Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts

Monday, 1 June 2026

Jun 1: Guest blogger Carl Lee #17: “Maybe Romance Is A Place”: That wet island out west

The latest in a series of guest posts from Carl Lee.

“Maybe  Romance Is A Place”: That Wet Island out West

You could probably have a month of blogs eulogising the breath and depth of Ireland’s musical heritage. Where would you begin beyond the obvious contenders such as the Boomtown Rats and U2? Should the focus be on traditional Irish music and how far should you trawl, into the 19th century or even further back in time, into the years of British colonial push and shove, bloodshed and dispossession. 

I was well versed in such matters from a young age with one Dublin born, Scottish descended, grandparent. His death certificate states ‘labourer’. 

For me the first Irish artist I ever saw live was that fellow Irish labourer but of the Fender Stratocaster, Rory Gallagher. This was back in the late 1970s at Friars, the rock venue located in Aylesbury Civic Hall. He’d learnt his chops in The Fontana Showband, a band who from 1961 to 1965 played the hits of the day in ballrooms, civic halls and pubs across Ireland, sometimes everyday bar Sunday. They were grafters. However, music moved on and so did Rory, eventually he formed the band Taste, and then he set off solo with a touring schedule that is probably unheard of these days. It is estimated that he probably played over 2000 gigs, so if you hadn’t seen him in the 1970s you probably didn’t go out much. 

It was the third version of his touring band that I saw, with drummer Ted McKenna and bassist Gerry McAvoy, and they had honed a harder edged rock sound by then (I guess they could afford a bigger soundsystem) with his trade mark battered Fender Stratocaster leading the charge in a high octane stage performance. His relentless touring led to a complete burn out and he died after a liver transplant in June 1995 aged 47. A very talented Irish musician. He really put the hard graft in and in that he reminds me of my Irish grand father

I sincerely hope that my current favourite band, who also just also happen to be Irish, learn the lesson from Rory and don’t burn themselves out. This is the Dublin band Fontaines DC, who are four albums into a run of carving out contemporary classics from all sorts of musical directions. 

I first stumbled across Fontaines DC during the first Covid lock down in June 2020 on Later with Jools Holland with their isolation filmed ‘A Hero’s Death’. It jumped out lyrically and musically. A breath of optimistic cheer in a dark time. 

“And don’t give up too quick

You only get one line, you better make it stick

If we give ourselves to every breath

Then we’re all in the running for a hero’s death”. 

Now generally speaking I’m quite fluid in what I listen to but for 12 months I absolutely battered the discography of Fontaines DC, from their first single, the retro punk of ‘Liberty Belle’, to the stadium rock blast of the most recent “It’s Amazing To Be Young”. I may have over-done it. I even bought one of their Bohemians FC third strip sponsored football shirts. Yet, I’ve never caught them live even though they played Sheffield at least three times since a 2018 gig at the Leadmill. 

And now I probably won’t, as they are a festival and stadium band now, two types of venues I’ve never particularly warmed to and now I am hesitant at the cost of such endeavours. 

But never say never. 

Fontaines DC are of course unquestionably Irish, singing on occasion in Gaelic, calling an album ‘Skinty Fia’ and waxing lyrical about the ‘Dublin City Sky’. There is also an attitude that shouts out ‘Irish’; an insouciance, and ease meshed into existential whimsy, and sharp social observation. They’ve got attitude.    

Irish musicians have never been short of attitude from Sinead O’Connor, Shane McGowan, Bono and of course the great Thin Lizzy front man Phil Lynott who was in a constant state of rock n’ roll cool; shades, leather trousers, upper-lip snarling, and all the ‘fuck you attitude’ that only a black-man raised in working class Dublin could muster after being asked to cover “Whiskey in the Jar’ to initially break the charts in 1972. 

By 1978 Lynott had his revenge with one of the best live albums of the 1970’s, ‘Live and Dangerous’. 

<My friend Simon says that Thin Lizzy were probably the loudest band he ever heard in his concert-going life... Alan>

Listening back to 'Live and Dangerous' brings to mind something the literate, crafted Irish nu-country artist CMAT sings. “I feel so rock n’ roll but I look like a secondary geography teacher.” 

I can’t help but imagine who it was who taught her geography at secondary school in County Meath just north-west of Dublin and deserved this scathing put down from Ciara Mary-Alice Thompson as it would have said on the school register?

