*Musicians gather at the Yellow Submarine in Corofin on Sunday afternoons.
On a recent Sunday afternoon at The Yellow Submarine restaurant in Corofin, more than a dozen musicians gathered. Tunes began as they sometimes do at such a session, a fiddle player picking up the first bars of a tune, some players joining in immediately, still others holding back for a bit, listening, listening until they felt they, too, were ready.
By Deborah McDermott
The previous night, Dysert flute player Mick Nestor and his friends could be found at Bofey Quinnโs, where they had played so many Saturday nights before COVID 19 silenced the music. Now they are back. Others, too, joined in that night, performing jigs and tunes all evening long, encouraging members of the audience to sing a song they might know.
Welcome to the weekend in Corofin.
โIโm hugely glad thereโs music again,โ said owner Niall Cleary of Bofey Quinns. โWhen you open the door and you hear traditional music, thereโs a feeling of being alive. The music is going, the fireโs going, and everythingโs right with the worldโ.
Everything is right with the world, indeed, said a number of those who come to play. For them, being able to gather again after 18 months has been a balm in more ways than one. Not only are they doing what they love, they are also able to finally again socialize with other musicians. And this is no small part of the joy.
โThereโs an important social aspect to playing, checking in with people. โHow are you getting on?โ said Vincent Fogarty of Corofin, who plays the bouzouki (โso thereโs a little bit of Greece in Ireland!โ). โThat 18 months had a negative effect on musicians and on music. I am lucky. I have a family. But those living on their own must have had a hard time.โ
An accomplished fiddle player who first picked up her instrument at 9 years old, Laura Ugur has been organizing the Sunday afternoon gatherings at the Yellow Submarine since music began outdoors last summer. She said she was delighted to be among her musician friends again.
โMusic is my lifestyle and itโs my social outlet as well. The lockdown had left empty spaces. A lot of people felt that,โ she said. โIt was surreal at first to get together. We werenโt sure how to talk with each other. We didnโt recall the tunes quickly. But after the first few weeks, things settled in again.โ
โCOVID was tough. There was nowhere to come out to,โ said Nestor, a North Clare native who grew up at a time when neighbors gathered at someoneโs home for house dances and โsoirees,โ when socializing and music were intimate parts of daily life. โSuddenly, your freedom was taken away. It wasnโt possible to meet people. Itโs a social thing for us. We do it for the camaraderie. But I do feel sorry for those who do this for a living.โ
As Ugur intimated, gathering again meant not only getting into the social groove. It also meant reintroducing in a group setting the jigs and reels that make up Irish music โ in other words, getting into the musical groove as well.
Thibaut Caron, who owns the Yellow Submarine, has been playing the bodhran since 2000 and frequently attends the Sunday afternoon sessions.
โItโs essential for me to have music, but during the lockdown musicians had to stop playing out,โ he said. โFor some of us, it took a few sessions to get it right. I experienced memory rushes. Someone plays a tune. Itโs a tune thatโs played a lot. So it comes back, and the memories connected with it.โ
โThe first lockdown was great,โ said Fogarty. โYou could learn some new tunes and practice. But then there was another lockdown and another.
โEveryoneโs lamenting that after 20 years of playing music, 18 months can destroy your ability to play,โ he said with a laugh.
Ugur said she herself probably knows 100s of tunes, but itโs that feeling of sitting down with her peers and plucking a tune while others join in that is most satisfying to her.
โThereโs a lot of joy, really,โ she said. โAnd I think things are going to pick up a little more again.โ
***
Bofey Quinns: Saturday night, 8:30-10:30 p.m., traditional music session; Friday night, 8:30-10:30 p.m., Irish band with vocalist
Yellow Submarine: Sunday afternoon, 1-3 p.m., traditional music session; Thursday afternoon, 2-4 p.m., beginner session focusing on tin whistle and guitar. Open to anyone.