Feature
- Ryan's Fancy -
Recipient
of the Dr. Helen Creighton Lifetime Achievement Award for 2004
Sally Goddard, The Measure, July
2004
When writing an article about Ryan’s Fancy for the Broadside, how do
you start? You might (if you are smart) phone Fergus O’Byrne, Dermot
O’Reilly, and Denis Ryan straight away and see if you could arrange an
interview with them. They are all busy, dynamic guys who travel, so if you
leave it too late, you might be out of luck.
Then you might do a bit of research, reading the numerous articles that
have already been written about Ryan’s Fancy. You will find that this
group of Irish musicians came to Newfoundland via Ontario in 1971, and
that their original plan was to attend Memorial University and gradually
ease out of the uncertain business of traditional music and into more
traditional careers (such as accountancy). However, what happened was that
they took the Newfoundland music scene by storm, quickly becoming local
heroes and performing traditional songs with fabulous ringing harmonies,
great energy and a strong mix of instruments to packed and wildly
enthusiastic audiences at the Strand Lounge. Stories abound of the energy,
charge and lift of the performances, of the packed venues, of people
dancing on tables, and heaven knows what else.
In 1973, the music found a wider audience when a CBC TV producer named
Jack Kellum, who had just arrived in Newfoundland, ran into Ryan’s Fancy
one evening at the Legion in Pleasantville. This fortuitous meeting
resulted in the Ryan’s Fancy television shows, which ran from 1974 to
1983. Through the medium of TV and because the shows involved travelling
and performing to and with musicians and local people from Newfoundland
and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick, the
impact and popularity of Ryan’s Fancy extended throughout Atlantic
Canada.
During this time there were three Ryan’s Fancy TV series and the band
released 12 LPs. In 1983, they decided to disband and Fergus, Dermot and
Denis went their own particular ways.
Fast forward to November 5, 2003 when the following announcement was made:
During a press conference held today at the Delta St. John’s Hotel and
Conference Centre, the East Coast Music Association proudly announced
Newfoundland super group RYAN’S FANCY as the recipient of the Dr. Helen
Creighton Lifetime Achievement Award for 2004. This award recognizes an
individual or group who has had a profound and lasting effect on the
Atlantic Canadian music industry.
[Historical Note: The Award is named after Dr. Helen Creighton,
Canada’s “First Lady of Folklore.” Helen was a Nova Scotian who as a
young writer in 1928, was asked to write a story about Nova Scotia’s
pirates. As she had never heard any local pirate stories, she did a bit of
research and found not only pirate stories, but also met a man who sang
pirate songs to her. That was the beginning of a lifelong passion, and
from then until her death in 1989, Helen Creighton, collected
approximately 16,000 songs and ballads reflecting the diverse ethnic and
cultural backgrounds of Nova Scotians.]
Back to February 2004, when the Lifetime Achievement Award was actually
presented to Ryan’s Fancy at the East Coast Music Awards Ceremony in St.
John’s, Newfoundland. In the first few minutes of the ECMAs, one of
Ryan’s Fancy demonstrated his lasting effect on the Atlantic Canadian
music industry, because the show was opened by A Crowd of Bold Sharemen -
a lineup well know to lovers of great traditional music, consisting of Jim
Payne, Colin Carrigan, Graham Wells, Gerry Strong and Fergus O’Byrne,
and they didn’t disappoint! But the highlight came as Ryan’s Fancy
accepted their truly well deserved award. Fergus, Dermot and Denis stood
round the microphone and launched into a chorus of the Tiree Love Song.
