Johnny Doran

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Johnny Doran (Exact d.o.b. unknown, 1907-January 9, 1950) was an Irish uilleann piper.

Contents

[edit] Life

Johnny Doran was born in 1907 in Rathnew, Co. Wicklow. His family were Travellers with a distinguished musical heritage; his father John Doran and brother Felix were also pipers, and his great-grandfather was the celebrated Wexford piper John Cash.

By his early twenties, Johnny Doran was working as an itinerant musician, travelling with his family from town to town in a horse-drawn caravan and playing for money at fairs, races and sporting events. His playing is said to have inspired the young Willie Clancy to take up piping as a career.

On January 30, 1948, Doran's caravan was parked on waste ground near Back Lane in Dublin's Cornmarket area. It was very windy, and a brick wall collapsed, falling on to the caravan, and also on Johnny who was outside at the time, lacing up his shoes. Johnny was completely covered by bricks and rubble. Johnny's lower back was injured during the rescue process as he was pulled free from the debris (according to one of his daughters). Johnny was afterwards paralysed from the waist down. His injuries led to continuing ill health and he died on January 9, 1950 in Athy, Co. Kildare. He is buried in Rathnew cemetery[1].

[edit] Recordings

Only one recording of Johnny Doran's playing was ever made. In 1947 the fiddle player John Kelly, a friend of Doran's, was concerned about the piper's health. He contacted Kevin Danaher of the Irish Folklore Commission, who arranged for a recording to be made on acetate disks. Doran was reportedly pleased with the session, and a further one was planned, but due to the accident that paralysed him, never carried out.

[edit] Style and Legacy

During his lifetime, Doran was one of the most admired traditional musicians in Ireland[2]. On the basis of his recordings, the traditional music scholar Breandán Breathnach ranked him alongside the fiddle player Michael Coleman as one of the greatest Irish traditional musicians ever recorded[1]. His unusually rapid and fluent style influenced contemporary pipers such as Paddy Keenan and Davy Spillane.

[edit] Discography

  • The Master Pipers Volume 1 (1947)

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Small, Jackie, Liner notes to The Master Pipers Volume 1, Na bPíobairí Uilleann, 2003
  2. ^ Carson, Ciaran, Pocket Guide to Irish Traditional Music, Appletree Press, 1986 ISBN 0-86281-168-6

[edit] External links