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Month: October 2020

National Concert Hall’s Imagining Ireland Livestream Series Continues with Paul Brady Plus Special Guest

The next instalment of Imagining Ireland sees singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Paul Brady perform a one-off exclusive global livestream show from the National Concert Hall on November 7th. His guest on the night is artist and performer Loah. 

Paul Brady is one of Ireland’s enduringly popular artists who has created some of our most beloved songs. His live performances create a magical world of music and song which have delighted thousands over the decades. For this special livestream show, he has invited Irish Sierra Leonean singer-songwriter Loah to share the stage. 

An active musician since the mid 60s Paul Brady first gained notoriety as a member of Planxty. After that band’s demise he formed a duo with former bandmate Andy Irvine releasing the highly acclaimed album ‘Andy Irvine/Paul Brady’. Brady firmly established himself as one of the foremost interpreters of traditional ballads such as ‘Arthur McBride’ and ‘The Lakes Of Pontchartrain’. 

In 1981 he moved away from folk with the lauded album ‘Hard Station’ and his success in the pop/rock genre continued with ‘True for You’ (1983). ‘Back to Centre’ (1985), ‘Primitive Dance’ (1987), ‘Trick or Treat’ (1991), which featured a collaboration with Bonnie Raitt, and ‘Spirits Colliding’ (1995). By this stage he had become a globally-renowned songwriter, who counted Bob Dylan amongst his fans. 

In April 2015 Paul released ‘The Vicar St. Sessions Vol. 1’ taken from a 23-night series of concerts in the venue featuring collaborations with Van Morrison, Mark Knopfler, Curtis Stigers and more. His latest album is 2017’s ‘Unfinished Business’. 

For this exclusive livestream, Paul’s special guest is Loah. Since the release of her debut EP ‘This Heart’ in 2017, Sallay Matu Garnett’s unique blend of folk and soul – which she calls Artsoul – has seen her fanbase grow exponentially. In August she released her single ‘Birthmark’ and she has just released the track ‘NGLA’ with Bantum. This winter she releases a solo acoustic EP as a direct response to the unique isolation circumstances of 2020. Last year she starred as Mary Magdalene in Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s iconic ‘Jesus Christ Superstar’ at the Barbican, London. 

Supported by Davy as Innovation Partner.   
Imagining Ireland is a partnership collaboration between NCH and Culture Ireland.   
Supported by The Department of Tourism, Culture,  Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media.  

The concert will be available to tickets holders for 24 hours following the performance.   

Tickets for the stream are available exclusively via DICE.fm   

Tickets: €16.50 On Sale Now 

Declan O’Rourke Announces Brand New Album and Single

Award-wining Irish singer songwriter Declan O’Rourke returns after 2 years with his new Paul Weller-produced ‘Arrivals’, the most emotionally raw and affecting album of his career, released on February 5th 2021 via eastwest records.

Pre-order: https://lnk.to/DOR-Arrivals

Recorded over six days at Black Barn studios in Surrey, with Weller producing (“he was there every moment, before, during and long after, discussing ideas about this and that, even down to the artwork. It was hugely impressive…”), ‘Arrivals’ sees Declan O’Rourke present his art in a different yet wholly distinctive manner. The sound is stripped back to Declan’s soulful and resonant voice, the virtuosic acoustic guitar playing for which he’s renowned and only the occasional sparse arrangement of strings and late-night drums bringing colour and light to the LP’s 10 songs. Weller, a fan of Declan’s songwriting for some years, also adds his multi-instrumental abilities to the recordings, including a beautiful piano accompaniment to the closing track.

Join Declan on his official YouTube channel at 8pm on Friday 16th to watch the video for The Harbour: https://lnk.to/DOR-THV . Declan will be answering questions in the comments box.

Proffering reassurance in the face of inevitable sorrow,” is what New York Times music writer Jon Pareles has said about Declan O’Rourke. Not many people would have thought that such praise would have so significant a purpose during a prolonged time of global turmoil, but – as his many admirers know only too well – O’Rourke has been spreading hope, love and emotional clarity for over 15 years.

From 2004’s debut ‘Since Kyabram’ to his forthcoming album, ‘Arrivals’ (his seventh studio record, and his debut for eastwest records), the Galway-based artist’s skills as a songwriter have been noticed and applauded by perfectionists such as John Prine and James Taylor. His songs have been covered by fellow artists, most notably his classic 2004 song ‘Galileo’ which has been recorded by Eddi Reader and Josh Groban amongst others. His last album ‘Chronicles Of The Great Irish Famine’, documented rare first-hand accounts from that devastating period of Irish history and garnered numerous awards.

Over time, I have found that being an artist is a process of stripping away layers of yourself in order to get to the core, to get to something that is pure and honest,” says O’Rourke.

He has reached that with his latest batch of songs, yet he has also reached back to what inspired him, and entranced his listeners, when he first performed his songs in small venues. “I recently played ‘Arrivals to a cousin of mine; she used to come and see me all the time in the early days when I’d play – just me and the guitar – at open mic nights. This album, she said, led her to feel that in many ways people were going to hear me for the first time. That made a lot of sense to me.”

‘Arrivals’ deftly balances the personal and the political. The personal – it is assuredly his most emotive and intimate work to date – comes from O’Rourke’s admission that he has always been guided by family. 

It’s at the heart of everything for me,” he acknowledges. “I know situations for some people are different, but for myself, family is the well, the source. When all is said and done, your family and those around you are the most important things in the world.”

Emerging at a time when the world is in a phase of serious flux, ‘Arrivals’ is also his most political and humanitarian. “We all feel very strongly about various aspects of what is happening in the world right now, and I don’t know if I ever managed to speak my mind well about them before. I am fascinated by the past, either in a nostalgic way or through seeing how history has unfolded and what has been revealed. These times are so engaging, compelling, however, that I’ve been pulled into the present. It just happened and I’m glad I let it through.

Alongside a vision of seeing the personal and political run in parallel and occasionally intersect on ‘Arrivals’, is the way in which textural layers have been stripped away.

I was probably a bit more impetuous early on in my career,” O’Rourke explains. “You want to make something mature and evolved, so you naturally think you need to add things to make the end result sophisticated. The opposite is true, however. The more noise you add, the more you struggle to hear the space around you. That level of quietude has taken me a while to get in my recordings, but I think with ‘Arrivals’ I have.”

I would like to think my writing is just a reflection of where I am at any given time,” he reasons, “but I guess it’s possible you get better at engaging with yourself and figuring out what you really want to say. I’ve always enjoyed the company of older people and been attracted to the wisdom and philosophies that are the gifts of age. I’m also used to hearing people, particularly artists, say that as they get older, they care less about what other people think, and that you just say whatever you want. I’m only 44 now, but I’m really gravitating towards that mindset.”

The first track from ‘Arrivals’, ‘The Harbour’, is released October 15th . Arrivals is released February 5, 2021.

A few words about the songs on Arrivals

1. Painters Light

I’ve always known I wanted to be an artist. I could draw well from the time I was quite young and that was the beginning.”  

2. The Harbour

About trying to find balance between the one great dream and the other great dream. Partly a tribute to one of my biggest musical heroes, Joni Mitchell.”

3. The Stars Over Kinvara 

Possibly the sweetest moment ever in your life is the one in which you can stand back and look at the beautiful chain of human beings before, and in front of you… to sense your place among them, and to feel the magic and the un-aloneness of the whole thing.”

4. Olympian

Written to honour one of the most inspiring, heroic, and little known stories of our time. A story for the ages. The story of Yusra Mardini.” 

5. Arrivals 

We are all on the move. Going away from somewhere, or returning. The shifts between the two are often the most emotionally charged, and fundamental points in our lives. Only after I wrote it did I discover an accidental thread that runs through some of these songs.” 

6. Andy Sells Coke

A boy’s rude awakening to nightlife in the city.” 

7. Have You Not Heard The War Is Over

WAR has become a soft word in our vocabulary. It’s all around us but we don’t believe it’s significant anymore, because the news tells us it’s ok.

War is a tool of oppression, but also a state of mind. This is a modern protest song.”

8. Convict Ways

In 2018 I played a festival in Australia that celebrated the 150th anniversary of the last ever convict ship to land in Australia, and therefore the end of the convict era. I wrote this song for them, but it raised some serious questions too.

9. Zeus and Apollo

How far back does the phenomenon of single parenting and its challenges go? This is based on an actual conversation that took place between Zeus and his teenage son Apollo.”

10. This Thing That We Share
Death. The ultimate arrival. Life is fragile. 

Paul described this as ‘The ghost of a jazz song’ which I love.”

Website https://declanorourke.com
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/declanorourke/
Twitter https://twitter.com/declanorourke
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/declanorourkemusic/

Keeley Returns After Long Absence

Former Session Motts lead singer Keeley returns this month after a long absence with her debut solo single ‘Last Words’. A mesmerising hybrid of fuzzy Psychedelic Rock and blissed-out Dreampop propelled by a Motorik Krautrock groove, the single has been gaining a significant amount of airplay on RTE Radio 1’s Late Date, Newstalk FM’s Tom Dunne Show, 98FM’s Totally Irish, 2FM’s The Alternative with Dan Hegarty and a host of other stations nationally.

‘Last Words’ comes backed by an 8-minute version of live favourite ‘Days In A Daze’ recorded in an online show for Time Tunnel recently.
Both the A-side and B-side of the single focus on a very unusual subject matter, namely the story of the last day of the life of a murder victim, specifically the German tourist Inga Maria Hauser whose murder in Northern Ireland in 1988 remains unsolved to this day. For the past five years Keeley has been publishing a blog, The Keeley Chronicles, that documents all facets of this unique and harrowing case. She has worked in close quarters with the PSNI, senior politicians and legal representatives in Northern Ireland during this time as part of concerted efforts to advance and resolve this notorious case.

‘Last Words’ has been made available only from Bandcamp. Keeley recently announced her new band’s first headline show at Dublin’s The Wild Duck venue. The concert having sold-out inside just 3 days fell victim to the re-imposed lockdown restrictions. It is hoped the concert can be rescheduled as soon as restrictions are eased.

‘Last Words’ is the first track to emerge from an extensive period of recording undertaken by Keeley with producer Alan Maguire over the last 18 months. The sessions have spawned a concept album set for release in late 2021 with a string of singles and EPs scheduled to precede the album’s release.

The single can be streamed and downloaded here:
https://keeleymusic.bandcamp.com/album/last-words

Dublin Jazz Trio Origin Story Release Debut Album

As individual artists, the three members of the Dublin-based jazz trio Origin Story have been at the forefront of many artistically and commercially successful projects in creative Irish music over the last 20 years.

Pianist Greg Felton has played in groups led by Ireland’s most renowned jazz musicians, Ronan Guilfoyle and the late Louis Stewart. He was also commissioned to compose and perform a body of work for the RTÉ Living Music Festival in 2007 with the group White Rocket.

Bassist Cormac O’Brien is one of the most in-demand bass players in Ireland, holding the bass chair with the Dublin City Jazz Orchestra as well as leading his own groups and performing regularly with Irish jazz and folk singer Mary Coughlan. He worked regularly with the late Louis Stewart, as well as international luminaries Bobby Watson, Kit Downes, Ernie Watts and Cleveland Watkiss.

Drummer Matthew Jacobson is active on both Irish and international creative music scenes, performing with and composing for several leading ensembles including ReDiviDeR, Insufficient Funs, Roamer, Anna Mieke, Ensemble Ériu, Naked Allies (USA), Aerie (DE/CH) and Ms Mercy (UK).

In 2016, after many years of collaboration and friendship, Greg Felton (piano), Cormac O’Brien (double bass), and Matthew Jacobson (drums) began writing and performing as a trio. This was the birth of F-JoB.

Felton, Jacobson & OBrien quickly garnered national acclaim, with The Irish Times proclaiming them “one of the freshest voices in Irish jazz and a must-hear for anyone who wants to know where the piano trio is headed in the 21st century.”

Recently they recorded and mixed their debut album, featuring original compositions from all three members, at The Meadow in Co. Wicklow with Rian Trench (Lankum). The resulting record embodies the group’s founding in the jazz tradition, their interest in groove, their affection for free improvisation, as well as their propensity for provocative rhythms. Influences for the upcoming record include Ornette Coleman, Craig Taborn, and Deerhoof.

After much deliberation, a tactical name change has been decided upon. The similarities amongst the trio members’ social, geographical and musical upbringing, now gives rise to Origin Story.

Origin Story’s music is informed by the member’s shared experiences and results in provocative and interactive writing and playing, equally influenced by the origins of the jazz tradition and contemporary innovations.

Origin Story’s debut album, ‘Good Friday’, is out now October 15th, 2020. In celebration of their release, the band members will host a live streamed listening party, where they will have a chat about the inception of the record, and development of the music, as well as listening through some of the tracks. Tune in online at 7pm this Sunday 18th October. For full details visit the event Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/events/415841706071158

Order the album on digital or CD from Bandcamp: http://originstorymusic.bandcamp.com/album/good-friday

Stream the album on Spotify:
https://tinyurl.com/y2zhh4mo

Enjoy a live video recording of the album’s title track, performed live at Soundcasters Studio, Dublin: https://youtu.be/MLXW3IQlWAo

www.originstorymusic.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OriginStoryMusic

New Single and Video from Caoilian Sherlock

Plans to release Caoilian Sherlock’s debut album were scuppered this year due to Covid-19 following the release of two highly praised singles ‘Shades Of You’ and Don’t Let Me Forget About Her’ at the tail end of 2019. Gaining strong momentum with the acclaim for his new work as a solo artist, Sherlock looks to pick up where he left off with his new single ‘Sucker For Love’. A glib anti-romance pop song that has flavours of artists like The Divine Comedy, Spoon, and Hiss Golden Messenger.

Playing guitar and writing songs since the age of fifteen, Cork musician Caoilian Sherlock is seasoned through years in rock and roll bands such as The Shaker Hymn, but his recent shift into releasing solo material has brought about a more compelling and adventurous sound for the singer/songwriter.

On ‘Sucker For Love’, and on his forthcoming EP, he is backed with a guitar, a joyous approach to writing music and an overly sentimental view of almost everything – as well as by his band The Big Children, an all-star collection of Cork’s finest musicians. Leah Hearne provides delightful vocals, with Paul Leonard (Paddy Dennehy, Eve Clague) on drums, Ruairi Dale (Elaine Malone, Laurie Shaw) on bass and Rory McCarthy (Brian Deady, Marc O’Reilly) playing keyboards and organ. There is an absurd sentimentality that the all-star cast of The Big Children capture on ‘Sucker For Love’ and faithfully elevate Sherlock’s alternative country pop sensibilities.

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New Music from Yenkee

Yenkee has just released his latest single ‘Life in 3/4 Time’ on Thursday 15th October.

‘Life In 3/4 Time’ is about moving out of the town where you were born, and feeling offbeat in the pace of a new, unfamiliar city. It touches on the reasons one may have to leave their loved ones behind in search of a new life, while also discussing the guilt, confusion, and waves of regret that come with that decision.

Your hometown is like your parent; someone you are tied to indefinitely but inevitably have to re-examine your relationship with as life goes on.

The track was produced between Cooney’s home studio In Cork, Ireland, and his new home in London, influenced by the tones and textures of 70s rock and pop maestros such as Prince, John Martyn, and ABBA.

Yenkee, or Graham Cooney as his teachers called him, began recording and producing his own music at 15. Using minimal equipment purchased with money from busking on the streets of Cork, Ireland, he began crafting his lo-fi bedroom recordings into sincere and soulful indie pop. Using a reel-to-reel tape machine for its gentle hiss, Yenkee’s sound is produced using the tasteful palettes of 60’s and 70’s rock.

Since releasing his first EP, Yenkee has been tipped as one of Nialler 9’s ‘Favourite New Acts’, a ‘One To Watch’ from Hot Press, Ireland’s leading music magazine, and had his track ‘Cannibal Tree’ featured in the soundtrack of the smash BBC drama ‘Normal People’. The future promises many more compelling pop tracks from this Cork native.

Website         Spotify          YouTube       Facebook     Instagram

‘Cabin Lights Off ‘A new Exploration by Dublin Based Musician, Filmmaker, and Director Myles O’Reilly

‘Cabin Lights Off’, the sophomore collection of ambient music works by filmmaker Myles O’Reilly under the moniker [Indistinct Chatter], is just like many of his films. Shot in various breath-taking spaces, where the plot never moves forward because nothing ever goes wrong. It’s dramatic, haunting, whimsical, wind-swept, watery, willowy and all sorts of adjectives that suggest both geology and more cosmic concerns. Melodic passages are composed of organs and synths that drift in gusts of reverb. Choirs can be barely heard, used as much for texture as they are for melody. Beats, and there are few, are no more pronounced than the thud of a heart.

The long-haul-flight themed ‘Cabin Lights Off’ is an immersive journey above the clouds sure to transport and mesmerize the listener without the use of any visual aid (or airplane), if met in the right acquiescent mood. [Warning: May cause altitude sickness]

Speaking about his new project, Myle’s says: “My explorations into creating ambient music began when I started to place drones in my music documentaries to lead the audience in and out of music performances. A drone might begin as a barely audible hum to preempt a song, and trail out after each song ends, resonating behind landscapes and the natural audio in my footage. Once I began to compose even longer pieces to sit under the dialogue of interviews, I realised I was unintentionally creating a collection of ambient songs. The first record (Tall as Houses) is pretty much a selection of works taken from different film projects of mine and elaborated upon but ‘Cabin Lights Off’ is an album created without help from any visual accomplices. I started and finished this new album with my eyes closed.

Inspired by long haul flights, I miss that feeling of tearing through the air, hundreds of miles an hour, thousands of feet above ground, snug behind a few panes of plexiglass, looking out at a sun setting above the clouds, dipping behind this giant space rock, made all the more present with a long and windy drone in my ears. It doesn’t really matter how I travel, there’s no better soundtrack than minimal ambient for staring out a window into the middle distance, when my mind turns it’s focus to the imagination and doesn’t want to be distracted. Eyes and ears not focusing on anything in particular but allowing my mind to investigate inwards.

Hearing not listening. Seeing, not watching. Ultimately, feeling as though I’m flying through the air like that kid in Snowman, and not sitting in a giant gravity-defying sardine can.”

‘Cabin Lights Off’, the new ambient album from {Indistinct Chatter], written, composed recorded and mixed by Myles O’Reilly, and mastered by Seán MacErlaine, is out now:

Bandcamp :: https://mylesoreilly.bandcamp.com/album/indistinct-chatter-cabin-lights-off
Soundcloud: :: https://soundcloud.com/mrmylesoreilly/sets/cabin-lights-off
Apple Music :: https://music.apple.com/us/album/cabin-lights-off/1534615589?uo=4&app=itunes
Spotify :: https://open.spotify.com/album/20ZWDDZUb63eTj74v75c8f

https://www.facebook.com/indistinctchattr
https://twitter.com/ArbutusYarns / @arbutusyarns
https://www.instagram.com/arbutusyarns/
http://www.arbutusyarns.net

New Music from We Cut Corners

We Cut Corners are guitarist/vocalist John Duignan and drummer/vocalist Conall Ó Breachain. ‘Moon Landing’ is taken from the band’s most recent EP release ’Muscle Memory’, and includes B-side ‘You Get A Pass’.

The Dublin two-piece have carved out a reputation for critically acclaimed, lyrically-rich songs over the release of four albums and most recently the four-track ‘Muscle Memory’ EP, all on Irish independent label Delphi.

The EP was released on Friday 28th August 2020, and the title track has received radio play on national and regional radio in Ireland, and on BBC 6 Music in the UK. The dynamic drum/guitar combination, and the blending of powerful, unique vocal harmonies is principal to their success, both on record and in their highly energetic live performances.

We Cut Corners’ work across four albums has consistently drawn praise from critics, also seen in three album nominations for The Choice Music Prize for Irish Album of the Year.

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/wecutcorners

New Video from Brew

Brew’s latest single release, ‘New Direction’ and  accompanying video, produced by 369 Production’s David Duggan, traces the arc of the loneliest kind of loneliness – the loneliness of invisibility in a crowd. 

Brew’s character in the video is a contradictory beast who wants to be sociable, but is never convinced of himself and finds himself constantly pulled back by his default personality mode of deep introversion. Even in familiar surrounds and territory that formed him, the dark draw of retreat into oneself is irresistible as we see Brew’s character stroll forlornly around his hometown, hanging with friends oblivious to his inner battle. 

‘New Direction’ is an important and compassionate reminder to us all to look behind the smile – sometimes things may not be as they seem. Sometimes a smile can be a plea. Now, more than ever, we have to look out for each other.

Ger Eaton to Release ‘ I Thought I’d A Friend’

It’s a Family Affair!

Dad… why are you always hiding in a band… release your own music!

Stuck at home (er ..only in a Home of the Year finalist home, 2015) during Covid-19, Ger Eaton, creative director, future planner, musical collaborator and style savant, heeded this advice from his recently self-appointed A&R daughter, 18-year-old Jude, dusted off his old 4 Track Tape machine and is finally releasing his first solo project single, entitled ‘I Thought I’d A Friend’.

Jude had noted that while her Dad had worked with Duke Special, Jack L, Mundy, Fionn Regan, and The Pale (to name just a few), appeared on Later with Jools Holland, played Glastonbury, toured extensively at home and in the US with his own bands Las Vegas Basement, The Carnival Brothers and (her favourite) Les Marionettes, he had never released music as a solo artist.

You’re like that old guy...”, she said, “… Brian Eno… you always stand out from the rest.”

As creative director and fashion forecaster of 25 years for the chic Robert Chambers Hair Salon, Ger has indeed used his creative talents to turn everything he encounters (including himself ) into a visual kaleidoscope of flair.

Now Ger, while ruefully accepting that the modern A&R approach has changed, is taking Jude’s advice when releasing ‘I Thought I’d A Friend’. Jude says her Dad’s unique look and interests would dazzle and resonate in any number of media formats (such as fashion, hairdressing, styling, and interior design) as well as, of course, the usual music ones!

Available on the 28th October 2020 via Apple Music, iTunes, Spotify, Bandcamp, and all other major digital platforms

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