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Music | Interview 89% |  8 Dec 1999
In The Name Of The Mother Jackie Hayden
The Winner In Me - Don Baker's Story, by Jackie Hayden, is the painfully honest account of the private life of one of Ireland's best-known musicians, and describes his efforts, as an adult, to come to terms with an unhappy childhood and a past littered with violence, crime and alcoholism. In this exclusive extract, Don describes how he believes his troubled childhood relationship with his mother left him with an enduring fear of betrayal in his relationships with women.

Hot Features | Interview 70% | 25 May 2005
It's Never Too Late To Have A Crappy Childhood Peter Murphy
Or, Augusten Burroughs And The Art Of Magical Thinking. Peter Murphy talks to the bestselling author about his troubled upbringing in rural Massachusetts, the long and strange series of events that led to him becoming a writer, and why his current personal and professional happiness may just mean that his extraordinary story has a happy ending after all. Photography by Emily Quinn.

Music | Interview 67% | 17 Nov 2004
Phil Chevron on Ghost Town Philip Chevron
"In a sense really Ghost Town is a skip full of memories and old stuff and childhood memories."

Hot Features | Interview 65% |  5 Jul 2001
Cherry bomb Peter Murphy
Why would a freight train take a dirt-road? PETER MURPHY gets a lesson in East Texas vernacular from hardboiled memorist MARY KARR

Music | Interview 64% | 24 Nov 2008
Haar Superstar Peter Murphy
Back in his native Fife, Scottish folk sensation James Yorkston chats about his childhood sojourns in West Cork and the debt his music owes to a sense of time and place.

Hot Features | Interview 64% | 19 Jul 2006
Pictures of you Joe Jackson
Memories of a childhood tragedy inspired visual artist Gary Coyle’s one-man show Death In Dun Laoghaire.

Politics | Frontlines 63% | 17 Dec 1987
Under Fire Kate Shanahan
With anti-Republican sentiment running high in the wake of the Enniskillen massacre and the O’Grady kidnapping, and with the first wave of joint RUC-Garda arms searches in progress, Kate Shanahan travelled to Belfast for an exclusive interview with Sinn Féin President, Gerry Adams. In it, the Westminster MP recalls his childhood in Belfast, evaluates the position the IRA now find themselves in and outlines his personal views on subjects as diverse as abortion, the Catholic Church, Dessie O’Hare, Bono and the role of violence in the Republican struggle.

Music | Interview 63% | 17 Feb 1999
Smog Alert Peter Murphy
PETER MURPHY talks to Smog mainman BILL CALLAHAN about road songs, childhood and the band s new album Knock Knock

Hot Features | Interview 62% |  6 Jul 2007
In the chick of it Tara Brady
Cecilia Peck, director of music documentary-political travelogue Dixie Chicks: Shut Up And Sing reminisces about her Dingle childhood and explains what it’s like being part of a great Hollywood dynasty.

Hot Features | Interview 62% | 11 Oct 2001
JT LeRoy – The Hot Press Interview Peter Murphy
Shirley Manson, Tom Waits and Suzanne Vega are among the many heavyweight champions of US cult author JT LEROY, a 21-year-old who survived childhood abuse and a period as a truckstop hustler to become what he calls “an accidental novelist”.

Music | Interview 61% | 19 Apr 1995
Polly Unsaturated Liam Fay
After a career barely spanning five years, there is a definite feeling amongst those who know about such things that POLLY JEAN HARVEY is destined to be one of the true rock music greats. Her darkly visceral, sexual and lacerating work has struck a raw chord, and made her the object of passionate adoration. But it has also cast her in the eyes of some as an "axe-wielding bitch cow from Hell." LIAM FAY travels to meet ze monsta, but instead finds a home-loving Yeovil lass who likes nothing better than gardening and whipping up pots of rhubarb marmalade.

Hot Features | Interview 61% | 23 Jan 2004
DBC Pierre: The Interview Olaf Tyaransen
The legend of the booker prize-winning author is of a life of fear and loathing and bad craziness that not even Hunter S. Thompson would dare to invent. But the truth is even stranger than the fiction. From a pampered mexican childhood through lost family fortunes, doomed movie ventures, alleged swindling, a couple of convictions and a serious drug habit, Peter Finlay has re-emerged atop a mountain in Leitrim, a little god of the literary world. Interview Olaf Tyaransen Photo: Nick Hitchcox

Hot Features | Interview 61% | 15 Mar 2004
Neil Morrissey: The Hot Press interview Paul Nolan
Known from the TV sitcom as the Man who Behaves Badly, actor Neil Morrissey is confounding the laddish caricature with his work for an anti-landmine charity. In this candid interview with Paul Nolan, he also reflects on childhood trauma, death in the family, that affair with Amanda Holden and his encounters with Olivier, Burton and Mel Gibson. main photography Cathal Dawson

Hot Features | Interview 61% | 11 Mar 2004
Neil Morrissey: The Interview Paul Nolan
Known from the TV sitcom as the man who behaves badly, actor Neil Morrissey is confounding the laddish caricature with his work for an anti-landmine charity. In this candid interview with Paul Nolan, he also reflects on childhood trauma, death in the family, that affair with Amanda Holden and his encounters with Olivier, Burton and Mel Gibson.

Hot Features | Interview 61% | 12 Oct 2006
No ordinary Joe Olaf Tyaransen
He’s one of the last great orators in Irish politics. But there’s more to Joe Higgins TD than firebrand socialism. In this candid interview, the man once described as a ‘nitwit’ by an enraged Bertie Ahern talks about his childhood, the role of the church in his life and explains why the Celtic Tiger has let Ireland down

Hot Features | Interview 61% | 18 Oct 2006
No ordinary Joe Olaf Tyaransen
He’s one of the last great orators in Irish politics. But there’s more to Joe Higgins TD than firebrand socialism. In this candid interview, the man once described as a ‘nitwit’ by an enraged Bertie Ahern talks about his childhood, the role of the church in his life and explains why the Celtic Tiger has let Ireland down

  59% | 12 Apr 2006
Surfer Rosa
(37/100 Greatest Albums Ever)
100 Greatest Albums Ever
Shouting and snarling about corpses, unbirthday host Frank Black sounded like a nutter on a street corner with a knack for associative wordplay (check out the extraordinary verbal dexterity of ‘Brick Is Red’). Kim Deal, then posing as Mrs. John Murphy, pounded close by, before freaking out the guests with primal scene anthem 'Gigantic', a childhood tale pervy enough to recall the films of Brian De Palma.

Music Review | Album 59% | 24 Jun 2005
All Winter We Have Waited Colm O Hare
An English teacher and acoustic troubadour Chris Gavin writes songs that are full of slice-of-life vignettes and wryly observational lyrics. ‘School Trip’ describes a childhood jaunt; the title track celebrates the glories of swimming at the Forty Foot in Sandycove in Dublin. The record is exquisitely arranged with angelic backing vocals, strings and flutes.

Music Review | Single 58% | 10 Dec 2003
One More Chance Paul Nolan
Speaking of regressive childhood complexes, Jacko is back in the saddle for this lead-off single from yet another Crimbo cash-in anthology.

Music Review | Album 57% | 26 Jun 2009
Howl On The Hot Press Newsdesk
One giant leap for Belfast Man with album that follows his childhood memories

Music Review | Album 56% |  5 May 2004
Cemetery Shoes Tanya Sweeney
By his own admission, Oklahoma-born Johnny Dowd lived the textbook American childhood, “driving in Daddy’s car, falling in love and listening to the radio”

Music Review | Album 56% |  5 May 2004
Cemetery Shoes Tanya Sweeney
By his own admission, Oklahoma-born Johnny Dowd lived the textbook American childhood, “driving in Daddy’s car, falling in love and listening to the radio”

Film Review | Film 55% |  3 May 2005
Mean Creek Tara Brady
It would be virtually impossible to get through a review of Mr. Estes’ teen murder movie without mentioning George Washington and River’s Edge, but if it shares plot points with these other fine dramas, Mean Creek is still uniquely, if often grimly compelling. In common with most tales of childhood lost, Mean Creek’s dramatic fulcrum is a bully...

Music Review | Album 55% |  6 Dec 2007
Dirt Farmer Roisin Dwyer
This collection sees Levon return to his roots to reinterpret classic songs from his childhood and pay homage to those who influenced him along the way.

Music Review | Live 54% |  1 Dec 2006
The Flaming Lips live at Vicar St, Dublin John Walshe
There really is no substitute for the first time you see The Flaming Lips live: it’s easy to spot Lips virgins at 20 paces: slack jaw, mouth agape, eyes swollen with something akin to childhood glee.

Hot Features | Reports 53% | 29 Jan 2009
At home with: Eleanor Tiernan Anne Sexton
Comedienne Eleanor Tiernan invites Anne Sexton into her Georgian home, and talks to her about childhood holidays in Kerry, her love of JP Donleavy, and writing a play – well, kind of – about Damien Rice and Damien Dempsey.

Politics | McCann 52% | 24 May 2001
Church of the poisoned minds Eamonn McCann
Thinking of making peace with the Catholic Church of your childhood? Think again…

Hot Features | Interview 42% | 27 Jun 2006
World Cup predictions: Neil Hannon, The Divine Comedy  
In which prominent musicians fondle their crystal balls and deliver their World Cup predictions.

Hot Features | Interview 41% | 25 Oct 2001
Go ask Alice Joe Jackson
JOE JACKSON goes through the looking glass with ALICE BARRY

Music | Interview 40% | 21 Dec 2004
My 2004 Cathy Davey
Cathy Davey Musician

Music | Interview 39% | 26 Jun 2008
Sam's Town Lauren Murphy
Internationalist jet-setting dance-pop playboy Sam Sparro has been propelled to ubiquity by the single 'Black And Gold', but he's not above offering HP a bite of his cheese toastie. Ahem.

Hot Features | Interview 39% | 11 Sep 2002
The grim fairytale James Kelleher
Acclaimed Sandman creator Neil Gaiman has turned his dark imagination to children’s fiction with Coraline, a book whose subject matter is even more timely in the light of the tragic events in Soham

Music | Interview 38% |  4 Nov 2009
Have Album, Will Travel Celina Murphy
Up-and-coming songstress Lisa O’Neill tells Celina Murphy how she has been inspired by Ronnie Drew, Leonard Cohen and Charlie McGettigan.

Politics | Frontlines 38% | 28 Feb 2003
War and peace Eamon Sweeney
Dublin, London, Paris, Munich – Anti-war protests took place all over the world on February 15th, with galvanising effect

Music | Interview 38% |  9 Dec 2002
Highland cowboy Phil Udell
James Yorkston’s unique blend of acoustic folk and americana comes as much from his love affair with Ireland as from his Scottish heritage

Hot Features | Interview 38% | 20 Jan 2006
Escape from Planet Earth Tara Brady
A surreal journey into the inner life of an Irish transvestite in ‘70s London is the basis of Breakfast On Pluto, the latest cinematic collaboration from writer Pat McCabe and director Neil Jordan.

Music | Interview 38% | 28 Jul 1993
GROWING UP IN PUBLIC Tara McCarthy
Beatbox New Band Challenge winners and now curtain-raisers at Féile - it all seems to be happening with remarkable speed for The Unbelievable Children. Once the hyperactive Tim has calmed down a little bit, Tara McCarthy finds out where these precious kiddies plan on going from here.

Music | Interview 38% | 14 Jan 2003
Pirate material world Helen Toland
 

Music | Interview 37% | 13 Mar 2002
Featured writer of the month: Joe Jackson The Hot Press Newsdesk
Three of the most celebrated third-degrees ever conducted by longtime Hot Press interviewer Joe Jackson

Music | Interview 37% | 20 Feb 2004
The pony express Hannah Hamilton
Pony Club mastermind Mark Cullen on speedy recording, touring with Morrissey and drinking the Dandy Warhols under the table.

Music | Interview 37% | 17 Apr 2002
Band of brothers Colm O Hare
Colm O'Hare meets indie teen-sensations Electric Soft Parade

Politics | Frontlines 37% |  3 Feb 2000
The Fickle Finger of Fate Stuart Clark
Undertone MICKEY BRADLEY and ANDY CAIRNS of Therapy? join STUART CLARK in mourning the passing of Subbuteo, the beautiful little game.

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 19 Feb 1997
THE PAIN inside THE PAIN Paul O'Mahony
I ve had people start crying, people who went Sweet Jesus , and people who stopped coming to my house because of the issues I m dealing with. Paul O Mahony uncovers the extraordinary talent of Tony Crosbie, bubbling under the Dublin art scene with work personally informed by sexual abuse, domestic violence, alcoholism and drug abuse, but pointing the way to discovery and triumph.

Music | Interview 37% | 30 Jun 2003
With a little help from my friends Peter Murphy
Despite having to contend with muscular dystrophy, the inspiration of working with some well-known musicians has given Fergus O’Farrell of Interference a whole new lease of creative life.

Hot Features | Interview 37% |  9 Jul 2009
Sunshine superman flies again Paul Nolan
The enigmatic pied-piper of psychedelic rock Donovan is to be honoured with a festival and a new documentary. Long based in Ireland, he talks about working with David Lynch and his plans to bring a new movie project on the road.

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 25 Jan 2005
Caught in the Net Stuart Clark
Rat Out Of Hell: Contestants on an American game show were asked to drink a liquidised rodent.

Music | Interview 37% | 19 Oct 2009
Flying By The Deceit Of His Pants The Hot Press Newsdesk
Swedish pop gurus, gun toting rednecks and MTV are all on the agenda as Chad Wolf explains how CAROLINA LIAR have soft rocked their way to the top.

Music | Interview 37% | 17 Feb 2000
Rags, Riches & R n B Mark Kavanagh
SHOLA AMA tells MARK KAVANAGH about being plucked from obscurity, losing it and her second album, In Return.

Politics | Frontlines 37% |  1 Apr 1998
Ronnie Be Good Nick Kelly
They say that there are no characters in snooker any more, but ronnie o sullivan is an exception. A true people s champion and natural talent in the mould of Alex Higgins and Jimmy White, he s made determined efforts to curb his own excessive tendencies and is now being tipped by many to claim the world title in Sheffield this month. Interview: Nick Kelly.

Music | Interview 37% |  7 Nov 2008
Fiddler on the hoof Peter Murphy
His plaintive violin playing will be familiar to fans of The Frames and Swell Season. Now Colm Mac Con Iomaire has finally gotten around to recording a solo album.

Music | Interview 37% |  4 Jul 2005
Leaving Certs Ed Power
With attitude and classy songs to burn, David Jones and his Departure bandmates are poised to become the new Kings of Skinny White Boy Pop.

Music | Interview 37% | 29 Apr 1998
C'mon Billie John Walshe
john walshe catches a word with London's latest pop sensation, songstress Billie Myers.

Music | Interview 37% |  1 Feb 2006
González with the wind Ed Power
Steeped in Latin mystery, José González’s tender ballads are set to make him the year’s biggest cross-over success.

Music | Interview 37% | 15 Apr 2004
Bringing it all back home Colm O Hare
Familiar surroundings play a big part in the music of Canadian singer-songwriter Sarah Harmer.

Music | Interview 37% | 22 Jul 1998
See Naples And Die! Barry Glendenning
Karen Ramirez may have hit the big time with her massive hit single ‘Looking For Love’, but, as she tells Barry Glendenning, her heart currently lies not in the Top Of The Pops studio, but in sunny Naples.

Music | Interview 37% |  3 Nov 2006
Sittin' on the dock of the Bray Peter Murphy
Back from exile in Brighton, Fionn Regan is making major waves with his filmic observations on life in a seaside town. Peter Murphy joins him for a promenade down memory lane, and suggests that he might just be the Wicklow Dylan.

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 27 Sep 2005
Denis Denis Tara Brady
On the tear in Edinburgh, Tara Brady discovers French director Claire Denis to be far more accessible and humorous than her film output.

Music | Interview 37% | 24 Jan 2006
Republic Of Lewis Ed Power
Rilo Kiley’s Jenny Lewis has released her first solo record, a plaintive country pop epic that might just be her ticket to the mainstream.

Music | Interview 37% | 23 Nov 2005
Jenny from the top Steve Cummins
Singer-songwriter Jenny Lindfors recorded her debut album four years ago but hated the results so much she's started all over again.

Music | Interview 37% | 28 Sep 2000
Kin Ship Mark Kavanagh
Mark Kavanagh talks to KINOBE about the origins of their acclaimed album, Soundphiles

Music | Interview 37% | 26 Jun 2002
'90s: Lion's daughter Sinead O'Connor
One of Ireland's most revered singers looks back at a turbulent decade during which she was never far from the headlines [pic Myles Claffey]

Music | Interview 37% | 10 Sep 2009
THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT Peter Murphy
hey’re the biggest thing to hit indie-pop in years, with a slew of day-glo hits and a reputation for partying until they drop. Ahead of their Electric Picnic headline slot, MGMT discuss falling out with Nicolas Sarkozy, their new base in sun-dappled Malibu and their work-in-progress new album. words

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 26 Jul 2005
Danny Boy Tara Brady
His father was a giant of cinema but now Danny Huston is carving his own path.

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 17 Sep 1997
a NOVEL approach Barry Glendenning
Not content with being one of the most successful stand-up comics of his generation, sean hughes has once again turned his hand to the world of prose with the publication of his first novel, The Detainees. barry glendenning, for his part, gives it a ringing endorsement of Eh, quite good. The Booker Prize awaits.

Music | Interview 37% | 10 Oct 2007
Rudd Brother Ed Power
A white man inducted into aboriginal culture, 29-year old Australian singer-songwriter Xavier Rudd eschews western-obsessed pop for more indigenous spirits.

Politics | Frontlines 37% | 30 Nov 1994
BLACK AND WHITE AND READ ALL OVER Gerry McGovern
GERRY McGOVERN meets FERGAL KEANE, author of a new book on the new South Africa.

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 24 Jun 2003
Come in number 5, your time’s up Colin Carberry
Glenn Patterson’s novel Number 5 take a hard look at the nuances of Belfast city life.

Music | Interview 37% | 22 Oct 2003
  Phil Udell
Had enough of “PMS, Screaming, ‘Fuck Men!’” bands? well, let us introduce you to Fair Verona, the all-girl Tipperary trio who are flying the flag for melodic alt. rock.

Music | Interview 37% | 23 Aug 2006
Boy bites dog Steve Cummins
Top 20 singles, festival gigs – Boy Kill Boy have come a long way from the East End. But they know where they really want to end up – lovely Mullingar.

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 17 Aug 2009
A Waltz On The Wild Side Tara Brady
Christoph Waltz talks about working with one of Hollywood’s most divisive directors, wooing Cannes and his childhood dreams of moving to Ireland.

Music | Interview 37% | 10 Aug 2009
Go With The Flo Paul Nolan
She’s shaping up to be one of the break-out stars of 2009, with a number one album and a Mercury Prize nomination to her name. We catch up with Florence And The Machine’s Florence Welch, who talks about becoming an overnight sensation, reflects on her bizarre childhood and explains why her most controversial song really isn’t as contentious as it’s made out to be.

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 10 Jul 2009
Fright club Ed Power
They used to be a bit of a joke but, with the release of their fantastic new record, The Horrors are suddenly a band to watch. Faris Badwan talks about stepping out with Peaches Geldof, ditching the freak-show hair and recalls his traumatic childhood experiences on Palestine’s West Bank

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 29 Jan 2009
Bon appetit for destruction Stuart Clark
Michelin star man Dylan McGrath has brought something of a rock ‘n’ roll aesthetic to Irish cooking. In a slap-up feast of an interview, he talks about his West Belfast childhood, kitchen stabbings and why he’s no time for mumsy housewives' choice chefs.

Music | Interview 37% | 29 Jan 2008
A walk on the bogside Jason O'Toole
Girls Aloud’s Nadine Coyle talks about her Derry childhood, drug use in the pop industry and explains why she gets irritated when the band are called “British”.

