Search

 

Jack Coen, 1925–2012

Jackcoen
Jack Coen / Unidentified photographer

Flute player Jack Coen (1925-2012) from Drimnamuckla near Woodford arrived in New York in 1949 and settled in the Bronx, where he soon became a musical associate of Larry Redican, Paddy O’Brien, Paddy Reynolds and other leading players. His younger brother Charlie Coen (born 1933) followed in 1955.

For more information on Jack Coen see below.

Now playing: King of the clans, reel ; Golden keyboard, reel [comp. Martin Mulhaire] ; The peeler's jacket, reel / New York Céilí Band [Paddy O'Brien, accordion ; Andy McGann, fiddle ; Larry Redican, fiddle ; Jack Coen, flute ; Gerry Wallace, piccolo ; Felix
Previous
Next
  1. King of the clans, reel ; Golden keyboard, reel [comp. Martin Mulhaire] ; The peeler's jacket, reel / New York Céilí Band [Paddy O'Brien, accordion ; Andy McGann, fiddle ; Larry Redican, fiddle ; Jack Coen, flute ; Gerry Wallace, piccolo ; Felix

    King of the clans, reel ; Golden keyboard, reel [comp. Martin Mulhaire] ; The peeler's jacket, reel / New York Céilí Band [Paddy O'Brien, accordion ; Andy McGann, fiddle ; Larry Redican, fiddle ; Jack Coen, flute ; Gerry Wallace, piccolo ; Felix

  2. The New York jig ; Contentment is wealth, jig ; The Killimor jig [comp. Seán Ryan] / New York Céilí Band [Paddy O'Brien, accordion ; Andy McGann, fiddle ; Larry Redican, fiddle ; Jack Coen, flute ; Gerry Wallace, piccolo ; Felix Dolan, piano]

    The New York jig ; Contentment is wealth, jig ; The Killimor jig [comp. Seán Ryan] / New York Céilí Band [Paddy O'Brien, accordion ; Andy McGann, fiddle ; Larry Redican, fiddle ; Jack Coen, flute ; Gerry Wallace, piccolo ; Felix Dolan, piano]

Scatter the mud, jig ; The Nova Scotia jig / Jack Coen, flute ; Billy McComiskey, concertina. Recorded by Terry Rafferty at Glen Echo Festival, Maryland, United States of America, 27 May 1990

Jim Conroy's reel ; The pullet, reel / Jack Coen, flute ; Fr. Charlie Coen, concertina. Recorded by Terry Rafferty at the Outdoor festival, New York in the 1980s

The jig of Port Fleadh [comp. Seán Ryan] / Jack Coen, flute. Recorded by Terry Rafferty at Catskill's Irish Arts Week, New York, 1992

The star of Munster, reel / Mike Rafferty, flute ; Jack Coen, flute. Recorded by Terry Rafferty at the Snug Harbour Festival, Staten Island, New York, 1989

The duke of Leinster, reel / Jack Coen, flute ; Mike Rafferty, flute ; Billy McComiskey, accordion. Recorded by Terry Rafferty at the Snug Harbour Festival, Staten Island, New York 1989

Farewell to Erin, reel / Jack Coen ; Mike Rafferty ; Paddy Reynolds ; Billy McComiskey. Recorded by Terry Rafferty at the Snug Harbour Festival, Staten Island, New York 1989

Jack Coen (1925-2012) arrived in New York in 1949 from a small farm in Drimnamuckla South, a townland just outside the village of Woodford. He was the second of nine children in a musical family. According to Jack:

"If the boys and girls wanted to dance, they'd come to our house. My father [Michael Coen] played a concertina ... he was the only musician around that village. It was the poor people's entertainment in Ireland."

He started on the tin whistle when he was about eight years old, later graduating to the fife, which he played in the parish fife-and-drum band. Flute-playing neighbor Jim Conroy and older members of the fife band got him started on the wooden concert flute. After practicing on borrowed instruments, he got his own flute in a Dublin pawnshop.

Jack arrived in New York in 1949 and after lodging for a few months with an uncle in the Bronx, he moved to East Rutherford, New Jersey, where he worked in a produce market for a year and a half before returning to the Bronx to take up a job on the railroad. Good fiddle players were thick on the ground in the Bronx in those days, but flute players were few, and Jack found himself welcome at house sessions and dances. Button accordionist Paddy O’Brien and fiddler Larry Redican were perhaps his closest musical associates and when the New York Céilí Band was founded in 1958, Jack was among the members. He also joined Joe Madden’s dance band in the early 1960s, playing the traditional numbers alongside fiddlers Paddy Reynolds and Denis Murphy.

Starting in the 1960s, Jack taught the whistle and flute to many young students in the Bronx. Joanie Madden of the celebrated band Cherish the Ladies was his best-known student. Joanie, like many of Jack’s pupils, started on the metal Boehm system flute as wooden models were hard to find. To fill that gap, Jack and a couple of carpenter friends started turning out their own wooden flutes in the late 1970s.

In the revival years of the 1970s, Jack resumed public performances at local concerts, festivals and pub sessions, and was recruited by banjo playing folklorist Mick Moloney to perform at the Smithsonian Institution’s 1976 bicentennial Festival of American Folklife. That same year, Moloney recorded Jack and his brother Charlie playing in Jack’s Bronx home. The tracks were issued as the Topic LP The Branch Line, a masterwork of east Galway traditional style.In 1991, Jack was honored as a National Heritage Fellow by the National Endowment for the Arts, the U.S. government’s highest honor for a traditional muisician. Two years later, he joined fiddler Séamus Connolly, accordionist Martin Mulhaire and pianist Felix Dolan on Warming Up, a recording that faithfully recreated the style and repertoire of the 1950s and 1960s. Jack’s final recording, released in 2001, was a duet outing with his son Jimmy, who flat-picked the melodies on the guitar. Jack Coen passed away in 2012, survived by Julia, his wife of forty years, and their five children.

See also Jack's brother Charlie Coen.