Luke Kelly was a singer and folk musician from Dublin, most famous as a member of the band 'The Dubliners'.
Indeed, while Luke often sang of the poor, the oppressed, the worker, the lover or the rebel –the realities of his own life and upbringing enlivened and gave weight to his songs and the emotional way in which he sang them. And his own childhood and youth was anything but privileged. Born on 17 November 1940 to a working class family near the Five Lamps area of Dublin, where in the words of his sister Betty, the family lived in 'poverty of the utmost', sharing communal toilets and taps with eight other families.
Kelly was one of the best-known figures of the Irish folk music movement of the 1960s and 1970s. A Dubliner from the north inner city, he attended O'Connell's Schools before emigrating to Britain in 1958. There he first became involved in the growing international folk music scene in which Ewan MacColl was a central figure, as well as joining the Communist Party of Great Britain.
In 1962 Luke Kelly returned to Dublin and quickly became a central figure in the city's burgeoning folk music community, playing in sessions in O'Donoghue's Pub on Merrion Row with the likes of Ronnie Drew, Barney McKenna and The Fureys. Not long after, he ended up forming a folk group with Drew, McKenna, Ciaran Bourke and John Sheahan, which he named The Dubliners. In 1965, Kelly married the actress Deirdre O'Connell, one of the founders of the Focus Theatre.
In the mid-1960s, Luke moved to England for a while. On returning, he rejoined the Dubliners. His interpretations of 'Raglan Road' (a poem by Patrick Kavanagh) and 'Scorn Not His Simplicity' were significant musical achievements and became points of reference in Irish folk music. Luke remained a politically engaged musician, and many of the songs he recorded dealt with social issues, the arms race and war, workers' rights and Irish nationalism, ('The Springhill Disaster', 'Second World Song', 'When Margaret was Eleven', 'Joe Hill', 'The Button Pusher', 'Alabama 1958' and 'God Save Ireland' all being good examples of his concerns). One of the Dubliners' seminal albums was titled Revolution. In the socially and politically conservative atmosphere of Ireland at the time, this was notable.
Luke Kelly was diagnosed with a brain tumour in 1980, and died in 1984. He remains a Dublin icon and his music is widely regarded as one of the city's cultural treasures.
It is an illustration of his pride for his humble origins that Luke Kelly, a man of so many songs and words, now lies in peace in Glasnevin Cemetery where his headstone bears the simple words Luke Kelly -'Dubliner'.
The Ballybough Bridge in the north inner city of Dublin has been renamed 'The Luke Kelly Bridge' and in November 2004, the Dublin city council voted unanimously to erect a bronze statue of Luke Kelly. However, the Dublin Docklands Authority later stated that it could not afford to fund the statue. In July 2017, it was announced that two statues to honour Luke Kelly are being planned for his hometown of Dublin. The news of two new statues comes after years of campaigning by Luke Kelly's family, who were said to have been left bitterly disappointed after previous plans to erect a statue were shelved.
On the thirty-fifth anniversary of his death, two statues were unveiled in Luke's honour. John Coll's (who also created Dublin's Patrick Kavanagh and Brendan Behan statues) life-sized bronze seated statue of Luke Kelly singing and playing banjo and was donated to the city by the late Gerry Hunt, located on South King St and is close to the Phil Lynott statue on Harry Street. The second sculpture, a marble portrait head of Luke Kelly, created by award-winning portrait artist Vera Klute, located on Royal Canal, Guild St/Sheriff St. Klute's piece, which was commissioned by Dublin City Council, is over two metres high and was unanimously selected as the winner of a limited competition established by the then Lord Mayor, Christy Burke in 2014.
From Dublin streets and roads and down the years
Came great musicians and balladeers
There was a special one, a red-haired minstrel boy
And when he passed away, a city mourned its favourite son
All round the markets and down the quays
The sad news it spread to the Liberties
The minstrel boy is gone, he'll sing no more
And Luke somehow we know, we'll never see your likes again
Featured Image |
December 1983 would be the last time Luke Kelly's fans would see him perform live. While the toll of his declining health could be seen on his face, he sang his last song 'The Night Visiting Song' with his characteristic depth and commitment. It seemed fitting that the opening lines of the song start with 'I must away now, I can no longer tarry'. Within the following month, Luke Kelly's mind and body had irrevocably drifted towards that permanent sleep and on 30 Jan 1984, the great performer succumbed to his illness.
Image | Sculpture of Luke Kelly created by award-winning portrait artist Vera Klute, located at Royal Canal, Guild St/Sheriff St
Image | Sculptor John Coll who created the Luke Kelly Statue puts the finishing touches to the statue on South King Street, to mark the 35th anniversary of the death of the musician || Photograph ||| Gareth Chaney/Collins
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