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New Irish albums reviewed: Sons of Southern Ulster, Poor Creature, Darragh Morgan, The Swell Season and California Irish

New Irish albums reviewed: Sons of Southern Ulster, Poor Creature, Darragh Morgan, The Swell Season and California Irish

Irish Times4 days ago
Sons of Southern Ulster: Through the Bridewell Gate (SOSU)
★★★★☆
Through the Bridewell Gate by Sons of Southern Ulster
The malcontents of
Co Cavan
resurface with the aim of once again visualising young dreams in middle age. Three albums in (and 10 years from their formation),
Sons of Southern Ulster
can safely lay claim to be as authentically Irish post-punk as any of the current native crop touting a similar validity. Sprechgesang songs such as Billyhill Hall, Royal Breffni, and the especially lyrical To the New World and Back ('I heard the voice of Joe Dolan – 'make me an island,' he cried'), place mainstays David Meagher and Justin Kelly in a league and a psycho-geographic place of their own.
Poor Creature: All Smiles Tonight (River Lea Records)
★★★★★
All Smiles Tonight by Poor Creature
Cormac MacDiarmada
, John Dermody, and
Ruth Clinton
may have their limbs in other contemporary experimental folk bands (
Lankum
, Landless), but their eyes remain firmly focused on recalibrating songs from many years past and adding unexpected sonic twists and turns without making you reach for the smelling salts. Psyche-folk might be the applicable category or genre, but there's something else filtering through on multilayered tracks such as Willie O, Bury Me Not, Adieu Lovely Eireann and Hick's Farewell. Think more kosmische variations of Cocteau Twins, Enya and several spectral others, imbued with sean-nós, drone, and artists such as Sandy Paton, Jean Ritchie, and Karen Dalton. Producer
John 'Spud' Murphy
sets the controls for the dark heart of the sun, while Clinton (whose father, incidentally, was once a member of Ireland's finest R&B band, The Rhythm Kings) delivers vocal shivers and delights in equal measure. Definite Album of the Year vibrations from this one.
Darragh Morgan: For Violin and Electronics Vol II (Diatribe Records)
★★☆☆☆
Cover of For Violin and Electronics Vol II by Darragh Morgan
New music violinist
Darragh Morgan
has quite the professional career, performing not only with numerous contemporary music groups (including Ensemble Modern, Icebreaker and London Sinfonietta) but also with The Divine Comedy, the Spice Girls and Sigur Ros. The sequel to his 2017 album showcases examples of what could be, for some, taxing. There are shades of that throughout the 10 minutes of Zack Browning's Sole Injection (think repetitive hiccups with occasional stabs of police car alarms). Conversely, in Scanner's A Cantegral Segment, Morgan's playing is peak elegance, but the album's longueurs far outweigh the best moments.
The Swell Season: Forward (Masterkey Sounds)
★★★★☆
Forward by The Swell Season
Glen Hansard
and
Marketa Irglova
reunite as
The Swell Season
for their first album in 16 years, and to say the results are equal parts bittersweet, heartwarming and wise is a piercing understatement. The pair's personal history is (presumably) well enough known to view Forward as a story-driven sequence of confessional regret and acceptance. Whatever the truth, there's no denying the empathy and common threads that connect not just the songwriters but also their folksy songs. Listen to People We Used to Be, Stuck in Reverse, I Leave Everything to You and A Little Sugar without your eyes brimming, and you have a heart of stone.
READ MORE
California Irish: The Mountains Are My Friends (7Hz Productions)
★★★☆☆
The Mountains Are My Friends by California Irish
From bullish hard rock to harmonic folk is a turn we didn't expect Belfast's Cormac Neeson to take, but the former frontman of The Answer has taken to the sensibilities of Laurel Canyon like the proverbial duck to water. Gathering a bunch of musicians with similar influences, the mood enveloping the debut album by
California Irish
is, says Neeson, 'the opposite of boring AI-generated, no-soul perfection'. There is throughout, then, not only genuine creative instinct but also the kind of sonic warmth that comes only from musicians in a room taking cues and empathetic hints from each other.
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RTE Up for the Match competition winner is county councillor and TD's daughter
RTE Up for the Match competition winner is county councillor and TD's daughter

