the band that best addrsses 'Irishness' and the subject of Ireland

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Dropkick Murphys.

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Monday, 17 May 2004 23:33 (9 years ago) Permalink

New Model Army are NOT Irish, goddammit.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Monday, 17 May 2004 23:35 (9 years ago) Permalink

POGUES TO THREAD, WTF YOU GUYS??

Ian Johnson (orion), Monday, 17 May 2004 23:35 (9 years ago) Permalink

I find it difficult to believe that no one has yet made reference to that Morrissey single.

Atnevon (Atnevon), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 00:04 (9 years ago) Permalink

Stiff Little Fingers

..., Tuesday, 18 May 2004 00:11 (9 years ago) Permalink

Sunday Bloody U2 Sunday.

John Melon (melon), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 00:15 (9 years ago) Permalink

U2?

* ducks *

x-post, i got beat to it

Debito (Debito), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 00:16 (9 years ago) Permalink

Pogues, Stiff Little Fingers both OTM

Debito (Debito), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 00:17 (9 years ago) Permalink

Dexy's Midnight Runners? Specifically 'Don't stand me down'.

Kevin Gilchrist (Mr Fusion), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 01:15 (9 years ago) Permalink

Ash.

@d@ml (nordicskilla), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 01:29 (9 years ago) Permalink

My Bloody Valentine. Van Morrison.

I'm spent.

David Allen (David Allen), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 02:22 (9 years ago) Permalink

bush

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 02:58 (9 years ago) Permalink

thin lizzy

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 03:00 (9 years ago) Permalink

Front 242

donut bitch (donut), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 03:04 (9 years ago) Permalink

lorenna mckennet

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 03:04 (9 years ago) Permalink

what's the name of that Irish folky.

Christy Moore or something.

That guy.

Debito (Debito), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 03:15 (9 years ago) Permalink

besides being irish, what do My bloody valentine do to address the subject of irishness and ireland? ughhh.

Ian Johnson (orion), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 05:03 (9 years ago) Permalink

yeah, and Bush... WTF!

Debito (Debito), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 05:20 (9 years ago) Permalink

the best U2 album seems to mostly be about america.

fortunate hazel (f. hazel), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 05:26 (9 years ago) Permalink

U2 is a bit suspect. They're not provincial enough.

Debito (Debito), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 05:32 (9 years ago) Permalink

i saw "the commitments" on cable this afternoon.

fortunate hazel (f. hazel), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 05:36 (9 years ago) Permalink

Jacob (Jacob), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 05:43 (9 years ago) Permalink

The (formerly "Irish") Rovers, of course. Or maybe Johnny Johnson and The Shamrocks.

Myonga Von Bontee (Myonga Von Bontee), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 07:29 (9 years ago) Permalink

The Sawdoctors - "N17"

Michael B, Tuesday, 18 May 2004 07:34 (9 years ago) Permalink

Boney M. Billy Bragg. Orbital.

Enrique (Enrique), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 07:41 (9 years ago) Permalink

Well, who are the band that best addresses "Swissness", and the subject of Switzerland?
Is Ireland really worthy of this kind of debate in this day and age? We arguably have little to distinguish us by now from a dozen other small, high-tech first world nations. An Irish band who were truly addressing the burning issues of their country would be writing songs about foreign holidays, house prices and hospital waiting lists, because they're the kind of things that people here are concerned with.
U2 haven't written a song about Ireland for twenty years, and the Pogues' self-concious Oirishiness - a dichotomy of boozy raucousness and the melancholy of the hopeless alcoholic - was only ever representative of a small facet of the national character.

Palomino (Palomino), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 08:02 (9 years ago) Permalink

Geez Palomino, way to take the fun out of this thread.

Debito (Debito), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 08:11 (9 years ago) Permalink

None of them.

Ronan (Ronan), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 08:56 (9 years ago) Permalink

Michael B, Tuesday, 18 May 2004 09:06 (9 years ago) Permalink

and they're German!

Michael B, Tuesday, 18 May 2004 09:07 (9 years ago) Permalink

THE UNDERTONES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Dadaismus (Dada), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 09:09 (9 years ago) Permalink

Microdisney and The Fatima Mansions quite obviously own this thread.

noodle vague (noodle vague), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 09:10 (9 years ago) Permalink

"Well, who are the band that best addresses "Swissness", and the subject of Switzerland?"

