Beautiful, brings me back to reading ghost stories warmed by the fire place and listening to Playboy Of The Western World Sean O'Riada, modern world has lost so much.
Some of contradictory stuff here. The group signed up to Transatlantic in 1963, as "The Dubliners." In 1964 Luke Kelly went back to England to join Ewan MacColl's "Critics Group" and Bob Lynch (here in this recording, he left in 65) joined The Dubliners; and John Sheehan formally joined in 1964 too. So, this is clearly the 1964 Dubliners ... though the presenter calls them by their old name of "The Ronnie Drew Group." I think it was certainly a mistake by the presenter.
Beautiful, brings me back to reading ghost stories warmed by the fire place and listening to Playboy Of The Western World Sean O'Riada, modern world has lost so much.
I've been looking for this forever
Same here.
This was recorded on the 9th of July 1964 as per Johnny McEvoy's autobiography. He was part of the Ramblers Duo
Some of contradictory stuff here. The group signed up to Transatlantic in 1963, as "The Dubliners." In 1964 Luke Kelly went back to England to join Ewan MacColl's "Critics Group" and Bob Lynch (here in this recording, he left in 65) joined The Dubliners; and John Sheehan formally joined in 1964 too.
So, this is clearly the 1964 Dubliners ... though the presenter calls them by their old name of "The Ronnie Drew Group." I think it was certainly a mistake by the presenter.
Dear,
the man at right, starting at 3:10 could be Johnny McEvoy. Is this correct? Thanks for sharing a minute for me.
Best regards from Frankfurt.
@@wilfriedschuler3796 Yeah, the ramblers two was the group. Mick Crotty on guitar and vocals, and Johnny McEvoy on vocals.
Fantastic - a wonderful time capsule - thanks a million for uploading this
That's just great Thank you so much
I miss bobby lynch :( wish he stayed longer x
It's back, fantastic ! Thank you so much, always look for this recording at "times"...
'Tis the finest music on the planet. It is also the root of American Bluegrass Music.
This crowd would refuse drink all day.
In this show you can see already the difference to all other musicians in the way of the Dub‘s unique voices.
Amazing how the Dubliners managed to get everyone singing at the end.
More amazing how they were all singing in Irish along with an earlier group.
You can see the inspiration here for the Mary Wallopers who are carrying on the tradition.
It is quite obvious that the Dubliners 'Sound' was largely the banjo playing of Ronnie Drew. God be with the days.
Barney, you mean?!
Ronnie Drew played guitar, not banjo.
No they all worked well together & when Luke Kelly joined,he was the last piece of the Puzzle!🙏☘️🇨🇮👍
Who was the fellow second from left (next to Barney McKenna?)
And i do love the Poc Fair song!
Any one know the name of reel/jig played by the Dubliners after the lady sang. There was no words just music?
The Donegal Reel & The Boyne Hunt
@@WilliamsAndZinger isn’t it the Longford collector
They were not the Dubliners at that stage, they were the Ronnie Drew group 😊
Who was the singer in the Ronnie Drew group there?
Bob Lynch.@@stephenmcloughlin7718
was it Ciaran Bourke?
The singer of the first song (Roth Sea O) was Bobby Lynch.
Does anyone know the name of the first tune?