35cm x 25cm Limerick
Earl William Gill (14 October 1932 – 4 May 2014) was an
Irish trumpet-player and bandleader who, with the Hoedowners, achieved fourteen Top 20 hits in the Irish charts between 1966 and 1973. As "Tim Pat", he also had a solo hit in 1971 with a
novelty song, "Poor Poor Farmer".
Early life and career
Earl Gill was raised in Dublin's
East Wall district by his parents, William and Mary (née Hunter).
His father was a pianist at the
Queen's Theatre while his mother played the cello.
As a boy Gill studied piano at the
Royal Irish Academy of Music.
] However, at the age of twelve he was involved in an accident which led to the loss of the two middle fingers of his left hand. From then on he concentrated on the trumpet and was soon proficient enough to perform in public while still in his teens.
During the early 1950s, Gill played with several of Dublin's leading
bands in venues such as the
Olympia Theatre and the
Gresham Hotel.
In 1954, he formed his own band and within two years they were established as the resident dance band at the
Shelbourne Hotel.
Among the musicians who played in the Earl Gill Band during the 1950s was saxophonist
Sonny Knowles who later found fame in Ireland as a cabaret singer.
In 1959, Gill and his band were hired to back singer
Ruby Murray on her tour of North America.
Showband years
In 1965, Gill and his colleagues were signed up as the
house band on a new Telefís Éireann country music show called
Hoedown. Fronted by their new lead singer,
Sean Dunphy, the band changed their name to the Hoedowners.
A year later their single "Wonderful world of my dreams" reached number five in the Irish charts.
The band achieved a further thirteen Top 20 hits between 1966 and 1973, becoming one of Ireland's most successful
showbands. While most of their recordings highlighted Dunphy's singing voice, Earl Gill's trumpet took the lead on the instrumental single, "Sunset" (an arrangement of
Offenbach's “Barcarolle”), released in 1967.
"Sunset" failed to make the top twenty but Gill had greater success with his next solo recording, which he also produced. Wearing a false beard, shabby clothes and
Wellington boots, he adopted the persona of "Tim Pat", a down-at-heel farmer who appeared on
The Late Late Show to perform his new single, "The Poor Poor Farmer". The marketing ploy worked and the record rose to number three in the Irish Charts in February 1971.
Later years
Following the disbandment of The Hoedowners in 1973, Gill continued to play a prominent role on the Irish music scene. He was one of a number of Irish jazz musicians, including
Louis Stewart and
Noel Kelehan, who performed together on an ad hoc basis at events such as the
Cork Jazz Festival.
Gill managed a number of pop groups, including
folk rock act, Spud.
He also produced recordings by
The Dubliners. In the late-1970s and 1980s he was the musical director of several significant shows, including the Cavan International Song Contest,
and
Noel Pearson's production of
Gilbert & Sullivan's
H.M.S. Pinafore.
In 1990, Gill released his first solo album,
Enchantment, on which he played a selection of traditional Irish melodies and popular
show tunes.
He continued to perform live throughout Ireland until his retirement in 2012.
Personal life
Earl Gill died in hospital aged eighty-one and is buried in
Shanganagh Cemetery.
He was married to Deirdre Kenny who predeceased him. They had three children: Derek, Earl junior, and Susan. In March 1995 Gill married his second wife, Mavis Ascott, and they had a son named Robin.