Biography:Tom Billy Murphy: Difference between revisions
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|f_given_name=Tom Billy | |f_given_name=Tom Billy | ||
|f_family_name=Murphy | |f_family_name=Murphy | ||
|f_year_of_birth= | |f_place_of_birth=Glencollins Upper, Ballydesmond | ||
|f_year_of_birth=1879 | |||
|f_place_of_death=Glencollins Upper, Ballydesmond | |||
|f_year_of_death=1944 | |f_year_of_death=1944 | ||
|f_profile=Composer, Musician | |f_profile=Composer, Musician | ||
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'''TOM BILLY MURPHY''' (c. 1875-1944) was a blind fiddler | '''TOM BILLY MURPHY''' (c. 1875-1944) was a blind fiddler who was born and died at Glencollins Upper, Ballydesmond in the Sliabh Luachra region, of the County Cork/Kerry border. Murphy, like his younger contemporary and sometimes rival Pádraig O'Keeffe (1887-1963), was a fiddle teacher and mentor to many area musicians in the first half of the 20th century. He learned many of his tunes from a traveling fiddle player named Taidhgin an Asail (Tadhg O Buachalla or Tadeen the Fiddler), who was also sight-impaired. Murphy was a peripatetic (though not homeless) individual who traveled throughout the region on his donkey, who, as the story goes, knew without guidance exactly which houses to go to for a welcome. | ||
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Latest revision as of 02:10, 15 April 2024
Tom Billy Murphy
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Given name: | Tom Billy |
Middle name: | |
Family name: | Murphy |
Place of birth: | Glencollins Upper, Ballydesmond |
Place of death: | Glencollins Upper, Ballydesmond |
Year of birth: | 1879 |
Year of death: | 1944 |
Profile: | Composer, Musician |
Source of information: | |
Biographical notes
TOM BILLY MURPHY (c. 1875-1944) was a blind fiddler who was born and died at Glencollins Upper, Ballydesmond in the Sliabh Luachra region, of the County Cork/Kerry border. Murphy, like his younger contemporary and sometimes rival Pádraig O'Keeffe (1887-1963), was a fiddle teacher and mentor to many area musicians in the first half of the 20th century. He learned many of his tunes from a traveling fiddle player named Taidhgin an Asail (Tadhg O Buachalla or Tadeen the Fiddler), who was also sight-impaired. Murphy was a peripatetic (though not homeless) individual who traveled throughout the region on his donkey, who, as the story goes, knew without guidance exactly which houses to go to for a welcome.