Background: | non_vocal_instrumentalist |
Instrument: | Uilleann pipes, irish flute, tin whistle. |
Willie Clancy | |
Birth Date: | 24 December 1918 |
Birth Place: | Miltown Malbay, County Clare, Ireland |
Death Place: | Galway, Ireland |
Occupation: | Musician, carpenter |
Genre: | Irish traditional music |
Years Active: | 1938–1973 |
Willie Clancy (24 December 1918 - 24 January 1973)[1] was an Irish uilleann piper, flute player and whistle player.
Clancy was born into a musical family in the outskirts of Milltown Malbay, County Clare. His parents (Gilbert Clancy and Ellen Killeen) both sang and played concertina, and his father also played the flute. Clancy's father had been heavily influenced by local blind piper Garret Barry and passed much of Barry's music on to Willie.[2]
Willie started playing the whistle at age 5, and later took up the flute. He first saw a set of pipes in 1936 when he saw Johnny Doran playing locally. He obtained his first set of pipes two years later. His influences included Leo Rowsome, Séamus Ennis, John Potts, and Andy Conroy. Clancy won the Oireachtas competition in 1947. Unable to earn a living from music he emigrated to London where he worked as a carpenter.[3]
Returning to Milltown Malbay in 1957 he recorded some influential 78 rpm recordings for the Gael Linn label - among them the classic reel selection "The Old Bush/The Ravelled Hank of Yarn." The next decades he stayed in Milltown Malbay.
Clancy married Dóirín Healy in 1962. The Willie Clancy Summer School was established in his honour in 1973, by Clancy's friends Junior Crehan, Martin Talty, Sean Reid, Paddy Malone, Paddy McMahon, Frankie McMahon, Jimmy Ward, JC Talty, Harry Hughes, Michael O Friel, Séamus Mac Mathúna, and Muiris Ó Rócháin.[4] http://www.scoilsamhraidhwillieclancy.com/about.htmlHe was also the subject of a major television documentary "Cérbh É? Willie Clancy" on TG4, first broadcast in November 2009. In this programme, one of a series in which major figures in contemporary traditional music, profile and pay homage to a master of their craft from a bygone age, Peter Browne traced the life and legacy of Clancy.
In 2009 The Choice Wife from The Breeze From Erin was included in Topic Records 70 year anniversary boxed set Three Score and Ten as track twelve on the third CD.
A book of transcriptions of Clancy's tunes was published in 1976 and updated in 1993.[6]