Video není dostupné.
Omlouváme se.

Tommy Makem - Roddy McCorley

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2007
  • Tommy sings Roddy McCorley

Komentáře • 190

  • @janefriel6895
    @janefriel6895 Před 3 lety +15

    My father loved this song.Hr was a quiet, modest man.Hard working and well respected.A true gentleman.He would request this song from a lady who was a family friend.When he passed this same lady came to his wake at our family home.She came armed with a huge pot of stew.I met her at the door and she said with tears "poor old Rody MC Chorley". That was eighteen years ago.The lady has since passed also.I have never forgotten her words.Miss you and love you always daddy.☘️

  • @chrismaddog7252
    @chrismaddog7252 Před 4 lety +40

    So sad that Tommy Makem and the Clancy Brothers are all gone now, But there music lives on. I so glad I got to meet Tommy at his own Pub in Manhattan on New Year's eve back in the 1990's. He sang all my favorites. I'll always remember.

    • @TheBarmbrackthecat
      @TheBarmbrackthecat Před 3 lety +6

      His father was also executed a few years before him, the charge was sheep stealing, never ever bleieved he stole anything..

  • @hmallow42
    @hmallow42 Před 17 lety +13

    Let's not have a sniffle, let's have a bloody good cry for Tommy Makem, RIP.

  • @AbandonEarth911
    @AbandonEarth911 Před 16 lety +17

    Tommy Makem Roddy McCorley Luke kelly,all gone but never forgotten.Their songs of freedom and justice live on in our hearts.

  • @frankdawe5156
    @frankdawe5156 Před 5 lety +41

    Tommy was one of the very best singers of Irish ballads ever recorded. You can really hear the pride of country in his voice as he sings. Terrific vocals, and a fantastic banjo player.

    • @user-og4xx6vl8b
      @user-og4xx6vl8b Před rokem +1

      My dad sang that song to me when I was a baby 🥲

  • @jkpuskar
    @jkpuskar Před 16 lety +5

    1798 was the last time the Protestants and Catholics stood together to fight against the imperialism of England. Roddy McCorley was one brave Protestant!

  • @irishbogman
    @irishbogman Před 7 hodinami

    Passed Toome today, said a prayer for Roddy as I crossed the bridge in the middle of the town, obviously not the same bridge but my heart was in it.

  • @johnraymond-pz9bo
    @johnraymond-pz9bo Před rokem +4

    Smiling free and young... There is never a tear in his blue eyes...

  • @spiritblue9
    @spiritblue9 Před 14 lety +25

    RIP all of the Clancy Brothers and Tommy Maken...you will be missed...

  • @patriciathewisher2315
    @patriciathewisher2315 Před 2 lety +4

    The bridge marks the boundary between counties Derry n Antrim

  • @BrendanSmithSpeedie
    @BrendanSmithSpeedie Před 16 lety +10

    One of the best of the many famous Irish rebel songs sung by Irish people the world over. The memory of the struggles of the United Irishmen for freedom, liberty and fraternity will not be forgotten when we have songs like that.
    It is an inspiration to all those that stand up to imperialism everywhere.

  • @joe56474
    @joe56474 Před 2 lety +5

    Tommy Makem is truly incomparable.

    • @fryavanbosh3563
      @fryavanbosh3563 Před 2 lety

      Zoveel mooie muziek uit die jaren zonder technische bijval , puur en hoogstaand zintuigelijk gezongen en geef mijn kinderen onze muziek cd’s en platen door . Deze warme levendige live muzikale optredens maak je niet meer mee . Gr.

  • @nfapiper1
    @nfapiper1 Před 13 lety +49

    I am a die-hard Dubliners fan (no disrepect to any other great groups and musicians), but this performance is pure brilliance. An chuid eile i síocháin
    Tommy Makem.

  • @eddiefinnerty431
    @eddiefinnerty431 Před 8 lety +40

    Thanks Tommy. This is one of the most important tributes to an Great Irish hero. Your version of this song is unique and will always be kept CLOSE and LOVED and replayed for ever by people who love and care passionately about IRELAND.🇮🇪☘🍀💚

  • @frankmckay3943
    @frankmckay3943 Před 3 lety +6

    A really stirring version, that I have listened to many times. Thank you Tommy Makem and Clancy brothers. I understand those who say it is in no way about religion. My grandfather who was Scot-Irish was raised Presbyterian. He married a Catholic girl. May he rest in peace, Roddy McCorley, a brave lad, who is 'Forever Young'!