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 13 Jul 2006
At home with Leo Moran Colm O Hare
For a hardened road dog like Leo Moran of The Sawdoctors, his childhood home in Tuam is not so much a house as a rest-and-recuperation facility.

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 30 Apr 2002
Nick Johnstone Peter Murphy
With A Head Full Of Blue, music journalist Nick Johnstone reveals the harrowing story of his alcohol addiction - not just from first drink to last, but right back to the childhood "faulty wiring" that also led him to cut himself and through to the sometimes difficult process of recovery which has allowed him to reclaim his life

Music | Interview 37% | 24 Mar 1988
Down All The Days Eamonn McCann
Philip Chevron's career has been nothing if not varied. From the early days with the Radiators through his collaborations with people like Agnes Bernelle and right up to his current work with The Pogues, he has proved himself to be a consistently fine songwriter and performer. In the first part of a lengthy and intense interview, he talks to Eamonn McCann about his childhood, his love of Broadway musicals, the Horslips connection, the genesis of the Radiators and his fleeting career as a journalist.

Politics | Frontlines 37% |  2 Jul 1986
The Mary Harney Interview Michael O'Higgins
Mary Harney grew up on a farm in Co. Dublin, experiencing what she herself calls "a normal childhood". Having completed a convent education she studied at Trinity College, and became the first woman auditor of the prestigious Hist. Soc., where she mingled and met with many of the then present and future politicos of the era.

Music | Interview 37% | 12 May 2008
Friday, I'm in love Patrick Freyne
Gavin Friday talks about Disney songs, Shakespeare sonnets, Ferrara films, liking art and reading books.

Music | Interview 37% | 27 May 1998
art rock Patrick Brennan
Having taken their name from one of Picasso's most famous paintings, guernica are aiming to keep Donegal safe for off-kilter power-pop. Interview: patrick brennan.

Hot Features | Interview 37% |  4 Jun 2003
Child’s play Joe Jackson
Bairbre Ni Chaoimh’s new play takes a blackly comic look at the changing status of women in Ireland over 40 years.

Music | Interview 36% | 12 Oct 2000
Through The Looking Glass Joe Jackson
HAZEL O CONNOR brings her new show, Beyond Breaking Glass, to the Dublin Fringe Festival

Music | Interview 36% | 16 Apr 2003
Pianist envy Colin Carberry
How Duke Special aka Peter Wilson came out as a piano player, loud and proud.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 25 Jun 2008
About Adamson Tara Brady
The new installment in the Narnia franchise, Prince Caspian, is burdened by huge commercial expectations. But the film's director, Andrew Adamson, is not letting the pressure get to him.

Music | Interview 36% |  9 Nov 2007
Christy Almighty Adrienne Murphy
His good humour apparently unblunted by years of drug addiction, Aslan’s Christy Dignam talks about heroin, sexual abuse and his belief in the redemptive power of music.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 23 May 2005
The Araki War Tara Brady
From his early punkish, defiantly anti-establishment indie flicks like The Doom Generation and Nowhere to his latest effort, the child sex-abuse drama Mysterious Skin, Gregg Araki has remained the most uncompromising alumnus of the early ‘90s new wave of queer cinema.

Music | Interview 36% | 10 Jul 2006
Roy of the (Irish) rovers Shilpa Ganatra
Lesley Roy was, give or take a few minutes, born on stage. No surprise then that the 19-year-old Jive signing should follow her mother into music.

Music | Interview 36% | 11 Oct 2001
Ave Maria Peter Murphy
With The Commitments, Black Velvet Band, Hothouse Flowers and a range of acting credits already to her name, MARIA DOYLE KENNEDY is finally releasing her debut solo album. PETER MURPHY is charmed

Music | Interview 36% | 22 May 2003
Arc of a diver Peter Murphy
A classical pianist grandmother, bohemian parents and a half-brother in LA legends Love – you could say that Maria McKee was cut out for her job.

Music | Interview 36% | 12 Aug 2002
Troy keen Stephen Rapid
He counts Juliet Turner as a friend and Bruce Springsteen as a fan - and now Troy Campbell wants you to discover him too

Music | Interview 36% |  8 May 2006
My Fair Ladyboy Shilpa Ganatra
Fairuza reek of sexually ambivalent glamour and aren’t adverse to wearing featherboas on stage. Their songs aren’t bad either.

Music | Interview 36% | 10 Oct 2007
Six On The Brain Colin Carberry
Transplanted Scots Six Star Hotel aren’t the sort to cause a song and dance, but that’s not to say they aren’t capable of creating a splash.

Music | Interview 36% | 16 Mar 2007
Paws for thought Colin Carberry
Banjo bangin’ Americana revivalists Cat Malojian give honky-tonk music an Irish twist.

Music | Interview 36% | 28 Sep 2000
Live Mike Siobhan Long
Michael McGoldrick s music might be labelled as trad . But, as SIOBHAN LONG finds out, he s much more unpredictable than that might suggest

Hot Features | Commentary 36% |  2 Mar 2000
Learning To Let Go The Hot Press Newsdesk
BOOTBOY banishes the shame of never having scored a goal in football, and learns to have some sporting fun.

Music | Interview 36% | 17 Jan 2007
Waiting for the siren's call Ed Power
Raised in India and hailed as an heir to Tori Amos, singer-songwriter Nerina Pallot is set to break big in 2007. Just don’t ask her about her appearance on kids’ television.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 25 Aug 2004
Major's Tom Tanya Sweeney
Sony love him, so do the music mags and so will you. Good looks, soulful music, a major label act with an indie heart – how can Tom Baxter go wrong?

Music | Interview 36% | 18 Aug 2004
Major's Tom Tanya Sweeney
Sony love him, so do the music mags and so will you. Good looks, soulful music, a major label act with an indie heart – how can Tom Baxter go wrong?

Music | Interview 36% | 25 Oct 2001
Super Nova Colm O Hare
COLM O'HARE meets the globetrotting singer/songwriter HEATHER NOVA

Music | Interview 36% | 11 Jul 2008
A Lykke Li story Lauren Murphy
She's bang in the middle of the hype storm. No wonder Swedish pop elf Lykke Li is looking so exhausted.

Hot Features | Commentary 36% |  1 Sep 1999
Seeing The Big Picture aka BootBoy
BOOTBOY welcomes the increasingly credible portrayal of gay men in popular culture.

Music | Interview 36% | 25 Oct 2001
Havana second chance Colm O Hare
COLM O’HARE meets the cuban vocalist IBRAHIM FERRER who came out of retirement to find fame with the buena vista social club

Hot Features | Interview 36% |  6 Aug 2003
Lost in the former West5 Peter Murphy
Exiled in America when war erupted in his hometown of Sarajevo, author Aleksandar Hemon taught himself to speak and write english – with stunningly powerful results. Portrait Mick Quinn

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 17 Feb 2003
I wish i could be like Naomi Watts  
There’s more than a few hollywood-based actors who are feeling like that, after her success in Mulholland Drive. interview Tara Brady

Music | Interview 36% | 14 Mar 2006
Singe when you're winning Richard Brophy
Don’t be fooled by Alex Smoke’s glossy techno. Beneath the slick beats and glitchy melodies is an artist with unflinching political views.

Music | Interview 36% | 23 Mar 2004
Young, gifted and techno Barry O Donoghue
French duo The Youngsters are taking up arms to save dance music.

Music | Interview 36% | 28 Feb 2006
Tiga tiga burning bright Barry O Donoghue
Is Tiga underground electronica’s first international superstar?

Music | Interview 36% | 11 Aug 1993
SHERMAN OF THE BOARD Stuart Clark
STUART CLARK trades licks with one of the stars of this year's Guinness Temple Bar Blues Festival, Sherman Robertson

Music | Interview 36% | 30 Apr 2007
Rhyme of the lives Colin Carberry
Border natives The Beat Poets boast a doctor of psychology in their ranks. But their anthemic indie-pop plays to the heart, not the head.

Politics | Hog 36% | 19 Mar 2008
The kids are alright The Whole Hog
Recent violent attacks, such as the horrendous killing of two Polish men, may have involved young people. But that shouldn't lead us to tar an entire generation.

Music | Interview 36% |  6 Oct 2004
Metallica KO Tara Brady
A superb new documentary offers an intriguing portrait of one of the biggest rock bands on the planet. Tara Brady meets the film's director Joe Berlinger (pictured, left with Bruce Sinofsky).

Music | Interview 36% | 25 Jun 1997
True Grit Siobhan Long
NY blueser STEVE JAMES, whose acclaimed album Art And Grit is out now, talks to SIOBHAN LONG

Music | Interview 36% |  1 Feb 2006
The Wainwright stuff Ed Power
The confessional coffee-house rock of Martha Wainwright doesn’t pull any emotional punches.

Music | Interview 36% |  5 Apr 2002
Home truths from abroad Fiona Reid
Experiences of life in London and Dublin inform the new album from Pony Club's Mark Cullen

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 29 Apr 1998
Club Mix The Hot Press Newsdesk
It's a queer world out there, and no mistake. So let's be more integrationist in our approach. By TONIE WALSH

Music | Interview 36% |  2 Apr 1997
Buddy, Can You Spare Me A Group? Joe Jackson
In going back to her roots on her latest album, Nanci Griffith also shines a light on one of the great backing bands of rock n roll Buddy Holly s Crickets. Interview: Joe Jackson.

Music | Interview 36% |  4 Dec 2003
The art of darkness Stuart Clark
Thin Lizzy brought artist Jim Fitzpatrick and band of 2003 The Darkness together for a special Christmas project.

Music | Interview 36% | 10 Sep 2008
Their story begins Lauren Murphy
How an enforced name-change proved fortuitous for Irish indie trio Subplots. Just don't call them post-rock.

Music | Interview 36% | 15 Mar 2001
Reservoir Songdogs Siobhan Long
Siobhán Long catches up with the globetrotting CALICO

Music | Interview 36% | 27 Apr 2000
Getting Fixed Up George Byrne
From the ashes of BAWL, a new band, FIXED STARS, has arisen. And they re even better. Frontman MARK CULLEN tells GEORGE BYRNE about posing in bordellos, singing songs about wife-beating at the BBC Radio One Roadshow, and how he got to write a song with Al Green!

Music | Interview 36% | 16 Dec 2002
Ghetto blasters Hannah Hamilton
Lewd lyrics, naked drummers and a dubious penchant for kids’ telly. Hannah Hamilton enters the strange and jazz-fuelled world of Little Ghetto Boys

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 19 Mar 2003
Christina Noble Peter Murphy
She’s no saint. She swears and smokes and doesn’t think she’ll go to heaven. But the one-time Dublin street kid has used the nightmare of her own past life to help make unlikely dreams come true for abandoned children across the world. Peter Murphy hears her extraordinary story.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 13 Oct 2005
Weisz and virtue Tara Brady
Cambridge graduate Rachel Weisz is far from your conveyor-belt English rose.

Music | Interview 36% |  5 Jul 2004
Revenge of the NERDs Colm O Hare
The producers of choice for everyone from Justin Timberlake to Jay-Z, Pharrell Williams and Chad Hugo are also earning plaudits for their rock and hip-hop influenced side project, N*E*R*D

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 15 Apr 1998
The Boy Done Good Stuart Clark
If it wasn't for the attentions of the gutter press, NICK HORNBY's current lifestyle would be pretty much blemish-free. His new novel, About A Boy, is racking up the sales figures with Overmars-like speed; he's just sold the film rights for it to Robert De Niro for #1.8m; and to cap it all, his beloved Arsenal are poised to do the league and cup double. Tape: STUART CLARK. Pix: Mick Quinn

Music | Interview 36% | 25 May 2005
At Home With...Steve Wall Jackie Hayden
After a gap of half a lifetime, Steve Wall is back living in the house he grew up in and learning to love DIY. He also recalls his days as a greyhound. Photography by Cathal Dawson

Music | Interview 36% | 11 Aug 2004
The Wainright Stuff Tanya Sweeney
Famous dad, famous mum, at one time wanted to be Dorothy in The Wizard Of Oz – but Rufus Wainwright has grown up to be very much his own man.

Music | Interview 36% |  9 Mar 2005
Feeder The World Phil Udell
Being described as "the new Keane" might bother some people, but not Grant Nichols who's content in the knowledge that his band have made the first great rock'n'roll record of 2005.l

Music | Interview 36% | 11 May 2000
Ray s Like This Peter Murphy
Chief Kink RAY DAVIES talks to PETER MURPHY about his spoken word show, being tagged as The Godfather of Britpop and being banned by the BBC.

Music | Interview 36% | 27 Sep 2007
The Boys From 'Brasil Stephen Errity
From starting out playing accordions to supporting the La’s and parting ways with their record label, Hybrasil have a lot of stories to tell.

Music | Interview 36% | 19 Apr 2004
War is over, if you want it Kim Porcelli
The Von Bondies were finally vindicated when Jack White pleaded guilty to assaulting their lead singer last month. Oh, and they’ve just released one of the albums of the year.

Hot Features | Interview 36% |  3 Sep 2008
Will Power Tara Brady
Comedy genius Will Ferrell turns out to be just as funny in the flesh as he is on screen, albeit far droller. Let's hear it for the world's greatest living Longford man.

Politics | Frontlines 36% |  6 Nov 2006
Madonna reignites the adoption debate Colm O Hare
Madge’s controversial adoption of a Malian child has focused attention on the often murky world of third world adoption.

Music | Interview 36% | 13 Sep 2001
Girls from Brazil Phil Udell
PHIL UDELL catches up with NELLY FURTADO before her concert at Slane with U2

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 19 Feb 2002
Hope, heaven & hell Peter Murphy
Peter Murphy speaks to South African writer Chris Hope and discovers a strange link between fashion and fascism

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 10 Nov 2003
The Revolutions Will Be Screened Tara Brady
The final instalment of The Matrix is on the way. Laurence Fishburne explains why he has mixed feelings about morphing into Morpheus one last time.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 27 Sep 2002
Math’s entertainment Stephen Robinson
Mirthmaker, maths teacher and martial arts expert Dermot McMorrow explains his theory of comedy. baffled? You will be

Music | Interview 36% | 28 Sep 2000
Captain Fantastic Kim Porcelli
Eaten alive first time round, DANIEL FIGGIS Skipper has finally found a receptive audience at the second attempt. Kim Porcelli hears how

Music | Interview 36% |  2 Aug 2001
Red nose day Eamon Sweeney
EAMON SWEENEY takes a trip with Irish and Scottish über-group THE REINDEER SECTION

Hot Features | Interview 36% |  1 Nov 2002
Extraordinary joe Tara Brady
Actor Peter Mullan first achieved mainstream success with his brilliant leading role in 1998’s My Name Is Joe, for which he received a best actor award at Cannes. His latest project concerns the abuse of young women by the Catholic Church in the Magdalen Sisters, which he wrote and directed

Hot Features | Commentary 36% |  8 Dec 1999
Sheepskin Coats And 'Early Doors' George Byrne
GEORGE BYRNE meets PAUL WHITEHOUSE to talk about a new video from one of the comedian's funniest creations - Ron Manager.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 30 Mar 2006
O'Leary could be next for sack Tony Cascarino
The Aston Villa manager is in danger of joining Mick McCarthy in the P45-waving manager's club.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 16 Jun 2003
The price of an education Peter Murphy
What happens when good samaritans go bad? Screenwriter and novelist Richard Price on the dark side of altruism

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 23 Oct 2007
Karl Makes A Mark Jason O'Toole
Karl MacDermott used to be the next-big thing in comedy until his stand-up career didn’t pan out as expected. Now he’s back in the public eye with a semi-autobiographical first novel.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 10 Sep 2008
Oh we do like to be beside the seaside Jason O'Toole
Seasick Steve is a former hobo who once called Kurt Cobain a neighbour and, in his 60s, now finds himself acclaimed as one of folk's hottest 'new' acts.

Hot Features | Interview 36% |  5 Nov 2002
Tommy Tiernan – basted not wasted The Mixed Grill
Comedian and all-round-nice-bloke Tommy Tiernan is back with a new show on RTE, a live video/DVD for Christmas and a series of brand new live concert shows around the country this autumn. We invited him to submit to the inquisition that is the hotpress.com mixed grill and he was only too happy to be hauled over the charcoal

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 15 Aug 2003
The Goofy Girl That Everyone Loves Tara Brady
As the lesbian witch willow, Alyson Hannigan was the star turn in Buffy The Vampire Slayer. she’s also the lead female in the ongoing teen comedy caper that is American Pie.

Hot Features | Interview 36% |  7 Mar 2002
Connelly's station Tara Brady
Tara Brady takes a closer look at the career of Oscar nominee Jennifer Connelly

Hot Features | Interview 36% |  3 Aug 2006
At home with Ann Marie Kelly Jackie Hayden
“Come up and see my snails sometime,” is hardly the best chat-up line ever coined, but an undaunted Jackie Hayden decides to brave all and call on Today FM jockette Ann-Marie Kelly.

Hot Features | Interview 36% |  6 Aug 2002
Michel Houellebecq Olaf Tyaransen
His novel "Atomised" was a controversial pornographic parable and its follow-up platforme led to him being denounced by Muslims and going into hiding, while his wife endured a nervous breakdown. Notoriously difficult, the County Cork-based French author here discusses – between pauses – monogamy, open marriages, drugs, politics, literature, the World Cup and his desire to be a wolf

Music | Interview 36% | 28 Apr 1999
American Pie Colm O Hare
A feast of good music is promised for this year s KILKENNY COUNTRY ROOTS WEEKEND with RODNEY CROWELL just the icing on the crust. COLM O HARE reports.

Music | Interview 36% | 25 Jan 1995
Vidal Statistics Niall Crumlish
SHAMPOO are famous for looking cool, sounding cool and throwing large, heavy objects at interviewers who aren’t up to scratch. Risking his life for his readers: NIALL CRUMLISH.

Hot Features | Interview 36% |  7 Oct 2004
The dog's bollocks Tara Brady
Having come to prominence as a pancaked drag queen in Cowboys And Angels, actor Allen Leech gets to massage canine testicles in Paddy Breathnach’s new film.

Music | Interview 36% | 30 Nov 1994
REALITY BITES Bill Graham
When a police investigation was launched into Michael Jackson’s alleged activities with Jordan Chandler, the King of Pop’s media image went from Peter Pan into the fire. In his new biography christopher andersen becomes the spokesman for Wacko’s degeneration offering a damning portrait of the real man behind the mask. Report: Bill Graham.

Music | Interview 36% |  8 Feb 2007
And now the end is blare Ed Power
Klaxons have got glowstick-waving fans, yes, but really, there’s so much more to this band than retro-beats, explains frontman Jamie Reynolds. For instance, have you heard the one about his spiritual healer grandfather.

Music | Interview 36% |  5 Nov 2007
Wood on the tracks Peter Murphy
Ronnie Wood reveals that his autobiography, a rather entertaining account of his hair-raising life as the 'new boy' in the Stones, was a toil of love to write.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 27 Feb 2008
A lass act Jason O'Toole
She claims to wander about in the nude in her spare time. But British model-turned-TV presenter Jayne Middlemiss is fully clothed and respectable when Hot Press pays her a visit.

Music | Interview 36% |  6 Jan 2006
Saint Antony - patron of lost causes Peter Murphy
Annual article: The tortured torch-songs of Antony & The Johnsons captured our hearts this year. But the singer remains gloriously enigmatic.

Music | Interview 36% | 12 Jan 1994
BOO MANIA! Lorraine Freeney
After five years of hard graft and dedicated shoegazing, The Boo Radleys came up with Giant Steps, an album so ambitious in scope that it’s been perched at the top spot of many end-of-year polls and has seen them heralded as the new Best Band In Britain. Interview: LORRAINE FREENEY

Music | Interview 36% | 11 Aug 2008
Black Kids on the block The Hot Press Newsdesk
'80s-influenced indie stars BLACK KIDS have been taking flak from message board snobs before their Bernard Butler-produced debut album has even been released. The crime? Being too popular.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 17 Aug 2007
Band of gypsies Peter Murphy
Award-winning Kiwi journalist Garth Cartwright has produced a vivid insight into Romany musical history and culture.

