INSTRUCTORS
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John Aherne – Step Dance, Céilí Dance
John Aherne began dancing at the age of 7 under the instruction of Cyril McNiff, TCRG/ADCRG, in Queens, New York. Under Mr. McNiff's instruction, and later, with the Marie Moore School, John competed in regional, national, and world championships. He co-choreographed and danced in a critically acclaimed off-Broadway production of Arrah-na-Pogue; his work was praised in the New York Times, Variety, Time Out New York, and Newsday. In addition to teaching classes at the Irish Arts Center, he also teaches Irish Dancing to children and adults at the Aherne Sheehan School of Irish Dance (www.ahernesheehan.com).
James Cleveland – Fiddle
James Cleveland has been teaching at the Irish Arts Center since 1999. He started playing the fiddle as an adult and learned much of his repertoire from classes at the Center. He plays regularly in NYC sessions, is a member of the Irish Arts Center band and has played the fiddle in several stage plays.
Tom Downes – Bagpipes
coming soon
Siobhan Egan – Bodhrán
Born in Philadelphia, Pa, Siobhan moved to the west of Ireland at a young age. While living in Foxford, Co. Mayo, she began traditional music lessons at age eight with Martin Donoghue. Learning by ear, she started on the tin-whistle and then went on to the flute, piano accordion, bodhrán and fiddle. When her family returned to the Philly area in 1980, Siobhan started performing at festivals and concerts up and down the east coast with her brother, Seamus, and sister, Rory. A founding member of Cherish the Ladies, she toured worldwide with the band for almost thirteen years. While with CTL, she recorded seven cd’s, many of which feature several of her own compositions. Since leaving the band, Siobhan has enjoyed teaching the bodhrán at the Irish Arts Center for the past few years.
Paul Ferris – Irish Language
Paul Ferris is an experienced teacher of Irish. He is a member of Daltaí na Gaeilge, and serves on the executive board of the North American Association of Celtic Language Teachers. He studied the language at Oideas Gael in County Donegal, and at Áras Uí Chadhain and Áras na Gaeilge in County Galway.
Dan Hunt: Set Dance
Dan Hunt has been a member of the Irish Arts Center since 1986. A former naval officer and merchant seaman, Dan came to the Irish Arts because he was looking for a club and a community where he could pursue his love of Irish music and culture. Smitten with Irish folk dancing, he attended dance classes taught by well known New York-area teachers such as Josephine McNamara, Kevin Westley and Paul Keating. Later he attended set dance workshops given in the US and Ireland by such legendary dance masters as Joe O’Donavan, Connie Ryan, Pat Murphy, Timmy McCarthy, Larry Lynch, and Padraic McEneneny. He started teaching Ceili Dances at the Irish Arts Center in 1988 and taught his first Country Set Dance class in the following year. He has been involved with Irish dance and music (especially at the Irish Arts Center) ever since.
Dan’s approach to teaching Irish folk dance is more than mere choreography. In his class he insists that only when you’ve begun to move to the phrasing of the music and above all, learn the footwork and movements unique to each dance will you experience the true pleasure of the sets.
Alexei Kondratiev – Irish Language,
History of Celtic Revival
As a child in rural France, Alexei Kondratiev was fascinated by the mysterious remains of ancient Celtic civilization in the landscape around him. This later led him to the discovery of the Celtic cultures still alive in the world today, and to spending extended periods over four years in the 1960's on the Aran Islands to learn Irish from native speakers. He has remained intimately involved with Irish language and culture ever since. A graduate of Columbia (anthropology and linguistics), he studied Celtic philology at the École des Hautes-Études in Paris. He has been teaching classes at the Irish Arts Center since 1985. He is the author of The Apple Branch (a book on Celtic tradition), and has taught all six of the Celtic languages at various times.
Shane O’Sullivan – Bodhrán
With an emphasis on traditional Irish music, percussionist/ guitarist Shane O’Sullivan has devoted himself to the spread of music progression. Through his mastery of an array of instruments (bodhran, guitar, djembe, and congas), O’Sullivan combines distinctly different sounds for a contemporary portrayal of the traditional Irish idiom. His hopes to continue to broaden the exposure of Irish culture are proven with every appearance he makes.
English born but County Offaly raised O’Sullivan honed his talents over the past twelve years in worldwide music scenes. With appearances such as the Celtic Connections festival in Scotland, the musician’s international experience includes multiple venues within England, Germany, France, and Switzerland. US performances with the Salt Lake Symphony, as well as appearances at the Milwaukee Fest and Stone Hill College have spurred O’Sullivan’s appetite for touring. For the past nine years and counting, the Irish transplant has found his home in the time-honored US heart of Irish culture, New York City. Carnegie Hall is O’Sullivan’s next great endeavor where he will be a guest artist featured in an upcoming concert.
O’Sullivan has played alongside Irish and folk music luminaries such as John Doyle (Solas fame), Alison Browne and Gary West, Michael Mc Goldrick, Dirk Powell (Cold Mountain), and the world renowned traditional group Flook. Heidi Talbot of Cherish the Ladies also highlighted his compositional and lyrical talents on her most recent solo CD, Distant Future, featuring two original songs written by O’ Sullivan.
