Scithereedee
Tim Lyons and Fintan Vallely
Fuller Song notes
Big guns & Hairy Drums
1/ The Bodhrán Song.
With the international fashion of Folk musics the bodhrán has multiplied
in geometric progression as a symbol of instant access to music-making. It has
reached nonsense proportions in the Irish Fleadh Cheoil and English Folk Festival
scene where a melody instrument may well start off the music, but the percussion
swells in and eventually becomes an end in itself. Ever aware of this scenario
all round him the whole summer long, Tim tells the original yarn about the bodhrán
in song in which he vilifies the 'typical' tourist as German (it used be American)
but lets the goat get away. Sensibly enough he robbed The Cuckoo's Nest to lay
his tonic eggs in - to eliminate the possibility of any German ever learning
the song.
2/ Song of The Teeth.
Martin O'Malley from Miltown Malbay in West Glare is an outstanding patron and
enjoyer of traditional music and Song. A farmer. the only thing which interferes
with his hay making is the cursed Willy Clancy Summer school in the first week
of July. On the one sunny day of 1985 while at the hay he set his teeth on the
wall for a rest after dinner, and a jackdaw robbed them. Two years later a neighbour
(called Crowe) found them, So Martin coined the immortal words: "Robbed by a
jackdaw, brought back by a Crow", and the song gushed forth.
3/ The Fast-food Song.
To a traditional air, this is about the Fast Food industry which is fattening
the Western Hemisphere and will eventually kill it off, a result of Tim being
half poisoned by a half-thawed, botulism-ridden alleged burger he foolishly
once bought on the side of the street at the Willy Clancy Week one year.
4/ Dunne's story beats them all.
"DUNNES' STORES BETTER VALUE BEATS THEM ALL" used be the famous slogan of Ireland's
most competitive cut-price supermarket which specialises in selling the fastest-moving
items at the lowest prices. Its millionaire proprietor, young Ben Dunne, while
on an alleged golfing trip to Miami O.D.'d on cocaine and was arrested after
going off his rocker in the company of a woman from an escort agency. Later
on he appeased the Catholic hierarchy by joining in the Irish supermarket blockade
against selling condoms.
5/ Jake the sniffer.
The police will stoop to any level to wipe out drugs, even corrupt innocent
dogs by getting them hooked so that they will do anything to get a sniff. Tim
was taken by the tale of this beast, one Jake, who was once kidnapped for interrogation
by the drug barons.
6/ Charles the Navigator
One morning in 1985 the yacht of Charles J. Haughey crash-landed on the Mizen
Head off Co. Cork as he was rushing home to eventual accountability for his
expensive lifestyle. The Mizzen's lighthouse keeper counselled the survivors
by torch light, and the Party faithful flocked to Baltimore to witness their
boss being winched ashore and dried out on the pier - all timed perfectly to
get the Sunday one O'clock news. The 'taypot' is the one Charles gave away to
Maggie Maggie Maggie (leaving a lonely gap in a set in the National Museum)
and the `sickening crunch' is his own description of the docking.
7/ The Weather
Tim wrote this opus in desperation at the bad summer of 1985 which caused a
National gloom both that year and the one Slier. The bad Weather must be held
accountable too for Gay Byrne depressing the half of the country about the joys
of working in America and Australia thereby creating an emigration crisis among
people foolish enough to take him seriously The exodus makes the famine years
look like a bomb- scare, and he didn't go himself in the end, now trying to
convince us to become millionaires).
8/ The Sun-worshipper song.
There is a pool of water in the North pole ice a mile across. There is a hole
in the ozone layer which if it doesn't incinerate us all will drown us in melted
icebergs. Steps were taken some years ago to limit the substances which were
causing all this, while at the same time the price of cars has been kept down
to make sure that none of it will work. The song explores the contradictions
involved with those who fetishise the colour of the body.
9/ Resurrection Romp.