  • @patriciathewisher2315
    @patriciathewisher2315 Před 2 lety +3

    Took Gore Verbinski’s big sister to Toomebridge to meet the eel fisherman at Easter 1982

  • @clarebannerman
    @clarebannerman Před 16 lety +7

    Great ballad. Great song and none better to sing it than Tommy Makem. Hope your up there Tommy giving it to them strong.R.I.P.

  • @danieldowning4583
    @danieldowning4583 Před 7 lety +17

    GOB Bless Roddy McCorley and the legend of Tommy Maken. We love ya Tommy.

    • @jamesmckie8734
      @jamesmckie8734 Před 5 lety

      So die all vile fucking treasonous scum.

    • @jimmorrison3035
      @jimmorrison3035 Před 2 lety +1

      GOB bless you lol. Just kidding.

    • @jimmorrison3035
      @jimmorrison3035 Před 2 lety

      did you hear about the dyslexic agnostic insomniac? He lay awake all night wondering if there really was a dog.😂😂😂😂😂

  • @peteroshea714
    @peteroshea714 Před 7 lety +2

    Seen these in 60s with my sister and mam and dad twice at Liverpool empire so lucky they were the best mam was from Thurles Co. Tipperary I know it's a long way

  • @jimjewison5638
    @jimjewison5638 Před 7 lety +5

    BRINGS TEARS TO MY BLUE EYES.

  • @orckiller91
    @orckiller91 Před 15 lety +3

    he was a very nice man, my grandfather introduced when I was 5 I use to go to his house and sing with him and my grandfather, both gone now rip both of you

  • @kevvy1908
    @kevvy1908 Před 16 lety +6

    Great singer, great song, great music, what more do you want?

  • @Donegaldan
    @Donegaldan Před 10 lety +28

    Rest in peace Tommy, an iconic song.

  • @DariusOfPersia
    @DariusOfPersia Před 3 lety +9

    Oh, see the fleet-foot host of men
    Who speed with faces wan
    From farmstead and from fisher's cot
    Along the banks of Bann
    They come with vengeance in their eyes
    Too late, too late are they
    For young Roddy McCorley goes to die
    On the bridge of Toome today
    Up that narrow street he stepped
    Smiling, proud, and young
    About the hemp rope on his neck
    The golden ringlets clung
    There is never a tear in his blue eyes
    Both glad and bright are they
    And young Roddy McCorley goes to die
    On the bridge of Toome today
    When he last stepped up that street
    His shining pike in hand
    Behind him marched in grim array
    A stalwart, earnest band
    For Antrim town, for Antrim town
    He led them to the fray
    And young Roddy McCorley goes to die
    On the bridge of Toome today
    There is never a one of all your dead
    More bravely fell in fray
    Than he who marches to his fate
    On the bridge of Toome today
    True to the last, true to the last
    He steps the upward way
    And young Roddy McCorley goes to die
    On the bridge of Toome today

  • @mainer98
    @mainer98 Před 9 lety +17

    A wonderful song sung by an Irish folk icon.

  • @michaelmurphy6
    @michaelmurphy6 Před 7 lety +13

    I learned this song from Kingston Trio,but I drank Guiness ,with Tommy Makem in Ohio .

  • @tjkenneally9808
    @tjkenneally9808 Před 2 lety +4

    One of the Best RIP Tommy

  • @clairevernell4645
    @clairevernell4645 Před 2 lety +3

    oh gosh, this just makes my day, Liam. Tommy Makem was my favorite singer and I have saved every song that I came across that he sang. He was sincere and down to earth, not putting on the dog like some of the others who I have listened to. I am sure he must be singing in heaven as well.

  • @richardcheevers7988
    @richardcheevers7988 Před 9 lety +20

    Well sung. Roddy Mc Corley proved religions will not divide us.