NEUTRAL milk hotel! *winks*

weasel diesel (K1l14n), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 09:13 (9 years ago) Permalink

> Geez Palomino, way to take the fun out of this thread.

Bah, humbug.

Palomino (Palomino), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 09:57 (9 years ago) Permalink

really who gives a shit?

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 10:02 (9 years ago) Permalink

correct.

Ronan (Ronan), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 10:28 (9 years ago) Permalink

itr's the thing i hate abt irish music more than anything else - its obsession w/ self/ makes it horribly parochial and popular with people hung up on "the old country". drives me nuts.

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 10:53 (9 years ago) Permalink

That's interesting DS: do you think it differs much from Jamaican music (and music of the Jamaican diaspora) in the 'self-obsessed' and 'harking back to the old country' stakes?

(Possible answer: JA music seems to be on a tip of continuously re-telling / mythologising the present day...).

Tim (Tim), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 11:03 (9 years ago) Permalink

well there was a thread abot englishness with this exact title and this thread was just meant to be a partner/response to that (it got a lot of lengthy responses and none of these "who cares?" ones, but y'know, i wouldn't want dave to miss another opportunity to be a crushing humourless bore so carry on i guess)

weasel diesel (K1l14n), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 11:32 (9 years ago) Permalink

and the actual answer is: warlords of pez

Conor (Conor), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 11:45 (9 years ago) Permalink

the wolfe tones, hairy, wankers.

Ronan (Ronan), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 11:47 (9 years ago) Permalink

Ha ha

Dadaismus (Dada), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 11:48 (9 years ago) Permalink

well, tim i guess as i'm not in any way shape or form jamaican i can tolerate it better. being 75 percent irish, this is closer to home for me and i find it very boring. the main thing is that i don't find a similar cloying romanticism in jamaican music harking back to the past...

oh for the days of coffin ships and potato famines.

ps kilian, thank you, you lovely man, you.

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 11:54 (9 years ago) Permalink

try living here.

Ronan (Ronan), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 12:00 (9 years ago) Permalink

to be honest, ronan, i reckon liverpool, with its large diasporic population, new york, boston and place like that are worse. and btw kilian, athough it may be "crushingly boring" a huge amount of the bands quoted here are not even irish, its exactly this... 2nd, 3rd and 4th generational whining.

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 12:06 (9 years ago) Permalink

"Not even Irish"

Roy Keane to thread!

There's plenty of romantic sentimentalisation of Africa in Jamaican music though DS, yes? So it's really the Irishness which you find cloying?

Tim (Tim), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 12:17 (9 years ago) Permalink

(My ultimate point I suppose being that if people want to self-identify with racial / national / cultural pasts - maybe partial, maybe invented - then that's fine by me and I tend to be uncomfortable with the excoriation of same.)

Tim (Tim), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 12:21 (9 years ago) Permalink

I agree, unless it's the House of Pain.

N. (nickdastoor), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 12:24 (9 years ago) Permalink

"POGUES TO THREAD, WTF YOU GUYS??"

Ummmm, did The Pogues actually reflect the genuine experience of Irishness and being Irish or did they (and similarly The Men They Couldn't Hang) not in actual fact reflect the (inevitably somewhat distorted and romanticised) impression of Irishness and being Irish that you'd get from growing up (as most of them did) as 2nd generation Irish immigrants listening to their ex-pat. parents sentimental reminiscences about their home land?

Please note I'm not trying to detract from the Pogues in any way, merely to identify them as what they were - a bunch of London punks with Irish parents.

Stiff Little Fingers and Saw Doctors OTM.

How about The Chieftains, The Dubliners, Christy Moore?

Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 12:26 (9 years ago) Permalink

oh well, as ever sorry for having an opinion. off to drink guinness and eat champ in memory of my forefathers

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Tuesday, 18 May 2004 12:27 (9 years ago) Permalink

No Foster and Allen? It's a disgrace, so it is.

Marcello Carlin, Thursday, 24 May 2007 07:45 (6 years ago) Permalink

Re: The supposed Irishness of the Pogues. The line-up in their mid-80's heyday was as follows:

Shane McGowan who was born in Tunbridge Wells
James Fearnley who was born in Manchester
Spider Stacey who was born in Eastbourne
Jem Finer who was born in Stoke
Andrew Ranken who was born in London
Cait O'Riordan who was born in Nigeria (before moving to London)
Darrell Hunt who was born in Hampshire

but(although he didn't join till Rum, Sodomy etc)....
Phil Chevron was born in Dublin YAAAAAY!

everything, Thursday, 24 May 2007 08:35 (6 years ago) Permalink

A lot of 19th century National Romantic composers, painters and authors preferred to live outside their home countries.

