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・ Bobby Hoppe
・ Bobby Hopper Tunnel
・ Bobby Hosea
・ Bobby Hosker
・ Bobby Houston
・ Bobby Houston (footballer)
・ Bobby Howard (wrestler)
・ Bobby Howe
・ Bobby Howe (footballer, born 1945)
・ Bobby Howe (footballer, born 1973)
・ Bobby Howell
・ Bobby Howes
・ Bobby Howfield
・ Bobby Howitt
・ Bobby Howlett
Bobby Gardiner
・ Bobby Garrett
・ Bobby Gates
・ Bobby Gaylor
・ Bobby Geddes
・ Bobby Genge
・ Bobby George
・ Bobby Gerhart
・ Bobby Gerould
・ Bobby Geudert
・ Bobby Ghosh
・ Bobby Gibbes
・ Bobby Gilbert
・ Bobby Gilfillan
・ Bobby Gilfillan (footballer, born 1926)


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Bobby Gardiner : ウィキペディア英語版
Bobby Gardiner

Bobby Gardiner (born 1939) is an Irish accordionist and lilter.
==Biography==
Bobby Gardiner was born in Aughdarra, Lisdoonvarna, the Burren area of County Clare. He began playing at the age of eight, on his mother Delia's old melodeon with the likes of Micho Russell and Micleen Conlon. At the age of 15, he was asked to join the Kilfenora Céilí Band. In 1957 he joined Malachy Sweeney's Céilí Band from Armagh and traveled throughout Ireland as a professional musician.
In 1960, Bobby followed his brother Mike and sister Mary to New Haven, Connecticut. During the day he worked as a mechanic on the New York Railway while playing for dances with the likes of Paddy Killoran, Joe Cooley, Ed Reavey and Joe Derrane as well as doing some session work for Colonial Records. His solo recording career began when Justus O'Byrne De Witt heard him on the Jack Wade Ceili Band record and contacted him to record his first LP, "Memories of Clare" which was one of the first solo LPs by an Irish button accordion player. He also recorded with Paddy Killoran. The LP sold so well that he was asked back to do more recordings.
In 1963 Bobby was drafted into the US Army and was stationed at Fort Dix in New Jersey. On his weekends off, he would visit the Catskill Mountains in New York where he played with renowned musicians such as Joe Cooley, Sean McGlynn and Andy McGann.
He got married in Dublin on St. Patrick's Day, 17 March 1969, to Ann Kearney, a Tipperary singer. The newlyweds returned to America where their first daughter, Kelley was born. A year later they returnes to Ireland and they settled in Burncourt, a small village in south Tipperary near the town of Cahir, where they had two more daughters, Fiodhna and Lynda. All his children are accomplished musicians, carrying on the Irish music tradition, playing melodeon, whistles and concertina. In January 2009, Fiodhna in her band Inis Oirr, entertained the Irish president Mary McAleese in the Emirates Palace Hotel, Abu Dhabi, UAE.
Over the years Gardiner proceeded to make further recordings, most notably: "The Master's Choice" and "The Clare Shout". Gardiner has also traveled extensively with Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann and is a member of the Brú Ború Troupe in Cashel, Co. Tipperary. They have also toured in China as well as Japan, Spain, Canada and the US.
He is an active accordion teacher in Tipperary, Waterford and Limerick. He was recruited by the pianist Micheal O'Suilleabhain to the Music Department in University College Cork where he has been teaching traditional music for the last 25 years. Some of his past students include Ciarán Ó Gealbháin and Benny McCarthy both of whom were part of Danú.

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