The Grehan Sisters Explained

The Grehan Sisters
Origin:Boyle, County Roscommon, Ireland
Genre:Irish folk
Label:REX (Decca), Transatlantic
Years Active:1964–1970 approx.
Past Members:Marie Grehan
Francie Grehan
Helen "Bernie" Grehan

The Grehan Sisters were an Irish folk music act of the mid to late 1960s who achieved popularity in Britain after moving to Manchester, England in 1967 from their native Boyle in County Roscommon, via a spell performing in Dublin. They disbanded around 1970 but have occasionally reunited for one-off appearances in subsequent years, most recently in 2015, while Helen (formerly "Bernie") continues to perform intermittently as a solo artist.

Biography

Siblings Marie, Francie and Helen (then known as Bernadette or "Bernie") Grehan were immersed in Irish traditional music from an early age via their parents' pub, Grehan's in Boyle, and as teenagers developed a reputation for their exuberant renditions of traditional and composed Irish songs and tunes, also featuring Francie's playing on mandolin and ukulele-banjo (actually a mandolin-banjo since it has 8 strings), Helen on guitar and both Helen and Marie on spoons, with which they frequently entertained the patrons. Young up-and-coming singers such as Christy Moore were attracted by their energy and their talents; in his 2012 book "One Voice" Moore wrote:

In around 1965 the sisters moved to Dublin to develop their playing and singing career, where they were included in The Dubliners' (at the time unfinished) short musical/comedy film O'Donoghue's Opera, and in 1966 released a single "Patsy McCann"/"Woman Of Our Town" plus an EP The Grehan Sisters for Rex records, a subsidiary of Decca. In 1967 they signed to the London-based Transatlantic Records, who were keen to capitalise on their recent success with releases of the Dubliners by signing another Irish group,[1] and moved to Manchester, England where they established themselves on the U.K. folk scene, typically performing "with gusto" in the style of the day also favoured by artists such as The Dubliners and The Clancy Brothers. In the U.K. they released an LP On the Galtymore Mountains (1967) featuring a mix of traditional music and Irish rebel songs, at which time Marie was 23 years old, Francie 22 and Helen 18.[2] They released two more singles, this time on Transatlantic, and contributed two newly recorded songs to a 1968 Transatlantic sampler Here's To The Irish. They were a popular attraction on the British Folk Club circuit and the major urban concert venues,[3] and were regular guests on the UK radio show "Country meets Folk", appearing ten times in 1968 and 1969.[4]

From the 1970s onwards the sisters ceased touring as an act and eventually all three returned to Ireland to live; Helen took part in several RTÉ productions and radio broadcasts in the 1980s. The three have reunited on occasion for special performances. In 2014 the Grehan Sisters and Christy Moore headlined a tribute concert in Boyle to the late John Reilly, a traditional singer associated for some years with their parents' pub,[5] and in 2015 they were guests of honour and recipients of the Annie McNulty Award at the opening of the South Roscommon Singers Festival,[6] while Helen continues to perform intermittently as a solo artist featuring her own songs.[7]

Marie died on 25 November 2020.[8]

Discography

The Grehan Sisters' track "The Black Velvet Band" also appears on the 2004 Sweeney's Men 2-CD compilation The Legend of Sweeney's Men - Anthology. (Castle Music).

Although the original LP and EP/singles releases have not been reissued as such, many tracks from their Transatlantic output have been reissued in the CD era on "Various Artists" compilations under such titles as The Best of Irish Folk, Essential Irish Folk, The Wild Rover, Irish Folk Favourites, The Very Best of Irish Folk, The Irish Folk Collection, etc., as well as the Transatlantic Folk Box Set, and are therefore not hard to find.[9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. [Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]
  2. Liner notes to The Grehan Sisters: On the Galtymore Mountains, 1967
  3. http://www.southroscommon.ie/2015.pdf South Roscommon Singers Festival, 2015. Guests of Honour - The Grehan Sisters
  4. Web site: Country Meets Folk . Radiolistings.co.uk . 26 January 2020 .
  5. Web site: Christy Moore concert sold out. Boyletoday.com. 17 March 2020.
  6. Web site: Award for Grehan Sisters Thursday. Boyletoday.com. 17 March 2020.
  7. Web site: Festival Weekend | . sligotradsingers.ie . 17 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171025055407/http://sligotradsingers.ie/frank-finn-traditional-singing-weekend/ . 25 October 2017 . dead.
  8. Web site: Late John and Marie Clarke. 2020-11-27. Boyle Today Your News, Your Town Local news for Boyle, County Roscommon. en-US.
  9. Web site: Amazon.co.uk: Grehan Sisters: Digital Music. Amazon.co.uk. 17 March 2020.