A treasured link to the mother island for the Twin Cities traditional Irish music scene has died at age 93.
Martin McHugh, a tuneful squeezebox player and anchor of sessions from living rooms to St. Paul and Minneapolis pubs, emigrated from a farm near Roscommon, Ireland, in the 1940s to St. Paul, an American city still brimming with staunch Irish immigrants who filled dance halls with fiddle, drum and pipe bands.
Over the coming decades, McHugh became a fixture in the local traditional music scene, leading the popular Northern Star Céilí Band and appearing on public radio's "A Prairie Home Companion."
According to a remembrance written by Sam Dillon and posted to McHugh's website, after arriving in Minnesota's capital, McHugh quickly gained footing in the Irish diaspora, attending a dance at the Gaelic Athletic League and regaling the crowd with tunes on a button accordion handed to him.
"Marty was always mainly a session warrior," Dáithí Sproule, a fellow Irish musician and immigrant to the Twin Cities, told Dillon.
As an earlier generation passed on, McHugh remained a constant in the traditional music scene, passing down songs to younger, newer players. During the scene's resurgence in the 1960s and '70s, McHugh was a link to authentic Ireland music for a younger generation hungry for traditional music.
"We called him the elder statesman," Norah Rendell, a musician and executive artistic director for the Center for Irish Music in St. Paul, told the Star Tribune. "He was our local connection to the living tradition."
According to Dillon's remembrance, McHugh took a variety of day jobs, working as a mail handler at Union Depot and a janitor for St. Paul Public Schools. He served in the Army in the 1950s. But his passion remained sharing the tunes — the jigs, reels and hornpipes — with new generations of players and listeners.