Anthony Kearns
(born 17 August 1971, Kiltealy, County Wexford, Ireland) is a founding member of the Irish Tenors, along with Ronan Tynan and John McDermott.
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ANTHONY KEARNS TICKETS
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Early career
He was one of six children in a musical family, played the
accordion and sang traditional Irish songs with his family. He attended F.C.J. Secondary School Bunclody, then studied catering and hotel management.
[1]. He achieved success at the age of 21 in 1993 after entering a national radio competition "Ireland's Search for a Tenor" on the Gay Byrne programme. This was run to celebrate the issuing of a new ten pound note. The only competitor not to have had formal training, he won the event, singing
The Impossible Dream
and
Danny Boy
on a city street in Dublin. One of his prizes was an appearance on Gay Byrne's
Late Late Show on TV. He began training with vocal coach Veronica Dunne who had been a judge on the show. After that he relinquished his various day jobs to pursue a full-time career in music.
[2]
Irish Tenors
Kearns, Tynan and
John McDermott were brought together for a concert at the
Royal Dublin Society in 1998. The concert was broadcast on the American
Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) in 1999 and the group found itself in huge demand for concerts across the Atlantic. After only a few months of international prominence, McDermott had left the group, to be replaced by
Finbar Wright. In 2006 Ronan Tynan left and was replaced by another Irish tenor
Karl Scully. The group now: Kearns, Wright and Scully, continues to tour and record and each member also continues with solo projects.
References
- Anthony Kearns biography
- The Irish Tenors Lyrics and Biography