The apostles, as everybody knows, were heavily into Irish music and they liked
a couple of drinks of a weekend - especially with a Bank Holiday coming up.
Christy Moore told Fintan this story in joke form one Good Friday in Maisie
Friel's of Miltown Malbay as all were breaking the law for pleasure. Fintan
wrote it as a commission for RTÉ's 'Sunday show' at Easter, 1990. Producer
Noel CoughIan wasn't pleased, nor was presenter Andy O'Mahoney: their show was
a "family" one, so it was censored out.
10/ The E?EC Song
The 1969 EEC elections were celebrated by people all over Ireland killing each
other to get to blazes out and find a good job in Brussels. Tim doesn't agree
with all this rot and sets out in detail the cashed hopes. false promises. ruined
economy. automated pubs and other awfulness that have been the result of Ireland's
joining up in '71.
11/ The Well Woman Song
Prior to `83 contraception was illegal in Ireland. This led to unwanted pregnancies,
large families, single mothers - and to abortion in England. A group of impeccably
moral citizens in 1983 initiated 'The Referendum" to prevent women making such
decisions, and then the law eased so one could get condoms - but only from a
doctor (if you planned busy sex-life it would be cheaper to emigrate). Since
the Well Woman clinic respected the woman's right to choose, and, furthermore,
was liberally interpreting the law by giving out condoms free, in return for
a small voluntary donation, 'The Referendum" crowd put pressure on the Gardaí
to prosecute. A lad was sent to the clinic to purchase a condom which became
`Exhibit A', and long after the things had been made legal the clinic was fined
£50 for their dastardly crime.
12/ The Price of the Pig.
A tale of hard times when the innocent lad in a strange town is beguiled by
the charms of a smart woman and ends up penniless. A gem of a traditional piece
to the air of the jig Tatter jack Walsh.
13/ Mwilly Mmride
Australian Eric Bogle's wonderful 1970s Green Fields of France details the pointlessness
of World War 1 slaughter, addressing an unknown soldier, Willie MacBride. The
Fureys topped the charts with it, lodging it in everybody's sentiment file,
everywhere that English is spoken. Anyone suspected of being able to sing is
constantly terrorised by unknown civilians with requests to "do Willie MacBride".
Finally Crawford Howard from Belfast obliged, in parody. This is Fintan's adaptation
of Crawford's rather brilliant, original idea.
14/ Confessions of a bodhrán player
This addresses the New-agey type of player of the modern Irish skin drum who
mistakenly believes that this the oldest thing around, and, conveniently, also
perceives it as easy to play as stamping your foot. Neither is true, and so
bodhrán players continue to take the brunt of the jokes inside Traditional
music.
15/ The Grisly Murder of Joe Frawley
The grocer-cum-publican is common enough in rural anywhere. Joe Frawley had
such an emporium, and was a politician too. Ever since Irish women took to the
pub after the epidemic of addiction to Dallas where every sentence used a drink
as punctuation, music came to be provided as entertainment, sometimes the native
stuff, more likely a cocktail of Country and pop. Often, to save expense, local
Trad musicians would be recruited, and called a 'session'. Substances other
than alcohol would be consumed too, and Tim's parody on the classic 'murder'
ballad romantically unfolds. The 'holy hour' was the now-obsolete dinner-hour
during which Dublin pubs were closed to give unionised bar-staff a break.
16/ The Moving Statues Movement
In 1985, in twenty-six places around Ireland, previously content and immobile
statues of stone, plaster and reinforced concrete began to move - wink, weep,
bleed, sigh, talk and even light up. The thing caught on like good scandal and
became the only growth industry of the 1980s. Nell McCafferty pondered the curious
fact that the statues only moved in the 26 Counties (Fintan's theory is that
the ones in the Six Cos. were afraid to move). It was all brought on by all
the talk and referenda on divorce and contraception; the air is that of the
1960s Civil Rights anthem.