Music | Interview 36% |  4 Aug 2006
What's up Tiger Lily? Steve Cummins
Fame has come remarkably quickly for Lily Allen, with her sensational debut album Alright, Still hitting the No.1 spot in the week of its release. But, with babysitting for Bez on her CV, anything is a breeze – and the bolshie young singer is taking it all in her stride. Plus, having lived in Ireland for a number of years, she has more than a few interesting tales to tell. Just don’t ask her about Bob Geldof...

Hot Features | Interview 36% |  3 Jul 2006
Bai-lingual Tara Brady
As well as being a rising actress and Playboy cover girl, Dumplings starlet Bai Ling has at least eight spirits currently inhabiting her body, one of whom is so shy it insists she has sex with the lights off. Alrighty then.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 13 Mar 2006
The other Oscar Kimberly Mack
While all eyes in Hollywood were trained on the Oscars, Ireland’s movie elite gathered in downtown LA to honour this country’s achievements in film.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 15 Sep 2003
Irish Cinema Goes Guerilla Tara Brady
A few years ago it would’ve been impossible to make a movie like goldfish memory, but thanks to digital technology and film board funding director Liz Gill is celebrating a box-office hit.

Music | Interview 36% | 16 Jan 1986
I'M BACK AND I'M BEAUTIFUL! Damian Corless
 

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 12 Sep 2006
Movies and shakers Patrick Gleeson
When not sleeping late or trying to score free beer, students like nothing better than to kick back and watch a movie. In fact, it is thanks to students that many films have gained a permanent place in the pantheon. Here are some stude faves from the annals.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 14 Jul 2003
Green around the gills Tara Brady
Ang Lee mightn’t have been the most likely candidate to put the jolly green giant on the big screen, but he has rendered Stan Lee’s Incredible Hulk as a greek tragedy.

Music | Interview 36% |  8 Jul 1998
Filling In The Blanks Colm O Hare
The task of exhuming a number of folk legend Woody Guthrie’s unused lyrics and setting them to music would be a daunting prospect for most artists – but not Billy Bragg, the self-styled Bard of Barking. The guitar-slinging socialist has teamed up with acclaimed US country-rockers Wilco to do just that. Interview: Colm O’Hare.

Music | Interview 35% | 17 Nov 2009
Different Strokes Edwin McFee
Spare a thought for Julian Casablancas. His bandmates having flown the nest to do their own side-projects, he’s confessed to feeling, well, at a bit of a loss these days. To fill those empty days, the lead singer for The Strokes has embarked on a solo career of his own. Edwin McFee catches up with the frontman on the eve of the release of Phrazes For The Young and finds out all about the record that he never thought he’d make. Plus, Casablancas also reveals why he doesn’t miss his old sparring partners one bit.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 23 Jul 2001
The Little Bed Fiona Reid
Notorious in her native China for her sexually graphic novel Shanghai Baby, Wei Hui looks sure to upset the authorities even more with her next literary outing. Fiona reid meets the controversial young author. photography: cathal dawson

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 11 Oct 2001
Girl on film Craig Fitzsimons
Moviehouse looks at the career of Jean-Pierre Jeunet, whose new film Amelie is released this month.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 20 Aug 1997
the wisdom of SOLOMON Colm O Hare
With Solomon s Seal, MOLLY McCLOSKEY has emerged as a potent literary force. Interview: Colm O HARE. Pix: CATHAL DAWSON

Music | Interview 35% | 16 Dec 1996
I was so much older then, i m younger than that now Siobhan Long
Six albums to the good and only now has andy white discovered his teenage years. siobhan long catches up with a man catching up with his own adolescence.

Music | Interview 35% | 21 Jun 2001
Keeping The Faith Eamon Sweeney
EAMON SWEENEY meets part-time recluse, brother of Dido, dance floor rebel and the brains behind FAITHLESS – ROLLO ARMSTRONG

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 24 Nov 1999
Go East, Young Man Craig Fitzsimons
CRAIG FITZSIMONS speaks to young Irish director DAMIEN O'DONNELL, whose debut feature East Is East takes a controversial look at Pakistani immigrant culture.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 26 Oct 2000
John Banville Joe Jackson
With a new novel Eclipse published to universal acclaim, the enigmatic Irish writer emerges from the deep gloomy cavern he inhabits to discuss art, sex, love, hate, humour, death and the battle of the sexes. Interview: JOE JACKSON. Portraits of the author: CATHAL DAWSON

Music | Interview 35% | 26 Jun 2006
The gentlemen rockers Tara Brady
Their debut album Hopes And Fears launched a host of hit singles, going on to become one of the most successful British records of the past five years. But, their indie background notwithstanding, Keane have still been dismissed by some self-styled aficionados as just too nice to be considered real rock'n'rollers. "If only people knew," says lead singer Tom Chaplin.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  6 Mar 2007
Cause and Effect Olaf Tyaransen
To some, he’s the last true socialist left in Ireland. In a forthright interview Michael D. Higgins reflects on Bono's knighthood, expresses his horror at America’s conduct in the Middle East and explains why the PDs are bad for Ireland

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  2 Mar 2007
Cause and effect Olaf Tyaransen
To some, he’s the last true socialist left in Ireland. In a forthright interview Michael D. Higgins reflects on Bono's knighthood, and explains why the PDs are bad for Ireland.

Music | Interview 35% | 14 Apr 2005
Forever Young Ed Power
Neil Young that is. Up and coming Dublin rockers Hal are earning serious kudos for their winning take on classic ’70s rock sounds. And despite dark murmurings of artistic plagiarism, they sure as hell aren’t about to apologise for it, as they tell Ed Power. Photography by Emily Quinn.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 11 Jan 2006
Rat smoothies and pixilated penises Stuart Clark
A clean, harmless online voyage through the weird, wonderful, wacko world in which we're lucky enough to find ourselves.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 10 Sep 2007
The freshman cometh Craig Fitzsimons
A forthright interview with the new Union of Students in Ireland president Richard Morrisroe.

Music | Interview 35% |  8 May 2009
Juxtaposed with you Peter Murphy
It’s hard to think of two artists less alike than MUNDY and LAURA IZIBOR. But they do have one thing in common: they’re Irish outsiders who have overcome challenging circumstances and, with new albums under their belts, are set to sweep all before them in 2009.

Music | Interview 35% | 10 May 2001
SOULMAN Barry O Donoghue
Richard Brophy meets Firstborn mainman and feel no pain DJ Oisin Lunny. Portraits: Myles Claffey

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 15 Sep 1999
Starman Olaf Tyaransen
Ireland s most popular novelist on republicanism, death threats, the Catholic Church and his new novel. By Olaf Tyaransen. Pics: Cathal Dawson.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 21 Mar 2007
Affirmative action Colin Carberry
Snow Patrol and Ash are just some of the North’s rock ambassadors who have given their backing to the Oh Yeah Music Centre, a state-of-the-art multi-media development which will put Belfast on the international musical map.

Music | Interview 35% | 27 Sep 2007
The Past Is Another Country Adrienne Murphy
The normally reclusive singer-songwriter talks about his remarkable life and times and the harrowing personal journey that led to his new album.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 21 Feb 2008
What's it all about, Sophie? Jason O'Toole
Most famous for the naked billboard campaign she did for Opium perfume, the granddaughter of Roald Dahl has since matured into a writer of note.

Music | Interview 35% | 20 Sep 2007
Kiley Watch The Stars Ed Power
Rilo Kiley have been hailed as the new Fleetwood Mac, and not just for their exquisite soft-rock shimmer.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  5 Sep 2003
Colm O'Gorman Jackie Hayden
One of the victims of the paedophile priest Sean Fortune – who took his own life before he could be brought for trial – Colm O’Gorman has since achieved national prominence as an eloquent spokesman and activist on all issues relating to sexual abuse. here he talks about his own experiences, the roles of the church and the courts and need for parents to take seriously the distress of young children.

Music | Interview 35% | 29 Apr 2002
White lies Stuart Clark
Stuart Clark hears the confessions of Natalie Imbruglia and talks of celebrity boyfriends, Bono and chocolate mousse

Music | Interview 35% | 31 Oct 2006
Malt the earth Tara Brady
With blithe disregard for typecasting, Hot Press brings Scots nu-folk troubadour James Yorkston on a whiskey tasting expedition.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 31 Mar 2008
Scream Queen Tara Brady
She spent years struggling with bit-parts and support roles. But now Naomi Watts is a Hollywood player, in the same league as her friend Nicole Kidman.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  2 Dec 1996
Master McGrath Liam Fay
The books of author PATRICK McGRATH depict insanity and psychological breakdown with a detail and accuracy that are second to none. LIAM FAY meets the mental hospital worker-turned-writer to discuss the very particular nature(s) of madness. Pic: CATHAL DAWSON.

Music | Interview 35% |  9 Aug 1995
I Suppose A Shag Would Be Out Of The Question? Joe Jackson
t certainly would, Joe. But you can have a toot on my megaphone if you like! Gavin Friday discusses the finer points of sexual politics not to mention the post-Freudian subtext to his stunning new meisterwork Shag Tobacco with Dr Joe Jackson. Our man in the white coat concluded: Gavin s time has come. But is the world finally read

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 17 Feb 2000
The Dark Stuff George Byrne
If I ever attempt to write the Irish novel please feel free to kill me . Best-selling thriller writer JOHN CONNOLLY assures GEORGE BYRNE that he only has murder and mayhem on his mind.

Hot Features | Commentary 35% | 28 Jul 1993
TANGO TANGO Fay Wolftree
SHOW ME a poster bearing the entwined silhouettes of two angular dancers accompanied by the words "Tango", "Sultry sensuous passion" and "Direct from Argentina" and the outcome is fairly inevitable.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  8 Feb 2006
Phoenix from the flames Tara Brady
Raised on the road by evangelical hippies, Joaquin Phoenix has overcome the tragic death of his brother, River, to become one of Hollywood’s most brooding leading men.

Music | Interview 35% | 24 Nov 1999
This Is Aslan George Byrne
GEORGE BYRNE joins the stars of stage turned stars of screen at the CORK FILM FESTIVAL as one band's star-crossed story takes another unexpected turn. Snaps: GEORGE BYRNE.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  2 Dec 1996
Master McGrath Liam Fay
The books of author PATRICK McGRATH depict insanity and psychological breakdown with a detail and accuracy that are second to none. LIAM FAY meets the mental hospital worker-turned-writer to discuss the very particular nature(s) of madness. Pic: CATHAL DAWSON.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 22 Jan 1997
BUILDING ON REALITY Liam Fay
Fact, fiction and hard graft form the inspirations for DERMOT HEALY s acclaimed memoir The Bend For Home. LIAM FAY meets an author who moves rocks, stones and words. Pic: CATHAL DAWSON

Music | Interview 35% | 17 Oct 2005
Moore,Moore,Moore Greg McAteer
National treasure Christy Moore returns to the fray with a new studio album.

Music | Interview 35% | 11 Mar 2004
Feeding frenzy Sarah McQuaid
Why the media were wrong in their assessment of Sharon Shannon’s court case; the latest musical venture from producer, director and PR ace, Mary McPartlan, plus the usual round-up of news from the world of folk and traditional music.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 11 Sep 2007
Agent Cooper Tara Brady
Having come to prominence as an Oscar-standard character actor in films such as American Beauty, Adaptation and Capote, straight-shooting Chris Cooper now plays America’s worst ever spy in Breach

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 11 Mar 2003
Telling the dancer from the dance Helena Mulkearns
For his new novel, Dubliner Colum McCann has set himself the challenge of writing a fictionalised biography of Rudolph Nureyev.

Music | Interview 35% | 18 Jan 2005
Return of the Kings Phil Udell
They arrived on the scene almost two years ago, determined not to let their unorthodox upbringing and dazzling cheekbones overshadow their music. Now, with their supremely accomplished second album, 2004’s Aha Shake Heartbreak, Kings Of Leon have established themselves among the rock’n’roll elite – from which position they’ve begun to enjoy the perks of rock stardom. “I’m actually getting laid now,” a relieved Caleb Followill admits. words Phil Udell

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 31 Mar 2004
Walter Yetnikoff: the HP interview Peter Murphy
The wild rise and fall of the coke-snorting, heavy boozing, rampantly horny music biz mogul who knew Dylan, Jagger, Jackson, Springsteen and Streisand better than most. And now he’s ready to tell all.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 26 Apr 2006
Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Russian roulette is back Rory Hearne
Those who claim nuclear power can help wean Ireland off its oil dependency clearly have not learned from the mistakes of the past.

Politics | Frontlines 35% |  3 Mar 1999
Hero, Villain Or Fool? Niall Stanage
A new book attempts to shed light on the life and violent death of ROBERT NAIRAC, one of the northern conflict s most mysterious victims. But, as NIALL STANAGE reports, it is unlikely that the whole story will ever emerge.

Music | Interview 35% |  5 Oct 1994
Fruit of the Heart Cathy Dillon
Since Dolores O'Riordan appeared on the cover of Hot Press at the beginning of the year, her life has changed dramatically on both a personal and professional level. Not only has she starred in the Wedding Of The Year, but she's also sustained a serious leg injury, appeared on the Late Late show, and became a dab hand at dealing with media begrudgery. In between all this, The Cranberries found time to record a new album, No Need To Argue. Interview: Cathy Dillon.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 13 Apr 2000
TALL TALES Peter Murphy
Rock bands, a brain haemorrhage, surviving cancer, and now a successful career as both a novelist and TV producer. FERDIA MacANNA s life has been nothing if not eventful. He talks to Peter Murphy.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  1 Sep 1999
Generation (Media) Terrorist Barry Glendenning
Despite being peerless at his chosen profession, CHRIS MORRIS has been sacked from more jobs than most people will have in a lifetime. He announced the death of Michael Heseltine on live radio, was responsible for a debate about non-existent drugs in the House of Commons and once screamed Christ s fat cock! at Cliff Richard during an interview. BARRY GLENDENNING examines the career of the broadcaster commonly regarded as Britain s foremost media satirist.

Politics | Frontlines 35% |  9 Feb 1994
Are you coming out tonight? Emma Donoghue
EMMA DONOGHUE issues an invitation to Ireland’s closet gays and lesbians. You have nothing to lose but your chains (sorry, we’ll read that again...)

Music | Interview 35% | 14 Jul 1993
Making Headlines Gerry McGovern
They came out of Ballyfermot Rock School,now they are capable of rocking the world! Gerry Mc Govern talks to a band who had the good sense to think of a name that was made for headlines.....flexihead!

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 27 Mar 2006
Back from the Thai-life again Olaf Tyaransen
In which our columnist returns home from Thailand to find a distinct lack of fatted calf slaughterings enacted in his honour.

Hot Features | Commentary 35% | 12 Apr 2001
Everything must go Kim Porcelli
Artist Michael Landy - this year's favourite for the Turner Prize - tells Kim Porcelli about the two-week process of destroying all that you can leave behind

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 24 May 2004
Hot Press interview: Neil Jordan Olaf Tyaransen
It’s been ten years since his last novel, but Neil Jordan has now reprised his role as one of Ireland’s finest contemporary prose writers with the dark gothic drama, Shade. In a wide-ranging interview with Olaf Tyaransen the Oscar-winning writer/director discusses the challenges of literary craftsmanship, swimming with sharks in Hollywood, working with Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt, his disinterest in celebrity and why Ireland continues to be his preferred place of residence.

Music | Interview 35% | 13 Aug 2003
Sons Of A Preacher Man Stuart Clark
How do four clean cut, church-going kids turn into one of the hottest rock ’n’ roll acts on the planet? Kings Of Leon explain all.

Politics | Frontlines 35% |  8 Jun 2009
The State is still failing us Jason O'Toole
It was 1985 when Bruce Arnold first wrote about the child abuse scandal in Ireland. In a powerful new book on The Irish Gulag, he is hugely critical of the efforts of the State as well as the Church, accusing them of conspiracy.

Music | Interview 35% | 19 Mar 2004
What Katie did next Danielle Brigham
From studying at the Brit School of Performing Arts and providing backing vocals for Westlife, to her Terry Wogan-facilitated assault on the charts and subsequent elevation to bona-fide star status, former Belfast resident Katie Melua has packed an enormous amount into her 19 years.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 26 May 1999
The Needle and the Damage Done Adrienne Murphy
The Junk yard: Voices From An Irish Prison is the title of a powerful new collection of writings by inmates of Mountjoy Prison. ADRIENNE MURPHY hears how the pen has replaced the spike for one former inmate, PENNER, and also talks to the anthology s editor, MARSHA HUNT.

Music | Interview 35% | 19 Nov 2009
The L Word Olaf Tyaransen
He's gone from bashing out Brel covers in pokey Dublin clubs to crooning 'New York, New York' while gazing at the Manhattan skyline.For his latest project, the wonderful story so far. Jack L has pushed the boundaries yet again by collaborating with up and coming Irish Novelist Anna McPartlin. Here they talk to Hot Press about their intriguing hook-up and explain how your career can lead you to some very strange places...

Music | Interview 35% |  7 Jun 2007
Things that go thump in the white Peter Murphy
As The White Stripes prepare to unleash another work of scuzz-bucket genius, frontman Jack White talks about his Catholic upbringing and explains why, as a teenager in blue collar Detroit, he fell hopelessly in love with the blues.

Music | Interview 35% |  8 Jun 2006
The grime of their lives Peter Murphy
From the ashes of The Libertines comes Dirty Pretty Things, Carl Barat's new band. But can Pete Doherty's old sparring partner escape the legacy of his old group?

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 21 Mar 2005
Temporarily Thairish Olaf Tyaransen
Intrepid explorer Olaf Tyaransen stops scratching his arse long enough to detail his ongoing struggle with mosquito bites, view a DVD package of Tsunami footage and inadvertently attend a Thai funeral.

Music | Interview 35% | 29 Mar 2001
THE DRINK TALKING Olaf Tyaransen
Shane MacGowan is not happy with the newly published A DRINK WITH SHANE MacGOWAN. for a start, it should be called Several drinks with Shane MacGowan, he points out. Plus there's a lot in it that's "garbled, dodgy and well-suspect". and on top of that, he wouldn't even stand over SOME of HIS OWN opinions AS expressed in the book. in fact, if shane had his way he'd "burn every fucking copy". Olaf Tyaransen tries to get the record straight while, inevitably, getting the drinks in. photography: Mick Quinn

Hot Features | Commentary 35% |  1 Dec 1993
BRAND'S NEW BAG Liam Fay
With her stinging one-liners and droll, deadpan delivery, JO BRAND has established herself as the Queen of British comedy. In the run up to her Dublin appearance, she talks about men, booze, cakes and Gary Bushell to LIAM FAY, and explains why she would eventually like to become an MP.

Music | Interview 35% | 30 May 2003
An air-raising adventure Jackie Hayden
Ryan Show insiders reveal what goes into making a long-running, successful and exciting radio experience

Music | Interview 35% |  6 Jan 2004
2 Sticks and a Drum Andy Darlington
At the end of a year which saw (most of) Fleetwood Mac reunited, on CD and stage, drummer Mick Fleetwood recounts the story of a legendary band and the making of a classic album – Rumours.

Music | Interview 35% | 27 May 1998
The Immaculate Collection Liam Fay
Undiscovered genius, ahoy! liam fay finds Pierce TurneR still struggling for the recognition his rich talent deserves. And to coincide with the release of his own Best Of, he asks Turner to compile the album of his dreams.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 18 Dec 2003
Best and worst of 2003 Tara Brady
Craig Fitzsimons and Tara Brady nominate the best and worst movies of the year.

