It was a wee bit Irish and then maybe not so Irish.  And then it was a wee bit American Folk and then maybe not so much American folk.  It wasn’t quite like anything I had heard before and it was more than a wee bit original!  After the first couple of songs, I knew I was listening to something very unique, something new and something all their own.  Clan Suibhne introduced me, that night, to “Greengrass” music.  

“Greengrass” music is a mixture of the folk music of Ireland, Scotland and Wales, with a little American Folk and Bluegrass thrown in.  Stir that all up and add three very talented New Jersey/Irish Musicians and you have “Greengrass,” a musical style pioneered by the members of Clan Suibhne, John, James and Charlie Farrell, otherwise known as Leprechaun John, Famous Seamus and C.W. Liam.  The Sweeney name is their Mom’s, a lovely lady now 92 years of age and still going strong.  They’ll readily tell you their family history which was very interesting to this history teacher who loves anything about Ireland and Scotland.

Clan Suibhne incorporates a broad range of styles into their show.  They play the traditional songs, but with their own signature style.  If you like traditional Irish tunes, you’ll like Clan Suibhne.  They also play their own original compositions, such as The Bay View Wheelmen, a song dedicated to the biking culture that dominated New York and northern New Jersey in the early part of the 20th century.  They’ll tell you the story.

Clan Suibhne put on a great show that night.  They sing, they tell stories and they interact with the audience throughout.  They are very definitely crowd pleasers!   We don’t get many class acts down in this end of New Jersey, but we had one that night and the audience knew it!  They tapped their feet and sang along to the songs that they knew.  For a small, intimate crowd, there was a lot of well-deserved applause at the end.  

Clan Suibhne is available for all types of occasions, including but not limited to private parties, festivals, fairs, coffeehouses, pubs, receptions and grand openings.  Believe me when I tell you that you will not be disappointed you hired them.  To get “Greengrass” music at your event, call Charlie Farrell at (719)761-7214 or email him at:  FARRE954@REGIS.EDU.

They’re coming back in a couple of months and I’m going to be there!

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Síocháin Vignette



Peace can you find
In a divided line
Take up the cross
When you find you're lost

Taste and see what peace did with me
Taste and see what peace did with me
Taste and see what peace did with me

Peace can you find
In the vice of the time
Frustration set in place
At the beginning o' the race


Taste and see what He did for peace
Taste and see what He did for peace
Taste and see what He did for peace

Before the Trioblóidí  (Trib lodge ee)
Are memories of peace
Peace called the walls
That divide from the Falls

Taste and see what peace did with me
Taste and see what peace did with me
Taste and see what peace did with me

Plowshares to swords
Truth forever more
Down on His knees
Sweat and blood for peace

Taste and see what He did for peace
Taste and see what He did for peace
Taste and see what He did for peace

CWF 11/2011






Thursday, October 27, 2011

Irish-Scottish Roots

What's in a name? Why name a folk group Clan Suibhne? Suibhne is an Irish and Scottish name meaning "well-going." Drop the h and Suibne is pure Irish. With the h Suibhne is Irish-Scottish and/or Scot-Irish. We kept the h because we like having a wee bit of "burl." The most proper way to spell Clan Suibhne is Clann tSuibhne, but just plain Suibhne is hard enough for most to pronounce so we left it at that. Sween is the Anglicized form of Suibhne and is where the name variant Sweeney comes from.

The Sweeney's, our Sweeney's, our immediate maternal ancestry, comes from Cappoquin, Waterford, Ireland. The Sweeney's have Scottish roots too. Notably, one of the oldest standing stone castles in Scotland today is Castle Sween - located on the eastern shore of Loch Sween, in Knapdale, on the west coast of Argyll, Scotland. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castle_Sween Wow, say that 10 times.

Our grandfather, James Joseph Francis Aloysius Sweeney, emigrated to the United States in 1905. He departed Crow Hill after trade school at Mount Melleray http://www.mountmellerayabbey.org/ and came across on the SS Cymric, a steam ship of the White Star Line.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Cymric  James landed in Boston en route to Newark, NJ. James took a wife, Catherine Sheehan, our grandmother, who emigrated from Limerick, Ireland in 1904.

