
Five For Your Radar: Cork gigs, Glastonbury, Squid Game, and more...
Cork concerts: Duran Duran, etc
Musgrave Park, Live at the Marquee, Cork, Friday-Thursday, June 27-July 3
What a week of gigs ahead. Duran Duran, supported by Nile Rodgers and Chic, play Musgrave Park (Virgin Media Park) on Tuesday, July 1, while the same night Live at the Marquee on the docklands, renowned blues player Joe Bonamassa plays Rory Gallagher on the first of three shows (next Thursday's show still has some tickets remaining). The Conoras play the Marquee on Friday, while the legendary Christy Moore returns on Saturday - expect classics and songs off last year's acclaimed album, A Terrible Beauty.
Talk: Gerry McAvoy
The Blue Angel, Cork Opera House, 2pm, Saturday, June 28
With the aforementioned Joe Bonamassa in town and Cork Rocks for Rory series of events continuing around the city, Gerry McAvoy, who played bass with Gallagher for 20 years, is in conversation on Saturday afternoon. Expect tales from the road and the recording studio. It's presented by Feedback Promotions as part of Gallaghers Music Festival, who are also staging a bus tour on Tuesday, July 1, of sights and landmarks associated with Rory. (Full disclosure... I'm the one interviewing McAvoy)
Streaming: Squid Game
Netflix, Friday, June 27
Netflix's number one non-English language series of all time, Squid Game returns for its third and final season on Friday. Gi‑hun (Lee Jung‑jae) returns wounded, vengeful, and ready to dismantle the Squid Game empire from within. He will be forced to make some important choices as he and the surviving players are thrust into deadlier games that test everyone's resolve. With each round, their choices lead to increasingly grave consequences.
TV: Glastonbury 2025
BBC, Friday-Sunday, June 27-29
The cliche goes that the best way to experience Glastonbury is on your couch rather than in the usually muddy field of Somerset with over 250,000 people. Neil Young (his set won't be televised), Olivia Rodrigo (who played Dublin on Tuesday), and the 1975 headline, but the act everyone is talking about is Kneecap. It's unlikely their set will be shown on Saturday, however. Coverage begins on BBC Two at 5pm, while Kneecap's set on the West Holts stage is scheduled for 4pm to 5pm.
Comedy: Dara Ó Briain
Live at the Marquee, Sunday, June 29
It's a busy weekend of comedy in Cork, with Jarleth Regan doing a second night at the Opera House on Friday and Katherine Ryan playing a sold-out show there on Saturday. Meanwhile, on Sunday, Dara Ó Briain returns to the Marquee with his latest tour, Re:Creation, about the search for his biological father. Like the story itself, expect to be taken on a laugh-filled journey by one of the best standups around.
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Irish Examiner
42 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Christy Moore review: A powerhouse of a performance leads to standing ovation at Live at the Marquee
Christy Moore just loves to perform for his Live at the Marquee audience, and yet another capacity night proves just how mutual that love is. Christy played the Marquee in its launch year of 2005, when Brian Wilson, the recently deceased Beach Boy, was the first artist to perform here. God only knows how Christy keeps going. He is the only artist to have attended every single Marquee. In an annual series broken only by Covid, this night was Christy's 19th year bringing his unique circus to Cork's big tent. It's hard to believe, really, that he turned 80 in May. What a powerhouse of a performance. The voice is as crystal clear as ever, the wit as sharp as a fishmonger's favourite blade. "Johnny, fill her up," he says to his technician, changing guitars. Christy Moore in concert at Live At The Marquee, Cork on Saturday. Picture: Eddie O'Hare Last year saw the release of the flawless album A Terrible Beauty, which sits up there with his all-time best work. Several of the songs featured in the tent: Cumann Na Mná and Palestine, and, of course, The Big Marquee, which he originally began writing a few years ago in the car journey down to Cork. In it, he mentions countless Cork people. "The first time I played this was in the Opera House on a tribute night for Don O'Leary of the Cork Life Centre. He's here again tonight, so we'll sing it for him. " He dedicated My Little Honda 50 to Ruby, a six-year-old attending along with two generations of her family. "Thanks to you, Ruby, you make an 80-year-old man feel really great." Christy Moore in concert at Live At The Marquee, Cork on Saturday. Picture: Eddie O'Hare Across the course of the evening, you see every shade of Christy. One minute, we are laughing at the speed of his reaction to a shout from the audience requesting a song while he's talking. "I'll be with you in five minutes, Mary. Here's a song I wrote 40 years ago. Sadly, it's entirely from my own experience. I add a new verse every year, but I can never remember the decade that I'm in." Delirium Tremens. The next minute, we are plunged into a kind of dark introspection that few of us actively seek out for our entertainment, and yet we're glad when we are floored by its stark authenticity. Like Black & Amber, Christy's a capella version of the song by Brian Brannigan of A Lazarus Soul; it's the moving tale of a woman left at home every night while her man is down the local pub: 'It's oh so lonely O he's left us on our owneo, Down the Black and Amber treatin' strangers like they're Kings'. Throughout the gig, Christy takes time to credit the many writers whose songs he records and performs. This is a regular trait in his shows. It must be a great buzz for songwriters to be name-checked by Ireland's all-time great folk artist. He mentions Hank Wedel, Martin Leahy, Jimmy McCarthy and more. "Sometimes you're singing a song, and it makes you think of another song. In 1974, I did a tour of West Cork with Jimmy Crowley, and I picked up this song." He sings Johnny Jump Up unplanned, impromptu and again a cappella. And then there's all the classic hits: Viva la Quinta Brigada, Spancil Hill, Back Home in Derry, The City of Chicago, Joxxer, Johnny Boy/Ride On, Bright Blue Rosé, The Voyage and Ordinary Man. A personal highlight for me was Christy's Yellow Triangle. A truly great song from his 1996 album Graffiti Tongue, he doesn't always play it. I'm sure it gives Christy no pleasure that his spine-chilling anti-fascist lyrics are more relevant today than ever. Politics, comedy, love and death, clapping along, singing. A night with everything. Such a powerful journey from one man's mastery to a standing ovation. Out and about at Live at the Marquee


Irish Independent
3 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Today's top TV and streaming picks: The Sunday Game Live, My Policeman and The Charles Ponzi Story
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The Journal
14 hours ago
- The Journal
Have you ever attended Glastonbury Festival?
IT'S A BUSY weekend across the western side of the globe: in Hungary, there is the prohibited Pride festival taking place in the streets of the capital city; Dublin played host to its own Pride festival, as have other towns and cities across the country; and at Glastonbury Festival in England, Irish rap group Kneecap are prowling the West Holts stage. Irish acts are packed into the festival's list of acts. Yesterday, singer CMAT received rave reviews after playing to festival goers from the Pyramid Stage. Kneecap, whose act is not being broadcast on the BBC due to one of its members being charged with a terror offence, have kept their place at the festival despite calls from various English politicians. 'Fuck Keir Starmer,' Mo Chara told attendees this afternoon. So today we're asking you: Have you ever attended Glastonbury Festival? Poll Results: No (863) No interest (305) I haven't, but I plan to (162) Yes, several times (102) Yes, once (87) Yes, several times Yes, once No I haven't, but I plan to No interest Vote