What a breathtaking moment of harmony - over too soon - and then (as is
often said of Ryan’s Fancy) “up she went!” The Stadium erupted, and
I am sure that living rooms all over Atlantic Canada erupted in unison as
the spell was broken and we could all breath again. Later that evening,
the female anchor of CBC’s Newsnight said, “Ah, they’ve still got
it!”, and she was right, they do still have it. Suddenly all the stories
about The Strand came back to me - what an exciting time that must have
been - and I wished I had been there to hear all the wonderful music made
by Ryan’s Fancy that is now so hard to get hold of. Ryan’s Fancy made
a lot of LPs, but they have not been made into CDs so you can’t just go
into Fred’s and pick up the complete works. There is one CD available -
Songs from the Shows - and it is wonderful. But I started thinking about
all the other songs which they had liked enough to record together. How
did they sound? I went on line, found an excellent
web site developed
and maintained by web master Roger Lockyer, and I got some answers.
Here are the LPs
that Ryan’s Fancy made while they were performing together and the songs
that they recorded.
What a list, what songs, and what a finalé - Irish Love Songs, and the
last Parting Glass. How I would have loved to be able to pick up those CDs
and listen to all those great songs and harmonies now, with a glass of
wine in Logy Bay. I was just starting to get maudlin when I thought - wait
a minute - I heard Dermot and Fergus singing some of these songs together
not long ago in Erin’s. I love I Followed Her into the West and
I’d follow Dermot into a bar to hear that any day of the week! And on a
good week in St. John’s, I can! The Punters sang Candlight and Wine
at the Festival of Friends in Middle Cove last year and we all sang along.
Coal Town Road - what a great song - I’m going to ask Fergus if
he will sing that the next time I get a chance - and I do get a chance
because I live in a place where music is living and vibrant and the songs
move around and the arrangements may change but the songs don’t get
forgotten.
The Lifetime Achievement Award is all about having a lasting effect on the
Atlantic Canadian music industry - and the effect of Ryan’s Fancy, and
now Dermot, Fergus and Denis, is lasting indeed. Fergus sings, plays, and
tours extensively - and his reach is long! Towards the end of April, my
cousin phoned me from her house in Devon, England saying that she had just
read that a Newfoundland duo - Jim Payne and Fergus O’Byrne - would be
performing close by she was going to go and hear them. I had already sent
her two great CDs (Wave over Wave and A Crowd Of Bold Sharemen,,
so she was well prepared! Countless children (including my own) have had
the great good fortune to have Fergus visit their schools, and they are
the richer for it. As well, Fergus organizes and facilitates Young
Folk at the Hall, an ongoing traditional music workshop that aims to
bring young people together to explore, expand and express their love of
traditional music. Fergus collaborates with musicians of all generations
both on stage and on CD. And in true Ryan’s Fancy Tradition, his
performances with Dermot are not to be missed.
Dermot continues to enchant all generations with his solo performances
(just ask my daughter and her friends who have fallen for the traditional
tunes and songs while listening to Dermot in Erin’s). He is also
dedicated to preserving those good sounds for posterity at his recording
studio in Torbay where he produces and releases recordings by local
artists. Rumour has it that he is working on his own album at his studio
in Torbay. It will be eagerly received when it appears.
In the years since Ryan’s Fancy disbanded, Denis has become involved in
a number of projects - founding Nova Scotia Crystal, working in the
investment business, hosting numerous major fund-raisers and community
projects in Nova Scotia. On the musical front, he has released three CDs:
Mist Covered Mountains, Here and There (Denis Ryan & Friends),
and Newport Town (with his cousin Denis Carey). So all three of
Ryan’s Fancy can still be heard, both live and on some great current
CDs, and their impact on the traditional music scene in Atlantic Canada
lives on. Collectively they have a legion of fans, and individually they
each have legions of their own. The songs they sung are now being learnt
and performed by a new generation of up and coming musicians - a tribute
to their lasting contribution. Not long ago (this May) I heard Allan
Ricketts give a beautiful heartbreaking rendition of The Green Shores
of Fogo at a concert in Pouch Cove, and yes - he said “I got this
from Ryan’s Fancy.”
So, although I wish I could go down to Fred’s and buy the “Collected
Works” of the great Ryan’s Fancy, and although the supergroup Ryan’s
Fancy is no more, the component parts are alive and well and making
wonderful music in Newfoundland, Nova Scotia and abroad.
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