- Fr. John O'Brien
Infobox Person
name = Very Rev. Fr. John O'Brien
caption = Very Rev. John O'Brien
birth_date =30 May 1931
birth_place =Kilrush ,County Clare ,Ireland
death_date = death date and age|2008|01|6|1931|05|30|df=yes
death_place =Finglas ,Dublin ,Ireland
death_cause =
occupation =Roman Catholic priest Very
Reverend Fr. John O'Brien (30 May 1931 –6 January 2008 ) was aRoman Catholic priest who worked in the Archdiocese of Dublin from 1956 until his death in 2008. He is best known as a prominent organist and founder of The St. James's Choir and the [http://www.glasnevinmusicalsociety.com Glasnevin Musical Society] .Life and career
Early life
John O'Brien, eldest of the four children of publican Michael O'Brien and Mary O'Dea, was born in
Kilrush ,County Clare on30 May 1931 .He had a keen interest in music, which was nurtured at home. His mother played the violin, while the family housekeeper sang to the children every evening. At the age of seven, John was sent to Mrs. Atherton, a local piano teacher whose husband was organist of the parish church. A bright pupil, he was considered sufficiently accomplished to play a solo at the next
St. Patrick's Day concert in Kilrush.Priesthood
John O'Brien attended the Christian Brothers' school in Kilrush until entering the junior
seminary for the Diocese of Killaloe inEnnis when he was sixteen. He successfully completed hisLeaving Certificate and, not being the chosen for the seminary ofKillaloe , O'Brien was directed instead to the Archdiocese of Dublin, where he began his studies inClonliffe College in September, 1949. He was ordained a priest by ArchbishopJohn Charles McQuaid on25 May 1956 .O'Brien's first appointment was as
chaplain toSt. Michael's Hospital, Dun Laoghaire and afterwards, in 1957, he was made curate ofGlasnevin Parish. He combined this with the first official diocesan chaplaincy to the Bon Secours Hospital. 1962 brought a move to the rural setting ofBallitore in the parish of Narraghmore inCounty Kildare . This would be O'Brien's base until 1966 when he was relocated in one ofDublin 's oldest parishes - St. James's, dominated by theGuinness Brewery . In 1975, he was transferred to St. Andrew's, Westland Row - one of the archbishop's own parishes. He remained there until 1983, when he was promoted toParish Priest of St. Canice's,Finglas . He retired in 1996, enjoying the title of Pastor Emeritus while still residing in Finglas. [http://www.dublindiocese.ie/ddd/perrec.php?pernumcode=100547&parnumcode=800084]Musical career
In the summer of 1955, O'Brien was asked to conduct
Sigmund Romberg 's "The New Moon " inKilrush . The scheduled conductor was taken ill, and John took the baton with some trepidation as the cast included the renowned English tenorThomas Round .In
Clonliffe , O'Brien had briefly come under the guidance of Fathers Sean Quigley and Brendan Lawless. He had sufficient self-confidence to form a choir from the nursing staff in St. Michael's Hospital, and, once in situ in Glasnevin to augment the Church choir there. With the blessing of his parish priest, Fr. Michael Geraghty, the [http://www.glasnevinmusicalsociety.com Glasnevin Musical Society] was founded in 1958. [http://www.glasnevinmusicalsociety.com/aboutus/history.htm]"
The Desert Song ", under the musical direction of O'Brien, opened at the newly built St. Francis Xavier Hall inDublin . The unprecedented success of "The Desert Song" led to Romberg's ' "The Student Prince ", with Brychan Powell and Estelle Valery of London's Sadler's Wells Opera Company in the leading roles, in 1959.The Glasnevin Musical Society broke new ground in February 1960 when O'Brien was approached by the directors of Dublin's Olympia Theatre Stanley Illsey and Leo McCabe. The result was a production of
Julius Benedict 's opera, "The Lily of Killarney". The cast includedVeronica Dunne ,Bernadette Greevy , John Carolan and Denis Noble.Romberg's "
The New Moon ", withBelfast soprano Julia Shelley and English baritone Joseph Ward in the principal roles, followed in October 1960 at the St. Francis Xavier Hall. Running for ten performances, it was another triumph.While stationed at St. James's Parish, and with the blessing of the parish priest, Fr. Henry Cunningham, O'Brien expanded the choir and had the organ refurbished. Masses by
Palestrina andMozart were sung in their liturgical settings, and these were extended to public performances with the choristers now firmly established as the St. James's Choir. Their first major event was anRTE TV showing ofGounod 's "St. Cecilia Mass" on her name day,22 November 1971 . O'Brien conducted with soloists Bene McAteer, Brendan Cavanagh and Gerald Duffy.Haydn 'sHeiligmesse andMissa in Tempora Belli followed, but a December 1972 performance in St. James's Church of Dvořák'sRequiem Mass was a turning point in the choir's career. It led toRTE inviting the group to undertakeHaydn 's "The Creation" with the RTÉ Concert Orchestra underColman Pearce . The soloists were Eithne Troy,Frank Patterson and William Young.St. James's Choir made three visits (1973, 1975, 1978), with an Irish orchestra, to
North America . These included concerts of mainly Irish and sacred music inNew York ,Detroit ,Milwaukee ,Muskegon andToronto . Another transatlantic trip in 1989 found the choir inSan Francisco , whileLourdes featured in their itineraries of 1968, 1970, 1972, 1993, 1995 and 1997 when the choir gave a special concert at the Shrine.In 1984, O'Brien embarked on an annual series of "Christmas Music" events in Dublin's
National Concert Hall . Initially for one performance, due to popular demand this was extended to a second from 1988.The formation of the RTÉ Philharmonic Choir in 1984 meant a reduction in St. James's work for
RTE , but allowed O'Brien to direct his own concerts in the National Concert Hall. These included Dvořák'sStabat Mater (1986),Verdi 's Requiem (1987),Gounod 'sMesse Solennelle (1989),Handel 's "Messiah" (1990) andBerlioz 'sTe Deum (1991), this withStuart Burrows as soloist.Health Problems and Death
O'Brien suffered ill health throughout his life. He had two bouts of
pneumonia before he was five years old, and while training for the priesthood atClonliffe College, he spent three of his seven Christmases in hospital. He suffered regular heart attacks and two strokes since 1990, which forced him to abandon the preparation and performances of major musical works. His health problems also forced him to early retirement from active ministry in 1996.On
6 January 2008 , after taking part at a mass in St. Canice's Church,Finglas (where he was formerlyParish Priest ), Fr. John O'Brien returned home and died peacefully, aged 76. [http://www.ireland.com/notices/index.cfm?fuseaction=detail&advert=645832]References
*Biography in "Pioneer Magazine" Volume LIII No. 8, September 2001
*Obituary in "The Irish Catholic" newspaper, Thursday, Feb 7th, 2008 issueExternal links
* [http://www.glasnevinmusicalsociety.com Website of The Glasnevin Musical Society]
* [http://www.nch.ie National Concert Hall, Dublin website]
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