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Pádraigín Ní Uallacháin
Irish singer & musician

Pádraigín Ní Uallacháin

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Irish singer & musician
Work field
Gender
Female
Place of birth
County Louth, Ireland
Age
73 years
Family
Instruments:
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Dr Pádraigín Ní Uallacháin ([ˈpˠɑːd̺.ɾˠɪɡʲiːnʲ nʲiː u.a.l̺ˠaxˠɑːinʲ]) is an Irish singer, songwriter, academic and former newsreader from County Louth, Ireland.

Early life

Pádraigín was born in an Irish-speaking household to Pádraig Ó hUallacháín and Eithne Devlin from Cullyhanna, Co. Armagh. Her father, a teacher, writer and song collector collected older songs from the Oriel area and in Rannafast, and encouraged Pádraigín and her siblings to sing.

Pádraigín attended school at St Louis, County Monaghan before beginning a degree course at the University of Ulster

Career

1976–1980: RTÉ and teaching

In August 1976, Pádraigín became a television newsreader at RTÉ, Ireland's national broadcaster. She also researched and presented numerous radio programmes in English and in Irish for RTÉ Radio.

Pádraigín left RTÉ in 1980 to become a school teacher in Athlone, County Westmeath. She is a full time professional musician since 1999

1999–2004: Recording

In 1994, Pádraigín recorded her first full-length album with Garry Ó Briain. A Stór is a Stóirín was released on the acclaimed Gael Linn label and featured 36 songs for all ages, with an emphasis on songs suitable for primary school children.

Britain's Channel 4 commissioned music videos for a number of songs on the album, featuring dramatisations of the lyrics as well as performances from Pádraigín. The videos later became regular features on TnaG (Ireland's newly launched Irish language television channel) between 1996 and 1998. That same year, she also featured on the television programme Light, Darkness and Colour.

With the album's popularity growing, Pádraigín began the recording of her second album, again with Gael Linn. In 1995, Ní Uallacháin released An Dara Craiceann: Beanath the Surface. It featured unaccompanied sean-nós songs and songs set to music, including the works of Irish poet Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.

Pádraigín's third album, When I Was Young, was a collaboration between Garry Ó Briain (with whom she had collaborated on her first album), and her husband, folk singer Len Graham, and was released on the Gael Linn label in 1999. Two years later, Pádraigín released fourth album, An Irish Lullaby: Suantraí, under the Shanachie label in the United States. The recording featured collaborations with Len Graham, Garry Ó Briain, Máire Breatnach, harpist Helen Davies, fiddler Nollaig Casey and Uilleann piper Ronan Browne.

Pádraigín released her fifth album, An Dealg Óir: The Golden Thorn in 2002. The track-list consisted mainly of songs from southeast Ulster, Oriel in particular. At the time, Pádraigín was studying the traditions, songs and people of the area. The album was again released on the Gael Linn label and features influential Irish musicians and singers, including Steve Cooney, Liam O'Flynn, Liam Ó Maonlaí and Máire Breatnach.

Pádraigín released her sixth album, Áilleacht: Beauty in 2005. It is a collection of newly written and composed songs in Irish. Áilleacht garnered enthusiastic reviews and praise from both press and academics, with poet Louis de Paor stating:

{{Quote|text=This is a deceptively sophisticated composition in which a profound emotional disturbance is articulated apparently without artifice, impressing itself on the listener as though it were actual and direct speech. It is a fitting conclusion to a substantial and deeply satisfying piece of work.|sign=Louis de Paor|source=The Journal of Music, January 2006

Pádraigín performed songs from the album on BBC NI and RTÉ, alongside other performers to celebrate the publication of An Leabhar Mór: The Great Book of Gaelic, which was launched in Ireland and Scotland over a period of months in the countries various cities. Pádraigín also contributed a song to the album that accompanied the book.

2002–2010: A Hidden Ulster

The following year, Ní Uallacháin's book, A Hidden Ulster: People, songs and traditions of Oriel was published with Four Courts Press, featuring 540 pages of rare songs, their histories, biographies of authors, collectors and scribes and documentation of folk traditions in Oriel from the 17th century onwards. Television and radio programmes and series were produced, based on 'A Hidden Ulster' and featuring Ní Uallacháin on RTÉ Radio 1, TG4, RTÉ1 and on BBC radio. A Hidden Ulster was met with critical acclaim and featured in the Times Literary Supplement as a Book of the Year, and Irish Times Books of the Year list. After the book's publication in 2003, Pádraigín was awarded Gradam Shean-Nós Cois Life in 2003 for her contribution to the Irish song tradition, and became the first traditional artist to be awarded a Major Arts Award from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland.. Followed by national recognition with TG4 Gradam Award 2018 for ‘outstanding contribution to traditional music’.

