Mar 01 2012
A Poem for Rory Gallagher
Born in Cork, Ireland in 1961, Louis de Paor is one of Ireland’s foremost Irish language poets. He is a four-time winner of the Seán Ó Ríordáin/Oireachtas Award, the premier award for a new collection of poems in Irish. He is also the recipient of the 2000 Lawrence O’Shaughnessy Award, the first poet in Irish to achieve such a distinction. In 2007 he narrated the documentary on Cork poet Séan Ó Ríordáin, considered one of the greatest Irish poets of all time. Paor’s poem Croibhualadh (Heartbeat) was included in ‘Nead an Dreoilín’ (Wren’s Nest), a collection of short films produced for Irish TV exploring the poetry of six living Irish language poets. His most recent project is a bilingual, mixed media revisit of his 2002 poetry collection, Agus Rud Eile De (And Another Thing), republished by Cló Iar-Chonnachta (2010), and features collaborations with artist Kathleen Furey and musician Ronan Browne. He currently resides in Galway, Ireland, and is the Director of the Center for Irish Studies, National University of Ireland, Galway.
It was for his collection of poems, Corcach agus Dánta Eile (Cork and other Poems) that Louis de Paor won the 2000 Lawrence O’Shaughnessy Award for poetry, the leading American award for Irish poets. Cork and other Poems starts with the memory of his departure from Cork in the mid 1980’s to Australia where he worked as a lecturer at the University of Sydney and as presenter and producer of an Irish radio programme in Melbourne. There are occasional references to Australia in the collection, but most of the pieces are set in his native city of Cork and in other parts of Ireland and deal with the “powerful impact of his homecoming” ten years later — his coming to terms with the memories from his Irish past. One of the poems deals with the passing of Irish legend Rory Gallagher during the author’s absence from his beloved Ireland. In the poem, simply titled Rory, Paor recalls the excitement of seeing Rory Gallagher’s performance at Cork City Hall in 1976, with “the waves of pounding feet that rocked the floors of City Hall” and the crowd chanting Rory, Rory, Rory. And he wonders if Rory ever knew how much he meant to the people of Ireland.
I saw Rory about 12 times in all between 1976 and 1994, in the City Hall, the Opera House, and the Arcadia in Cork, at the Mountain Dew Festival in Macroom, and finally in Melbourne. I met him after the first gig in the City Hall in 1976 when I was 15 and he seemed even shyer than I was. I was supposed to meet him in Melbourne but he was too sick after the show. I did interview him though for a radio programme I was presenting at the time on SBS Radio in Melbourne. The interview was by phone and he had just come off stage in London. He was full of chat and a great interviewee.
I suppose what’s behind the poem is the idea that maybe he never fully realized how much he and his music meant to us all and that he was gone before we had a chance to tell him. He is still the yardstick by which I measure all live music and very few have matched him over the years.
With kind permission from the author, I’ve posted a copy of Louis de Paor’s poem Rory in both English and Irish below:
Rory
right at the back of the hall
my heart was beating
the drums of my hands;
I hadn’t a note in my head
only the grace-notes you picked
from tangled strings
as the knot in my veins
was undone by your brilliant fingers.
I couldn’t work out
why you kept tinkering
with the end of the tune
while the roar of our applause
rose up under the heels of your hands
that kept my dreams above water
as you walked the angry sea.
Did you really not hear
the tide flooding in behind you,
the waves of pounding feet
that rocked the floor of the City Hall
until it rolled like the deck of a ship,
that will never fill the emptiness
you left behind you on stage?
Can you feel it now,
our swiftfingered brightness,
as the light of heaven
shovels silence on the eyes
of the crowd as they press against the stage,
calling you back from the dark:
Rory
Rory
Rory…
Now can you hear me?
Rory
thiar i dtóin an halla,
bhí mo chroí ag bualadh
tiompán mo bhas,
an chruit im chuisle á míniú amach
idir t’ordóg is m’inchinn bhuailte,
gan nóta im cheann
ach an spionnadh a chuiris-se
le sreanganna in achrann.
B’ait liom go raghfá ag tincéireacht
mar sin ar bhuille scoir an tiúin
is tormán ár mbasbhualaidh
ag líonadh fé shála do lámh
a thug snámh smigín dom mhian
ag trácht ar uisce coipthe.
An é nár airís an tuile
ag líonadh ort, rabharta cos
a dhein bord loinge den urlár
i Halla na Cathrach
is ná líonfaidh feasta an poll
a d’fhágais ar ardán id dhiaidh?
An mbraitheann tú anois é,
ár ngile mearluaimneach méar,
is solas na bhflaitheas
ag sluaistiú ciúnais
ar shúile an tslua
atá buailte le stáitse
ag glaoch ar ais ort ón ndoircheacht,
Rory
Rory
Rory
An gcloiseann tú anois ár nguí?
If the words sound familiar to you then I suspect you are a fan of another Cork native, John Spillane. John Spillane grew up in the Bishoptown suburb of Cork, Ireland, graduating from University College Cork. In 2003 Spillane won the Meteor Ireland Music Award for Best Folk / Traditional Act. In 2005 he released his critically acclaimed third solo album, Beautiful Dreamer; one of the songs on the album was a tribute to Rory Gallagher titled, ‘A Song for Rory Gallagher.’ Much of the lyrics were taken from Louis de Paor’s poem, Rory. Spillane and Paor have been frequent collaborators. Calling themselves the “Gaelic Hit Factory” they took their music on the road and won the Realta Irish song contest in 2001 and 2002. In 2006 they released a CD of their compositions eponymously titled, The Gaelic Hit Factory. They have been writing great songs together since they sat together in physics class when they were 14:
Myself and Louis sat next to each other at school and have been friends since we were about 14 – we wrote our first epic poem at the back of Physics class in 5th Year. Louis followed the path of poetry and I music. We come together every now and again and write songs together in the Irish Language – Gaeilge. — John Spillane
I never saw Rory live but his music formed part of the soundtrack of my youth and that music never grows old. He lives on in the hearts of his army of loyal fans.
Every time I think about Rory’s passing (and its frequently) I get depressed about him no longer being with us.But, all I have to do is listen to his great music and I am lifted. I miss his musical contribution to my life so much.If there is a heaven,I know he is in a better place and way. Thank You Louis &John for your heartfelt tribute to the man I enjoyed it very much.
Dear Louis,
A fine and nice poem about Rory. it sences the beauty and spirit of his playing. In times I read about what he has meant for Ireland and I believe so.
He was so briljant and together with his music, only loke at fuel to the fire. Very sensitive.
with heartful greets
for ever rory
Luc Verheij
The first gig of my life was Taste in The Savoy in 1971, I think. I know it was the summer as it was still bright walking home out the Model farm Road, high as a kite on Rory’s music, Bursting into singing What’s Going On? and The Same Old Story with my friend Conor o’Sullivan it was a magic night. Rory was our inspiration. he was the only hero we had at that time when everything in Ireland seemed second rate. We lacked confidence as a nation and Rory was the first to make us feel proud to be Irish.
Thanks John and Louis for your lovely tribute to this great man who loved and lived for music.
Saw Rory many times and he never disappointed.i saw him in the dominion on totenham court road wifh Richard Thompson and you cannot get better than that . From the city hall to the paradiso his spirit will live on and he is still missed today. Sleep soft Rory…