On Saturday
6th May I played at The Bury Folk Club near Manchester. I sang some
of the above songs plus:
Blackwaterside
Spanish Lady
Carnlock Bay
Spancilhill
I’m a Rover
The following day I celebrated my 22nd birthday. I was a Folksinger
in exile
And I was on the pig’s back.
From ’67 onwards I developed my repertoire and spread my
wings the length and breadth of the U.K. In ’68 I did my first
radio broadcast in Dublin on Radio Eireann in a hall on O’Connell
St. I sang ‘The Galtee Mountain Boy’, ‘Bogies
Bonnie Belle’ and ‘The Bunch of Thyme’. On the
back of my emerging career in the U.K, the Dublin bookers were starting
to give me some gigs. I had many British songs that had not been
heard in Dublin before and this worked to my advantage.
Around ’69 I was becoming desperate to make an album. To
be a “Recording Artist” was essential if I was to break
into the Premier Division of the folk circuit. I was doing well
but there was still a way to go. I auditioned unsuccessfully for
‘Transatlantic’, which was the most desirable folk label
of the era featuring the likes of Pentangle, Ralph McTell and Hamish
Imlach. Subsequently I recorded my first album ‘Paddy On The
Road’ with Dominic Behan in Sound Techniques, Chelsea.
I can still savor the feeling of getting that first L.P into my
hand. I could not quite believe it. I went to Noel Murphy’s
pad in Shepard’s Bush and we listened, me in awe and he being
kind and encouraging. 500 were pressed and then it was deleted.
By the end of the ’60’s my ears were focused back on
Dublin.
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