Eddie & Finbar Furey

I Know Where I'm Going
1968 - Waverley ZLP 2104 LP
with Paddie Bell

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Side One

I Know Where I'm Going — Paddie, Finbar and Eddie

The Lark In The Morning — Finbar and Eddie

Come By The Hills (Gordon Smith) — Paddie, accompanied by Tom Smith

Star of the Munster — Finbar and Eddie

The Lark In The Clear Air — Paddie

Pretty Saro — Finbar and Eddie

If I Were A Blackbird — Paddie, accompanied by Tom Smith

Side Two

Three Lovely Lassies From Bannion — Paddie, accompanied by Tom Smith

The Sligo Maid — Finbar and Eddie

The Verdant Braes Of Screen — Paddie, Finbar and Eddie

Down By The Sally Gardens — Paddie, accompanied by Tom Smith

The Spanish Lady — Finbar and Eddie

My Lagan Love (MacCathmhaoil) — Paddie

Roisin Dhu — Finbar and Eddie

Sleeve Notes

If you happen to go into O'Donoghue's bar in Merrion Row, Dublin , you'll see the Furey Brothers, Finbar and Eddie, almost life-size on the wall. Paddy and Maureen O'Donoghue are much more than the genial hosts of this genial howff. They seem to adopt ballad-singers and instrumentalists — filling up the hungry with bowls of soup and ham sandwiches, comforting the lovelorn, acting as post office, bank, home-from-home, and maybe as confessional, too, for all I know. They also act, discreetly and efficiently, as unpaid agents for many of the singers and songmakers who need a step up. Hence the note I received over In Edinburgh one day which said, simply: "Finbar Furey is all-Ireland champion piper. This is to introduce him and his brother, Eddie. They are very good." The note was signed, "Paddy O'Donoghue". And this LP is the result.

They don't have a photograph of Paddie Bell in O'Donoghue's, but that's by the way. They think very highly of her there, even though she comes from Belfast and has lived in Scotland for many years. She found the Fureys or the Fureys found her. Which came first is beside the point. They decided to share this LP after we all heard Paddle's voice alongside Finbar's pipes. Both are unique. No Irish piper plays with such authority and imagination as Finbar Furey. There is no voice like Paddie Bell's. These are simple statements of fact. Listen to them yourself and add your own grace notes. And listen, too, to brother Eddie singing in his authentic ballad-singer's voice, reminiscent of Luke Kelly, redolent of all that is singing Ireland.

W. GORDON SMITH

Alternate releases


I Know Where I'm Going: 1968 - Capitol SP-10559 LP

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Paddie Herself/I Know Where I'm Going: 2001 - Alauda Records ALACD 104 CD

…the CD is available through Finbar Furey's and the Corries' website.

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