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County Donegal reels by De Dannan

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Sceala Irish Craic Forum Discussion:     County Donegal reels by De Dannan

Donegal reels by De Dannan
De Dannan [originally De Danann] was an Irish folk music group. They were formed by Frankie Gavin [fiddle], Alec Finn [guitar, bouzouki], Johnny "Ringo" McDonagh [bodhran] and Charlie Piggott [banjo] as a result of sessions in Hughes's Pub in Spiddal, County Galway, subsequently inviting Dolores Keane [vocals] to join the band. They named themselves Dé Danann after the legendary Irish tribe, Tuatha Dé Danann.

The group released their self-titled debut album De Danann in 1975. Keane left to marry John Faulkner in 1977. [They were both multi-instrumentalists, and recorded 3 folk albums together.] To fill the vacancy, De Danann brought in Johnny Moynihan for the second album Selected Jigs Reels and Songs, which featured a bodhrán solo by McDonagh [this album has never been released on CD, reportedly because the master tapes were lost]. The Mist Covered Mountain featured various older traditional singers, and on Star-Spangled Molly they were joined by Maura O'Connell. For reasons that have never been made clear, they changed the spelling of the group from "De Danann" to "De Dannan".

After the departure of Maura, they brought in Mary Black for two albums. Like Maura and Dolores before her, she has gone on to explore country, blues and jazz, hopping backwards and forwards between Nashville and Dublin. After Mary Black, Dolores Keane returned to the fold for two albums. Other singers with the group have included Eleanor Shanley, Tommy Fleming and Andrew Murray.
On the instrumental side, Frankie Gavin and Alec Finn were the only constant members of the group. Jackie Daly [accordion] is a star in his own right and later went on to join the group Patrick Street. In 1980 De Dannan had a surprise hit single in Ireland with the Beatles song Hey Jude. As an indication of their diversity, they also recorded Handel's "Arrival of the Queen of Sheba" [which they jokingly retitled "The Arrival of the Queen of Sheba in Galway"], Bohemian Rhapsody, and Jewish klezmer tunes, learned from bluegrass superstar, Andy Statman.

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