These programs can be presented at schools, libraries and to cultural clubs and organizations.
The
McDermott’s Handy Christmas music program is a natural extension of their passion for the wonderful varieties of Irish traditional music and their talent for synthesizing the rich cultural lore of the season into a rollicking holiday house party, right in front of the audience. This is not the music you’re likely to hear at the mall!
The holidays are all about family so it’s no wonder they would be joined in these performances by their daughter Emma, who has been attending these holiday concerts since she was a baby, and now plays fiddle and is a lovely singer. The mother & daughter twin fiddles are awesome! This concert is a blend of lively dance tunes, songs with the kind of choruses to make you sing along, and poignant stories about some of the customs that are now part of the seasonal tradition. You’ll hear the harp, fiddles, flute, tinwhistle, guitar, bouzouki and bodhran.
Kathy and Dennis wrote the scripts and p erformed for the popular Joys of Christmas Past program at the Historic Village of Allaire for many years. They have also performed this concert at: The Watchung Arts Center, Gloucester Township Library, Mom & Pop’s Coffeehouse, Wheaton Village, and for the Delaware Valley chapter of Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann,
Mullica Hill Library, Willingboro Library and the Colts Neck Historical Society.
Download the promotional packet to get a sample of the repertoire used in this program.

The Harp & Shamrock:The Harp in Irish History
Ireland is the only country in the world with a musical instrument, the harp, as its national emblem. From the time the Celts arrived in Ireland in 5th century BC with their harp-like instruments, music has inextricably been linked with their history: warriors and scholars, pagans and poets, conquerors and conquered.
This program takes a musical journey through Irish history with a wide variety harp repertoire, folk songs, and Irish music styles that tell the story of the Irish. Significant historic events have always been captured in folk songs. The early harpers had an exalted and honored status in Irish society and they and their music are known in tales and legends. The later conquest of Ireland and the misfortunes of its harpers are reflected in the music of the 17th and 18th century. Then the Great Famine and ’98 Rebellion saw the harp’s near extinction and its elevation in the patriots’ psyche and nationalists’ and emigrants’ fervor to “unchain the harp”.