The Yank-Irish-Celtic Folk Trio Clan Suibhne names their music group in honor of their grandfather. If it were not for James and Catherine - Clan Suibhne Folk Trio wouldn't be here.

A Sweeney from Cappoquin, Waterford, Ireland.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cappoquin
SS Cymric ~ built in Belfast ~ in this pic @ Liverpool




Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Clan Suibhne @ The Green Planet Coffee Co in Point Pleasant Beach, NJ

We had a great time @ The Green Planet Coffee Co Friday evening October 21st. (http://www.greenplanetcoffee.com/). Go figure...Greengrass music at The Green Planet.

We made a lot of new friends and managed not to upset the old friends too much that we can still call them friends :).

Many thanks to Jennifer Peacock for taking some awesome pics and to Cat Galioto, Editor of the Toms River Patch (http://tomsriver.patch.com/) for doing an article and posting a video clip in the "Patch."
http://tomsriver.patch.com/articles/greengrass-is-local-band-s-specialty#video-8229092

Also a big thanks to "cousin" Reach Man for helping out with all his sound accoutrements. DNA and blood tests have confirmed that Reach Man is 33% Sweeney. However in order to receive land parcels and royalties one would need to be 33 1/3% Sweeney...and no one's ever gotten the extra 1/3%...at least while living.

Clan Suibhne w/ Reach Man @ The Green Planet Coffee Co ~ Point Pleasant Beach ~ 21 October 2011



Friday, October 21, 2011

Greengrass Music ~ Raw, Simple and Pure

What's in a word? Greengrass music? What is meant when some one says Greengrass? Is it a spin off of Bluegrass? Not quite. It'd be more appropriate to consider Bluegrass having it's roots in Greengrass Music.


Bluegrass is a term created as a result of the name of a country group - Bill Munroe's Blue Grass Boys. http://doodah.net/bgb/ . Bluegrass (now being one word) genre music was a specific arrangement unlike the country music of it's time. "In bluegrass, as in some forms of jazz, one or more instruments each takes its turn playing the melody and improvising around it, while the others perform accompaniment; this is especially typified in tunes called breakdowns. This is in contrast to old-time music, in which all instruments play the melody together or one instrument carries the lead throughout while the others provide accompaniment. Breakdowns are often characterized by rapid tempos and unusual instrumental dexterity and sometimes by complex chord changes." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluegrass_music

There are other forms of hybrid'ing the term Bluegrass...like new grass, Gospel grass, plaid grass...all attempts at capturing the roots type music of their aim. But none come full circle like the genre of Greengrass music. Greengrass is a roots music concept that is totally different in sound and theorem. Greengrass goes back to the beginning with a mindset of "old-time, new again." Meaning before there were Country, Old-Time, Bluegrass and Appalachian music there was Greengrass music. Greengrass being the folk music of Ireland, Scotland, Wales and other Celtic nations.


As Elvis Costello put it:
"I started with rock n' roll and...then you start to take it apart like a child with a toy and you see there's blues and there's country...Then you go back from country into American music...and you end up in Ireland and Scotland eventually."


Some groups do Irish folk songs bluegrass style, but it sounds bluegrass. Other groups do bluegrass tunes Irish-Celtic style, but it sounds Irish-Celtic. Greengrass music borders and sounds similar to Bluegrass, Irish and Celtic nations folk but has more of a conglomerate mix of all of the previous with a dose or two of American folk...which other than Native American music, and as Elvis Costello infers,  originated from somewhere else. 


Greengrass may be best described as raw, simple and pure. Like the early sounds of Woody Guthrie, Dylan, and Pete Seger (without most of the protest lyrics) combined with the Celtic Nations & Irish Folk flairs of Tommy Makem and The Clancy Brothers, a snippet of The Chieftains, The Dubliners and maybe a skosh of the Bard-like minstrel DNA of Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull. Greengrass can even have an added pinch of a Ragtime-Dixieland bling for extra flavor. It is significant to note that Bob Dylan was greatly influenced and helped get his start through The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem.


