Welcome to our seisiún! We're glad you're here. This is a regular weekly pick-up gathering of folks who play traditional Irish music.

If you've been to sessions elsewhere, you probably already know what to do. Jump in! Our only real house rules are to be nice, listen, tip the bar staff, and enjoy yourself.

If you're new to playing in traditional Irish music, this page has a little more info for you.


This style of gathering is called a session (or ”seisiún” in Irish). The music is based on a repertoire of many thousands of melodies (we call them “tunes”), most of them quite old. The tunes are traditionally played unaccompanied (i.e. just the melody instruments), all in unison. Someone in the circle will start a “set” of 2 or 3 tunes played back to back (usually 3 times through each), and anyone who happens to know those tunes will play along.

We don't read from sheet music while we play, as a general rule—the tunes are played from memory. That means that we've spent countless hours learning these tunes, which is a big part of the fun. It doesn't take that long to get started, though; there's a repertoire of ~50 tunes that are particularly common for us, so if you want to be playing a lot, that's a good set to learn; you can find links to all of them on this site.

A few quick guidelines:

  • We generally prefer only one or two accompaniment instruments at a time (piano and / or guitar). This is because the harmonization is shaped by, but not strictly dictated by, the melody. When you get more than a couple harmony instruments going at once, they almost always clash.
  • We love percussion, but go easy—don't play on every tune. (Especially with loud instruments like the spoons.) For other instruments, there's a natural backpressure to not play continuously, because hardly anybody knows all the tunes. Not so for percussion instruments, so you have to exercise self-control. :)
  • If you don't know the tune being played, it's usually correct to remain tacit (i.e. not play). This style of music doesn't really have “jamming” in the way you might find in Bluegrass, and the harmonic structure of the tunes is often far from predictable.
  • The usual melody instruments that play in Irish sessions are: fiddle, flute, whistle, concertina, button accordion, piano accordion, banjo, mandolin, harp, and uilliean pipes. (And common accompanying instruments include guitar, bouzouki, piano, and bodhran.) If you play an instrument outside that list, and you've got a lot of experience playing Irish music, then by all means, come and play it. If you play an instrument outside that list and you don't already play Irish music, then this might not be your venue.
  • Our repertoire isn't strictly Irish, but it's mostly Irish. We'll often delve into Scottish, Breton, Quebecois, and a few other “celtic” styles, and very occasionally someone will play an Old Time or Contra tune.
  • While we will occasionally have a song, this is primarily an instrumental tune session, not a song session.
  • We have a range of tempos, and we'll usually play as slow as anyone requests to play (especially new learners). As the night progresses, tunes do tend to speed up a little bit, but don't go overboard–when you play tunes crazy fast, it often loses most of the musicality and enjoyment.

Thanks for coming, have a good time!