Pat McDonagh (piper)
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Pat McDonagh (died 1904 or 1908) was an Irish piper. McDonagh was a native of Galway town, where at one point in his life he ran a small shop. He was described as respectable in behaviour, and a very accomplished musician. Jeremiah O'Donovan, first secretary of the Cork Pipers Club, met him in 1903, thought no one his equal. He prevailed upon McDonagh to participate in the 1903 Feis Ceol, which he won. However he died in the years immediately following. O'Neill says that "For a man of his rare musical ability his modesty was truly refreshing, and though conscious of his gifts, he was much disinelined to display them away from his own home. No relationship other than that of surname and nativity existed between him and John McDonough, the renowned piper of an earlier generation."


References

* ''Famous Pipers who flourished principally in the second half of the nineteenth century'' Chapter 21 in ''Irish Minstrels and Musicians'', by Capt.
Francis O'Neill Francis O'Neill (August 28, 1848 – January 26, 1936) was an Irish-born American police officer and collector of Irish traditional music. His biographer Nicholas Carolan referred to him as "the greatest individual influence on the evolution of ...
, 1913.


External links

* http://billhaneman.ie/IMM/IMM-XXI.html {{DEFAULTSORT:McDonagh, Pat Irish male uilleann pipers Musicians from Galway (city) 19th-century Irish uilleann pipers 1904 deaths 20th-century Irish uilleann pipers