    • @nancyburke5779
      @nancyburke5779 Před 9 lety +4

      Tommy Makem was one of the best-selling around R.I.P. he sang great Irish song's from his heart live Ruddy McCorley

    • @johncollins1250
      @johncollins1250 Před 5 lety +3

      Well Richard, in 1798 the Penal Laws were still adversely affecting Presbyterians and that is just one of the reasons why so many of them were involved in the '98 rising. The general wave of uprising against old regimes, of which the French Reolution and the American War of Indepependence are examples, may also have enboldened them.

    • @ciaranharrington4141
      @ciaranharrington4141 Před 4 lety +2

      The Presbyterians of ulster were absolutely vital to american independence, hard hard fighting units, back when they were more irish rebel than ulster loyalist. The anglicans feared them and brought them into the british family not long after this

  • @poverobucharin
    @poverobucharin Před 17 lety +5

    Requiescat in pace. He is an hero of irish music.

  • @JOHNSderry
    @JOHNSderry Před 11 lety +10

    This was the first tune we learnt on the recorder in primary 2 and it was the 1st tune we learnt on the tin whistle in primary 4 in a little primary school in Derry!

    • @daithireilly1839
      @daithireilly1839 Před 4 lety +1

      Johns Derry , this was also the first song we learnt, taught by a Presentation Brother, back in 1970

  • @dympnamcmanus9608
    @dympnamcmanus9608 Před 4 lety +3

    Seen them at Irish festival in Boston 1980's Brilliant

  • @darryljwillis
    @darryljwillis Před 11 lety +5

    Because the lines
    "But never a one of all your dead more bravely fell in fray,
    Than he who marches to his fate on the bridge of Toome today. "
    already begin the third verse.
    They paid homage to it.

  • @danieldowning4583
    @danieldowning4583 Před 7 lety +19

    GOD Bless Tommy Makem. A true treasure.

  • @bubbathemani
    @bubbathemani Před 13 lety +92

    Roddy McCorley was a Presbyterian. The 1798 Uprising had nothing to do with religion, as Catholic and Protestant fought side by side.

    • @eugeneobrien5236
      @eugeneobrien5236 Před 4 lety +15

      Religion was never a part of the process for Irish independence. "Home Rule" occupied the British parliament for many decades up to the outbreak of WW 1.and at the time it overshadowed the rise and threat of war with Germany. Just before WW 1 It was the descendants of Scottish immigrants, the majority of the population in Ulster, who threatened civil war if Ireland was given independence...After WW 1, the partition agreement that gave 26 counties of Ireland semi-independence but kept Ulster in the UK is what led to the Irish civil war. In Ulster, the "Protestant/Catholic" brands were representatives of the indigenous Irish and the descendants of the Scottish immigrants. The societies were divided almost like apartheid in South Africa with the "Protestants" in command and the "Catholics" virtually subjugated. Both Catholic and Protestant religious establishments did nothing to try an neutralise the situation, and in fact were part of the problem as they used it to further their won religious dogma.

    • @TheBarmbrackthecat
      @TheBarmbrackthecat Před 3 lety +9

      His father was also executed a few years before him, the charge was sheep stealing, never ever believed he stole anything..

    • @colleenmccracken828
      @colleenmccracken828 Před 3 lety +11

      @@bmca8876 I always thought/heard he was Presbyterian, he claimed to be in the United Irishman. No matter what his religion, he was a Patriot

    • @eugeneobrien5236
      @eugeneobrien5236 Před 3 lety +1

      @@bmca8876 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulster_Scots_people

    • @TheCornflakesXx
      @TheCornflakesXx Před 3 lety +1

      Well said lad

  • @blasketboy
    @blasketboy Před 15 lety +4

    Four Green Fields is a classic of his. Rest in peace Tommy.

  • @michaeldineen8324
    @michaeldineen8324 Před 9 lety +23

    Mighty work here. We need these songs, more than ever now. I hope they won't be lost or forgotten. What a shame, local radio won't give them publicity, instead of the overdose of country music they are playing nearly 5 nights a week.

    • @johnoconnor4623
      @johnoconnor4623 Před 9 lety +2

      thank goodness for Youube, we can listen when we want and we can listen to what we want. We can choose. Oh, local radio is just okay for bits of local news and death notices. I never listen to them anyway.