Geir Hongro, Thursday, 24 May 2007 08:37 (6 years ago) Permalink

Their "home country" is England.

everything, Thursday, 24 May 2007 08:39 (6 years ago) Permalink

Bap Kennedy has a few songs that help this Yank relate to living in difficult times in Ireland.

Mr. Odd, Thursday, 24 May 2007 13:49 (6 years ago) Permalink

The Divine Comedy - Sunrise

I was born in Londonderry
I was born in Derry City too
Oh what a special child
To see such things and still to smile
I know that there was something wrong
But I kept my head down and carried on

I grew up in Enniskillen
I grew up in Inis Ceathlain too
Oh what a clever boy
To watch your hometown be destroyed
I know that I could not stay long
So I kept my head down and carried on

Who cares where national borders lie
Who cares whose laws you're governed by
Who cares what name you call a town
Who'll care when you're six feet beneath the ground

From the corner of my eye
A hint of blue in the black sky
A ray of hope, a beam of light
An end to thirty years of night
The church-bells ring, the children sing
What is this strange and beautiful thing
It's the sunrise
Can you see the sunrise?
I can see the sunrise

Finefinemusic, Thursday, 24 May 2007 20:19 (6 years ago) Permalink

the band that best addrsses 'Irishness' and the subject of Ireland ...inna reggae song?

t**t, Thursday, 24 May 2007 20:20 (6 years ago) Permalink

Christy Moore was still the best answer on this thread, but it asked for a band, so it would probably have to be Planxty whose first three albums (at least) were pretty much peerless.

Lostandfound, Friday, 25 May 2007 03:29 (6 years ago) Permalink

planxty was such a good band, and pre-MOR paul brady was even better than christy moore imho (lol i just remembered luka bloom, christy's brother - is he still "around")

gershy, Friday, 25 May 2007 03:36 (6 years ago) Permalink

Mary Coughlan: "My Land Is Too Green" (abt sentimental self-mythologising alcoholics ect)

anatol_merklich, Friday, 25 May 2007 10:12 (6 years ago) Permalink

No mention of Clannad or Enya?

Geir Hongro, Friday, 25 May 2007 11:05 (6 years ago) Permalink

the Virgin Prunes, see especially the song "Down The Memory Lane" or most of Heresie for example.

sleeve, Friday, 25 May 2007 15:41 (6 years ago) Permalink

1 year passes...

Actually, there's a native comedy troupe who occasionally appear (Mighty Wind-style) as fake-folkie balladeers, satirising the whiny, recriminatory self-pity that pervades so much of Ireland's "trad" songbook.
They're called The Hairy Bowsies*, and their songs tackle Perfidious Albion (Ye Dirty English Bastards) and sacred cows such as the 1916 Rising (The Craic We Had The Day We Died For Ireland) and the Potato Famine (Jaysus, The Spuds Aren't Lookin' The Best).

must look these guys up, those titles are pretty sharp.

U2 raped goat (darraghmac), Tuesday, 19 May 2009 13:54 (4 years ago) Permalink

There's always the Horslips.

THESE ARE MY FEELINGS! FEEL MY FEELINGS! (I eat cannibals), Tuesday, 19 May 2009 16:46 (4 years ago) Permalink

I vote for Primordial. Easily the greatest Irish band of the last 20 years.

scott seward, Tuesday, 19 May 2009 16:58 (4 years ago) Permalink

The Craic We Had The Day We Died For Ireland

lol

languid samuel l. jackson (jim), Tuesday, 19 May 2009 17:00 (4 years ago) Permalink

so beautiful...

scott seward, Tuesday, 19 May 2009 17:08 (4 years ago) Permalink

scott seward, Tuesday, 19 May 2009 17:19 (4 years ago) Permalink

There's clearly a gap in the market for a band of young(ish) men full of righteous anger spewing venom about falling house prices, the income levy, and the loss of Ranelagh's Michelin star restaurant.

ecuador_with_a_c, Tuesday, 19 May 2009 19:46 (4 years ago) Permalink

There's clearly a gap in the market for a band of young(ish) men full of righteous anger spewing venom about falling house prices, the income levy, and the loss of Ranelagh's Michelin star restaurant.

or career rebirth for the Thrills, to give vent to the anger of their class....

sonofstan, Tuesday, 19 May 2009 19:52 (4 years ago) Permalink

I used to play football (soccer) with the lead singer of Primordial when I was a kid. He's one of my best friend's cousins.