In 2005, A Hidden Ulster was shortlisted for the 2005 Michaelis-Jena Ratcliff Prize in Folklore and Folklife. That same year, Pádraigín was named Traditional Singer in Residence at the Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry at Queen's University Belfast.

2011–Present: Songs of the Scribe

In November 2011, Pádraigín released her first album on the Ceoltaí Éireann label, Songs of the Scribe. As Traditional Singer in Residence at the Seamus Heaney Centre she collaborated with poets Ciaran Carson and Seamus Heaney on editing and translating song-poems from ancient Irish manuscripts, written by Irish scribes and scribe-poets. To record the album, Pádraigín travelled to St. Gallen, Switzerland to read the Irish manuscripts that had been removed from the country for safe-keeping in the event of Viking attack. Songs of the Scribe features all new compositions for poems and marginalia in Old Irish and in English. Songs of the Scribe received a positive reception and remained on the Celtic Note album charts for seven months between March and September 2012.

The recording of Songs of the Scribe and Ní Uallacháin's visit to St. Gallen saw Ní Uallacháin begin work on a new creative album with fiddler/producer Dónal O'Connor based on older writings, including lore surrounding Irish Goddess Brigid. Pádraigín is also researching for a new book on the songs from the Irish Kingdom of Bréifne.

LET THE FAIRIES IN, Pádraigín's latest album of children's songs was released in September 2012. CEOLTAÍ OIRIALLA - Songs of Oriel - a double CD of renewed songs by her of her native Oriel with and without accompaniment was released in 2017. her most recent project was the renewal of Oriel music and song online, www.orielarts.com which was funded by the Arts Council of Ireland

Awards

Among many awards,she is the first recipient of a Mayor Arts Award for a traditional musician from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland; a recipient of TG4 Gradam Award 2018 for outstanding contribution to traditional music.Gradam Sean-Nós Cois Life, Gradam TG4 Award for contribution to traditional song.

She received her doctorate from University of Ulster in 2012

Personal life

Pádraigín lives in Glendesha, County Armagh and has two sons, Eoghan and Macdara https://www.facebook.com/MacdaraJewellery/. Pádraigín is a sister of the late Eithne Ní Uallacháin and aunt to Eithne's son Dónal O'Connor, a producer and member of Irish traditional group At First Light, uileann piper Finnian Ó Conchubhair and film director Feilimí O'Connor.

Discography

  • 1994 – A Stór Is A Stóirín (Songs for All Ages)
  • 1995 – An Dara Craiceann (Beneath the Surface)
  • 1997 – When I Was Young
  • 1999 – An Irish Lullaby (Suantraí)
  • 2002 – An Dealg Óir (The Golden Thorn)
  • 2005 – Áilleacht (Beauty)
  • 2011 – Songs of the Scribe
  • 2012 – LET THE FAIRIES IN
  • 2017 - Ceoltaí Oirialla (27 Oriel Songs)

Footnotes

  1. ^ Pádraigín Ní Uallacháin at LinkedIn
  2. ^ Douglas Hyde Conference biography Archived 29 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Arts Tonight Interview at RTÉ Online
  4. ^ A Stór Is A Stóirín at Gael Linn
  5. ^ An Dara Craiceann at IrishSong.com
  6. ^ An Irish Lullaby review at Hot Press
  7. ^ Cead Cainte : Louis de Paor
  8. ^ An Leabhar Mór Archived 20 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ A Hidden Ulster Archived 29 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine at Four Courts Press
  10. ^ Pádraigín on TV and radio – 'A Hidden Ulster'
  11. ^ Songs from a Hidden Ulster Archived 12 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Uallacháin search at Times Literary Supplement
  13. ^ Dr. Pádraigín Ní Uallacháin, Seamus Heaney Centre
  14. ^ Irish Music Charts at Irish Music magazine
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 24 Apr 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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