    • @johnoconnor4623
      @johnoconnor4623 Před 9 lety +1

      John O'Connor that of course should be CZcams! not Youube.

    • @michaeldineen8324
      @michaeldineen8324 Před 9 lety +2

      You are right. In fact, because of those local radio d.j's playing country music 5 nights a week, most of them are taking money from small time entertainers. Bribery is the big thing,on these stations. The small man must hand over anything from 50 to 100 euros, before his music is played.

    • @nancyburke5779
      @nancyburke5779 Před 9 lety +4

      Michael Dineen I love Ruddy McCurley,s song a great Irish song I used to live not far from Toomebrige CO Antrim

    • @nancyburke5779
      @nancyburke5779 Před 9 lety +2

      I agree why don't they play more good Irish song's

  • @DrMerle-gw4wj
    @DrMerle-gw4wj Před rokem +1

    Up the Republic!!

  • @TheJoetowngirl
    @TheJoetowngirl Před 14 lety +19

    @peachyfoxinthebox
    In 1798 many of the United Irishmen under Wolfe Tone were Protestant. they were united in the cause for Irish freedom and Roddy's great-grandson, Roger McCorley, was an IRA officer during the Troubles

    • @conorsmith7009
      @conorsmith7009 Před 4 lety +2

      Roger was in the irish war of independence in the 20s not the troubles

  • @edwardfinnerty4198
    @edwardfinnerty4198 Před 9 lety +9

    Tommy u r so powerful. Great voice, passion, it is the best version of one of my fav songs. God bless you!!! X.

  • @nancyburke5779
    @nancyburke5779 Před 8 lety +19

    When I get homesick I listen to this song

  • @letusplaydarts
    @letusplaydarts Před 3 lety +2

    True to the last, true to the last...

  • @clarebannerman
    @clarebannerman Před 14 lety +4

    Remember this one from my school days.

  • @TheCrackentone
    @TheCrackentone Před 2 lety +1

    Roddy Mccorley irish martyr

  • @drsigmundschadenfreude2965

    An excellent version.

  • @AngeliaSparrow
    @AngeliaSparrow Před 9 lety +9

    Some of the most beautiful banjo work in the world

  • @sbbinahee
    @sbbinahee Před 9 lety +12

    Timeless and wonderful...

  • @andys722
    @andys722 Před 11 lety +2

    the first tune i learnt to play on the irish whistle and later on the tenor banjo - a lovely tune irrespective of the sad story!

  • @johnraymond-pz9bo
    @johnraymond-pz9bo Před rokem +1

    Just beautiful.

  • @justinianthegreatandnerd6377

    Same tune as Sean South, both are heroes!

  • @richintalent
    @richintalent Před 16 lety +1

    I'm weeping right now.... 'when will we ever learn?' indeed.

  • @990drifter
    @990drifter Před 9 lety +6

    Couldn't help the last comment, but if its any consolation I think it only reasonable that people like Roddy McCorley are remembered in folklore through music, reminds of the sacrifice people mae because of their beliefs and I guess we are all entitled to them!

    • @nancyburke5779
      @nancyburke5779 Před 9 lety +2

      I agree those great Irish song's should never be forgotten I Love listening to ,hope they are sang more often.

  • @rhodiusscrolls3080
    @rhodiusscrolls3080 Před 2 lety +1

    Behind him marched in grim array a stalwart earnest band..

  • @vlikavec
    @vlikavec Před 17 lety +1

    good song of Tommy Makem
    R.I.P Tommy Makem

  • @orckiller91
    @orckiller91 Před 17 lety +1

    hm back when he was still able to belt it out poor man still fighting for his life this day may he find peace and rest when he stops his fight

  • @Arkybark
    @Arkybark Před 12 lety +6

    History aside, if someone just wants to hear that verse sung, it's in the Corrie Folk Trio version!

  • @johnconnor2054
    @johnconnor2054 Před 8 dny

    Brilliant song 🇮🇪✅🎵

  • @9DERAILED9
    @9DERAILED9 Před 14 lety +2

    excellent song

  • @marklittel6191
    @marklittel6191 Před 6 lety +2

    incredible music, the best there is

  • @rhodiusscrolls3080
    @rhodiusscrolls3080 Před 2 lety +1

    See the fleet footed hosts of men...

