William Rowsome
1 media/Rowsome_thumb.jpeg 2021-06-20T00:28:51-07:00 Scott B. Spencer 3a6e09c2eefd9ca96adbf188c38f589304cf3ce2 39279 1 William Rowsome plain 2021-06-20T00:28:51-07:00 Scott B. Spencer 3a6e09c2eefd9ca96adbf188c38f589304cf3ce2This page is referenced by:
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William Rowsome (1908)
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William Rowsome: September 1908
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Collection of Helena Grimes
09/01/1908
O'Neill's Music of Ireland - 250 Choice Selections (1908)
Presented to Wm Rowsome
A Fascinating friend + charming Musician
with compliments of the
Compiler + Editor
Retired Gen Supt Police
Chicago U.S.A.
September 1908
Biography:
William Rowsome (1868 - 1925) from Ballintore, Co. Wexford was a fiddle player who became a renowned maker and performer on the uilleann pipes, having been influenced by his father, Samuel, of whom Capt. Francis O’Neill had much to say in Irish Minstrels and Musicians. William's brothers, John and Tom were also renowned uilleann pipers and are documented in the publication, as is William’s eldest son, Samuel Jnr. William later moved to Dublin where he set up a music business, making and repairing uilleann pipes.
When Capt. Francis O’Neill visited William Rowsome in Dublin in 1906, he was “favorably impressed by his manner and music. Mr Rowsome put on the pipes and played his favorite tunes at a lively clip; the spirit of the music was in the performer, for while he touched the keys of the regulators airily and in good rhythm, his eyes sparkled with animation and his whole anatomy seemed to vibrate with a buoyancy which found suitable expression in the clear tones of his chanter.”
O’Neill always spoke of William Rowsome in the most affectionate terms, speaking highly of his skill as a craftsman and making it known that instruments made by him had found their way into the most remote corners of the globe. The Captain expressed enormous satisfaction when he heard that William’s son, Leo, (whom he watched being taught by his father) had secured first place in the Feis Ceoil. and that he was teaching the uilleann pipes at Dublin’s Municipal School of Music; On his return to Chicago, Capt. O’Neill delighted in telling his friends that the piping tradition was in safe keeping and that William’s son, Leo had become world famous as a performer on the uilleann pipes.
“The world lost a famous musician when William Rowsome died; his rendering of Irish music was a marvel of dexterity, his manipulation of the regulators being regarded as an innovation in the art. William as a father watched every step of Leo’s rise to world fame as a performer on the uilleann pipes.”
William Rowsome is pictured on the front cover of O’Neill’s 1910 publication, Irish Folk Music, and is on page 163 of his 1913 publication, Irish Minstrels and Musicians.
[Biography by Helena Grimes]
Provenance:
The original publication of O’Neill’s Irish Music - 250 Choice Selections Arranged for Piano and Violin (1908) was inscribed and presented to William Rowsome by Capt. Francis O’Neill in September 1908.
The book was given by William to his son (and successor) Leo, who later passed it to his daughter, Helena, the writer of her father’s biography.
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William Rowsome (1910)
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William Rowsome: August 27, 1910
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Irish Folk Music: A Fascinating Hobby (1910)
08/27/1910
53.3390158,-6.2525394
Irish Traditional Music Archive, Dublin
To William Rowsome
An Excellent piper &
Prince of Good Fellows
Compliments of the Author
Capt Francis O'Neill
Chicago USA
Aug. 27th 1910
Biography:
William Rowsome (1868 - 1925) from Ballintore, Co. Wexford was a fiddle player who became a renowned maker and performer on the uilleann pipes, having been influenced by his father, Samuel, of whom Capt. Francis O’Neill had much to say in Irish Minstrels and Musicians. William's brothers, John and Tom were also renowned uilleann pipers and are documented in the publication, as is William’s eldest son, Samuel Jnr. William later moved to Dublin where he set up a music business, making and repairing uilleann pipes.
When Capt. Francis O’Neill visited William Rowsome in Dublin in 1906, he was “favorably impressed by his manner and music. Mr Rowsome put on the pipes and played his favorite tunes at a lively clip; the spirit of the music was in the performer, for while he touched the keys of the regulators airily and in good rhythm, his eyes sparkled with animation and his whole anatomy seemed to vibrate with a buoyancy which found suitable expression in the clear tones of his chanter.”
O’Neill always spoke of William Rowsome in the most affectionate terms, speaking highly of his skill as a craftsman and making it known that instruments made by him had found their way into the most remote corners of the globe. The Captain expressed enormous satisfaction when he heard that William’s son, Leo, (whom he watched being taught by his father) had secured first place in the Feis Ceoil. and that he was teaching the uilleann pipes at Dublin’s Municipal School of Music; On his return to Chicago, Capt. O’Neill delighted in telling his friends that the piping tradition was in safe keeping and that William’s son, Leo had become world famous as a performer on the uilleann pipes.
“The world lost a famous musician when William Rowsome died; his rendering of Irish music was a marvel of dexterity, his manipulation of the regulators being regarded as an innovation in the art. William as a father watched every step of Leo’s rise to world fame as a performer on the uilleann pipes.”
William Rowsome is pictured on the front cover of O’Neill’s 1910 publication, Irish Folk Music, and is on page 163 of his 1913 publication, Irish Minstrels and Musicians.
[Biography by Helena Grimes]
Provenance: This book forms part of Cnuasach an Bhreathnach (The Breandán Breathnach Collection) at the Irish Traditional Music Archive, Dublin. Thanks to ITMA Archivist Maeve Gebruers.