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'Danny Boy' Explores an Enduring Irish Mystery
A Review By Rick Grant
But where did it come from? Who wrote it, and for whom? McCourt addresses the questions that have lain, unanswered, for nearly 100 years in his recent book "Danny Boy: The Legend of the Beloved Irish Ballad." Only two verses long and a little more than 150 words, "Danny Boy" has become far more than a folk song. As McCourt puts it, "The mystery and myth surrounding the air has elevated it from beloved ballad to sacred script." Could it be that a song that can bring a tear to the eye of even the hardiest Irish fighting man has its roots on a British commuter train? Author of the New York Times best seller, "A Monk Swimming," McCourt, in search of the origin of this classic tune, takes us on a trip back in time to a land of traveling folk minstrels.
In the process, he explores the political situation at the time and allows us to see how very unlikely an event it was that an English song could become so important to the Irish. Recall, at this time, the seeds for the English/Irish civil war were being sown by Irish trade unionists and nationalist volunteers. The Irish Republican Brotherhood, forerunners of the Irish Republican Army, had been drilling all year, and the conflict would ultimately break out on Easter Monday of 1916. World War I was about to begin; war had already broken out in the Balkans. In that context, "Danny Boy" seems a lament for simpler times.
Like most every other aspect of Irish life, the song is not separated from politics or religion. To some, the tune is called the "Londonderry Air" for the town it is said to have originated in. For others, it will always be known as the "Derry Air," for the very same reasons. But where did the tune originally come from? To answer this question, McCourt takes us back to Northern Ireland and into the heart of the conflict that, at the time, was tearing his homeland apart. In doing so, McCourt, no shrinking violent when it comes to politics or much else, cannot resist the temptation to expound on the political implications of the time. In doing so, he provides a timeline of Irish conflict and a better insight into the forces that came together to bring this melody to life.
Likewise, in his search to uncover the real subject of the song, he leaves us with probabilities instead of certainties. And yet, because of his attention to historical detail, when we reach the end, we feel that we understand more about the environment that gave birth to the song and the people that inhabited that world. "Danny Boy" is not a long book. In fact to make it to 141 pages, McCourt has to include a partial discography of artists who have recorded the song and a timeline of Irish history. But in that short space, he uncovers a wealth of historical information that is very interesting and readable. The book can easily be read in a single day. Many who pick it up will doubtless do so without any desire to put it down.
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