Norman O’Rourke RIP. The Pipes are Silent!

Cork piper Norman O’Rourke sadly passed away on Tuesday August 26th at St Finbarr’s hospital. 

Norman O’Rourke at the Spirit of Mother Jones Festival.

Norman played his pipes at many events across Cork but for those of us associated with the annual Spirit of Mother Jones Festival, he will be remembered for piping in the Lord Mayor of Cork to the formal launches and official opening ceremonies of the festival.

Norman O’Rourke with the Lord Mayor of Cork, Cllr. Kieran McCarthy and Cork’s Mother Jones (Joan Goggin).

Norman learned to play the pipes in the 1950s with the Cork Volunteers’ Pipe Band which took part in commemorative parades throughout Ireland and played at all the major Gaelic Athletic Association matches during that period. To many, Norman was the face and image of Cork city and he proudly adorns a large banner on the Grand Parade having been chosen as the official piper of the Decade of Centenaries celebrations by Cork City Council, where he is viewed by the thousands coming and going in the City Centre. He used to joke how he kept an eye on all the parades and demonstrations gathered right underneath him for years.

A City Remembers. Norman looks down on the Grand Parade.

A proud follower of Cork hurlers he was so looking forward recently to the All-Ireland final this year but alas victory was not to be. He played with and  supported St Vincent’s Hurling and Football Club. However he was regularly seen leading parades of excited children to their medal presentations on pitches at GAA clubs, the sound of his pipes being a magnet for crowds to gather. A lifelong republican he played his pipes at commemorations, parades and funerals where he was a familiar figure. 

Norman O’Rourke plays at the baptism font, where Mary Harris (Mother Jones) was baptised on 1st August 1837 in the North Cathedral in Cork. His performance took place on August 1st 2012 at the inaugural Mother Jones Festival. Photo by Martin Duggan.

He played at festivals across the City and It was a great honour for the Cork Mother Jones Committee to have him come each year to do the honours for the Lord Mayor of Cork at our festival. Norman often returned to the festival events later with his wife Marie where he listened to the speakers and the music and he really enjoyed the songs and the craic of the Cork Singers’ Club. Possessing a vast knowledge of Irish history he had a repertoire of stories and funny incidents which he told with a warmth, sincerity and humanity. His admiration for the Cork girl who went on to become Mother Jones was total. 

He was extremely proud of his family and spoke of his love and support for them. 

Norman’s beloved pipes may be silent for now but his warm heart lives on.

We offer our sympathy to Marie, his children and his family.       

Norman O’Rourke with his good friend, Richard T. Cooke.
Finbarr Archer with Norman.
Norman chatting with Richard T. Cooke and Ann Rea on the Cork Mother Jones Committee at the Festival in 2024.

     

Norman pipes in the Lord Mayor of Cork, Cllr Dan Boyle accompanied by Cork’s Mother Jones to the Festival in 2024.

https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=733975582948231

Music and Singing at the Spirit of Mother Jones Festival 2024.

Thursday 25th July at 1:00 pm.

Norman O’Rourke, Cork’s favourite piper, will again lead in the Lord Mayor of Cork to formally open the 13th Spirit of Mother Jones Festival. Norman recently received a Lord Mayor’s Award for his contribution to the community in Cork. In recent years a giant banner featuring Norman and his bagpipes overlook the Grand Parade in the City Centre.

Norman O’Rourke with Richard T. Cooke.

Kalyna Ukrainian Community Choir. 

Recent winners of the Lord Mayors top community prize at Cork City Hall, this choir has become a huge favourite across Cork in recent years. It comprises women and men who are now living in Cork following the Russian invasion of Ukraine.  At the recent Festival launch, their rendering of Amhrán Na bhFiann was a highlight. “You Raised Me Up” is another firm favourite. A performance by the colourful and very impressive Kalyna should not be missed.

Kalyna Ukrainian Community Choir.

Thursday 25th July at 9.30.

Cork Singers’ Club.

This unique club of unaccompanied singers has performed at the opening night of the festival since the festival began in 2012. Jim Walsh is Fear An Ti for this year’s session and the night will hear songs of trade unions, workers’ lives, social justice, human rights and many other topics. Singers are welcome to participate and if anyone wishes to contribute a song, just put your name down on the list. The Cork Singers’ Club holds regular sessions at the Spailpín Fánach Bar on South Main Street on Sunday nights and is a must see for anyone with an interest in singing.. 

It can be contacted through its Facebook page.  

Jim Walsh, Cork Singers Club

Friday 26th July at 1pm.

Legendary Cork ballad and folk singer Jimmy Crowley accompanied by Eve Telford will perform at lunch time.  Jimmy has created and played on the folk music scene in Ireland and across the world for over 60 years now. He established one of the first folk clubs in Cork in Douglas in the late 70s and early 80s. His band Stokers Lodge was very popular for a number of years. From his song-writing  to his solo albums to his Opus Mór; Songs From a Beautiful City (The Free State Press 2014),  Jimmy has made an enormous contribution to preserving Irish ballads, which would have been lost without his intervention.  Each week since 2002 he submits songs weekly to the Cork Evening Echo with a note dealing with its background and his contribution has now exceeded a thousand songs. . 

Eve Telford sings traditional folk songs from Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales.  Born in Australia, her original songs are inspired by the wellsprings of world mythologies, indigenous rights, the natural world and political protest. 

Ann Piggott with Jimmy Crowley and Eve Telford

Friday 26h July at 9pm.

John Nyhan and friends, and introducing Carla Gover and the CornMaize Stringband.

John Nyhan. Photo: Claire Stack

Following an invitation to play at a festival in Mexico, which went so well Carla and her friends dubbed themselves CornMaize (the words for corn in English and Spanish). The band draws heavily on the fiddle and banjo music of Eastern Kentucky where the band members are from but also includes some bluesy influences. “There’s a lot of fun and a lot of love in our performances   and we hope you feel it as you listen and (hopefully) dance along”. Members of the band include Arlo Barnette, Zoey Barrett, Yani Vozos and Carla Gover. 

Carla Gover and John Nyhan in Cork.

Saturday 27th July  at 6pm (at the Mother Jones Plaque on John Redmond Street)

Martin Leahy will sing a number of songs including his song about homelessness which he has performed each Thursday outside Dail Eireann for the past two years. Martin sings also on Saturdays at the Palestinian marches in Cork City. 

Martin Leahy singing at a Palestine support march in Cork City