Ronnie continues, “I didn’t want my family to be suffering for lack of contact.
My children were growing up and I wanted to be there. So I decided I’d pack it up
and do something on my own. So I packed up in June or July of 1974.” Jim McCann
was asked to join and in 1975 the group released Dubliners Now, followed by
Parcel of Rogues in 1976, and 15 Years On and Live In Montreux
in 1977, 15 Years On being a compilation album with tracks from the Ronnie
and Ciarán years, as well several new Jim McCann cuts. The Jim McCann albums
have a decidedly more mellow folk sound that I think is quite underrated. In 1978 Jim
McCann decided return to his solo career. According to Ronnie, “I was in bad car
accident in November 1978. I broke my hip and I was in the hospital.
Jim McCann decided to leave the group. So John Sheahan asked me to come back to the
group. I said, ‘I might as well.’ I’ve had a rest now and I’d
had 4—4 ½ years at home and thing were okay. So I joined the group again.
I did the first gig in England on crutches.” In 1979, The Dubliners released
Together Again, a very underrated and more somber album featuring Ronnie
and Luke singing Pete St. John, Ewan McColl, Eric Bogle and Ian Campbell songs.
On June 30, 1980, at a concert in Cork, Luke Kelly collapsed on stage. According to
Ronnie, “When I left the group in 1974, he was okay. Then when I went back
to the group, about a year or two after I returned to the group, which was 1979, Luke
used to drink a fair bit. He was forgetting words on stage. We all thought he was drinking
too much. But it was happening when he wasn’t drunk that he would forget. I
said a lot of times he wasn’t drinking that much that he couldn’t remember.
But it turned out anyway that he had a brain tumor. One night we were in Cork”.
“We were on the stage of the Opera House in Cork. Luke had started singing a
song. I noticed his hand shaking, but I didn’t mind that because it sometimes
happens from too much adrenaline. It’s happened to me a couple of times. I was
watching and in case he got it too bad, I was ready to take over the song so the people
wouldn’t know. The next thing he started slurring his words. The next thing he
just collapsed and was rushed to straight into the hospital and they did an operation
on his head that night. ” Luke recovered and returned to the group on a part-time
basis. In the meantime, Sean Cannon was asked to fill in for Luke.The group had begun recording Prodigal Sons with Luke, but when the album was released it didn't contain any of his songs. His versions of “A Song For Ireland” and "Raglan Road" from those sessions were subsequently released on Luke’s Legacy after his death. In November 1982, Bob Lynch committed suicide in Dublin, continuing the Dubliners’ string of tragedies.
1983 saw the releases Prodigal Sons and 21 Years On, the latter being a live
album recorded at the Dublin Concert Hall. In the autumn of that year the group embarked
on tour with Luke Kelly. A concert at the Carré in Amsterdam was recorded and later released
on CD; this was Luke Kelly’s last recording.
The Dubliners continued on to Germany, where Luke again collapsed. This account according
to Ronnie Drew: “I can’t remember the name of the town we were in but he
had to be taken off. It was somewhere near Heidelberg. He was taken to Heidelberg to one
of the clinics. A couple of days after we had a day off and we were traveling to Stuttgart. I
didn’t like going on the bus, so I said, ‘I’ll get a train to Heidelberg and
then a train on to Stuttgart.’ It was a day off and I wanted to make use of the day off
as well. The lads tend to get up late in the day and I tend to get up early. So I got up early
and I got a train to Heidelberg by ten o’clock in the morning. I didn’t know what
hospital he was in, but I just went into a hospital and inquired and it turned out he was in it.
There were a lot of clinics in Heidelberg. I went in and sat down for over two hours. It was a
great chat—talked away. A couple of weeks later, he was gone home from Heidelberg
with all his medical data to Dublin.He was out of hospital and had another operation on his head and I went to see him when I came home from Germany, which was about December. Shortly after that he went home for Christmas. Then at the end of January we got word that he was in hospital and very bad. I went into the hospital about nine o’clock and I stayed all night and he died that night". Ronnie continues, "He had a huge funeral in Dublin—television and radio and all the papers. In fact, there were so many there they had to get police on motorbikes. Here in Ireland when you die you go to the church—the Catholic Church. His church—I mean his family’s church—Luke didn’t go to mass—Catholicism dies very hard in Ireland. So he was brought over to the church. But they had to go right through the city at half-past five. There were a good six guys on the motorbikes— policemen —driving the whole way in front to get through the traffic. Luke would have had a laugh because Luke used to have run-ins with the police. They were all there—politicians from both sides of the divide. It was a terrible loss.”