Music | Interview 35% | 17 Nov 1993
Always look on the dark side of life Gerry McGovern
From the early excesses of the Birthday Party through meisterwerks like The Good Son to his new release, Live Seeds, Nick Cave has spent nearly fifteen years probing those crevices of the human psyche that few care, or even dare, to venture into. Here, in a highly personal, in-depth interview, Gerry McGovern grills the god of Goth about his ambivalence towards and obsession with religion, his love of dysfunctional people, his thoughts on the past and his hope for the future, oh, and how to reconcile life as an internationally renowned icon of doom with being a mummy’s boy! (Only joking, Nick!).

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 31 Jul 2007
Kid A Tara Brady
He's Hollywood's newest golden boy but that's not to say Transformers star Shia Labeof doesn't have to obey the call of nature from time to time.

Music | Interview 35% | 10 Aug 2009
Whatever Happened To The Likely Pads? Stuart Clark
It’s no rest for the wicket, as Stuart Clark gets bowled over by the DUCKWORTH LEWIS METHOD. Musical odd-couple Neil Hannon and Thomas Walsh explain why they decided to record a musical homage to cricket and talk about hanging out with Blur’s Damon Albarn, the Governor of the Bank of England and Sir Tim Rice.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 26 Jun 2008
Special EXTENDED web version: The Fine Art Of Surfing Peter Murphy
With his surfing fable Breath, virtuoso Australian writer Tim Winton has delivered one of the novels of the year.

Music | Interview 35% |  1 Apr 1998
Talking Blues Peter Murphy
Harmonica virtuoso DON BAKER has been busy recently adding another string to his bow, in the form of an acting career which has so far seen him work with Jim Sheridan and Richard Attenborough. And in between takes he s even managed to put the finishing touches to his latest album, Just Don Baker. Interview: PETER MURPHY. Pics: cathal dawson

Music | Interview 35% |  1 Oct 1997
damn right he?s got THE BLUES Siobhan Long
SIOBHAN LONG meets Stockholm-based bluesman ERIC BIBB, who won friends and influenced people aplenty at the recent Guinness Blues Festival in Dublin.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 25 Jun 1997
Jong, Gifted & Back Joe Jackson
It may be that she will forever be associated with the Zipless Fuck, but if her new book, Of Blessed Memory, takes off like Fear Of Flying, erica jong could yet become synonymous with another hot erotic scenario, The Three Slipperies. Still creating controversy after all these years, the author talks feminism, Judaism, rock n roll, fashion and but, of course sex, with Joe Jackson. Pix: cathal dawson

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 10 Jul 2009
Death becomes them Stuart Clark
The first time The Killers played Oxegen they fretted whether anyone would turn up to see them. Now they’re sweeping in to headline the main stage. They talk to us about being chased by papparazi, growing up in Middle America and sharing a bill with Bono and, er, Gary Barlow

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 14 Dec 2001
Mark Durkan – the Hot Press interview Joe Jackson
As the new leader of the SDLP and Deputy First Minister in Northern Ireland, MARK DURKAN will have plenty to occupy his mind in 2002. Here he talks about the early death of his father, politics and paramilitaries in the North, the Dublin/Monaghan bombings, his opposition to Sellafield and membership of Greenpeace – and what Mo Mowlam might have piped into the Good Friday talks! Words: JOE JACKSON

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 30 Apr 2008
Miss World Is Not Enough Jason O'Toole
It’s almost five years since Rosanna Davison first burst into the limelight, winning the Miss World contest in China.

Music | Interview 35% |  8 Mar 2004
Auf herr rocker The Hot Press Newsdesk
Melissa Auf Der Maur, the former Hole and Smashing Pumpkins bassist, on working with Courtney Love and Billy Corgan, and finding her own space in the male locker room. Interview by Peter Murphy.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 21 Jan 1998
Too Long In Exile Liam Fay
LIAM FAY talks to writer TIMOTHY O GRADY and photographer STEVE PYKE about their new book, I Could Read The Sky, which chronicles the lives of quiet desperation lived by the forgotten members of London s Irish community.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  4 Jul 2005
By Gum! Olaf Tyaransen
A trip to Singapore proves to be a little sticky.

Music | Interview 35% | 19 Jul 2001
All About Eve Nadine O Regan
Nadine O’Regan meets no-nonsense rap star Eve and discusses Dr Dre, ‘doing shit’ and stripping

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 10 Nov 2005
The Bang's All Here Tara Brady
They've had their share of troubles but now arch Hollywood bad boy Robert Downey Jr. and Val Kilmer are back on the A-list - and fronting a movie together.

Music | Interview 35% |  8 Sep 1993
BON VOYAGES Stuart Clark
Half way through his band's massive world tour, JON BON JOVI takes time out to beam good vibes and good health at a frankly envious STUART CLARK.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 22 Jan 1997
THE ABUSER ABUSED Richard Balls
When PETER O CONNELL (not his real name) was charged with the molestation of two young boys in Kilkenny and Waterford in 1994, his statement to Gardai revealed for the first time, his own horrific saga of sexual abuse, and resulted in the conviction of a priest who had ostensibly taken him under his care. With full access to court documents, RICHARD BALLS reports on the case of a 33-year-old with a mental age of 12 who, for much of his grim, institutionalised life, had been in the words of the judge who sentenced him to 18 months imprisonment more sinned against than sinning .

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 17 Jan 2001
Bruce Robinson Peter Murphy
Fourteen years on and people still come up to BRUCE ROBINSON and quote chunks of Withnail & I to his face. But if you don t know more about this talented, opinionated, chain-smoking, wine-guzzling writer/director, then that may be because, to put it at its mildest, he and Hollywood have never seen eye to eye. PETER MURPHY meets the angry older man

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 12 Jan 2006
Corporate takeover Rory Hearne
Corporations are now targeting the young – in our schools, of all places.

Music | Interview 35% |  2 Nov 1994
Give Pierce A Chance Liam Fay
While commercial success hasn't exactly come a-knockin' on his door, Pierce Turner, in stoical mood, tells Liam Fay why he's not all that bothered at the relative lack of lolly rolling in but how with his new live album Manana In Manhattan just released, the wily Wexford wizard believes his time will come.

Politics | Frontlines 35% |  2 Sep 2002
The man with the calcified heart Peter Murphy
Dirk Whittenborn started his writing career on the cult us show saturday night live in the 1970s when the hedonistic, cocaine-fuelled lifestyle claimed the talents of many of his contemporaries, including John Belushi. Whittenborn survived - but only after brutal heart surgery.

Music | Interview 35% |  3 Apr 2007
Mourning has broken Tara Brady
In an exclusive interview, Yoko Oko talks about being the world’s most loathed woman and explains why it’s time she started living for herself.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 22 Jun 2000
The Faith And The Fury Niall Stanage
SUSAN McKAY has just published a startling book about Northern Protestants. Here, NIALL STANAGE meets the Dublin-based journalist and, below, relates his own experiences of life as a Belfast-born Prod. Portraits: Cathal Dawson

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 31 Aug 2007
Portrait of the artist Olaf Tyaransen
Graham Knuttel talks about his fight with the bottle, his friendship with Sylvester Stallone and why he doesn’t want to be surrounded by his own paintings.

Politics | Frontlines 35% |  8 Jul 1998
When He Became She Adrienne Murphy
For one day only, ADRIENNE MURPHY’s boyfriend GAVIN HARTE decided to go where Dustin Hoffman had gone before in Tootsie, and metamorphose into a woman – with the help of the staff at a Phibsboro establishment that specialises in such radical makeovers. How did it look? What did it feel like? And – most importantly – was his corset too uncomfortable? Pix and images: MICK QUINN

Music | Interview 35% |  7 Mar 2002
Dark days, bright sparxxx Peter Murphy
How Bubba Sparxxx went from being nose-down in a bowl of coke to becoming hip-hop's greatest white hope since Eminem. Peter Murphy hears how the southerner fell and rose

Music | Interview 35% | 28 Apr 1999
Wave Goodbye, Say Hello Nick Kelly
Once he cleaned up in the charts, now he s cleaned up himself. Bruised but unbroken, MARC ALMOND is back and busy on all fronts. And, whisper it, there s even talk of SOFT CELL reforming. Interview: NICK KELLY.

Music | Interview 35% |  2 Nov 1994
give PIERCE a chance Liam Fay
While commercial success hasn’t exactly come a-knockin’ on his door, Pierce Turner, in stoical mood, tells Liam Fay why he’s not all that bothered at the relative lack of lolly rolling in but how with his new live album Manaña In Manhattan just released, the wily Wexford wizard believes his time will come . . . Pic: Cathal Dawson.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 16 Mar 2007
Confessions of a movie star Jason O'Toole
Whether starring in popcorn blockbusters or thoughtful art-house movies, Gabriel Byrne is a reassuring presence on our screens. But he reserves his deepest passions for keeping alive the flame of Irish culture among the diaspora.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  2 Apr 1997
Wax In Haste, Repent At Leisure Liam Fay
When liam fay went along to interview comedienne and chat show host ruby wax, he expected a garrulous, loud, flashy American who would brook no argument as to the sheer wondrous fabulousness of her televisual output. What he got was a garrulous, loud, flashy American who was almost touchingly keen to disown most of the programmes she has starred in during her career, and eager to proclaim herself a serious artiste . . . not to mention her burning ambition to interview Yasser Arafat.

Music | Interview 35% |  1 Dec 1993
The Children of Lir Jackie Hayden
They may have been one of the most consistently hotly-tipped bands in Ireland over the past three years but Lir are still mere babes in the great rock’n’roll scheme of things. It’s ironic then that they should so often be accused of harking back to the ’70s. Interview: Jackie Hayden

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  3 Feb 1999
Fighting Against The Odds Craig Fitzsimons
FRANCIE BARRETT rose to public acclaim in 1996 when he became the first member of the travelling community to represent Ireland at an Olympic Games. Now a documentary, Southpaw, has been released which relates the Galway boxer s story. CRAIG FITZSIMONS met him and was impressed.

Music | Interview 35% |  1 Dec 1993
He writes the Songs Joe Jackson
What links Richard Harris with Linda Ronstadt, Art Garfunkel with The Supremes, and Frank Sinatra with er, Ghost Of An American Airman? Why, the music of Jimmy Webb, of course, one of the most widely-respected songwriters of all-time. Here he talks to JOE JACKSON about his friendship with Richard Harris, his encounters with Elvis and his deep-rooted love of Irish music.

Hot Features | Commentary 35% |  2 Mar 2000
Erectile Dysfunction Barry Glendenning
Intrigued by the ridicule and bad press being generated by London s Millennium Dome, BARRY GLENDENNING pays a visit to Greenwich and discovers why Tony Blair is having trouble sustaining his massive erection.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  4 Oct 2004
A wizard and a true star Peter Murphy
Roddy Doyle is one of Ireland's most important writers. Having made his initial breakthrough with The Commitments, he won the Booker prize in 1993 with Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha. Now with his new novel Oh, Play That Thing – the sequel to the critically acclaimed A Star called Henry – he is back to one of his guiding passions, music, as he takes his protagonist Henry smart through the scrum of 1920s New York, and on to Louis Armstrong's Chicago.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  5 Aug 1998
Out Of Africa Siobhan Long
A powerful tale of love, lust and life with the Taureg nomads of Nigeria, Gaye Shortland’s new novel, Polygamy is based in large part on her own extraordinary experiences of an alien culture. Interview: Siobhan Long.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 18 Jun 2007
The best of the rest The Hot Press Newsdesk
Full profiles on Faithless, Antony & The Johnsons, Slayer, The Who, Bell X1, Status Quo, The Flaming Lips, 50 Cent, Madness, Christy Moore, Elton John and Lionel Richie.

Music | Interview 35% |  4 Apr 2002
Southern man. Peter Murphy
No mere actor boy moonlighting as a rock star, Billy Bob Thornton is steeped in music and also in the kind of brooding Southern gothic aesthetic which informs his compelling album of song and story, Private Radio. Peter Murphy meets a singular man of stage and screen

Music | Interview 35% | 14 Apr 2009
The sew must go on Adrienne Murphy
Her split with Damien Rice caused headlines around the music world. Now Lisa Hannigan is taking her first steps as a solo artist with a wonderfully ethereal debut album, Sea Sew. She talks to hot press about the end of her partnership with Rice, her hopes for the future and the influence of romantic entanglements on her powerfully feminine songwriting.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 28 Apr 2004
Behind Closed Doors Tara Brady
A disquieting true-life tale of family intrigue, child abuse and inept judicial proceedings, capturing the friedmans is one of the most compelling and acclaimed documentaries of recent years. Tara Brady talks to the film’s director, Andrew Jarecki.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 12 Jan 1994
ANGER IS AN ENERGY Gerry McGovern
"Hope is a scarce commodity in the Inner City," writes Gerry McGovern. Here, he hears from Paul Hansard, who has lived in the Inner City all his life, about the many and varied injustices aimed at the working class, the frustration of never rising above the level of subsistence and about trying to wish for better for your children

Music | Interview 35% |  5 Sep 1991
THE TRUTH, THE WHOLE TRUTH AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH Joe Jackson
n a career spanning 25 years in the glare of the stagelight, CHRISTY MOORE has known every emotion from insecurity, despair and vilification to adulation, triumph and the warm glow of creative fulfilment. He has dabbed in drugs, drink to excess, suffered a heart attack for his troubles and made some of the finest records that have ever been subjected to critical scrutiny in this country. Now, in a frighteningly honest interview, he tells it like it is and was. Cross-examination: JOE JACKSON. Microscopic camerawork: COLM HENRY.

Music | Interview 35% | 29 Jan 2009
The Crying Game Peter Murphy
Three years since his Mercury-winning second album swept the world, ANTONY & THE JOHNSONS’ Antony Hegarty is going back to nature. His new record is both a requiem for a dying planet and a statement of hope for the future – one that draws deeply on his Irish-Catholic upbringing. Prepare to have your spine tingled all over again.

Music | Interview 35% |  6 Jan 2004
The boy of Sumner Peter Murphy
Sting – all dull AOR anthems, mawkish charidee singles and empty celeb blather, right? wrong! The artist formerly known as Gordon Sumner here talks to hotpress about the lingering fall-out from the break-up of the police, hanging with über-hip filmmakers Terry Gilliam and David Lynch, and getting the seal of approval from the late Johnny Cash.

Music | Interview 35% |  4 Mar 1998
Parker, WELL DONE! Peter Murphy
Even though he s just as acerbic and witty as he ever was, these days GRAHAM PARKER isn t what you d call the man of the moment. Which is a shame, because the veteran new-wave critics darling is currently writing some of the best material of his life, including last year s Acid Bubblegum album, which he describes as a fucking great record . And as if that wasn t enough to be going on with, he s also got plenty of short stories on the go. Tape: Peter Murphy

Music | Interview 35% |  6 Mar 2008
Believe the Stipe Dave Fanning
Michael Stipe talks about REM's new album Accelerate, looks back at their 'working rehearsals' in Dublin and explains how their Irish-born producer helped them through their mid-life crisis.

Music | Interview 35% |  2 Mar 2000
Queen Of The Hill Olaf Tyaransen
LAURYN HILL s debut album, The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill was the fastest selling album ever by a female artist in the United States. What s more it s just garnered her five Grammy Awards, confirming her status as one of American music s most important new icons. OLAF TYARANSEN went to London to hear the singer talk frankly about success, motherhood, the future of The Fugees and her father-in-law, Bob Marley.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  7 Apr 2005
The Splice Of Life Tara Brady
Texas native Jonathan Caouette has caused a sensation in underground circles in the US with his brilliant and groundbreaking debut, Tarnation. A dazzling mix of autobiographical scenes, TV clips, movie footage and cutting-edge music, it might just be the best movie you’ll see this year.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 25 May 2000
No More Mr Nice Guy Joe Jackson
The recipient of a Late Late Show tribute and the outgoing presenter of The Arts Show, MIKE MURPHY avails of a timely opportunity to reflect on the highs and lows of his personal and professional life and to assure JOE JACKSON that, contrary to certain popular mythology, he is neither a marshmallow nor a flowerpot man

Music | Interview 35% | 20 Oct 1993
HE DID IT NORWAY! Siobhan Long
For many years a 'musician's musician', TOM PACHECO is now enjoying the commercial recognition he deserves thanks to a collaboration with Steiner Albrigtsen that's stormed its way to the top of the Norwegian charts. Here, the American singer-songwriter reflects on a remarkable career which has seen him hanging out with Jimi Hendrix and The Doors in New York, taking on the Nashville establishment and finally settling in Ireland where his star is also firmly in the ascendent. Interview: SIOBHAN LONG.

Music | Interview 35% | 30 Jun 1993
Neil's Old Man Colm O Hare
COLM O'HARE meets SCOTT YOUNG, father of Neil, and a renowned journalist, author and broadcaster in his own right. In this rare interview he talks about his best-known subject - his famous son.

Music | Interview 35% | 21 May 2003
The story of the red, white & blues Peter Murphy
How The White Stripes turned the bare essentials into an essential noise, insisted that three is indeed a magic number and wound up becoming one of the most phenomenally successful rock acts in the world

Music | Interview 35% |  2 Jun 1993
NOT SO STEELY DON Liam Fay
CHRONICALLY SHY, NERVOUS AND INTROVERTED, DONALD FAGEN IS NOT AT ALL WHAT YOU WOULD EXPECT OF THE MAN, WHO ALONG WITH WALTER BECKER, MADE UP THE NOW LEGENDARY STEELY DAN, ONE OF THE SEVENTIES' MOST SOPHISTICATED AND CYNICAL ROCK BANDS. HAVING SURVIVED OVER A DECADE OF "PSYCHOLOGICAL CRISES" AND INACTIVITY, HOWEVER, HE HAS NOW RE-EMERGED WITH A BRAND NEW ALBUM. INTERVIEW: LIAM FAY.

Music | Interview 34% |  7 Dec 2000
Sharon Corr Niall Stokes
Niall Stokes: People would make an assumption that since The Corrs have sold millions of records, you ve already got it made. Does it feel like that to you?

Music | Interview 34% | 29 Jul 2002
Song and dance man Peter Murphy
Leaving behind his desk job, Paul Oakenfold has enlisted a galaxy of stars to perform vocal duties on hs new album Bunkka including Tricky, Nelly Furtado and, uh, Hunter S. Thompson

Music | Interview 34% | 27 Aug 1992
Fifteen Years on Joe Jackson
FIFTEEN YEARS after his death Elvis Presley is probably having the toughest year of his career. Not Elvis the guy who works down at the chipper or at the local A&P, obviously, but Elvis the social construct and cultural phenomenon. Elvis the quintessential folk hero.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 10 Sep 2008
Talking trash with the master of filth Tara Brady
He's the Hollywood enfant terrible who refuses to mellow with age. In a rare interview, John Waters talks about the aesthetics of trash, and looks back on his career.

Music | Interview 34% | 10 Mar 1988
This Is The Story Cathy Dillon
Christy Dignam of Aslan has never been one to pull his punches and, as a result, controversy has dogged the band with every new public utterance. Now as their debut album Feel No Shame nestles at the top of the Irish charts, in an in-depth interview he attempts to set the record straight, on his attitude to U2, poverty, drugs, groupies, his personal life and the macho implications of the band s image and music. Sceptical Eye: Cathy Dillon

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 24 Jun 1998
Sport, Drugs And Journalism Barry Glendenning
With the Tour de France scheduled to kick off in Ireland on July 11th this year, the subject of drugs in international sport has become a hot topic again. Not only did PAUL KIMMAGE take drugs himself as a professional cyclist - he wrote an award-winning book about it. Interview: BARRY GLENDENNING

Music | Interview 34% | 11 May 2000
Alternative Hero Jonathan O Brien
CATHAL COUGHLAN has long been among the most articulate and angry of Irish songwriters. Here, he talks to JONATHAN O BRIEN about his new album, money problems and adapting to middle-age

Music | Interview 34% | 19 Feb 1997
THE SPHERE FACTOR Jonathan O Brien
Why are the Spice Girls animals ? Why would Crispian Kula Shaker benefit from a hefty spell of National Service? And why should you never trust a hippy? These are just some of the burning issues that Dr. Alex Paterson of The Orb would like to address. Oh yeah, and he also talks about his band s ace new album Orblivion, as well as his exotic, not to say erotic, yesteryear escapades on the road with LL Cool J and Motvrhead. Our man with the shiny black Panasonic tape recorder: jonathan o brien.

