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Arthur Warren Darley


Arthur Warren Darley (1873–1929) was an Irish fiddle player, composer, music teacher and examiner as well as a traditional music archivist.

Arthur Warren Darley was born in Dún Laoghaire and first lived in Silchester Road, Glasthule. He was a grandnephew of poet George Darley. His father Henry Warren Darley had converted to Catholicism. In 1923 he purchased a house in Northumberland Road, Dublin. His family was musical both in traditional and classical. His grandfather played the uilleann pipes and fiddle, his father played fiddle and viola and Arthur played fiddle and piano. Arthur was playing the fiddle well at eight years of age. Later he was a fellow in The College of Violinists, London, professor of Leinster School of Music & Drama, director of the municipal school of music, and was deeply interested in Irish music. He met Patrick Joseph McCall who spent much of his time in Wexford. Together they collected old tunes and Ossian Publications published them.

Arthur was also a church organist who spent some time as a Church of Ireland organist near Bruckless, County Donegal, where he spent some time with the great Donegal fiddler, John Doherty. His son Arthur Darley Jnr was a guitarist who featured on some early recordings of Irish music.

It was Patrick Joseph McCall who composed the famous Wexford Ballads and Arthur Darley helped put Irish airs to them – "The Boys of Wexford", "Boolavogue and "Kelly the Boy from Killanne".

He was president of the Irish Music Club and as one of the founders of the Feis Ceoil Association.[1] the Arthur Darley Memorial Prize is awarded to violinists at the annual music festival. He was the first musical director of the Abbey Theatre following its foundation in 1904 in which he played an active part.


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