Irish Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

RTE Up for the Match competition winner is county councillor and TD's daughter

The winner of a pair of All-Ireland hurling final tickets on RTE's Up for the Match was Tipperary county councillor Máirín McGrath, who is the daughter of independent TD Mattie McGrath. The independent councillor for the Cahir Electoral Area on Tipperary County Council won a competition on the programme for a pair of tickets for Sunday's final between Tipp and Cork at Croke Park. Máirín went up against Toronto-based Cork fan Lisa-Marie O Mahony, who flew home from Canada for the decider. The competition saw Máirín and Lisa-Marie have to say if a former hurling star had more or less All Stars than the player that was called out before them. Máirín won the tickets after correctly guessing that Anna Geary (four) had more All Stars than Seán Óg Ó hAilpín (three). Speaking on the programme ahead of the game starting, Máirín said: "Big stakes for me. I'm with one of my friends. I'm her bridesmaid, she's getting married in a couple of weeks, but she's an insufferable Cork fan and so she's looking for a ticket too. She said if I win the game I'll be upgraded to maid of honour." Máirín McGrath and Mattie McGrath TD (Image: Instagram/ Máirín McGrath) Her victory amused viewers online, with one person writing on X: "Does @rte know one of the guests competing for tickets on Up For The Match is a county councillor in Tipperary and Mattie McGrath's daughter?" However, many people didn't see an issue with the county councillor winning the tickets. One viewer said: "Don't see the problem here? Are county councillors forbidden to enter competitions? Erm no is the answer" Another commented: "Do these things disqualify her from taking part? Of course not. Jasus, the manufactured outrage is tedious." Someone else said: "Why is this relevant? Is there a law forbidding councillors to keep for prizes?" RTE have been contacted by the Irish Mirror for comment.

‘Keep Carey out of Croker' – Victim urges GAA not to honour cancer conman at All Ireland
‘Keep Carey out of Croker' – Victim urges GAA not to honour cancer conman at All Ireland

Sunday World

time3 hours ago

  • Sunday World

‘Keep Carey out of Croker' – Victim urges GAA not to honour cancer conman at All Ireland

Victim of DJ's cancer scam calls on GAA bosses to ban hurling legend from ceremony at today's All-Ireland final A BUSINESSMAN defrauded out thousands of euro by cancer conman DJ Carey has warned the GAA it would be '100 per cent wrong' to honour the disgraced hurler in Croke Park today. Noel Tynan, owner of The Celt bar in Dublin and one of the 80,000 strong crowd who will be in attendance for today's All-Ireland Final, said: 'It would be, completely, 100 per cent wrong. 'I'll be in Croke Park and to watch him walk out there waving and nodding, you couldn't do it. 'They recommended on the day of the court that a psychiatric report on him be carried. 'Well, if he turns up on and waves to the crowd, there certainly should be a psychiatric report on him … that's how I would see it … he'd need some balls. 'You couldn't do it, in front of 80,000, not knowing if you're going to be booed off the pitched. 'And at the least he should be booed off the pitch.' DJ Carey admitted to deceiving 13 victims The GAA have failed to comment ahead of today's clash between Cork and Tipperary as to whether Carey will be included when tribute is paid to the Kilkenny team that lifted the Liam McCarthy 25 years ago. Calls to the GAA's director of communications were not returned. A traditional part of All-Ireland ­final day is the presentation of the winners from 25 years ago to the crowd in Croke Park. Carey was man of the match in his teams All-Ireland win over Offaly in 2000. It's unknown whether Carey will attend but even those not in attendance traditionally have their name read out, followed by a description of their contribution during the game. But Mr. Tynan, who is one of the 13 people Carey pleaded guilty to approaching for money after faking a cancer diagnosis, believes the conman's action, and in particular the targeting of a woman with cancer with his cancer lies, are 'unforgiveable and can't be overlooked.' Noel Tynan says GAA should not honour Carey 'If DJ Carey wasn't who was he was, superstar that he was and the whole lot, people would be saying throw the book at this criminal,' Mr. Tynan said. 'But he's no better or worse than any other criminal. 'He's a criminal … full stop and just because he won five All-Irelands and nine All Stars, it doesn't change things 'The bottom line is he purposely set out to defraud people. 'He met me in 2017 and that's when he told me about his cancer and then he didn't hit me for six years. 'He kept me in cold storage for six years before I got the call on a Monday morning. 'And some of the lies he told me that morning … 'He didn't have to even blink. 'The big word was the deception. 'He came across as such a humble fella but he was setting me up. 'It was a form of grooming. 'The All Star, the All-Ireland winner and then to use that and say you had cancer, it's just unforgiveable and there's no excuse for him. 'What angered me more than anything is when I found out about the woman who had cancer … he conned this woman and her husband … and that to me is unforgiveable. 'That was way worse than what happened to me. 'To con that poor woman that had cancer … that's inexcusable.' DJ Carey in his heyday before he disgraced his sporting legacy Carey pleaded guilty on July 3rd to dishonestly by deception, inducing victims to make monetary payment to him after he fraudulently claimed to have cancer and needed finances to obtain treatment. The offences happened at unknown locations within the State on dates between 2014 and 2022. The 13 victims named in the case were Mr. Tynan, Owen and Ann Conway, Mark and Sharon Kelly, Denis O'Brien, Aidan Mulligan, Tony Griffin and Christy Browne, Thomas Butler, Jeffrey Howes, Edwin Carey and Aonghus Leydon. He admitted to dishonestly persuading people to give him money by fraudulently claiming he was suffering from cancer and saying he needed funds for treatment. He was remanded on bail and is due to be sentenced on October 29th. DJ Carey faked having a cancer diagnosis Last week, Carey's ex-partner Sarah Newman spoke out about the scandal, insisting a major chance had been missed to stop Carey in his tracks as far back as 2012. She told the Sunday Independent newspaper she had contacted Blackrock Garda station to complain about Carey stealing from her, but that this was never followed up by gardai. She said: 'That trauma could have been stopped. These victims should not have become his prey if the gardaí had taken proper notice of me when I made formal complaints back in 2012 about DJ's conduct, lies and deception. 'They [my complaints] went untreated and there has been a black cloud over my judgment and reputation for many years, which I feel has now been lifted. victims of his crimes. 'There are people who will have met me and taken statements from me over that period of time. And it is they who have to look at themselves. They know the truth and they had the facts and they did nothing about it. 'Sometimes the legal system fails people. 'Whether it's domestic violence or a heinous criminal act, sometimes the judicial system gets it wrong. 'And that starts at grassroots with the gardaí when people make complaints. 'I think all over the world there are miscarriages of justice, there are people that get away with absolutely dreadful things — and I guess that's just the way things are.'