Politics | Frontlines 34% |  3 Feb 2000
Rebel Rebel Niall Stanage
Jailed in the '70s and '80s for gun-running and membership of the IRA, Kerry-born MARTIN FERRIS was one of the most senior Republican figures in the south to throw his weight behind the Sinn Fiin-backed peace process. Now, a Kerry County Councillor with ambitions to take a Dail seat, Ferris has earned a particular reputation for being tough on drugs in his native Tralee. Interview: NIALL STANAGE.

Music | Interview 34% | 15 Dec 1993
I was a middle aged L.S.D. Freak Joe Jackson
Andy Williams may have a reputation as a bland M.OR. crooner but beneath the squeaky clean showbiz facade lurks an interesting man indeed, who reveals a knowledge of modern art, a past laced with drug use and an unhealthy interest in Shirley Temple. Joe Jackson travels to Branson, Missouri to hear his confessions.

Music | Interview 34% | 12 Jun 2002
The Enright stuff Kim Porcelli
Kim Porcelli accompanies Mundy to Birr, Co. Offaly for a sort of homecoming to celebrate the release of his new album, 24 Star Hotel

Music | Interview 34% |  8 Sep 1993
THE BOY LOOKED AT MORRISSEY Cathy Dillon
JOHNNY ROGAN didn't write just any old biography - he wrote a book about MORRISSEY which brought down a virtual pop fatwah on his head, with his subject declaring in public that he hoped the author would die a grisly death. Now, with the paperback version just published, the 'controversy' seems to have been given a new lease of life. It's not by any chance a publicity scam, is it? CATHY DILLON puts Johnny Rogan on the spot.

Music | Interview 34% |  5 Aug 1998
100% Noo Yawk Stuart Clark
FUN LOVIN’ CRIMINAL Huey Morgan offers stuart clark a guided tour of the rotten apple, detouring occasionally to take in topics such as California Mist, London gangsters, Tricky, Ian McCulloch and Tony Bennett, as well as his high-profile relationship with Jerry Hall’s daughter. And, let’s see now, there was one thing . . . oh yes “every American’s inalienable right to have nails hammered through their scrotum if they want”.

Music | Interview 34% | 21 Jan 2005
The Greatest Film Director In The World Tara Brady
Thought that’d grab your attention! Having made his name with such arthouse classics as In The Mood For Love, Fallen Angels and Chungking Express, legendary Hong Kong director Wong Kar-Wai is back with the eagerly anticipated 2046. A dazzling collage of existential longing, wacky sci-fi and lurid pulp thrills, it confirms his status as, well, one of the real greats of modern cinema.

Music | Interview 34% |  1 Oct 2004
Heaven knows The Thrills are miserable now... Stuart Clark
The last 18 months have been a hell of a ride for The Thrills, catapulted from the relative obscurity of the south dublin suburbs to the top of the uk charts, rubbing shoulders with Van Dyke Parks and Peter Buck along the way. But are the band suffering from diver’s bends? is that laid-back california-in-my-mind facade starting to crumble? We put on our therapist’s hats and endeavour to find out, if something’s gotta give, what gives?

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  8 Jun 2000
AFTER THE FALL Siobhan Long
Five years after the collapse of The Irish Press Group, CON HOULIHAN suffered a fall of his own. Here, he reflects on broken hips, broken dreams and the road to recovery. Interview: SIOBHAN LONG

Music | Interview 34% | 31 Oct 1991
I Hear The Angels Sing Molly McAnally Burke
Since bursting onto the world stage with her No.1 single, Orinoco Flow and the multi-million selling album, WATERMARK, Enya has become one of Ireland s brightest star. Now with the release of her new album, SHEPHERD MOONS she prepares to take on the world again, with music of an almost other-worldly beauty. In the throes of a personal odyssey to pastures east, Molly McAnailly Burke explores the genesis of the album, talks to Enya s collaborators Roma and Nicky Ryan and discovers in the work of this extraordinary trinity intimations of mythic grandeur.

Music | Interview 34% |  3 Mar 1999
Better Living Through Chemistry Andy Darlington
 

Music | Interview 34% | 26 Apr 2001
The rebirth of the uncool Peter Murphy
Peter Murphy chills out with TRAVIS

Music | Interview 34% | 20 Jan 2000
NOIZONE! Andy Darlington
Cum On Feel The Noize of turning pages as Slade s NODDY HOLDER does a literary tour to promote his autobiography, telling tales of Phil Lynott, Oasis, Gary Glitter, Glam-Rock Excess, MERRY XMAS EVERYBODY and Suicidal Groupies. ANDY DARLINGTON tags along.

Music | Interview 34% | 31 May 2006
Mind, Lightbody & soul Stuart Clark
Snow Patrol‘s Gary Lightbody may be the thinking woman’s indie sexpot, but with their new album Eyes Open going supernova all over the shop, the poor fella has no time to capitalise on his status, given that the only people he sees on a regular basis are his band and crewmates. With whom, he assures us, “penetrative sex is out of the question.” Also on the agenda: break-ups, infidelity, the Northern body politic, U2 and, of course, underpants.

Music | Interview 34% | 29 Oct 2009
All White On The Night Stuart Clark
On a fleeting visit to Dublin the legendary Jack White sat down with Hot Press' Stuart Clark to discuss his past life as an upholsterer, jamming with Bob Dylan. Jimmy Page and The Edge and going for dinner with Loretta Lynne.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% | 13 May 1998
THE GENERAL consensus Craig Fitzsimons
Having just bagged the coveted Best Director award at the Cannes Film Festival, John Boorman's eagerly awaited biopic of Dublin's most notorious fun lovin' criminal, Martin Cahill, has been hailed as a silver screen masterpiece. Craig Fitzsimons hears about the physical, moral and financial perils of making The General.

Music | Interview 34% | 21 Apr 2009
Arcadian Fire Stuart Clark
After years of pushing the self- destruct button, Pete Doherty has proved his detractors wrong with a solo album that's on a par with anything he did with the Libertines.

Music | Interview 34% | 23 Oct 2008
Soul Brothers Stuart Clark
Having spent the best part of the last decade in a blizzard of drug-induced excess, Oasis are cleaning up their act.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 30 Apr 1997
Sins of The Father Joe Jackson
At the age of 20, kathryn harrison embarked on a full-blown sexual affair with her own father an incestuous relationship which the acclaimed author has now chronicled in detail in her latest book, The Kiss. joe jackson meets the woman who has been attacked as a mercenary slut wanting to capitalise on shock value . Pix: colm henry.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% | 11 May 2000
Rat Trapped Joe Jackson
It s a story that has it all. Fame, drink, women, politics. Even death threats and The Mob. In a special retrospective feature JOE JACKSON explores the myth, and the reality, of THE RAT PACK, the original reservoir dogs.

Music | Interview 34% | 29 Nov 2006
Dreadlock holiday Paul Nolan
As Duke Special set off for a jaunt around Europe with the Divine Comedy, our correspondent hitched a ride on the tour bus. In between the sound-checks and the motor-way pitstops, he received a unique insight into the life of the touring musician.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  2 Mar 2006
The good fella Tara Brady
Snooker wild man Alex Higgins might be his hero but Ken Doherty is one of the sweetest sports stars around.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 27 Sep 2007
Shoot To Thrill Tara Brady
In a career-spanning interview, Tarantino talks about his pursuit of genius, his love of exploitation flicks and the James Bond film that got away.

Music | Interview 34% |  7 Sep 1994
Hey Preachers, Leave them kids alone! Stuart Clark
Is football hooliganism really the new rock ’n’ roll and should little boys be wearing Boot’s No.7 blusher? Stuart Clark fears for the moral wellbeing of the nation’s youth as Manic Street Preachers wage holy war against MTV, Take That, Kate Moss and poor old Gerry Ryan. Pix: Cathal Dawson.

Music | Interview 34% | 30 Mar 2000
Confessions Of A Songwriter Joe Jackson
Credited with being a pioneer in the field of confessional singer-songwriting, it is only now, at the age of 55, that JONI MITCHELL is able to talk openly about the private trauma behind the songs on such classic albums as Blue. On the occasion of the release of a new album Both Sides Now, that sees her revisit some former glories, the legendary Mitchell takes JOE JACKSON on a journey through her personal, and professional history. This is part one of an exclusive two-part interview

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 31 Aug 2000
"Fuck The Critics!" Joe Jackson
DERMOT HANRAHAN, Chief Executive of Dublin's FM104, is in fighting form. He tells Joe Jackson about the station's transformation from near-insolvency to runaway success, slates the station's critics, praises Eamon Dunphy and defends late-night talk shows. Dermot-ologist: MYLES CLAFFEY

Music | Interview 34% | 17 Sep 1997
Homer s Odyssey Stuart Clark
Heard the one about the Irishman, the Bronx and the tab of industrial-strength acid? Stuart Clark hadn t either until that most eligible of bachelors, David Holmes, talked him through the mad month in New York that inspired his Let s Get Killed album.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 27 Jan 2009
Hope for the states Bob Geldof
As Barack Obama gets ready to take up residence at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, Bob Geldof, Josh Ritter and Laura Izibor offer their views on his presidency. Plus what the rest of the rock ‘n’ roll community including Bruce Springsteen and Ani DiFranco are saying about the new man in the White House.

Music | Interview 34% |  6 Feb 2006
The X1 factor Joe Jackson
With the release of their acclaimed third album Flock, which went straight to No.1 in Ireland, Bell X1 have staked their claim not just to greatness, but also to potential world domination – a possibility which is reinforced considerably by their powerful showing in the Hot Press Readers’ Poll. Here, in an emotional and revealing interview, the band’s photogenic frontman Paul Noonan discusses life, art, love, death... and music.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  8 Jun 2006
A history of violence Olaf Tyaransen
He revolutionised contemporary fiction with Fight Club. But, with more than one brutal murder lurking in the family undergrowth, Chuck Palahniuk's own life has been as troubled and disturbing as any of his books

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  1 Oct 2007
Living The Wet Dream Olaf Tyaransen
Founder and editor-in-chief of Playboy magazine Hugh Hefner looks back on a life less ordinary and explains how he’s really ‘a romantic’ at heart.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  3 May 2005
The Big Heat Tara Brady
From Charlie & The Chocolate Factory to War Of The Worlds and The League Of Gentlemen: Tara Brady presents the ultimate summer movies guide

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 15 Dec 1993
A SORT OF HOMECOMING Gerry McGovern
Christmas is the time of the year when thousands of Irish emigrants return home to link up again with families and friends. All over the country, for a brief interlude, towns and villages will come alive with stories, songs, drink and craic. And then all will be quiet again. Gerry McGovern examines the impact of emigration on Irish society – and the sense of alienation which many emigrants feel about their treatment by the authorities here.

Music | Interview 34% | 16 Dec 1996
TAKING THE KISS Joe Jackson
You wanted the best, you got GENE SIMMONS. Here, the motormouth frontman of KISS, the world s greatest showband, talks about sex and women at length (quelle surprise), discusses his Jewish heritage, explains why Kierkegaard and Nietzsche obviously never got laid, and announces to an increasingly bemused JOE JACKSON that he Gene, that is possesses the world s smallest penis.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 19 Sep 2006
Stone cold sober Tara Brady
Re-telling the story of September 11 with a measured hand and lightness of touch hithertoo unhinted at, director Oliver Stone proves a more serious thinker than his paranoia-soaked canon would suggest. Here, he explains how his experiences as a soldier in Vietnam framed his outlook on life and art.

Politics | Frontlines 34% |  3 Sep 1997
HIGH TIMES Olaf Tyaransen
Any self-consciousness was quickly dispelled by the notion of how ridiculous I d look with my head and shoulders buried a few feet in the earth. A frankly terrified olaf tyaransen embarks on his first ever parachute jump and lives to tell the tale.

Music | Interview 34% | 24 Aug 1994
Swindler's List Stuart Clark
Fashion designer, punk Svengali, musical maverick, filmmaker and occasional pervertor of justice. MALCOLM McLAREN has been all of these things – and more – in a rollercoaster career that's seen him become a hero to some and an unscrupulous villain to others. STUART CLARK tools up at Ron & Reggie's Gangland Surplus Store for a showdown with the man who manufactured cash from chaos! Scene-of-the-crime photographer: COLM HENRY.

Music | Interview 34% | 18 Dec 2002
Bringing it all back home Stuart Clark
It’s Christmas, time for some of the leading lights of the Irish musical family to return from far-flung stages and convene for a traditional evening of reflection, revelation, conversation, merriment and, well, gargle. The guests: Glen Hansard and Colm Mac Con Iomaire of The Frames, Gemma Hayes, Mundy and David Kitt.

Music | Interview 34% | 21 Jun 2004
Nancy Sinatra Stuart Clark
The still vibrant 64-year-old on why Morrissey’s like Father Frank, why Iraq is like Vietnam, and on her meetings with Elvis Presley, Marilyn Monroe, Bono, Phil Spector and a whole Oval Office full of presidents.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 15 Oct 1997
Roche s Story Joe Jackson
Bruised but unbowed by a turbulent campaign, the People s Coalition candidate, ADI ROCHE, discusses matters personal, political and presidential with JOE JACKSON.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  3 Jul 2009
The boy in the bubble, the man in the mirror Peter Murphy
Not since the death of Elvis has the passing of a music legend so gripped the world. As fans and detractors alike struggle to come to grips with the sad, strange end of Michael Jackson we assess his legacy – as musician, celebrity and enduring icon and talk to some of the people who knew and understood him best.

Music | Interview 34% | 11 Jun 2003
The people’s band Peter Murphy
The industry may not have always liked them but their fans couldn’t be more passionate. Ten members, four studio albums, three managers and two major labels later, The Frames still managed to add up to more than the sum of their parts. Peter Murphy, with help from Glen Hansard and other key players brings the story of the band up to date in this, the final part of our two-part special [Photo Mick Quinn]

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 20 Dec 2007
Mr. Nice Jason O'Toole
Padraig Harrington talks about gay golfers, stalkers on the tour, the potential of Rory McIlroy and the death of his father. And, he says, his Open win was just the beginning.

Music | Interview 34% | 26 Apr 2007
He who scares wins Olaf Tyaransen
They may refuse to play the media game, but whether it’s dating page three models, accepting awards dressed as the Village People or earning the ire of Keith Richards, there’s never a dull moment in the world of Alex Turner and Arctic Monkeys.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  4 Mar 1998
The KIDS ARE NOT ALL RIGHT Joe Jackson
To Cian O Tighearnaigh of the ispcc, child abuse sexual, physical and emotional constitutes the single greatest scandal facing our country. Here he talks to Joe Jackson about the extent to which he believes the state has failed our children and why, in his opinion, mandatory reporting is an essential first step in putting things right. Pix: Colm Henry

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 27 Jun 2002
Mo Mowlam Joe Jackson
As Secretary Of State in Northern Ireland, Mo Mowlam [pic left by Mick Quinn] played a crucial role in formulation and implementation of the Good Friday Agreement. It helped that she is no conventional politician but rather a warm, down-to-earth and decent individual with a genuine commitment to positive action. in both the UK and Ireland, she became by far the most popular British figure in the history of Northern politics - which may explain why, in the end, she was shafted.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  6 Dec 2004
The Hard Man of British Television Colin Carberry
With State Of Play and Shameless, Paul Abbott has taken more risks than any other writer of TV drama – with spectacularly successful results. Now, Channel 4 have asked the BAFTA award winner to write a pantomime, that’s destined to be one of the highlights of the festive season.

Music | Interview 34% |  8 Nov 2001
Wake up call Joe Jackson
DOLORES O'RIORDAN may have the highest profile but the others are also here to remind you that THE CRANBERRIES are a group. and with the release of their new album wake up and smell the coffee, a happier, wiser, less embattled group than ever before. “all you need is love,” they assure JOE JACKSON

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 18 Mar 1998
Blonde on Blonde Olaf Tyaransen
By popular demand, ULRIKA JONSSON is coming back to Belfast to co-host this year's heineken-hot press awards. olaf tyaransen meets up with television's Golden Girl and hears about the world of the small screen, the men in her life, the poet behind the party animal, tabloid intrusion and the importance of Van Morrison in keeping her head straight.

Music | Interview 34% | 18 Mar 2005
The Boy From Donaghmede Takes On The World Tanya Sweeney
Damien Dempsey has battled his way centre stage, winning the support of luminaries as diverse as Morrissey, Robert Plant, Sinéad O'Connor, Larry Mullen and Brian Eno along the way. Now with the release of his third album Shots, he is poised to make a major breakthrough. Interview by Tanya Sweeney. Photos by Cathal Dawson.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 29 Oct 2004
The Secret Of His Success Olaf Tyaransen
Ireland’s biggest transatlantic TV star, Graham Norton has come a long way from his humble beginnings in Bandon. In his new tell-all autobiography, So Me, Norton writes about his tumultuous rise to the top, living in the media spotlight, keeping A-list company and coping with emotional upheaval. “It’s an uncertain time in my life,” he tells Olaf Tyaransen.

Politics | Frontlines 34% |  6 Oct 1993
ROCK ENROLL Niall Crumlish
ENTERTAINMENT OFFICERS FROM UCC, UCD, UNIVERSITY OF ULSTER, UCG, DCU AND THE UNIVERSITY OF LIMERICK GIVE AN ALTERNATIVE VIEW OF LIFE ON THEIR PARTICULAR CAMPUSES.

Music | Interview 34% | 26 Mar 2002
Fallin' to the top Matt Diehl
Currently the hottest female property in music, Alicia Keys has come a long way from the little girl whose first record was kermit's 'it's not easy being green'. Admittedly, she's had some serious assistance from heavy friends - including music biz mogul Clive Davis - but mainly she can thank her own prodigious talent and spirit of independence. Matt Diehl hears how Alicia Keys came to share the grammy limelight with U2

Music | Interview 34% | 14 Apr 1999
State of Grace Olaf Tyaransen
The legendary GRACE JONES is coming to Dublin. OLAF TYARANSEN caught up with her in New York to talk about drugs, stalkers, her recent marriage and period pains.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 29 Jul 2008
The Write Stuff Jason O'Toole
When Joseph O'Connor's Star Of The Sea was selected as a Richard & Judy Book Club choice in the UK, it propelled the writer to the literary A-list

Hot Features | Commentary 34% |  2 Nov 1994
PLUMP FICTION Liam Fay
From circus dwarves, incest and lesbian love affairs to severed organs and transvestite Indian brothels, John Irving’s novels are awash with enough tales of screwball sex and lurid violence to make even Quentin Tarantino blush. With his mammoth new 633-page novel A Son Of The Circus just published, the multi-million selling New Hampshire author indulges in a spot of verbal wrestling with liam fay, who discovers why he should keep this particular tête-à-tête purely literary. Pix: Cathal Dawson.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 27 Apr 2000
Eddie Rocket Niall Stanage
EDDIE IRVINE is Ireland s leading sporting playboy. The Grand Prix driver is a multi-millionaire whose taste for the extravagant runs to owning a private jet, a yacht and around ten cars. Here, the ladies man of Formula One talks to NIALL STANAGE about sex, drink, drugs, rock n roll oh, and driving.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 23 Feb 1994
THE HOLOCAUST: A SURVIVOR’S TALE Gerry McGovern
WHILE HE WAS BEING TERRORISED AND BRUTALISED IN MONNOWITZ, LEON GREENMAN MADE A DEAL WITH GOD: IF HE WAS TO BE ALLOWED TO SEE THE OUTSIDE OF THE DEATH CAMPS AGAIN, HE WOULD DEVOTE HIS LIFE TO TELLING THE WORLD WHAT HAPPENED THERE. NOW, AS DENIAL OF THE HOLOCAUST CONTINUES TO AID THE INSIDIOUS RISE OF THE FASCIST MOVEMENT IN EUROPE, IT IS MORE VITAL THAN EVER THAT HIS STORY IS TOLD. REPORT: GERRY McGOVERN.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  7 Jun 2001
Fergus Gibson Stephen Robinson
Astrology. an ancient science or a load of cosmic nonsense? FERGUS GIBSON is probably ireland's best-known astrologer, a man who gave up a hit-making career in music to concentrate on another kind of stardom. Here her talks about his astrological work with David Bowie, Iina Turner and Garth Brooks, explains why your aura always reveals the truth about your love life, describes his own encounters with strange and inexplicable phenomena and, finally, gives our own STEPHEN ROBINSON a personal palm reading. star gazer: Cathal Dawson

Music | Interview 34% | 16 Nov 1994
DOUBLE EXPOSURE, DOUBLE EXPOSURE Joe Jackson
Confronted by an autobiography with a dual narrator, Joe Jackson asks the real Ray Davies to stand up and testify on homosexuality, marriage, groupies, the essence of Kinkdom – and the true story of Lola.