Bill Ochs: Tin Whistle
Bill Ochs has been called a "central figure in the renaissance of the tin whistle" by National Public Radio's All Things Considered and "the leading tin whistle teacher in North America" by New York's Irish Voice newspaper. He has devoted over thirty-five years to playing and teaching the instrument.
Ochs is author of The Clarke Tin Whistle, an instruction book now in its eighteenth printing with over 237,000 copies in print. He is producer of Micho Russell's Ireland's Whistling Ambassador, and co-producer of Cathal McConnell's Long Expectant Comes At Last, both of which were nominated for "Best Celtic Album of the Year" in the NAIRD Indie Awards.
Ochs also plays the Irish uilleann pipes, which he learned from master pipers Andy Conroy, Pat Mitchell and Tom Standeven in Ireland and the U.S. Ochs's piping studies in Ireland were supported by a 1976 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. His piping and tin whistle playing can be heard on the Rounder CD Light Through The Leaves.
Ochs's performing credits include playing for José Quintero's Broadway production of A Touch of the Poet, Pilobolus Dance Company's Broadway début, the soundtrack for Bob Rafelson's film Mountains of the Moon and the première of Wind by Eiko and Koma at the Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival. He was also piper in the original touring lineup of The Green Fields of America, which included Liz Carroll, Jack and Charlie Coen, Michael Flatley, Sean McGlynn and Mick Moloney.
Ochs has written on Irish music for New York Magazine, Sing Out, The Pipers' Review and other publications. He is currently working on a book about the music of Micho Russell.
Pio Ryan - Banjo
Tipperary born and bred Irish Tenor Banjo musician Pio Ryan has been playing the NYC Irish Traditional circuit for over 3 years now. His deep rooted traditional style mixed with blues and bluegrass influences creates a unique twist with a sound that is both driven and refreshing.
Pio learned his trade from his father John Ryan, a renowned whistle player from North Tipperary. Early on, Pio earned the title Musician of the Year at Portumna Community School. After years of dedication and many live performances on both television and radio, Pio furthered his studies at the Ballyfermot College of Music in Dublin earning a degree in Professional Irish Music Performance.
Pio officially transplanted to the US in 2005, finding a home at the Irish Arts Center. He originated the Irish Tenor Banjo program, whose strong following continues to grow.
When he’s not teaching, Pio remains very active on the Irish Traditional scene in the tri-state area and beyond. Venues include Webster Hall in NYC, John D. McGurk’s music bar in St. Louis and the Kansas City Irish Music Festival, along with many other festivals and more intimate locations. He has played among the ranks of such top musicians as Ivan Goff of Riverdance, Larry Nugent, Gerry O’Connor, The Chieftains, Seamus Egan and others, broadening his musical repertoire.
Mia Theodoaratus – Celtic Harp
Mia Theodoaratus is a composer, improviser and harpist who plays Celtic, Rock and Jazz harp. She has enjoyed working with Roscoe Mitchell, Susan Allen, Charlie Hayden, Daniel Carter, Dee Pop, Baikida Caroll, Antony and the Johnsons and Leona Naess. Her goal is to take classical sensibility and infuse it with the dynamics of free jazz and the rhythm of rock. Performance highlights include Chaos & Candy, National Shakespeare Company production of Oedipus with Avery Brooks, Jason Schmidt opening with Gelatin performance group at Deitch Projects, and Butch Morris's New York Skyscraper.
This year Mia is playing in Dueling Harps with Ann Magnuson, Alex Rami and Adam Dugas at the Red Cat Theatre in Los Angles. Her touring duo with Adam Dugas is Ravens and Roses which fuses together Irish tunes, rock songs and Purcell.
Caitlin Warbelow – Fiddle
Born and raised in Fairbanks, Alaska, Caitlin Warbelow began studying violin at age three in the Suzuki Method. While continuing with intensive classical music studies, she found a concurrent love of Irish music after meeting a few fiddlers and hearing a few seminal CDs around the age of seven. Largely self-taught through listening and learning by ear, Caitlin was given the chance to travel and study in Ireland at the age of sixteen, attending the Willie Clancy School and the BLAS school at the University of Limerick. Caitlin attended Boston University on a full music scholarship and obtained degrees in Violin Performance and Anthropology. After serving as an Adjunct Professor of Music at the University of Alaska, she was accepted into the Urban Planning masters program at Columbia University for the fall of 2006 (and led her to her current day job as a research cartographer). Since then she has played and recorded with a number of top Irish musicians in the city and plays many sessions and gigs a week as an Irish, Classical, and American-style fiddler. This summer she won first place in both the Open and Trick & Fancy divisions at the Lake Champlain Bluegrass Festival, expanding her expertise into yet another musical genre. Caitlin can also be found playing with the Garden State Philharmonic, and loves teaching both Irish and Classical music to fiddlers of all ages. For more information, please stop by her website at www.myspace.com/caityanna
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