  • @brianrunyon266
    @brianrunyon266 Před 8 lety +7

    First time I heard this song was from the book Angela's Ashes.

    • @padraicjmU
      @padraicjmU Před 7 lety +1

      Heard first it over 50 years ago in class at St Galls school
      Belfast.

    • @glen7318
      @glen7318 Před 3 lety

      @@padraicjmU I read abit about the Clancy's in the sequel to Angelas Ashes....

  • @abbothenderson
    @abbothenderson Před 17 lety +2

    R.I.P. Tommy Makem.

  • @liamstclair9498
    @liamstclair9498 Před 10 lety +3

    Magiic Makem.

  • @BHRocks28
    @BHRocks28 Před 15 lety +1

    TO TOMMY MAKEM 1932-2007 RIP

  • @Normanskie
    @Normanskie Před 15 lety +1

    For all those men and women who died in oblivion from all causes and all nationalities who were never known.

  • @yaelpalombo4093
    @yaelpalombo4093 Před 2 lety +1

    Meravigliosa

  • @Locahaskatexu
    @Locahaskatexu Před 7 lety +1

    Reading the backstory of this song.... I'm really not surprised this is the tune they used for the ballad of Sean South of Garryowen....

  • @morgurtha4141
    @morgurtha4141 Před 11 lety +6

    the band third man out had the whole song including that verse but its almost impossible to find their music any more

  • @Jonepk
    @Jonepk Před 8 měsíci +1

    True to the last

  • @rhodiusscrolls3080
    @rhodiusscrolls3080 Před 2 lety +1

    Roddy died on Good Friday and a priest likened the death of an Irish.patriot to that of Christ. The Troubles ceased and the IRA no longer existed by the time of what came to be called the Good Friday Agreement. No one lifted a finger to make much of the 100th anniversary of the Easter Rising in 1916.

  • @990drifter
    @990drifter Před 9 lety +2

    1st August 2007 when "the Brits moved out of Ireland", oh have I missed something, last time I checked Northern Ireland still is an integral part of the United Kingdom!

    • @990drifter
      @990drifter Před 9 lety

      There are so many more have questions to answer in relation to all our history, but when do we try to move on. Only with the combined will of all of the majority of people in NI will the status change and hard as it may be to comprehend not all catholics want rid of the "Brits", as you put it.

    • @dowdallerno1
      @dowdallerno1 Před 6 lety

      Is it? That integral they would punt it first chance they got. Brexit is the final nail in the manufactured statlets coffin. I hope you like those apples🍀😉

    • @johnduheaume6650
      @johnduheaume6650 Před 5 lety

      I ask myself when Erin's Isle will be a nation undivided? When religion ceases to divide us? In my dreams! Cheers John.

  • @tonycarton8054
    @tonycarton8054 Před 3 lety +1

    maybe the first song i ever knew

  • @michaelcooperwoti
    @michaelcooperwoti Před 15 lety +1

    i met tommy in my moms/dads kitchen in cape breton nova scotia when i was young i never knew he knew bob dylan tho

  • @orckiller91
    @orckiller91 Před 17 lety +1

    R.I.P my lord and master

  • @derrickmurphy9988
    @derrickmurphy9988 Před 6 lety +2

    No one sings this like tommy.

  • @rhodiusscrolls3080
    @rhodiusscrolls3080 Před 2 lety +1

    On a programme called the Island Parish they followed without comment the life of a priest called Roddy McCorley. The hero of the song lived long ago and was Presbyterian by all accounts.

  • @crispybeak
    @crispybeak Před 15 lety +1

    Classic.

  • @KennBurch
    @KennBurch Před 16 lety +2

    Roddy was Presbyterian. And Wolfe Tone and Emmet who led United Irishmen in the 1798 revolt(the uprising in which Roddy died)were Protestants as well. As was Charles Stewart Parnell in the late 19th Century, and as were Roger Casement and Erskine Childers. It's a British myth that Irish nationalism was a strictly Catholic affair. That kind of imperialist lie gets my(Protestant)Irish up.