Music | Interview 34% |  7 Dec 2000
Four Corrs Niall Stokes
By any standards, The Corrs are an extraordinary phenomenon. It won't be long before the combined global sales of their albums to date top the 20 million mark. In Ireland alone, by the end of the year, they will have sold over a million records - at which point they may well have established themselves as the biggest-selling Irish act of all time on home turf.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  2 Apr 2002
Allen Long Olaf Tyaransen
Allen Long put his own life on the line, smuggling dope from Colombia to the US in massive quantities. The business made him wealthy and gave him a taste for both the good life and the fast, white powder. But then it all went wrong: after some years on the run, Long was caught and sentenced to five years in jail. Now author Robert Sabbag has put his extraordinary story in print. hotpress meets "the American Howard Marks"

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 13 Aug 2004
Firestarter Olaf Tyaransen
Meet Larry Harvey, the man behind burning man, the world’s most extraordinary festival, in which a whole city, run as a gift economy, springs up in the arid nevada desert to celebrate creativity, non-conformism and the healing power of fire.

Music | Interview 34% | 10 Dec 1997
The First Noel Stuart Clark
It's Christmas, 1997 is drawing to a close and Noel Gallagher is in suitably reflective mood. "I can't be bothered writing music anymore", says the Oasis mainman before telling Stuart Clark precisely what he thinks of Liam, Meg, Sinéad O'Connor, that cunt Mick Jagger and England's chances of lifting the World Cup.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% |  2 Apr 1997
RAP WARS Jonathan O Brien
The recent murder of the notorious b.i.g., following the killing of Tupac shakur six months ago, has been linked by many to the prolonged East Coast-West Coast feud which threatened to tear the US hip-hop community apart. jonathan o brien reports on how life chillingly imitates art in the gangsta rap wars.

Music | Interview 34% |  5 Aug 1998
Truth Decay - The Manic Street Preachers: From Despair To Here Peter Murphy
James Dean Bradfield on The Cult of Richey, The Spanish Civil War, Jon Bon Jovi, and the new album This Is My Truth, Tell Me Yours. Truth Serum: Peter Murphy. Light Detector Test: Simon Clemenger.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 20 Oct 1993
THE CYBERHOUSE RULES Liam Fay
WILLIAM GIBSON is no ordinary science-fiction writer. Aside from coining such essential nineties' terms as Cyberspace and Cyberpunk, his work has also influenced everyone from computer hackers to scientists developing virtual reality technology. In the rock world, he's regarded as a visionary and artists as diverse as U2, Billy Idol and The Rolling Stones have all claimed inspiration from his novels. Interview: Liam Fay. Cyberpics: Cathal Dawson.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  4 Mar 1998
A WORKING MAN IN HIS PRIME Liam Fay
pat mcCABE is on a roll. Neil Jordan s film adaptation of his acclaimed novel The Butcher Boy has been rapturously received. His latest meisterwerk Breakfast On Pluto about a border county transvestite is about to be published. He s going on the road with Jack L. And what s more he was recently named Monaghan Man of the Year! Interview: liam fay. Pics: Mick Quinn

Music | Interview 34% | 13 Oct 2003
Paddy Casey: This Is Your Life Olaf Tyaransen
Released in 1999 Paddy Casey’s debut album went double-platinum, establishing him as one of Ireland’s brightest prospects. but the intervening four years have seen that crown slip, as a succession of homegrown singer songwriters battled their way into contention, outstripping him in terms of record sales – and hard graft. now casey is back in the frame, with his long-waited follow-up, the cheekily titled Living – an album that sees him gloriously back on top of his game. why did it take four years to make? the answer to that burning question may go back even further. because Paddy Casey’s life story is truly a remarkable one.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% | 12 Jan 1994
THE ONE DANCE SONG THAT CAN MAKE ME BREAK DOWN AND CRY Helena Mulkearns
Fiction by Helena Mulkerns

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 30 Apr 2003
Hector O hEochagain Olaf Tyaransen
His TV breakthrough came when he told Pat Kenny about how he hung weights from his penis. Since then it’s been wild globetrotting and fluent Irish all the way. And now, in his latest spectacular for the viewing public, Hector O hEochagain has only gone and bought himself a share in a racehorse.

Politics | Frontlines 34% |  8 Sep 1993
Left at the Crossroads Gerry McGovern
With close to forty TDs in the Dáil, and Labour in government with Fianna Fáil, the parties of the left have undergone something of a renaissance in Ireland over the past few years. There are those, however, who view this as a grand illusion, arguing that the cause of socialism is being ill-served by our elected representatives. Meanwhile, following the collapse of the East European model of communism, the left is experiencing a crisis of its own. GERRY McGOVERN talks to the activists who see themselves as carrying the socialist torch and profiles the parties who have yet to make an impact at the polls. Pix: CATHAL DAWSON.

Music | Interview 34% | 25 Jan 1995
Oh, Sheryl Helena Mulkearns
Don’t let her steal your heart away! sheryl crow: Hot Press Readers’ Love Of The Year and Bob Dylan’s favourite singer-songwriter is the hottest new star in rock'n'roll. Helena Mulkerns charts the singular rise of Kennet, Missouri’s most celebrated slacker country queen.

Music | Interview 34% | 16 Dec 2003
It's a rock 'n' roll wonderful Christmas Andy Darlington
From Dickie Valentine to The Darkness: Andy Darlington dusts the five decades of Christmas records and chats to Slade's Noddy Holder about his haunting ghost of Chris- singles Past.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 12 Feb 2009
The case for the defence Dermod Moore
The renowned Irish language poet Cathal Ó Searcaigh was the subject of an extraordinary documentary, broadcast on RTÉ last year, entitled Fairytale Of Kathmandu. Accused in it of the sexual exploitation of Nepalese teenage boys, defiantly asserts his innocence in this, his first in-depth interview.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 27 May 2003
Paraic Breathnach Olaf Tyaransen
He’s been many things: a roadie with De Danann, a carpenter with Druid, a founder of the world-famous Macnas theatre group and, not least, a six-foot four-inch Connemara man in a skirt and self-styled “cranky fuck”. But now Paraic Breathnach spends a lot of his time crying tears of rage. Olaf Tyaransen finds him down but definitely not out. Portrait Aengus McMahon

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 11 Nov 2005
The road to nowhere Olaf Tyaransen
OUr intrepid adventurer enter enters the bandlands of Burma.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% | 16 Dec 1996
The A to Z of Weird sex (Deluxe version) Liam Fay
A mind-boggling shagiography to keep fans of the regular column going until the New Year. Your guide: liam fay.

Politics | Frontlines 34% |  5 Aug 1998
SPORTS SPECIAL - Tour de France Shane Stokes
Getting press accreditation for the world’s greatest cycling race seemed like a dream come true. Then the Tour de France turned into the Tour de Farce. SHANE STOKES recalls the death of innocence during three tumultuous weeks in July.

Music | Interview 34% | 10 Aug 1994
Bjork on the wild side Liam Fay
She can't sit still. She has the attention span of a senile goldfish. And she has got some very strange personal habits. But Bjork is still one of the brightest and most compelling pop stars the nineties has produced thus far. LIAM FAY travels to darkest Blackpool for a close and often strange encounter with the Icelandic imp herself.

Music | Interview 34% | 14 Dec 1994
At long, long, long, long, long last . . . THE HANDSOME DICK MANITOBA Liam Mackey
The fabled lead singer, frontman and secret weapon of late lamented New York legends, The Dictators, the whereabouts and even the very existence of Handsome Dick Manitoba has been a mystery for many years. Liam Mackey has devoted his life to a quest for the great man which has made the search for The Abominable Snowman look like a wet weekend in Butlins. Now, after 15 years of false alarms and dead-ends, he has finally tracked him down. And the true, unexpurgated story of ‘The Handsomest Man In Rock ’n’ Roll'? Wilder, stranger and even more sobering than fiction . . .

Music | Interview 34% | 27 May 1998
From Zero To Here Peter Murphy
With the tragedy which disfigured their last Irish appearance still fresh in people's minds, SMASHING PUMPKINS' return to a Dublin stage was never going to be an ordinary affair. As it turned out, PETER MURPHY witnessed an act of redemption and spoke to BILLY CORGAN about surviving troubled times.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 22 Sep 1993
What God Did We Offend? Gerry McGovern
They called them the Magdalen Laundries, where fallen women were sent to atone for their sins. There, thousands of Irish women were imprisoned, often for life. They worked for nothing, literally like slaves, and they died. And then one hundred and twenty-three of them were dug up with the approval of the Catholic Church. Report: Gerry McGovern

Music | Interview 34% |  3 Apr 2009
The unbearable lightness of being Morrissey The Hot Press Newsdesk
Ahead of his 50th birthday, Morrissey talks exclusively to Hot Press about the sexual nature of singing, letting go in the studio, being blacklisted by the UK's Radio One and how he approaches songwriting.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 25 Jun 1997
The Touchable Liam Fay
He may unashamedly refer to himself as an artist and others may caricature him as a cold fish, but even if he suspects he has spent too much time writing and not enough living, john banville bears scant resemblance to the pompous boffin of popular prejudice. With the publication of his latest novel, The Untouchable, the acclaimed author gets his round in with liam fay. Pix: Cathal Dawson.

Music | Interview 34% | 28 Aug 2002
Elvis: The interview Joe Jackson
Imagine the scene. It is August 15th, 1977. Joe Jackson of Hot Press arrives at Graceland, to do the ultimate interview with Elvis Presley. Elvis is in the music room,seated at the piano and singing 'Blue Eyes Cryin In The Rain'. They sit down across the table, Jackson pushes the record button - and so begins the final interview with the greatest rock'n'roll star of them all

Hot Features | Commentary 34% |  7 Jan 1998
The Reich Stuff? The Hot Press Newsdesk
The first sci-fi cineplex blockbuster of 1998 STARSHIP TROOPERS is directed by Paul Verhoeven from a book by noted sci-fi scribe Robert A. Heinlein. And it s either a mindlessly enjoyable special effects white-knuckle ride or dangerously subversive propaganda for right wing militarism. You decide: to Grok, or not to Grok?

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 15 Dec 1993
Have I got Hughes for you Joe Jackson
With the return of Sean's Show to Channel 4, Ireland's most successful funny man (he'll love that - Ed) is back in the spotlight. But behind the obsessive, neurotic, insecure, angst-ridden exterior of the show's central character, is there an obsessive, neurotic, insecure, angst-ridden individual? Here Sean Hughes worries over religion, dreams, sex, drugs, family and ... Christmas (aaah!). Interview: Joe Jackson.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% | 20 Aug 1997
All The King s Women Joe Jackson
From girls-next-door to super starlets, elvis presley had em all. Yet not all his relationships with women were consummated, and there are even those who claim that none ever replaced his mother in his affections. Still, The King found plenty of outlets for his wild and boundless physical appetites, as Joe Jackson reports in this investigation into The Secret Sexual History Of Elvis Aaron Presley. Part one of a two-part Elvis confidential special.

Music | Interview 34% | 11 Sep 2007
The Ritter End Olaf Tyaransen
It’s been a tumultuous few years for Josh Ritter. Against the dramatic backdrop of the Swiss Alps, he talks about his number one fan Stephen King, recalls the day he met Bob Dylan and explains why it’s never a good idea to drink before a show

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 15 Mar 2001
Willie O'Dea Joe Jackson
One of the most distinctive and colourful characters in Dail Eireann, Junior Minister WILLIE O’DEA is also passionate about his commitment to reforming adult education. Here he talks to Joe Jackson about his brief, about Michael Noonan, Frank McCourt and “Stab City”, and about his recent outspoken comments on taxi drivers, political donations and other controversies. And, yes, he admits he did inhale and was “legless” the night he got elected

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 22 Jan 2003
Sebastian Horsley Olaf Tyaransen
A self-styled dandy, painter, writer and poseur, Sebastian Horsley seems to do everything to excess – whether that be drink, drugs, sex, sending shit to a critic or, literally, being crucified for his art. Olaf Tyaransen hears about his agony and ecstasy.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  7 Dec 2007
King of America Jason O'Toole
In a remarkably honest interview, which directly preceded the death of his mother, Jonathan Rhys Meyers reflects on his spells in rehab and discusses life as one of Hollywood’s hottest young actors.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% |  1 Sep 1999
Symphony For A Devil Peter Murphy
30 years after the savage Tate/LaBianca murders that epitomised the dark side of the American hippy dream, CHARLES MANSON aka God aka The Devil, continues to exert a potent influence on popular culture. In part one of a two-part feature, PETER MURPHY recalls the twisted vision of a charismatic man whose personal interpretation of The Beatles Helter Skelter helped give rise to one of the crimes of the century.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 22 Feb 1995
A Sharp Left Turn Joe Jackson
Dail Eireann has never been short of socialist mavericks but rarely has a member of government spoken out so emphatically in favour of divorce, abortion and the shackling of the Catholic church as Democratic Left’s EAMON GILMORE. JOE JACKSON meets the agnostic Junior Minister who smoked and inhaled and reckons he'd probably make a better whoremaster than a priest. Pix: Colm Henry.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 10 Feb 2006
JT and me Peter Murphy
He was a literary sensation, a writer with the outlaw charm of a rock star. But when rumours began to circulate that JT LeRoy was nothing more than a post-modern media prank, Peter Murphy, a friend and confidante, found himself caught up in an extraordinary story.

Music | Interview 34% | 27 Oct 2006
The 9th life of Damien Rice Peter Murphy
It's been over four intriguing years since Damien Rice's extraordinary debut album O was launched. That record went on to become a huge underground international hit, selling in excess of 2 million copies. Now his long-awaited follow-up – the similarly simply titled 9 – is finally ready to hit the shops. So how did Rice so successfully capture the collective imagination? And will the latest instalment in the Rice musical biography propel him to even greater heights? Hot Press talks exclusively to some of the key players in his remarkable rise and rise.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  6 Aug 1997
Jeers of a Clown Liam Fay
You thought Noel V Ginnity was a bland cabaret funnyman, peddling lite entertainment to American tourists and OAPs at the Burlington Hotel. But you were wrong! Wince as the 59-year-old Meathman unleashes an unstoppable torrent of vitroilic bile at virtually every other stand-up comedian in Ireland and a whole lot more besides. Interview: liam fay. Pix: mick quinn.

Music | Interview 34% | 27 Jul 1989
I Drink Therefore I Am Liam Fay
Liam Fay calls on Shane MacGowan at home, where over mugs of brandy, the singer cheerfully rationalises his notorious alcohol-intake in the face of widespread concern that he might be drinking himself to an early grave. The premier Pogue disagrees, predicting instead a happy fulfilling life away from the stage, in which he would own and run a fully-licensed restaurant in London and face extended vacations in Thailand.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 21 Sep 1994
The New Man In The Paisley Shirt Joe Jackson
With the focus of world attention increasingly on Unionism and its capacity to respond positively to the IRA ceasefire, IAN PAISLEY JNR. – the son of Dr Ian Paisley – talks about culture and the Protestant identity, about his father’s emotive brand of politics, about secret deals and about ‘that petty little Fuehrer’ Albert Reynolds. Interview: Joe Jackson. Pix: COLM HENRY

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 21 Mar 2006
Not the end of pierre show Olaf Tyaransen
Critics have not been kind to the long-awaited second novel from Booker-winning novelist DBC Pierre. After a lifetime that has lurched between excess and poverty, privilege and despair, he’s not bothered though.

Music | Interview 34% |  1 Dec 1993
One More Time With Feeling . . . Liam Fay
During the late eighties, Aslan were among the most celebrated of Irish rock acts, immensely popular at home and signed to EMI, a major multinational label, on which they released their debut album, Feel No Shame. And then it all came unstuck, amid squalid tabloid accusations of drug addiction, egotism and recrimination. Now they re back, older, wiser and more resolute but with their musical batteries recharged, a new contract with BMG under their belts and that old emotional band intact. Report: Liam Fay (with additional reporting by George Byrne).

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  9 Nov 2000
Kevin Myers Joe Jackson
Best known for his Irish Times column An Irishman s Diary, KEVIN MYERS has been denounced as arrogant, bigoted, pompous and prejudiced. And those are just the people who like his witty writing! On the occasion of the publication of a collection of his writings, the journalist they either love or loathe talks to JOE JACKSON about class, prostitution, drugs, relationships, the North, Mary Ellen Synon and more. Photography: CATHAL DAWSON

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  3 Nov 2008
Snow Country for Old Men Olaf Tyaransen
On the eve of the release of Snow Patrol's epic fifth album A Hundred Million Suns, Hot Press finds out how singer Gary Lightbody gets inspiration for his songs.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 21 Sep 1994
HITLER, STALIN, BOB DYLAN, RODDY DOYLE ...AND ME Joe Jackson
John Banville places himself among some of the century’s most celebrated and notorious figures, in a frank interview which sees one of Ireland’s most revered and controversial writers musing on the raging battle between high art and popular culture, not to mention the war between the sexes . . . Tape: Joe Jackson Pix: Cathal Dawson

Music | Interview 34% |  1 Dec 1993
One more time with feeling...  
During the late eighties, ASLAN were among the most celebrated of Irish rock acts, immensely popular at home and signed to EMI, a major multinational label, on which they released their debut album Feel No Shame. And then it all came unstuck, amid squalid tabloid accusations of drug addiction, egotism and recrimination. Now they’re back, older, wiser and more resolute – but with their musical batteries recharged, a new contract with BMG under their belts and that old emotional band intact. Report: LIAM FAY (with additional reporting by GEORGE BYRNE). Pix: MICK QUINN

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  2 Jul 2007
Losing my religion Peter Murphy
Journalist, essayist, atheist, author and, above all, agent provocateur, Christopher Hitchens has not shied away from controversy over the last 30 years. But in his new book, the writer takes on his biggest adversary to date – God.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 11 Aug 1993
THE ART OF THE MATTER Joe Jackson
In the first part of a two-part interview, Michael D. Higgins, Minister for Arts, Culture and the Gaeltacht, talks about his philosophy of art, about his own poetry and, more controversially, about RTE, the IRTC, the future of commercial radio - and the sustained and slanderous campaign against him in the Sunday Independent.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 21 Oct 1996
Plucky Jim Joe Jackson
In the second and final part of an extensive interview, director Jim Sheridan discusses his troubles with Gabriel Byrne and Noel Pearson, explains why he could marry Daniel Day-Lewis but would fail to measure up against Richard Harris, and suggests the best way forward for the embattled Irish film industry. Plus: the ouija board prophecies which seem to have shaped his life. By Joe Jackson.

