Background
O'Leary was born in Maulykeavane, which is about half-way between Killarney and Ballydesmond, in the centre of Sliabh Luachra, renowned for its traditional music.
O'Leary was born in Maulykeavane, which is about half-way between Killarney and Ballydesmond, in the centre of Sliabh Luachra, renowned for its traditional music.
He started picking out tunes on the melodeon at the age of five and by his early teens he was regularly playing for local dances. He played the Paolo Soprani box in C#/D tuning, using the "press and draw" style. Together they played at Dan O'Connell's pub in Knocknagree, along with musicians such as O'Leary's daughter Ellen (on tin whistle), Kathleen O'Keefe (whistle) and Michael Duggan (fiddle).
Dancing was provided by the Knocknagree Set Dancers. The music of Sliabh Luachra is characterized by a predominance of dance tunes such as polkas and slides over the more obvious jigs, reels and hornpipes. While its slow airs are in the minority when compared with other parts of the country, the tunes resonate with a shrill sadness and poignant humanity.
Many of Johnny O’Leary’s polkas, slides and barn-dances are quite unusual and little known. The collector and publisher of Irish traditional music Breandán Breathnach visited Sliabh Luachra for many years and collected music from O'Leary. He intended to publish this material because he regarded O'Leary's playing as preserving the style and repertoire of the area.
After Breathnach's death in 1985, Terry Moylan took up the work and published his collection of O'Leary's music in 1994. According to broadcaster Ciarán Mac Mathúna, who first met Johnny in 1955, he had a huge repertoire, with up to 1,500 tunes stored away. A bronze life-size statue of O'Leary was unveiled in Killarney Town Centre by John O'Donoghue, T.D., Minister for Arts, Sports and Tourism, on 28 April 2007.