  • @TheDiarmaidable
    @TheDiarmaidable Před 13 lety +1

    Songs lak this wan favored Tommy in later life athink... more of a chant ... but be jasas hewas adam goodin n his day...

  • @crc778Hypnodoc
    @crc778Hypnodoc Před 11 lety +2

    That may be down to Ireland's unofficial censors during the period from the early 30's up to the 50's and even the 60's in some cases. For instance the I.R.A was officially outlawed and songs which mentioned them or their campaigns would find it impossible to get played on Irish radio.Similarily song writers of such songs would find their songs ignored. Hence many writers of those times just penned their songs as Traditional. This verse uses the IRA name so may have had to be dropped

  • @irishpride9999
    @irishpride9999 Před 14 lety +1

    Roddy McCorrley.

  • @patrickspoint
    @patrickspoint Před 11 lety +1

    The song doesn’t suggest he died in battle, on the contrary, it says he was hanged, and it goes:
    About the hemp-rope on his neck, the golden ringlets clung… as young Roddy McCorley goes to die on the bridge of Toome today

  • @stacyblue1980
    @stacyblue1980 Před 11 měsíci +1

    🙏✊🇮🇪

  • @paulshields6234
    @paulshields6234 Před rokem +1

    the village is Toome he was hanged at the bridge of toome

  • @dlh60
    @dlh60 Před 13 lety +1

    I'll bet he knew the rules to "kick the one legged boy in the shin" game referenced by Frank McCourt It doesn't get more Irish than Tommy Makem.Thanks for this.

  • @Christopherjamesmurphy21
    @Christopherjamesmurphy21 Před 15 lety +2

    my father taped this a longgggg time ago on tv

  • @patriciathewisher2315
    @patriciathewisher2315 Před 2 lety +2

    World famous eel fishery there

  • @sullybrighton
    @sullybrighton Před rokem +1

    👍

  • @irishpride9999
    @irishpride9999 Před 15 lety +1

    the song is long enough as it is.

  • @philsteakfreeman
    @philsteakfreeman Před 7 lety +1

    I want to learn to play banjo like Tommy Makem? Where can I find a teacher?

  • @Crintingnut
    @Crintingnut Před 15 lety +1

    Anyone have the Kingston Trio version of this great song?

  • @ulty77
    @ulty77 Před 12 lety +1

    @momazilla the english are anglo saxons, not celts

  • @malachy1847
    @malachy1847 Před 13 lety +1

    @pwebb34 I don't know what Angela's Ashes has to do with this song.... One would be much better off reading ..Tom Paine..'The Rights of Man'.... as the United Irishmen ' based their views on that style of Republicanism that spread through the Americas and beyond to europe.. thus in Ireland creating a common cause for leading to the by those to call for the unity of ...'Protestant Catholic and Descenter' ....and unite the people to seek their own place anong Nations.. a Noble Cause indeed

  • @blasketboy
    @blasketboy Před 15 lety +3

    You should be very proud Coolioo36, listen to 'Sean South' it has the very same air. Pity, that between all the great folk singers that they used the same basic airs for great,but completely different lyrics. But anyway, no one could ever touch Tommy, The Bard Of Armagh!

  • @chiggmacdonald
    @chiggmacdonald Před 15 lety +1

    Its called live singing, if you ever play live and you have 40 or 50 song lyrics, history, patter and all, you make a mistake, but keep going, nobody is perfect ....allthough sounds pefect to me. hope that helped>>

  • @Fi-ye4ir
    @Fi-ye4ir Před 4 lety +1

    Usa 😥

  • @user-hr1ce2rm1o
    @user-hr1ce2rm1o Před 10 lety +2

    Is that a lute that he plays? It's beautiful!

  • @NiallSullivan48331
    @NiallSullivan48331 Před 13 lety +1

    @tomfoleyiscool I learnt this at school long before Sean South gave up breaking up gourting couples in Limerick cinemas and took up a gun. The guy who wrote "Sean South of Garryowen" lifted the tune from "Roddy McCorley", which tells all you need to know about the imagination of Republicans.

  • @markoliverplunkett266
    @markoliverplunkett266 Před 6 lety +1

    The druids
    Band

  • @patriciathewisher2315
    @patriciathewisher2315 Před 2 lety +1

    Monument to Roddy