Michael
Gorman (1895 - 1970)
Michael
Gorman was born in County Sligo in 1895. He lived first in Doocastle,
and then Achonry. His mother, Anne McGibbon, was a singer from Derry and
his father, a small farmer, played the flute and the melodeon.
When he was young,
he was taken care of by foster parents who sent him for fiddle lessons
to James
Gannon, who
also taught Michael
Coleman.
Willie
Clancy used to
tell the story about the master and pupil when Gorman was aged about
nine: "Gannon wrote out the tunes in his own system of notation on
pieces of card. Slowly these cards piled up under Michael's bed and he
still could not hitch onto the fiddle. One day Gannon asked him to play
The
Green Mountain.
Of course he could not, and Gannon broke the fiddle across Michael's
head. He still has the scar."
Gorman formed a
ceili band in Tubbercurry and later settled in London in 1939 where he
worked on the railway. Although he played little over the next ten
years, he met up with collectors Peter Kennedy and Ewan McColl who gave him work.
He was introduced
to the singer Margaret
Barry when
his ceili band was
featured by Alan
Lomax on BBC
in 1953. He gave up his job as a railway porter at Liverpool Street
station and they formed the famous duo which lasted over many pub
sessions and recordings until the singer returned to Ireland in the
1960s.
They held a
residency in the Bedford Arms in Camden Town. He was prominent in the
Irish-music-in-exile scene in London in the 1950s and '60s and Ewan
McColl brought him and Willie Clancy together for a recording session
in his Croydon home in 1955 and the result was the album Irish Jigs, Reels and Hornpipes.
Boat
train
Peter Kennedy tells of a friend travelling on the boat train to Ireland
in the early 1950s who heard Michael playing the fiddle. He had lost
all his personal belongings in a suitcase at the station and was
"playing himself back to happiness."
He can also be heard playing tunes on most Margaret Barry albums, most
notably The Mantle so Green. He is credited with
the composition of the reel The Mountain Road.
There has been some renewed interest in his recordings in recent years
by young fiddle players seeking out rarer styles. He died in 1970.
Discography
Michael Gorman, the Sligo
Champion. A musical biography, by Reg Hall. Topic
Irish Jigs, Reels and Hornpipes, Michael
Gorman and Willie Clancy, Folkways.
Her Mantle so Green, Margaret Barry and
Michael Gorman, Topic.
Irish Music in London Pubs, Margaret Barry,
Michael Gorman and others, Folkways
Irish Night Out, Margaret Barry, Michael
Gorman, The Dubliners and others.