Music | Interview 34% |  6 Aug 2003
Beyond the back of beyond Peter Murphy
Maverick genius or away with the fairies? Peter Murphy travels to North-East Scotland to meet Mike Scott at home in the spiritual Findhorn community where The Waterboys’ latest album was written and recorded. And Steve Wickham explains how he left and rejoined the band.

Music | Interview 34% | 23 Feb 1989
Elvis Unmasked Neil McCormack
OUT FROM BEHIND THE GREASE-PAINT THAT ADORNS HIS FACE ON THE COVER OF ‘SPIKE’, ELVIS COSTELLO EMERGES TO TALK ABOUT THE MUSIC THAT RUNS IN HIS FAMILY FROM BIG-BAND TO SPEED-METAL, HIS MUCH-TOUTED IRISH CONNECTION, WORKING WITH PAUL McCARTNEY, HIS CONTEMPT FOR MUCH OF TODAY’S POP MUSIC AND THE FEELINGS THAT INSPIRED HIS DEATH-WISH FOR MARGARET THATCHER.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  2 Nov 1994
U2: The Book of Genesis Joe Jackson
Are Bono and the boys just a really good rock band or have they succeeded where the priests and politicians have failed and unlocked the neuroses of our colonial past? Joe Jackson indulges in a spot of cultural sparring with John Waters and finds the author of Race of Angels: Ireland and the Genesis of U2 well able to maintain his guard.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 28 Jul 2008
The true story of the John Gilligan gang Jason O'Toole
When Sunday Independent journalist Veronica Guerin was gunned down in cold blood on the Naas Road, the finger of suspicion turned on John Gilligan.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 29 Oct 1997
Menace Liam Fay
DENIS LEARY, sultan of sneer, is en route to Dublin to star in the Murphy s Ungagged Comedy Festival. By way of a little limbering up, and proving that there s no smoke without fire, here he lets rip on Noraid, The Kennedys, The Royals, Bill Hicks, Dean Martin, Oasis, Father Ted, drugs in Kerry and, oh yes, why he d like to go to Riverdance with a sniper s rifle . Interview: LIAM FAY.

Music | Interview 34% | 17 Jan 2001
The Boy From The County Hell Peter Murphy
EMINEM s Marshall Mathers LP has gone 12 times platinum in Ireland. He s been voted Time magazine s Man Of The Year. And, having broken through into the mainstream with the remarkable Stan , he s just been nominated for four Grammys. So why is the world suddenly falling at the feet of a venomous bottle-blonde rapper who s penned some of the most repugnant, hate-filled lyrics since the invention of the gramophone record? Peter Murphy tells one of pop music s most extraordinary stories ever

Music | Interview 34% | 29 Jan 2003
8 miles high Peter Murphy
He may have ranked among the biggest-selling artists in the world in 2002 – but the ambition that has driven Eminem to pop’s dizziest heights shows no sign of abating with the release of his own biopic, 8 Mile. On track to becoming Hollywood’s latest darling, with all the attendant pressures and provocations that entails, will his art survive?

Music | Interview 34% | 27 Jul 1989
THE MAKING OF A LEGEND Neil McCormack
From "Out Of Control" to "All I Want Is You", Neil McCormick presents a major critical retrospective on the complete recorded works of U2, the band who went from being one of the world's worst cover groups to become a leading force in modern Rock'n'Roll

Music | Interview 34% | 14 Dec 1994
It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing Joe Jackson
Johnny Ray invented rock ’n’ roll. Elvis Presley marked the beginning of the downfall of popular music. The Beatles only ever wrote one great song. Cranky stuff maybe, but when the speaker is Tony Bennett – the man Sinatra called “The best singer in the business” – you have to listen. Joe Jackson does and, in this exclusive interview, hears how a Jewish-Italian New York kid grew up to be a musical legend, a respected painter and a man who, at 67, can still kick ’90s rock off MTV.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 22 Jan 1997
The Kerryman Siobhan Long
lthough left broken-hearted by the demise of the Irish Press, CON HOULIHAN s latest collection of prose, Windfalls, confirms that his pen, like the Castle Island colossus himself, is still mightier than the rest. Now, at 71, a novel is in the works. SIOBHAN LONG embarks on a long night s journey into day with the legendary journalist. Pix: COLM HENRY.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 22 Jan 1997
The Kerryman Siobhan Long
lthough left broken-hearted by the demise of the Irish Press, CON HOULIHAN s latest collection of prose, Windfalls, confirms that his pen, like the Castle Island colossus himself, is still mightier than the rest. Now, at 71, a novel is in the works. SIOBHAN LONG embarks on a long night s journey into day with the legendary journalist. Pix: COLM HENRY.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 22 Jan 1997
The Kerryman Siobhan Long
lthough left broken-hearted by the demise of the Irish Press, CON HOULIHAN s latest collection of prose, Windfalls, confirms that his pen, like the Castle Island colossus himself, is still mightier than the rest. Now, at 71, a novel is in the works. SIOBHAN LONG embarks on a long night s journey into day with the legendary journalist. Pix: COLM HENRY.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 16 Mar 2006
My date with a Thai hooker Olaf Tyaransen
In which Olaf Tyaransen is erected by three wrinkly Thai women – and then goes chasing babes.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% |  3 Sep 1997
NOT ALRIGHT mama Joe Jackson
In the second and final part of his exploration of the Secret Sexual History of Elvis Presley, joe jackson describes the king s prowess as a peak performer, reveals the great loves of his life, and charts his sordid, sad and ultimately tragic decline and fall.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% |  3 Sep 1997
NOT ALRIGHT mama Joe Jackson
In the second and final part of his exploration of the Secret Sexual History of Elvis Presley, joe jackson describes the king s prowess as a peak performer, reveals the great loves of his life, and charts his sordid, sad and ultimately tragic decline and fall.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 23 Jan 2009
I life less ordinary Jason O'Toole
In the final months of his battle with cancer, TONY GREGORY sat down with Hot Press to discuss his life and career. Knowing it would be his final interview he was in a reflective frame of mind.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  2 Apr 2008
Speaking his mind Jason O'Toole
For over three decades, the political agitator and columnist Eoghan Harris has been the focus of abundant controversy, consistently raising hackles with views that are seldom less than heretical.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 10 Dec 1997
WHOOPS APOCALYPSE Liam Fay
THE FINAL YEARS OF peter cook The father of modern British comedy, peter cook s death in 1995 brought the strangest chapter of his life to a close. Ravaged by alcoholism, he dedicated his final years to sloth, drink, drugs, porn, daytime television and late-night radio phone-ins. But even in his darkest hours, the black humour and brilliant wit that marked him out as the towering comedy talent of his generation just kept on breaking through. liam fay reports.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 10 Dec 1997
WHOOPS APOCALYPSE Liam Fay
THE FINAL YEARS OF peter cook The father of modern British comedy, peter cook s death in 1995 brought the strangest chapter of his life to a close. Ravaged by alcoholism, he dedicated his final years to sloth, drink, drugs, porn, daytime television and late-night radio phone-ins. But even in his darkest hours, the black humour and brilliant wit that marked him out as the towering comedy talent of his generation just kept on breaking through. liam fay reports.

Music Review | Single 33% |  7 Jul 2003
Sleeping Satellite Hannah Hamilton
Succeeds in dashing all happy memories in one phrase of pumping dance beats. Stop, please!

Music Review | Single 33% |  4 Jul 2003
Sleeping Satellite Hannah Hamilton
 

Film Review | Film 32% |  2 Feb 2000
ANGELA'S ASHES Craig Fitzsimons
ILLITERATE PHILISTINE that I am, I never bothered carving out the time to read Angela's Ashes - I know I'm missing out on something absolutely amazing here, but I just didn't like the sound of it one bit.

Film Review | Film 32% |  2 Feb 2000
ANGELA'S ASHES Craig Fitzsimons
ILLITERATE PHILISTINE that I am, I never bothered carving out the time to read Angela's Ashes - I know I'm missing out on something absolutely amazing here, but I just didn't like the sound of it one bit.

Music Review | Album 32% |  4 Nov 2008
In Ear Park Edwin McFee
GRIZZLY BEAR STALWART AND FRIEND ON PASTORAL FOLK TRIP

Music Review | Album 32% | 26 Feb 2009
Changing of the seasons Alison Curtis
Chills and thrills from Norwegian folkie

Music | News 31% | 25 Jun 2007
Eagles of Death Metal announce Irish date The Hot Press Newsdesk
California rockers Eagles of Death Metal, featuring Josh Homme on drums and bass, come to Dublin this August.

Film Review | Film 31% | 19 Jan 2007
The Return Tara Brady
This pleasing supernatural thriller sees Sarah Michelle Gellar play a trucking firm sales-rep lured back to her native Texas by the promise of a big sale.

  31% | 15 Nov 2004
She’s In Control Member CD Offer
 

  31% | 15 Sep 2005
On The Revs 2005 Tour: Manna  
Manna will be playing the Rory Gallagher Theatre, Ballyshannon on 2 October with The Revs. Here's a little background on the hand-picked support...

Music Review | Album 31% |  5 Jul 2001
The Houston Kid Jackie Hayden
 

Music Review | Live 31% | 16 Nov 2006
Sufjan Stevens plays the Olympia Theatre Kilian Murphy
His show is full of humour and surprise, delivered with an air of solemnity that only Sufjan Stevens can pull off.

Music Review | Single 31% | 22 Feb 1995
Fire Maple Song Patrick Brennan
Everclear: “Fire Maple Song” (Fire Records)

Music Review | Single 31% | 22 Feb 1995
Blue Patrick Brennan
The Jayhawks: “Blue” (American)

Music Review | Album 31% |  3 Mar 2009
Silence Is Wild Patrick Freyne
Piano playing songwriter straight out of a ‘70s dinner party.

Music Review | Single 31% | 16 Aug 2001
Knives Out Eamon Sweeney
It is an extraordinary choice for a single, but then again Amnesiac is quite an extraordinary album from an utterly sublime band.

Music Review | Album 31% | 16 Jan 1992
Little Earthquakes Paul Byrne
Tori Amos is coming, and if the English music press are to be believed, she's going to be huge.

Music Review | Album 30% | 29 Oct 2004
Uncovered Sarah McQuaid
Uncovered is Garry’s first step towards preserving these tunes for posterity, along with a few originals of his own.

Music | News 30% | 19 Jul 2007
Are you heartbroken? Ham Sandwich want your pics The Hot Press Newsdesk
Ham Sandwich are asking their not inconsiderable fan base to help them design the cover for their debut album, which is due in the autumn and addresses the theme of heartbreak.

Music Review | Album 30% |  5 Dec 2003
Legacy Sarah McQuaid
Legacy is O'Sullivan's first solo album, and it makes a lovely listen.

Music Review | Album 30% | 15 Jun 2005
The Magic Numbers Tanya Sweeney
The Magic Numbers, hailing from New York (via Trinidad), trade in classic West Coast vibes, and it’s precisely this springy, spirited outlook that will probably see them denounced by misery gut purists as low-calorie, happy-clappy fluff. For those in the know however, The Magic Numbers bears all the hallmarks of a soon-to-be-classic.

Music Review | Album 30% | 13 May 2008
MY DARK ROSALEEN & THE ISLAND OF DREAMS Jackie Hayden
Veteran Cork campaigner hits new folk highs

Music | News 30% | 18 Nov 2009
Ronan Keating live at the Grand Canal Theatre The Hot Press Newsdesk
The Boyzone member brings his 2010 solo tour to Dublin on March 23.

Music Review | Album 30% | 20 Nov 2006
To All New Arrivals Deirdre O'Brien
Sometimes it can be a real disappointment when bands ‘grow up’ and embrace a radically different sound. In certain cases this can be seen as progression but sometimes it can be a step too far. To All New Arrivals is a sometimes confusing record, mixing too many styles.

Music | News 30% |  7 Jun 2001
Breaking news Stuart Clark
JJ72 WERE FORCED to postpone three shows last week after drummer Fergal Matthews fell off his new 400cc motorbike in Dublin and broke a hand.

Film Review | Film 30% | 15 Apr 2004
The Butterfly Effect Tara Brady
What is it about films and Chaos theory? Everyone from David Thewlis in Naked to Jeff Goldblum in Jurassic Park has expounded on the theme in their best faux-analytical tones.

Music | News 30% | 25 Feb 2004
Hot shots 2004: Fair Verona The Hot Press Newsdesk
For anyone who cut their musical teeth on the classic late ’80s days of alternative US rock, Fair Verona’s recent six track demo will have come as both a blast from the past and something refreshingly different.

Music Review | Album 29% | 22 Oct 2008
I Won't Go Home Till Morning Jackie Hayden
IRISH-AMERICAN GOES BACK TO HER ROOTS

Music | News 29% | 25 Mar 2008
Music industry mourns death of 'fifth Beatle' The Hot Press Newsdesk
Former Beatles tour manager and head of of Apple Corps, Neil Aspinall died yesterday following a battle with lung cancer.

Music Review | Album 29% |  9 Nov 2007
My Conscience And I Chris Wasser
This debut offers up indie and acoustic pop that perhaps plays it a little too safe.

Music | News 29% | 30 Sep 2003
Autamata tell Tales from a Mayo Sanctuary The Hot Press Newsdesk
Nostalgia for Ballyhaunis and giant underwater jellyfish - step into Autamata's world

Music Review | Album 29% | 26 Oct 2000
Neither Am I Fiona Reid
Bell X1’s debut album displays a touching uncertainty. Apart from the robust vanguard of ‘Pinball Machine’ and the confident swish of ‘Man On Mir,’ Neither Am I has a preponderance of translucent ballads. Most of these, while genuinely lovely, are not as striking as they might be, due to the distant, dreamy production style.

Music Review | Album 29% | 19 Mar 2008
Safe Inside The Day Lauren Murphy
"Musically, these are piano ballads either splashed with a whimsical dose of vaudeville, tumbler-slamming jaunts, or torch songs supplemented by a tender string section."

Politics | Bootboy 29% | 30 Mar 2000
Talk Tonight Dermod Moore
BOOTBOY hears other gay men recall their first love, and reflects on how we have not yet spoken enough .

Music Review | Album 29% | 16 Nov 1994
Fumbling Towards Ecstasy Oliver Sweeney
SARAH McLACHLAN: “Fumbling Towards Ecstasy” (Arista)

Music Review | Album 29% | 19 Mar 2009
To the pine roots Paul Nolan
Former Snow Patrol man knows what the folk he’s doing

Music | News 29% | 26 Apr 2001
Dylan For Kilkenny Stuart Clark
BOB DYLAN BI-PASSES the capital on July 15th when he plays at Kilkenny’s Nowlan Park GAA Stadium.

Music Review | Live 29% | 13 Sep 2001
Seamus Ruttledge Billy Scanlan
Music needs gigs like this. Ruttledge's rapidly growing reputation for quality song-writing insures that there will be

Music Review | Album 29% | 24 Jun 2003
Filth & Fire Sarah McQuaid
Gauthier has a natural Southern twang and a laid-back, conversational singing style that keep the unrelenting gloom of the lyrics from crossing over the line into self-parody.

Music Review | Album 29% | 17 Jan 2002
M!ssundaztood Helen Toland
M!ssundaztood fails to distinguish itself from the slew of similar releases we’ve been offered in the past year

Music Review | Live 29% | 12 Feb 2007
Psapp live at Whelan's, Dublin Ed Power
Psapp are a London duo who toot on children’s toys and bang out rhythms on plastic fish. This sounds toxically cute and very nearly is.

Music Review | Album 29% |  5 Dec 2003
James Street Jackie Hayden
Johnston is a folk troubadour of the hard travellin’, dusty roads variety, offering wry observations on the ups, downs and sideways of life as we think we know it.

Music | News 29% | 18 Apr 2008
Damien Dempsey plans new album, tour The Hot Press Newsdesk
Damien Dempsey has confirmed details of his new album, The Rocky Road, with a massive Irish tour lined up for the coming months.

Music Review | Album 29% | 11 Jun 2008
The Rocky Road Adrienne Murphy
Dublin singer does a first rate job of interpreting Irish Trad standards for a new generation

Music Review | Album 29% |  7 Jul 1999
The Good Old Days Adrienne Murphy
Kooky is a young male crooner with a classical voice who sings maverick, cabaret style pop tunes like a contemporary Irish Frank Sinatra. His album’s title – The Good Old Days – acknowledges the throwback nature of his vocal style, which sounds like it’s from the ‘30s, ‘40s and ‘50s rather the turn of the 21st century.

Film Review | Film 29% | 25 Apr 2008
The Eye Tara Brady
At the turn-of-the-millennium, the J-horror was our love supreme.

Film Review | Film 29% |  8 Feb 1995
ONLY YOU Neil McCormack
ONLY YOU (Directed by Norman Jewison. Starring Marisa Tomei, Robert Downey Jr., Bonnie Hunt, Joaquim De Almeida, Fisher Stevens)

Film Review | Film 29% | 24 Apr 2007
This Is England Tara Brady
Shane Meadows, the ace writer-director behind A Room For Romeo Brass and Dead Man’s Shoes hasn’t steered us wrong yet, but This Is England is almost certainly his best work to date.

Music Review | Album 28% | 28 May 2003
Forward Tanya Sweeney
A very seasoned and accomplished sound.

Film Review | Film 28% | 19 Sep 2006
The Night Listener Tara Brady
This is compelling viewing and one can’t wait to see what Stettner does without the restrictive budgetary constraints.

Film Review | Film 28% |  5 Jul 2004
The Return Tara Brady
It would take one seriously myopic, heartless wretch to not fall madly, ardently in love with Andrey Zvyagintsev’s scintillating debut. Set in a lushly monochrome, distinctly post-Soviet Russia, The Return is revealed almost entirely through the eyes of the mollycoddled, petulant Vanya. When his long absent father returns unexpectedly and inexplicably having missed a decade of the pre-teen’s life, it threatens to blow the boy’s world apart.

Film Review | Film 28% | 30 Nov 2007
KM31 (Kilometro 31) Tara Brady
A strange hybrid of supernatural thriller and magic realist soap opera, it's no wonder this galloping hokum is the third biggest grossing title of all time in its native Mexico.

Film Review | Film 28% | 20 Jun 2007
La Vie En Rose (La Môme) Tara Brady
A biopic of the French Judy Garland? How perfectly fabulous, I hear you cry. Certainly, the life of Edith Piaf, the shrewish chanteuse who was born in a whorehouse and raised on the streets, would put Courtney Love to shame.

Film Review | Film 28% |  9 May 2006
Time To Leave Tara Brady
Like Michael Winterbottom, Ozon’s prolific output and promiscuous style can be his undoing. Many titles, most recently 5X2, seem more like doodles than proper films. This is particularly true of Time To Leave (Le Temps Qui Reste), a gay dying young soap.

Film Review | Film 28% | 13 Feb 2007
Hannibal Rising Tara Brady
Ready yourselves. Hannibal Reloaded and Hannibal: A New Hope can’t be too far away.

Film Review | Film 28% | 25 Apr 2003
Dreamcatcher Tara Brady
"Nonsensical, but entertaining enough horror."

Film Review | Film 28% | 17 Jan 2008
Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story Tara Brady
"Bad ageing make-up, crazy exposition, half-a-century’s worth of the uniforms of youth culture: Walk Hard has a heap of fun with the music biopic."

Music Review | Album 28% | 27 Sep 2001
Across The Pond Eamon Sweeney
Across The Pond is direct and sparse while possessing a loving warmth

Film Review | Film 28% |  1 Jul 2005
Sky Blue Tara Brady
South Korean anime has always lagged behind that produced by big brother Japan, but Sky Blue’s lush dystopian tableaux and extravagant Wagnerian staging rivals practically anything the neighbours have come up with. Seven years in the making, you can see where Sky Blue’s vast team of animators put in the hours.

Music Review | Album 28% |  8 Nov 2001
Supernova Peter Murphy
‘True Confessions’ hinges on a magnetic synth-cello figure, and all 13 tracks come in multiple flavours of soda pop, retro funk and trip-hop.