Even in rival Youghal they'll belt out the Killeagh song if Cork topple Tipp today
Even in rival Youghal they'll belt out the Killeagh song if Cork topple Tipp today

Extra.ie​

time4 hours ago

  • Extra.ie​

Even in rival Youghal they'll belt out the Killeagh song if Cork topple Tipp today

Kingfishr's surprise hit of the summer, Killeagh, will be sung 'everywhere' around Cork if the Rebels win the All-Ireland hurling final today – though one club mainstay has admitted she can't resist 'rubbing it in' over Killeagh's nearest rivals. The east Cork village and hurling club has been immortalised in Kingfishr's ubiquitous folk track, which has spent the last 18 weeks in the Irish top 10 charts and was used in RTÉ's ads for today's decider against Tipperary. Written for Kingfishr bass player Eoin Fitzgibbon's home parish and former team, the song features references to local places including Killeagh's GAA grounds, Páirc Uí Chinnéide. Helen Kennedy, at the Pairc Uí Chinnéide, Killeagh GAA Grounds, Killeagh, Co. Cork. Helen Kennedy is the grandmother to Charlotte, 4 years old, Hugo, 6 years old, and Poppy, 2 years old. Pic: Seán Dwyer Helen Kennedy, whose brother-in-law Robert 'Danno' Kennedy the pitch is named after, said 'everybody's talking about' the song in the village of around 900 people. 'I've seen it everywhere,' she told 'In fact, it's on the television nearly every night. I've seen videos of people singing it…' The veteran club member said locals don't talk about Kingfishr. 'Instead, we say young Fitzgibbons – Ger Fitzgibbons's son,' she explained. 'And his grandfather – I remember the night the cup came to Killeagh, he danced down the street to the bus. These were dedicated GAA people, even with so little.' Kingfishr. Pic: File The volunteer continued that she 'just can't believe how popular' the song, which has more than 16 million plays on Spotify, has become. She said: 'I think it's wonderful. And I think there's a lot of credit due to the other boys [in Kingfishr, who are from Limerick] who agreed to play it and it has taken off.' Ms Kennedy agrees with a take she read online that the song is relatable to 'every village in Ireland'. Helen Kennedy, at the Pairc Uí Chinnéide, Killeagh GAA Grounds, Killeagh, Co. Cork. Pic: Seán Dwyer 'It is, because villages are different from towns and cities,' she explained. 'I suppose we just don't have other facilities like they do, and all the kids go to the hurling field.' The song has even been readily belted out by supporters from other Cork clubs, possibly helped by Killeagh's underdog status – they have never won a senior championship and are 'not doing very well at the moment'. But there remains a 'next-door-neighbour hurling rivalry' with nearby Youghal. 'I be saying to my little grandson, 'That's your granduncle [in the song] – Páirc Uí Chinnéide!' Ms Kennedy laughed. 'And of course his father's from Youghal and I know it's driving him simple. I just love rubbing it in. They love to have one up on me whenever they can.' But even in Youghal, they are singing the catchy ballad, 'and if Cork wins it'll be sung everywhere', Ms Kennedy said. Killeagh's current home, officially opened in 1996, was named in honour of the man who 'was so dedicated he put his own money in to keep the club going' and offered his own fields as sporting pitches, clearing cattle off before matches'. 'It was usually my late husband and my brother-in-law's land that the matches were played on,' Ms Kennedy recalled. 'I remember when I was a child – nobody told me I was going to be his sister-in-law then – going to a match above in Kennedy field. 'And the older fellas would tell you they'd have to take the cow sh*t off the field and then they'd play the match.' The long-serving club member continued that the 'proud people' of Killeagh are 'very proud of our youth', who have 'served us well' and kept the GAA grounds busy generation after generation. 'Every kid went to the hurling field, and that's why Páirc Uí Chinnéide means so much to everybody,' she said. 'And now there's children coming in from other countries and going to the schools and learning to hurl and play with the children here, which I think is lovely to see.'

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