Jordan Tirrell-Wysocki

Bringing fresh energy to Celtic music, Jordan Tirrell-Wysocki is an award-winning fiddler/singer who grew up playing dances and folk festivals around New England. He was first recognized as part of New Hampshire’s culture at the age of 12, when he was the youngest member of the delegation representing the state at the Smithsonian Folklife Festival. He has toured nationally with bands in various genres, performed across Ireland, and released multiple recordings of Celtic music that can be heard on radio stations around New England and in the British Isles. He has also written soundtracks for audiobooks and television (including the New England Emmy-nominated theme music for NH Chronicle) and appeared as a guest on over 75 albums. Before the pandemic he performed around 200 shows each year, mostly with his own band, the Jordan TW Trio. In 2013 He was awarded the title of “Master Artist” by the NH State Council on the Arts and named “Best Fiddler 2016” by NH Magazine. His lifelong passion for history helps bring to life the traditional music around which he built his career. Tour dates and more info at www.JordanTWmusic.com

 
Contact

Jordan Tirrell-Wysocki
Canterbury, NH 03224
jtirrellwysocki@gmail.com
Cell: 603-344-0400

Available Program Formats: In person or online presentations 

Jordan Tirrell-Wysocki's Programs

Songs of Emigration: Storytelling Through Traditional Irish Music

Songs of Emigration: Storytelling Through Traditional Irish Music

Through traditional music Jordan Tirrell-Wysocki relays some of the adventures, misadventures, and emotions experienced by Irish emigrants. The focus is on songs about leaving Ireland, sometimes focusing on the reasons for leaving (a man who is driven from his land by English persecution), sometimes revealing what happened upon arrival (an immigrant drafted into the Union army during the Civil War), and sometimes exploring the universal feeling of homesickness of a stranger in a strange land (a factory worker in London missing his home in County Clare). The presenter discusses the historical context of these songs, interspersing their stories with tunes from Ireland that made their way into New England's musical repertoire, played on his fiddle or guitar. 

 

Join us as we celebrate 50 years of bringing the humanities to your community!