Barney McKenna, last of original Dubliners, dies

DUBLIN (AP) — “Banjo” Bar­ney McKenna, the last orig­i­nal mem­ber of the Irish folk band The Dublin­ers, died Thurs­day while hav­ing a morn­ing cup of tea with a friend. He was 72 and had just marked his 50th year with the troupe.

Irish clas­si­cal gui­tarist Michael Howard, who was with McKenna when he died, said he was talk­ing with his long­time friend at his kitchen table, when “all of a sud­den Barney’s head dropped down to his chest. It looked as if he’d nod­ded off.” Howard said para­medics over the phone talked him through emer­gency revival pro­ce­dures, but McKenna “was pretty much gone.”

The com­fort that I take from it is, he passed away very peace­fully sit­ting at his own break­fast table hav­ing a quiet cup of tea and a chat,” Howard said.

What a lovely way to go,” said McKenna’s Dublin­ers band­mate for a quarter-century, gui­tarist and singer Eamonn Campbell.

McKenna was con­sid­ered the most influ­en­tial banjo player in Irish folk music. He spent a half-century per­form­ing, record­ing and tour­ing with the band ever since its 1962 cre­ation in the Dublin pub O’Donoghue’s. The other three founders — Ron­nie Drew, Cia­ran Bourke and Luke Kelly — died in 2008, 1988 and 1984, respectively.

McKenna com­pleted a United King­dom tour with The Dublin­ers last month and per­formed Wednes­day night at a Dublin funeral. Howard, who also per­formed there and drove McKenna home after­ward, said his friend per­formed “absolutely beau­ti­fully. When he fin­ished there was a spon­ta­neous, thun­der­ous round of applause in the church.”

Born in Dublin in 1939, McKenna tried to join the Irish army band but was rejected because of bad eye­sight. He busked in the streets and pubs of the cap­i­tal and devel­oped a rep­u­ta­tion as an inno­v­a­tive per­former on a spe­cially tuned, four-stringed tenor banjo, then a vir­tu­ally unknown instru­ment in Ire­land that he made an Irish folk favorite.

The gravel-voiced Drew recruited him to Fri­day night “ses­sions” — impromptu bar­side con­certs — at O’Donoghue’s, a diminu­tive pub near the Irish par­lia­ment so famously packed that its bar­men had to stand on step­stools to take orders. It soon gained a rep­u­ta­tion as the country’s top venue for live folk music, with The Dublin­ers per­form­ing along­side such other ris­ing folk stars as The Chief­tains and the Fureys.

Many noted how McKenna always made time to help younger musi­cians learn the art of the tenor banjo, par­tic­u­larly the intri­ca­cies of his own strum­ming and tun­ing techniques.

His influ­ence on and gen­eros­ity to other instru­men­tal­ists was immense,” said Irish Pres­i­dent Michael D. Hig­gins, who saw McKenna per­form last month in a Dublin cathe­dral at one of The Dublin­ers’ many 50th anniver­sary performances.

Friends and band­mates told anec­dote upon anec­dote Thurs­day of the many off-the-wall, com­i­cally illog­i­cal com­ments made by McKenna over the years.

He was like a brother to me,” recalled fid­dler John Shea­han, who joined The Dublin­ers in 1964 and remains in the band today. His favorite Bar­ney­ism: call­ing an opti­cal illu­sion an “obsta­cle confusion.”

He was very droll man and great com­pany. You’d never know what he’d come out with next,” Camp­bell said. “My favorite song that he sang was ‘I’m a Man You Don’t Meet Every Day.’ And that was true about Barney.”

His Dutch wife, Joka, died 28 years ago and the cou­ple had no chil­dren. He lived alone in the upscale fish­ing port of Howth and spent spare time tin­ker­ing with his boat and fish­ing on the Irish Sea. He con­tin­ued to per­form, despite suf­fer­ing from dia­betes and a mild stroke.

McKenna is sur­vived by his part­ner Tina, sis­ter Marie and brother Sean, who is also a top Irish banjo player. Funeral arrange­ments were not imme­di­ately announced.

Online:

Dublin­ers his­tory and mem­bers, http://itsthedubliners.com/welcome.htm

Offi­cial Dublin­ers site, http://thedubliners50years.com/

McKenna’s 2008 banjo med­ley per­for­mance, http://bit.ly/Hh6gwv

McKenna sings ‘I’m a Man You Don’t Meet Every Day,’ http://bit.ly/HYINwr

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Arti­cle Source: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/E/EU_IRELAND_OBIT_MCKENNA?SITE=KVUE&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT