The international Pan Celtic Festival is kicking off Carlow on 2nd of April
The International Pan Celtic Festival is coming to Carlow and the entire
community is looking forward to the kick off on Tuesday, 2nd April. The flags
are flying, the bunting and banners are hanging, accommodation is at capacity
and the town is ready for a whole five days and nights of fun, friendship,
sharing and celebration from 2nd to 6th April.
A massive programme of some 200 official and fringe events mostly free of
charge has been prepared by the organising committee to celebrate this the 50 th
Pan Celtic festival with lots of music, dance, concerts, choirs, exhibitions, the
festival parade, StreetFest, the Garda Band, the Kilfenora Céilí Band, live
music @The Exchange, busking and lots lots more.
Pan Celtic is an annual gathering of the Celts at Easter time to celebrate and
share the rich heritage, culture and language of the participating nations through
music, song, dance, storytelling, poetry, sport, craft, art and friendship. This is
the 6 th time that Carlow has the honour of hosting the prestigious festival.
Hundreds of overseas visitors are expected in Carlow over the 5 days travelling
by coach, ferry and plane from Wales, Scotland, Brittany, Cornwall and The
Isle of Man as well as numerous domestic visitors from across Ireland.
Pan Celtic ’24 will kick off on Tuesday, 2 April with the Official Launch &
Opening Concert from 7pm in Visual and the GB Shaw Theatre. A limited
amount of seating is available in the theatre at €10 from www.visualcarlow.ie
but to cater for everybody the proceedings will be beamed live to the overflow
attendance in the bar area and will also be streamed live on
facebook.com/pancelticfestival. The concert will feature an eclectic mix of
items showcasing the best of the cultures of the six participating nations in
music, song and dance while The Mezz@ Dinn Rí will be the venue later that
evening at 9pm for the Opening Trad Session of the festival.
Coming up with the kind of budget required to fund a festival as broad as Pan
Celtic and particularly on two consecutive years has been challenging according
to Bríde de Róiste of the organising committee. “Carlow Co. Council and the
Local Enterprise Office are main funders of Pan Celtic ‘24 while the support of
NUA Glenveagh Company brings a welcome addition to the coffers” said Bríde.
Continuing she said “We are especially grateful to those elected members of
Carlow Municipal District who have come on board to generously support this
year’s festival while other sponsors include Foras na Gaeilge, Plazamont Ltd
and an tOireachtas”.
Amongst the highlights of the main official Pan Celtic programme will be the
Pan Celtic International Song Contest when six newly composed songs, each in
its own celtic language, representing the six participating nations will compete
in the grand final on Thursday, 4 th April in Visual. Flying the flag for Ireland
and hoping to walk away with the coveted trophy and a cash prize of €1,500
will be singer songwriter Éabha Breathnach from Connemara with her own
composition “Na Pictiúir ar an mBalla”.
There will be several other interceltic competitions including traditional and
folk singing, traditional dance, harp and fiddle, piping and drumming as well as
the festival’s distinctive choral competitions. The focus on Saturday, 6 th April
will be the choral competitions in St. Mary’s Academy CBS Hall when some
12 amazing choirs from Wales, Scotland and Ireland will compete in a range of
categories including male, female, mixed, rural and community choirs.
Meanwhile, the choral concert on Friday night at 7.30pm in Carlow Cathedral
will be an opportunity for the public to sample a selection of popular choral
pieces performed by some of the visiting choirs.
Highlights of the fringe programme during the festival will include the
Lunchtime Concerts on Wednesday and Thursday from 1-2pm in St. Mary’s
Church, Haymarket. The double bill on Wednesday will feature musician and
singer John Spillane and locally based Indeceltic duo Anna Tanvir & Maninder
Singh. Rooted in people, place and history, John Spillane’s music transports the
listener and his live performances captivate audiences the world over while the
mixed cultural heritage of Indeceltic go beyond language and physical boundary
to create a soul stirring musical experience for the individual. Carlow’s own
talented group of female singers enCÓRe supported by Asophonics will
entertain at lunchtime on Thursday.
A major addition to the community entertainment programme this year will be
Live @the Exchange with free afternoon sessions on the Wednesday, Thursday
and Friday featuring a host of local and visiting talent. Bands from Wales,
Scotland, Brittany and Cornwall will perform while the Carlow Ukulele Players,
Fiach Moriarty, Music Generation and Burnchurch family group will also
entertain at The Exchange.
All roads will lead to the Woodford Dolmen Hotel on Friday, 5 th April when the
great Kilfenora Céilí Band will play for the festival céilí. This rare visit of the
Kilfenora to the midlands will also provide a welcome opportunity for the
band’s many fans who may not be set dancers but who wish to experience live
the band’s distinctive style of music.
The Garda Band will be guests of Pan Celtic on Thursday at 2pm when under
the baton of Supt. Pat Kenny they will perform an outdoor concert at The
Fountain weather permitting and otherwise under cover in The Exchange.
There will be Open Mic Sessions @ Pembroke Club D’Art on Wednesday,
Thursday and Saturday afternoons where a host of singers, musicians,
storytellers and raconteurs will be invited by host Bernard Jennings to step up to
the mic. Daily walking tours of Carlow will be led by members of Carlow
Archaeological and Historical Society while there will be storytelling sessions
galore with Aideen McBride and Deirdre O’Byrne, Colin Urwin at Lamberts,
Carlow Storytellers in the library and Ceatharlach Rambling House in Scraggs
Alley. Free daily dance workshops will be based in the Tower@Dinn Rí where
basic steps in highland, sean-nós and Breton dance will be delivered while the
Adeleine Dargan Dancers are looking forward to a hectic schedule throughout
the week. To mark the 50 th anniversary of Pan Celtic, a bilingual lecture entitled
“Endangered Minority Languages” will be delivered by Dr. Alexandra Philibin
on Thursday, 4 th April in The Carlovian Room, Teach Dolmain which will also
be the venue earlier in the day for the Gaidhlig Singing class and the chance to
learn a Scottish Gaelic song or two from award winning Scottish Singers
Caitríona & Isabelle Bain (Isle of Lewis) and Ian Beggs (Isle of Barra) – all
Royal National Mód Traditional Singing Gold Medallists.
A range of festival exhibitions running throughout Pan Celtic will include
paintings by the Barrow Valley Artists in the Shaw Room at Carlow Library,
award winning lace creations by the Borris Lace Makers in the Museum, a
photographic exhibition and memorabilia related to the majestic Duckett’s
Grove will be mounted in the festival office at Potato Market while Made in
Carlow will have the best of local art and craft on display to impress the
hundreds of visitors to the shop on Tullow Street.
A huge array of free entertainment will be on offer in several local pubs and
venues including The Irishman’s, Tully’s, Scraggs Alley, Harry Burke’s, Dinn
Rí, Teach Dolmain, Waterlilies and Carpe Diem with visiting bands and local
artistes included in their exciting line ups while a choral crawl of hostelries is on
the menu for the Saturday afternoon.
Carlow will be a language mecca with a great mix of celtic sounds shared
formally and informally throughout the week. The regular Wednesday Irish
Conversation Circle will continue in Lamberts while Scraggs Alley will be the
venue for a date with the Isle of Man visitors for a taste of Manx music, song
and language and there will be an opportunity to learn some Scottish Gaelic
phrases at the taster session with Martainn Mac a’ Bhaillidh from Skye who
actually wrote the Duolingo Gaelic Course. Angela Keogh will host the
multilingual Court of Poetry in Lamberts Café welcoming poets and writers
from the various nations while there will be an opportunity to join Dr. Alasdair
C. Whyte of the University of Glasgow for an hour of Fianna stories and place-
names from his native Hebridean island of Muile.
An exciting aspect of this year’s festival will be the weekend StreetFest with
Lower Tullow Street going pedestrian from 11am on Friday and Saturday and
will facilitate music and colour on the main thoroughfare with the Festival
Parade on Friday at 2pm when musicians, singers and dancers from the various
delegations will depart the grounds of Carlow College waving their nations’
flags and props and banners. Led by the Killeshin Pipe Band the parade will be
via Potato Market, Kennedy Avenue, Burrin Street and finish on Lower Tullow
Street for post parade performances while a selection of celtic bands will also be
on hand to perform indoors at The Exchange. The organisers of Park Run
Carlow will welcome early risers on Saturday morning at 9.30am to the Town
Park for a multilingual 5k Park Run Abú while the StreetFest will continue with
the Busking Competition at 1pm to guarantee plenty of talent in the town centre
with competitors competing for prizemoney of up to €800.
The committee hopes that all visitorsand participants will have a most enjoyable
time and a great holiday and that the people of Carlow will enter into the spirit
of the festival by extending a céad míle fáilte to everybody while enjoying the
colour, enthusiasm and vibrancy which Pan Celtic brings to town.
The full festival programme is available now on www.panceltic.ie or
www.facebook.com/pancelticfestival while hard copies are available from the
Festival office, Potato Market, Carlow Tourism, hotels and outlets throughout
the town.
Further Information? Drop into the Festival Office which will be on Potato
Market, call 087 2857048, 085 1340047 or email pancelticcarlow@gmail.com
Subscribe or register today to discover more from DonegalLive.ie
Buy the e-paper of the Donegal Democrat, Donegal People's Press, Donegal Post and Inish Times here for instant access to Donegal's premier news titles.
Keep up with the latest news from Donegal with our daily newsletter featuring the most important stories of the day delivered to your inbox every evening at 5pm.