Clan Suibhne's original music compositions and arrangements are Greengrass...raw, simple and pure...old-time, new again.



Clan Suibhne (left to right) C.W., LepreJohn, Famous Seamus = 3 brothers from Jersey


"They're Not Just a Band, They're a Clan"



Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Singing Brothers Form a Musical Irish Clan



Singing Brothers Form a Musical Irish Clan
By GRAELYN BRASHEAR - STAFF WRITER
March 12, 2010 Asbury Park Press
While growing up in Newark and Wall Township, the Farrell brothers were always surrounded by the music of their Celtic heritage. At family gatherings — which ranged from a few cousins kicking back in someone's basement to full-fledged reunions of hundreds — instruments invariably came out.

"It's a ruboff from the old Irish culture," said Charlie Farrell, 49, of Toms River. He and brothers James, 55, of Brick, and John, 60, of Keyport, are the grandsons of immigrants from County Waterford, Ireland, and frequent impromptu music sessions were a tradition their vast extended family never gave up.

So it makes sense, the brothers said, that they learned to sing and play multiple instruments from a young age. "We all started out as children playing," said John. "Around our house, there were musicals, there were always the old Irish records on."

Now, after decades of casual jamming, the brothers have formed their own Irish-American band. They've dubbed themselves Clan Suibhne, opting for the Gaelic spelling of their immigrant grandparents' Anglicized last name, Sweeney. And with gigs piling up, the trio — which often grows to incorporate other clan members — is realizing a longtime dream. "This is something we've always said we wanted to do," Charlie said. "It was one of those "some day' things," added John, who has been writing his own songs for 20 years.

Last year Charlie was coming up on retirement from a 30-year career in the Coast Guard, and he decided it was time to make some day happen. John, who works in real estate and construction, and James, long active in the Shore music scene, agreed.

When they started researching venues in Monmouth and Ocean counties, the Farrell brothers found themselves drawn to the classic ambience of a handful of Irish taverns in Shore towns they've known and loved all their lives. Fittingly, their first pub appearance was at Farrell's Stout & Steak in Point Pleasant Beach.

Playing in pubs along New Jersey's "Irish Riviera" just feels right, the men said, like things have come full circle.

In a way, they have; it's not the first time a Farrell has performed in a Shore town. The family used to summer in Belmar, and their late father was known for loading the talented young Jimmy and his accordion into the back of the family's Studebaker for musical drives.

"They'd be down by the beach, driving around town, doing their errands," said John, "and Jimmy would be in the back playing songs with the windows open. People would just be astonished."

Memories of those days find their way into the songs John writes for the band. He often references now-shuttered hangouts, like the Circus Fun House in Asbury Park and the Route 35 drive-in theater in Hazlet, both landmarks of the brothers' teenage days. When he sings of those places, he said, "I'm amazed at how many heads snap up."

The distinctly Jersey touches are delivered, however, with real Irish flair. The trio travels with two carloads of instruments, including traditional drums, pipes, a concertina, mandolin, guitars, bass fiddle and an Irish banjo — a four-string version of the classic American instrument, which, they said, has a beautiful, bagpipe-like drone.

Strum those strings, said Charlie, "and you'll start thinking about Celtic women and Riverdance."
With one foot in their ancestral homeland and one planted firmly on the Jersey Shore, the Farrell brothers are winning over fans by the pubload. The band will even make an appearance in an episode of the NBC drama Mercy that airs on St. Patrick's Day (2010). They're looking forward to tuning into the show while they play at Murray MacGregor's Publik House in Rumson that night, said John.

And they're having a blast bringing their music to others. Charlie said he thinks their dad knew what he was doing when he orchestrated those summertime backseat concerts. "He'd be real happy to see this day," he said.  

©2010 Asbury Park Press. All rights reserved.