Mick Broderick
d. 2009
Mick Broderick was born in the Clydebank Blitz and has been bombarding audiences ever since. His first career in music came to an abrupt end when he was ejected from the local boys choir by a certain Monsignor Bradley when his voice broke suddenly in mid-hymn. However, it was while working as a plater in the shipyards of Clydeside that his true skill as a raconteur and storyteller was honed.
From the jazz scene of the beatnik era he quickly ascended to the heights of Glasgow’s Montrose Street Folk Club and the folk revival began in earnest. Out of this hive of activity, especially around the Scotia Bar and the anti-Polaris movement, came groups like the Jacobites which found Mick lined up with Billy Connolly and Tam Harvey. After they went their separate ways Mick formed the Whistlebinkies with Sean McGhee, Jim Daly and the McGovern brothers. With a change of line up to include Gordon Hotchkiss (concertina) and Eddie McGuire (flute) in the early 1970s their original American sound gave way to more Celtic styles. In 1974 Mick invited Rab Wallace (bagpipes) to join; in 1976 Gordon and Jim left and the group established their commitment to performing Scottish traditional music through a core of harp, fiddle and pipes.
With this “damn band which keeps following me around” Mick banged his bodhran, chanted his songs and told his tales around the world before retiring from the group in the late 1990s.
The stories presented here are from a compact cassette tape Recorded 15 July 1983 at Balloch Folk Club and 7 May 1983 at Halibees Cafe, Glasgow. The recordings were mixed November/December 1983 at CaVa Sound Workshops, Glasgow by Cy Jack and remastered by Stuart Eydmann, Edinburgh 2006. All music by the Whistlebinkies. All stories by Mick Broderick.
See: http://www.theherald.co.uk/search/display.var.2522806.0.mick_broderick.php