Music Review | Album 28% |  7 Apr 1988
Land Of Dreams John McKenna
The Dreamtime of American life has been mapped out with loving delicacy and accuracy by Randy Newman during his career. His circus of characters, his small-ads style absurdities, his prompt wit have created an alternative vista of the United States.

Music Review | Album 28% | 17 Jan 2001
Hush Siobhan Long
'And it's in the hush that we hear the sound between darkness and first bird'. Jane Siberry has always been someone who's cocked her ear to the silence every bit as much as to the sound.

Politics | Bootboy 28% | 12 Dec 2007
Return to innocence aka BootBoy
Why there’s more to life than boozing and shopping – even at Christmas.

Politics | Bootboy 28% |  6 Feb 2008
“There are many reasons why people get fucked up on drugs” aka BootBoy
And if that happens, the road back can be a difficult and painful one. To some degree, of course, it depends on the drug.

Music | News 28% |  3 Jan 2006
Leddy the new boss at Radio 1 The Hot Press Newsdesk
RTÉ has today announced the appointment of Ana Leddy as Head of Radio 1.

Film Review | Film 28% |  1 Nov 2002
Halloween: Resurrection Tara Brady
This is the second haunted-house flick in the last month, but where My Little Eye attempted to compensate for its budgetary constraints with lively inventiveness, Halloween: Resurrection tries to paper over its utterly unabashed lack of originality with glossy high production values

Music Review | Album 28% |  4 Aug 1999
At Home Siobhan Long
If it's a roll-call of the best traditional musicians on the far side of the Atlantic you're after, then Cherish The Ladies' latest album will probably sate your thirst. It's brimful of magnificent talent, including the core sextet of female musicians who've paved such a fine path for others with their spunky, intricate arrangements of traditional tunes.

Film Review | Film 28% | 10 Aug 2005
Charlie And The Chocolate Factory Tara Brady
Though much has been made of the darkened hues in Tim Burton’s new adaptation, few who saw Mel Stuart’s original screen version of Roald Dahl’s classic 1964 novel ever needed to be told about the dangers of strange men with sweets again.

Music Review | Album 28% | 28 Sep 2000
Miss You Colm O Hare
The seventh album in just over a decade from one of this country’s most gifted blues practitioners, Miss You finds Don Baker in an introspective mode as he turns fifty. Apart from a handful of tracks, including the up-tempo opener, ‘Chains’ and the straight rock and roll of ‘Mama’, the bulk of the material here is laidback, late night blues fare.

Music Review | Album 28% |  7 Jun 2001
Outrospective Fiona Reid
There’s a fair helping of standard Faithless tracks on Outrospective. The sinister dance epics ‘We Come 1’ and the dark and dangerous ‘Tarantula’ come from a familiar place. But the magic of Outrospective lies in the unexpected, which is magic thankfully in abundance.

Music | News 28% |  3 Nov 2009
Tickley Feather with Patrick Kelleher & His Cold Dead Hands The Hot Press Newsdesk
The two impressive acts come to Upstairs at Whelan's on November 18

Film Review | Film 28% |  4 Oct 2007
Comfortably Glum Tara Brady
We’d happily watch this lovely, cheerless thing a thousand times over than sit through five minutes of most musical biopics.

Music Review | Album 28% |  1 Dec 1993
Happy Like This Colm O Hare
MICK HANLY “Happy Like This” (Round Tower)

Film Review | Film 28% | 29 Mar 2002
E.T.20 Tara Brady
A twentieth anniversary edition of Spielberg's finest feature film, specially repackaged to include less grit and added cuddle factor

Film Review | Film 28% |  6 Jul 2000
MY LIFE SO FAR Craig Fitzsimons
It’s by no means the worst, most cynical or most offensive movie ever to bedevil our screens, but in terms of out-and-out dullness, My Life So Far has very few precursors in film history.

Music Review | Live 28% | 14 Oct 2009
Speech Debelle Celina Murphy
There may not be a big hip hop scene here, but we are now finally getting some quality. That much was clear from the support acts at Academy 2 for the debut Irish appearance of Speech Debelle – namely Infomatics and Maverick Sabre.

Film Review | Film 28% | 25 Apr 2008
Persepolis The Hot Press Newsdesk
Tara Brady reviews Vincent Paronnaud and Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis

Music Review | Album 28% | 26 Oct 2000
An Irish Lullaby Siobhan Long
This is a gorgeous collection of Irish and English lullabies, many of them shot through with enough banshees, witches and mountainy hags to put manners on the feistiest of juniors.

Music Review | Live 28% | 17 Nov 1993
Breeding Rapid Patrick Brennan
The Breeders (Tivoli, Dublin)

Film Review | Film 28% | 19 May 2005
Mysterious Skin Tara Brady
Filmmaker Gregg Araki’s shock tactics have frequently raised eyebrows and heckles, and for a while, during the late ‘90s, he threatened to become the oldest angry teen not actually a member of Sonic Youth. Though Mysterious Skin revisits many familiar Araki themes (sexual deviancy, rape, alien abduction, fucking the pain away, terminal youthful boredom, you know, the usual…) – it’s a far cry from the addled nihilism and indiscriminate buckshot of his earlier movies.

Film Review | Film 28% |  6 Aug 2003
Pirates Of The Caribbean Craig Fitzsimons
En route, there’s some hair-raising swordplay, quite a few stirring skirmishes, passages of mildly tiresome buddy-movie convention, and your time-honoured posh girl-falls-for-devilish rogue scenario.

Film Review | Film 28% |  4 Dec 2008
Patti Smith: Dream of Life Tara Brady
A collection of images, fragments and recollections from the career of the Godmother of Punk.

Music Review | Album 28% | 26 Jan 2004
The Black Album Maurice O'Brien
If this album really does mark the fading to black of one of hip-hop’s true heavyweights then at least we can take some consolation in the fact that the self-styled ‘Michael Jordan of rap’ has gone out at the top of his game.

Film Review | Film 28% | 30 Mar 2000
JOAN OF ARC Niall Stanage
In theory, the potential for Joan of Arc to be an embarrassing fiasco is huge.

Music Review | Album 28% | 15 Jun 2005
Peddlin' Dreams Peter Murphy
Maria McKee’s last album High Dive was one of the most grievously ignored records of the last 20 years, a bona fide masterpiece dripping pearls of songs overlooked by swine and swineherds alike distracted by more easily rooted-out truffles. In its wake, the singer could have gone to ground for another seven years, but the irony would have been acute – High Dive was, among many other things, a devastating elegy to thwarted ambition.

Music Review | Album 28% | 10 Sep 2007
Big Bad Beautiful World Peter Murphy
The listener intuitively gets the thrust of what O'Rourke is saying, but feels unmoved by the fuzzy manner in which he says it.

Music Review | Album 28% |  2 Nov 1994
American Thighs Nick Kelly
VERUCA SALT : “American Thighs” (Minty Fresh/Rise)

Film Review | Film 28% |  9 Aug 2004
13 going on 30 Tara Brady
Just when you thought the body-switch comedy had thoughtfully been put out of its misery, along comes this delightful froth on a daydream from indie-graduate Winick.

Music Review | Album 28% | 13 Sep 2001
Private Radio Peter Murphy
Private Radio should be appraised as part of a body of work that includes Slingblade and a mesmerising performance in Sam Raimi’s A Simple Plan,

Hot Features | Reports 28% | 24 Feb 2009
Age before beauty Peter Murphy
In praise of codgers with a twinkle in their eye and a swagger in their walk.

Film Review | Film 28% |  6 Sep 2007
Atonement Tara Brady
For almost two hours, it’s hard to conceive how Mr. Wright could have done better with the material.

Film Review | Film 28% | 24 Jan 2003
The Pianist Craig Fitzsimons
No one in their right mind can deny that he’s a spellbinding filmmaker, a truth arguably never more vividly demonstrated than in The Pianist, Polanski’s hugely elegant and beautifully haunting Holocaust memoir.

Music Review | Album 28% | 29 Sep 1999
The Gasoline Age Nick Kelly
Rock ’n’ roll has also long been obsessed with the dual totems of cars ’n’ girls, and of contemporary bands the likes of Mercury Rev and the Vulgar Boatmen have made sure the Americana idyll doesn’t run out of gas.

Hot Features | Comedy 28% | 22 Nov 2006
Clearly Canadian Neil Brennan
He has seen every Star Wars film “50-75 times”, but Charles Ross insists he’s no Star Wars nerd.

Music Review | Album 27% |  8 Jul 1998
Invisible Walls Siobhan Long
SHARON MURPHY Invisible Walls

Music Review | Album 27% | 13 Dec 2002
Skylarkin Peter Murphy
This album operates under its own internal logic, happens in its own dreamtime, the basic tracks being augmented with all the care and lightness of touch one would expect from musicians preparing their friend’s last will and testament

Film Review | Film 27% | 26 Jan 2005
A Very Long Engagement Tara Brady
 

Film Review | Film 27% |  2 Apr 2008
Son of Rambow Tara Brady
To indulge the thirteen-year-old dreamer in all of us...

Music Review | Album 27% |  8 Dec 2004
Encore Phil Udell
Could this, you wonder, actually be the record that sees Eminem the artist match Eminem the personality? The opening seconds of ‘Puke’ – the sound of, yes, someone puking – sadly answers the question.

Music Review | Album 27% |  2 Dec 1990
Pills'n'Thrills and Bellyaches Paul Byrne
Whereupon we find our Mancunian maniacs still keeping their Drugs Against Rock campaign in full swing. *I smell dope/I smell dope*, shouts Ryder (Shaun never sings - he either talks or shouts!) and you don't doubt him.

Music Review | Album 27% | 18 Aug 2005
Invisible Fields Sarah McQuaid
Recorded in his home studio in rural County Kilkenny, Iarla Ó Lionáird’s second solo album has a quiet, introspective feel that stands in contrast to his work with the Afrocelts (formerly the Afro Celt Sound System).

Hot Features | Caught In The Net 27% | 29 Nov 2001
Castlebar dong contest Stuart Clark
Stranger than fiction... filthier than Father Ted... Caught In The Net goes to Castlebar.com for a dirty weekend

Film Review | Film 27% | 30 May 2007
Black Snake Moan Tara Brady
Black Snake Moan exists somewhere between the timeless depression era shanties of Zora Neale Hurston’s folk-tales, the King James Bible and a Jerry Springer confessional.

Music Review | Album 27% | 23 Mar 1989
Like A Prayer George Byrne
On Like A Prayer Ms. Ciccone concocts a potent pot-pourri of re-discovery and re-invention.

Music Review | Album 27% | 21 Apr 1988
Watermark Liam Fay
Watermark is reminiscent of lots of things - yet it's like nothing you've ever heard before. Traces of classical, traditional and rock are easy to spot but Enya and crew haven't been content to drink only from established sources - rather they've managed to come up with a potion all of their own.

Film Review | Film 27% | 29 Apr 2005
Tarnation Tara Brady
Simultaneously an autobiographical cine-scrapbook, a boy’s heartbreaking love letter to his mother and a screaming-comes-across-the-screen instant (appropriate that) post-modern classic, Tarnation was assembled from family home-movies, tape-recordings, video-diaries, stark inter-titles and pop-culture fragments to create a cubist portrait of the director as a young man, reflected primarily through his relationship with his mentally-traumatised mother, Renee.

Film Review | Film 27% |  1 Mar 2002
Bully Tara Brady
Larry Clark's powerful, but problematic rendering of a real-life 1993 murder-case paints a disturbing portrait of bored, disaffected American youth and the moral void that they inhabit

Film Review | Film 27% | 30 Jan 2006
Walk The Line Tara Brady
During his misspent youth, Johnny Cash crashed and burned so spectacularly, so frequently, that a future rock biopic became something of a certainty. James Mangold’s fine film has plenty of seamy detail – Cash’s amphetamine fuelled tours with Elvis and Jerry Lee Lewis, hysterical groupies, a drug-bust at the Mexican border. Primarily though, Walk The Line is a romance, a dark, spiritual, difficult, redemptive love story.

Film Review | Film 27% | 28 Apr 1999
Happiness Craig Fitzsimons
I've seen a few weird movies down the years, but Happiness - Todd Solondz' controversial but massively acclaimed follow-up to the brutally impressive Welcome To The Dollhouse - is truly in a league all of its own. Grim, sick, morbid, perverted - and perversely excellent - the misleadingly titled Happiness is a raging, vengeful, malevolent celluloid beast that hacks away mercilessly at every taboo in the book, and makes the Farrelly Brothers' output look tamer than the dullest Merchant Ivory.

Film Review | Film 27% | 27 Mar 2009
Tyson Tara Brady
 

Music | News 27% | 30 Mar 2006
Irish author John McGahern dies in Dublin Niall Stokes
The death has occurred of the great Irish writer John McGahern, at the Mater Hospital in Dublin. He was 71 years of age. Although his health had not been the best for some time, his death was sudden.

Film Review | Film 27% | 27 Jun 2006
The Wind That Shakes The Barley Tara Brady
Lessons from history can only be a good thing and Loach’s fine-looking Palme D’Or winner works hard to include every possible perspective on the War Of Independence.

Music Review | Album 27% |  2 Nov 1994
Sweaty Handshake Niall Crumlish
PET LAMB: “Sweaty Handshake” (Roadrunner)

Hot Features | Laugh Lines 27% | 18 Nov 2003
News Hounded Patrick McDonnell
Patrick McDonnell on being rolled over by rollng news.

Hot Features | Comedy 27% | 14 Feb 2007
Stand up and coming Olaf Tyaransen
Romance ain’t dead, says John Donnellan, but Saint Valentine’s Day is a racket.

  27% | 15 May 2007
When I lost my electoral virginity Shilpa Ganatra
For first time voters, the trip to the ballot box is more than an expression of democracy. It’s also a coming of age experience.

Music Review | Album 27% | 19 Mar 2004
Absent Friends Niall Crumlish
If you’re like me, then The Divine Comedy 1993-96 was aural El Dorado, the last couple of albums were disappointing, and Absent Friends is the one you’ve been waiting for; the one you were worried Neil Hannon might never make.

Music Review | Album 27% |  3 Mar 1999
Up, Up, Up, Up, Up, Up Niall Stanage
Ani diFranco is not one to rest on her laurels. This, her twelfth album, was recorded only a matter of months after Little Plastic Castle, which was released last year to huge critical acclaim.

Film Review | Film 27% | 14 Jul 1993
JURASSIC PARK Neil McCormack
JURASSIC PARK (Directed by Steven Spielberg. Starring Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Richard Attenborough)

Music Review | Album 27% |  1 Dec 1993
All The Aces: The Best Of Motorhead Stuart Clark
They were also one of the first '70s bands to genuinely crossover.

Hot Features | Reports 27% | 10 Nov 2008
Made In Japan Tara Brady
From psychedelic anime to Japan's answer to Trainspotting, the Japanese Film Festival 2008 brings a delightful miscellany of movies to Dublin, Cork and Limerick.

Film Review | Film 27% | 28 Oct 1999
The Blair Witch Project Craig Fitzsimons
In an ideal world, nobody would have been allowed to write anything about The Blair Witch Project before its release, and everybody could have experienced the shock at maximum impact. That might have carried its own dangers, however: people might literally have died from the terror.

Music | Homefront 27% | 11 Aug 1993
LAUGHTER AND FORGETTING Nell McCafferty
"...a momentous event is about to take place, or so they would have us believe."

Music | News 27% | 20 Jul 2009
Irish writer Frank McCourt dies The Hot Press Newsdesk
Author Frank McCourt has died at the age of 78. McCourt shot to international fame he when he won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award for his 1996 memoir of "miserable Irish Catholic childhood" in Limerick, Angela's Ashes.

Music | News 27% |  7 Mar 2002
Past 'lives The Hot Press Newsdesk
Does very old footage of the proto-Westlife - then called IOU, back in 1997 - belong to the band's childhood friend who filmed it, or to a promotions company who claim to have contracted him to do so? Let the courts decide

Politics | Bootboy 27% |  5 Mar 2002
Loss of innocence aka BootBoy
A distressing rift as an eight-year-old friend discovers that our columnist is gay

Music Review | Album 27% |  1 Feb 2001
The Houston Kid Stephen Rapid
When Rodney Crowell last played here, at the Kilkenny Rhythm and Roots weekend, as part of his solo act he read (from a work in progress - a book about his childhood) a piece about the first time he heard Johnny Cash and the song 'I Walk The Line'.

Politics | Message 27% | 13 Apr 2000
The Not-So-Beautiful Game Niall Stokes
I stopped playing football at the age of eighteen and stayed away from it for twelve years. By then I had a son, and it was kicking ball with him, and witnessing his unselfconscious enthusiasm for the game that first re-awakened the sense of magic that football had held for me during my own childhood and teenage years.

Nuggets | Net 27% |  3 Mar 1999
A BIG HAND, PLEASE Stuart Clark
Those of you who watch Sky News on a regular basis may have seen the story of an American man who was given a new hand in a pioneering transplant operation last week. The man, who lost his original hand in a childhood accident, was quoted afterwards as saying that he wanted to let my two kids see their daddy with a proper right hand . The operation was performed at a Jewish hospital the Kleinert, Kutz and Associates Hand Care Center plc and a special website was set up shortly afterwards to chronicle this slice of medical history in the making. Images from the operation itself, in all their gory glory, can be viewed on the site, as well as patient-condition updates, and transcripts from the press conferences held before and after. http://www.handtransplant.org/ #

  27% | 22 Nov 2009
Precious mettle  
Alison Goldfrapp and Will Gregory of GOLDFRAPP giggle through tales of childhood, nasty previous employment and big bassoons in our video interview

Hot Features | Reports 27% | 17 Sep 2008
Lewi's Carols Ed Power
From child actress to Rilo Kiley frontwoman to hanging out with Elvis Costello: every day is Groundhog Day, but when you're Jenny Lewis that's not necessarily a bad thing.

  27% |  7 May 2004
Facé Off Sarah McQuaid
Filí, amhránaithe and ceoltóirí na héireann member Steve Cooney on the rights of trad acts to travel, get paid… and obtain a cup of tea when playing Dublin castle. Folk Centre with Sarah McQuaid

Film Review | Film 27% | 16 Nov 1994
DAZED AND CONFUSED Neil McCormack
DAZED AND CONFUSED (Directed by Richard Linklater. Starring Jason London, Michelle Burke, Wiley Wiggins)

Music Review | Album 27% | 27 Mar 2003
The Trouble With Being Myself Peter Murphy
Anyway, Macy does both sides of the actor’s mask very well, balancing the party animal (‘Come Together’) with the natural melancholic (‘Jesus For A Day’).

Film Review | Film 26% | 30 Jun 2004
Bad Education Tara Brady
 

Film Review | Film 26% |  7 Jun 2001
Pearl Harbour Tara Brady
Religiously, but ill-advisedly, sticking to the Titanic template – right down to a Celine soundalike’s power-ballad over the credits – Michael Bay’s three-hour military epic is a suitably bombastic treatment of one of World War Two’s most infamous incidents – the Japanese bombing of a US naval base.

Music Review | Album 26% | 12 Apr 1985
The Last Man In Europe George Byrne
Oh, to live in an ideal world! In an ideal world The Blades would be on their third album, at least, and we wouldn't have had to wait until now, five years after their debut single 'Hot For You'.

Politics | Bootboy 26% |  4 Mar 2003
I only want what's best for you... aka BootBoy
Sometimes, the appearance of unconditional love can be deceptive

Hot Features | Sex 26% | 18 May 2004
Can't Keep my Hands offa You Anne Sexton
In which our sex correspondent finds that a trip to an Amsterdam strip club makes her hornier than a tomcat – with interesting consequences during the train ride home!

Politics | McCann 26% |  1 Apr 1998
Paul Bearer Eamonn McCann
There will be a secret meeting in Belfast next Thursday (April 23rd) to mark the centenary of the birth of Paul Robeson, the prototype for Muhammad Ali.

Politics | