The Music
".... you know it's quite untrue to say that people other than the Irish do not appreciate Irish Music...
they may not understand it, but they sure as hell love the noise it makes...." Anon
The Style
Well I suppose you could class our style as "Thrash Paddy meets Jed
Clampit". Although primarily an Irish Band playing tunes and ballads made
famous by the likes of The Chieftains, The Pogues, The Dubliners etc. there
are a lot of tunes that forge a link between the Irish and Blue Grass styles.
For example the tune "Miss McLeod's Reel" is as popular in Irish as it is in
Blue Grass.
A few of our 3 part sets tries to capture this spirit, such as :-
Botany Bay (Irish), Angeline the Baker (Blue Grass), Miss McLeod's Reel
(Both)
Now listen... we don't do country music... , but we don't mean to denigrate
those who do. And for the people who like country music, denigrate means
'put down'
The Magic
The charm of Irish music lies in its ability to appeal to people of all ages, this
is an essential part of its spirit and allure.
Popular music tends to be generational, connecting listeners in one
generation, but dividing them from those in others. In Ireland, because
traditional music has been respected and virtually unchanged for hundreds of
years, you'll often find, as one Irish musician observed, "the tiny tot sitting
down with the pensioner and the judge or lawyer and playing music with the
common man of the street."
Simply put, it is music that somehow helps us cross the barriers of class, age
and ethnicity and makes us feel that we are all in this together. Lord knows,
there is not enough of that going on in the world today.
This, I believe, is the real magic of Irish Music.
The Music
I suppose you can define Irish Music into 3 categories. Traditional, popular and
modern. Traditional tends to fall into the category of the reels, jigs, hornpipes
etc. that everybody enjoys a dance to while popular can be classed as "the old
favourites" such as The Irish Rover, Star of the County Down and Fields of
Athenry.
In recent years modern Irish Music has become extremely popular. With bands
such as Solas, Moving Hearts and The Pogues all helping to bring this type of
music to the forefront of the music industry. I think it takes a strong willed man
not to join in the chorus of " A fairytale in New York" There are so many new
and inspiring artists and song writers around today such as Christy Moore,
Mary Black and Jimmy McCarthy whose popular songs of today will be the
classics of the future.
An example of this would be the song " Back home in Derry" Although I did not
agree with his politics this was penned by Bobby Sands, while on hunger
strike, shortly before he died. Superbly written this tells the graphic tale of Irish
prisoners deported to Australia at the turn of the 17th century.
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Last updated Apr 11
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