Local Garda, Tuesday, 19 May 2009 22:53 (4 years ago) Permalink

my best mate was introduced to his GF by one of the thrills at a wedding, and subsequently given the use of his posh room to consummate said meeting.

that pic from the youtube primordial is five mins from me.

i got nothin else.

U2 raped goat (darraghmac), Tuesday, 19 May 2009 23:22 (4 years ago) Permalink

that was actually my dad

seriously tho, first sentence, are you saying your mate slept with guy from primordial's gf? or the dude from the thrills? i saw the thrills in aladdin's on brick lane last thurs. the circle is complete.

Local Garda, Tuesday, 19 May 2009 23:25 (4 years ago) Permalink

introduced to his own future gf, not a gf of any of the thrills. that i am aware of.

U2 raped goat (darraghmac), Tuesday, 19 May 2009 23:28 (4 years ago) Permalink

ah okay, now i understand. the dublin indie scene is pretty small. a lot of bands/artists i thought were irredeemably shite turn out to be v nice and good fun and into techno.

Local Garda, Tuesday, 19 May 2009 23:29 (4 years ago) Permalink

their music still shite tho...imo

Local Garda, Tuesday, 19 May 2009 23:30 (4 years ago) Permalink

certainly.

U2 raped goat (darraghmac), Tuesday, 19 May 2009 23:39 (4 years ago) Permalink

2 years pass...


Women from the UK/Ireland area have the most soothing songs/voices. This girl, Enya, Leona Lewis, Dolores O'Riordan from the cranberries to name a few.
Just something about celtic women singing that calms the soul.
Jarsia 1 year ago 34

pizza pizza and cult jam (crüt), Saturday, 28 April 2012 07:40 (1 year ago) Permalink

has never heard Dolores O honk like a sealion on "Zombie" i take it

seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 28 April 2012 12:19 (1 year ago) Permalink

the band ronan was looking for singing about young posh middleclass upwardly mobile ireland (but well aware of cultural nationalism's importance to edge in the celt angle) are probably bell x1 tbh, cf reacharound

diafiyhm (darraghmac), Saturday, 28 April 2012 16:05 (1 year ago) Permalink

but i mean the chieftains were suckin diesel last night on jools holland and if we can go back to the dubliners, those are good answers too.

diafiyhm (darraghmac), Saturday, 28 April 2012 16:09 (1 year ago) Permalink

just think of all those douce celtic sirens like sinead o'connor, jessie j and the melifluous cerys from catatonia

Ms Tum-Bla-Wi-Tee (nakhchivan), Saturday, 28 April 2012 16:11 (1 year ago) Permalink

Dr X O'Skeleton, Saturday, 28 April 2012 16:14 (1 year ago) Permalink

NPR says they deliver “a brilliant co-mingling of electronic music and anthemic pop rock”.[4] The band is named after the Bell X-1, the first supersonic aircraft in history.

Ms Tum-Bla-Wi-Tee (nakhchivan), Saturday, 28 April 2012 16:15 (1 year ago) Permalink

co-mingling

Ms Tum-Bla-Wi-Tee (nakhchivan), Saturday, 28 April 2012 16:15 (1 year ago) Permalink

The Clancy Brothers with Tommy Makem

Tarfumes The Escape Goat, Saturday, 28 April 2012 20:46 (1 year ago) Permalink

They're called The Hairy Bowsies*, and their songs tackle Perfidious Albion (Ye Dirty English Bastards) and sacred cows such as the 1916 Rising (The Craic We Had The Day We Died For Ireland) and the Potato Famine (Jaysus, The Spuds Aren't Lookin' The Best).

I thought this was Ding Dong Denny O'Reilly, one of whose tunes is reputed to feature the lovely lyric "Flow river flow / fuck off to the sea".

I understand that the same person was also behind Tony St. James and the Joshua Trio.

The New Dirty Vicar, Saturday, 28 April 2012 21:56 (1 year ago) Permalink

an old website: http://indigo.ie/~lwp/dingdong/

The New Dirty Vicar, Saturday, 28 April 2012 21:59 (1 year ago) Permalink


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