Still, at least another of CMAT’s acid tonged victims, the chef Jamie Oliver, managed to get a foothold in the humour when he stars in the official video of CMAT’s 2026 hit ‘The Jamie Oliver Petrol Station’ playing the drums almost in a manner as frenzied as CMAT’s dancing.  

No country is so tightly inter-twined with Britain’s musical heritage whilst still retaining its own identity and diversity as Ireland and this has been sustained over generations stretching back to Victorian times, when Irish labourers dug and built much of Britain’s infrastructure. 

So many British families have Irish lurking around their DNA, myself included, a healthy dose that could capture me an Irish passport if I was so inclined; I’m not. 

And I will admit it, I have never been! 

China yes, Australia even. But not yet a short hop over the Irish Sea to the wet island way out west. A lifetime's oversight that really needs sorting. 

But no matter. Plenty of Ireland: its history, culture, and importantly its music, has made it into my life already. 

Carl Lee is retired but was a lecturer at The University of Sheffield and Sheffield Hallam University, taught A level Geography for 20 years at Sheffield College, is the author of five books about geography and has a PhD in economic geography. He has been nuts about music since buying his first single in 1973: 10cc’s 'Rubber Bullets' if you were wondering.

Sunday, 22 February 2026

Feb 22: U is for U2

An A-Z of bands from Spotify, based on the algorithm which suggests the best match to each letter of the alphabet.

I've listened to U2's music since 1983-ish. This goes back to their live album at Red Rocks. 

 
My first U2 experiences were back in the 1980s with albums like Boy. I remember bringing in the New Year in a holiday cottage in Wales in the late 1980s with 'New Year's Day'.

There are a few favourite songs of mine, including a live version of 'City of Blinding Lights'.

I saw U2 play in Sheffield on their 360 degrees tour in August 2010. I was in the city for another reason.

This was an outdoor concert, and their first in the city.

U2 started out in the city of Dublin in 1976.

Brendan shared a U2 story

Best concert: 

U2 at Wembley on Friday 12th June 1987, the day after the general election result. U2 were at the peak of their powers. Support included The Pretenders, Spear of Destiny and World Party. We’d tried to get tickets but it was sold out so we thought we’d go and listen to it from outside. We then realise that there was a hole in a wall above a fire escape so we managed to shin up and climb through the hole where it opened up on the roof of toilet block, which wasn’t very promising. However, we jumped down without injury and just ran before anyone could catch us and dived down one of the stairwasy onto the pitch just as everything was starting. For ‘Bullet The Blue Sky’, Bono changed the lyrics for the spoken section at the end of the song, saying ‘and they run and run, into the arms of…Margaret Thatcher’. The place erupted.


Bono has been involved in a great many political campaigns to some degree, and their shows are also very political.
I remember his involvement in the Make Poverty History campaign. A lot of us wore white wristbands for a while. There was an apocryphal story about an incident at a gig which is explored here at Snopes.


U2 Discography - AI generated.



What 'U' bands does your algorithm throw up?

What are your favourite U2 memories or tracks?

Update

Since I scheduled this post, U2 received a new EP - their first music for a long time, called 'Days of Ash' with a song called 'American Obituary'.

Wednesday, 4 February 2026

Feb 4: C is for Clannad

An alphabet of bands and artists as a series for February. These were selected by the Spotify algorithm.

Following Altan for A, we have another Irish folk band for C: Clannad.

Once again, this is a band I have a long history with in terms of having seen them play live numerous times, and listened to their music for over 40 years.

Their album 'Magical Ring' included the theme from Harry's Game, and also a track called 'Newgrange'. This is a prehistoric structure into which the rising sun intrudes on just one day a year: the winter solstice- there is a lottery system to be there in the chamber when it happens.

Newgrange is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, in county Meath.

In 2024, they released an extended version of this album with a whole set of new music which they thought may have been lost.  Even now, some of those songs have a great pull, and memories of times as a student in Huddersfield.

In 1984, they produced the music for a TV series which was watched by millions: 'Robin of Sherwood'. This was essential viewing at the time. It wasn't the first TV programme they had been associated with, but was the one that still resonates with a lot of people, with Michael Praed playing Robin.

At the time we had a TV which was rented and which had a coin box at the back. A 50p coin would provide a certain amount of viewing time. I remember watching an important episode of the show, and we had to run to get a coin as it ran out during the episode and the screen went blank.

I saw Clannad a number of times during the 1980s, including a tour to promote their Macalla album - possibly their best in terms of the range of music and the arrangements. At this time they recorded an album with Bono from U2 on vocals on 'In a Lifetime'.

They also released a single from the soundtrack from the film 'Last of the Mohicans' featuring Daniel Day Lewis.

Another album of note for me was the album 'Sirius', which was recorded with Bruce Hornsby - of which more to come later in the blog. He added a special atmosphere to that album, along with a new production sheen a long way from their earlier folkier albums with songs about seaweed.

This included the song 'Something to Believe In'.

In November 2024 the band decided to bow out from live performance with one final show. 

They managed to secure the Royal Albert Hall for the venue. I was very lucky to notice this concert was being held while I was down in London overnight ahead of an early Eurostar. I logged online and saw a seat in the front stalls. It was a memorable night.

Here they are taking a final bow.


Image: Alan Parkinson, shared on Flickr under CC license.

Clannad means 'family' and many of the family members had success in other ways.

One Brennan sister was Enya. More on her in a later blogpost. Moya Brennan released several solo albums and Pol Brennan was in a trio called 'Trisan' who released an album with Real World Music.

Discography:




What 'C' band comes up on your algorithm? Let me know in the comments... along with any memories of Clannad and their music.

Monday, 2 February 2026

Feb 2: A is for Altan

An alphabet of bands and artists as a series for February. These were selected by the Spotify algorithm.

A is for Altan.

Altan are a band I have seen numerous times in different incarnations going back over 30 years. The most recent concert was for their 2024 album 'Donegal', with an excellent concert at Snape Maltings down on the Suffolk coast for the release of the album.

The band themselves are named after a lake in Donegal, situated at the foot of the northern slopes of nearby Mount Errigal.

Formed in County Donegal in 1987 by lead vocalist Mairéad Ní Mhaonaigh and her late husband Frankie Kennedy, the group’s music is influenced by traditional Irish language songs and tunes from Donegal. Over the course of their career, Altan has sold over a million records.

They have made numerous albums, with various guest musicians including Dolly Parton.

They mostly sing in Gaelic.

Here's a song of theirs called 'Time has Passed'. This is particularly poignant as it remembers the passing of one of their members: Frankie Kennedy.


When the band began, the singer and violinist Mairéad Ní Mhaonaigh and Frankie were co-founders and also married. Here they are playing together back in 1985.



I remember one gig which took place down in the ballroom below Sheffield City Hall. I had to get the tickets from the box office, but in the main hall was the Chippendales. This meant queuing up with a lot of women who were eagerly awaiting some hunky men taking their clothes off... I got a few strange looks... the ticket for that gig - back in 1992 is included at the bottom of the post.

Over the years, the band has collaborated with a range of musicians including Dolly Parton.

And here's some drone footage flying over Altan Lough - a landscape feature after which the band were named... and Altan Tower.


And here's a ticket stub for that concert by the band in 1992...


Discography

Plenty for you to discover....



What 'A' band comes up on your algorithm? Let me know in the comments... along with any memories of Altan and their music.

Saturday, 17 January 2026

Jan 17: Guest blogger Brendan Conway #1: From Penny Lane to Euro-Country: Psychogeography is alive and well

My first guest post from Brendan Conway.

How the legacy of the greatest single ever made continues to inspire songwriters to capture a sense of place including current rising stars such as CMAT.

In recent decades, a recurring theme among the most creative and highly-regarded musicians is their influences from the past, including recordings from many years before they were born.

One example is Irish musician CMAT (Ciara Mary-Alice Thompson). CMAT’s first album in 2022 included a track called ‘Geography Teacher’. Her most recent album title and title track ‘Euro-Country’ also has a justifiable geographical ring about it, with various meanings, including her love of music from different countries, particularly when artists sing in their own language and all types of country music.

CMAT’s songwriting is strongly influenced by her experience of growing up in Dunboyne, County Meath around the time of the banking crisis of 2008, which caused a major economic crash in Ireland following the ‘Celtic Tiger’ boom years. 

Songs on the album include laments about the ensuing social and economic impacts and loss of cultural identity: 

‘Everybody became unemployed. Then, in the village I grew up in, there was a year or 18 months where loads of the people I went to school with, their dads started killing themselves because they'd lost everything in the crash.’ (see Middle-aged Men and Suicide in Ireland (Donnell and Richardson 2018) ).

The title track ‘Euro-Country’ starts with a verse in Irish and the video takes place in the sterile interior of the Omni Shopping Centre in Santry, northern Dublin. There is nothing distinctive about the place - it could be anywhere. 

Geographers will pick up strong resonances with issues around ‘clone towns’ and ‘out-of-town’ retail-led developments. 

Along with many of the best contemporary artists, CMAT actively trawls deeply and widely through musical heritage. In this video, CMAT breaks down the process behind her 'EURO-COUNTRY' album, plus 'Running/Planning' (Artist In Residence’ on BBC 6 Music in August 2025 - there is a link to influence of Pentangle and The Beatles' use of the mellotron explained here) 

Her work follows a long tradition of psychogeographical songwriting which began in the 1960s. 

Along with so many trends of that era, The Beatles were a major catalyst. They initiated or picked up on cultural shifts, ran with them and brought them into the mainstream, often in a profoundly influential way. In turn, their songwriting style borrowed ideas from other songwriters such as Bob Dylan and critics such as Kenneth Allsop

A turning point was The Beatles song 'In My Life' on their 1965 studio album 'Rubber Soul'. Starting with the line ‘There are places I remember…’ it was mainly written by John Lennon drawing on reminiscences of his childhood holidays in Durness, northern Scotland.

It signalled a major shift away from The Beatles’ earlier, straightforward love songs to a more autobiographical, reflective style of songwriting. In particular, their innovative fusion of pop music with feelings and memories about geographical places unwittingly pioneered a psychogeographical approach to songwriting. 

Then in February 1967, The Beatles released arguably the greatest single record of all time - a 'double-A side' of Penny Lane written by Paul McCartney and Strawberry Fields Forever written by John Lennon. Both were psychogeographical vignettes of suburban life - evoking memories of places associated with their upbringing in Liverpool.


The influence of The Beatles' new approach on other songwriters was immediate and enduring. In 1967 alone, several hits of the year demonstrated that other artists were choosing psychogeographical themes to good effect including The Kinks' 'Waterloo Sunset'; Small Faces' 'Itchycoo Park'; The Monkees' 'Pleasant Valley Sunday', and Scott McKenzie's 'San Francisco'. 

It wasn’t just about the song's lyrics but its instrumentation and production as well. 

The Beatles popularised the use of cut-up methods and sampling loops to paint soundscapes with early uses on songs such as 'Tomorrow Never Knows' on the 1966 album Revolver. 

On their 1967 album Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band they incorporated cultural influences from distant times and places including vaudeville, music hall and Indian classical music. They embraced new technologies of the day such as the mellotron (a keyboard instrument which played tape loops) for the opening chords and /textures throughout 'Strawberry Fields Forever' and synthesisers on the 1969 album Abbey Road, especially on George Harrison’s classic song 'Here Comes The Sun'.

The Beatles cleared a path for other artists to experiment such as Pentangle who fused folk with rock and jazz for songs such as 'Light Flight' (1969) about challenges of life in London for three young women and 'Wedding Dress' (1971), which CMAT describes as ‘the greatest song of all time’, incidentally recorded 25 years before her birth!

Well into the twenty-first century, artists frequently gain substantial inspiration from the innovations which took place many years before they were born, five or six decades ago. For example, CMAT explains that ‘I love the mellotron… we used it on every single song on this record’ such as 'Running/Planning' to create sound imagery by fusing disparate genres such as country and western, chamber pop strings and old-school music tech. 

As in a relay race, the psychogeographical baton created by The Beatles has been handed successfully from one generation to another.

For further details about The Beatles' psychogeographical song writing and other links to geographical places, take a look at these two Story Maps. (They will appear elsewhere on the blog as well).

Penny Lane / Strawberry Fields Forever  - the geography of the greatest single ever

Sgt. Pepper’s Places - a geographical perspective on The Beatles in 1967


Brendan Conway is a geography teacher with over thirty years’ experience and led his current school to the GA Centre of Excellence. He has authored a range of learning materials for Oak National Academy, Tutor2U, Collins, BBC Bitesize and has expertise in GIS. Brendan is very interested in the links between geography and music and has written far too many story maps on this theme.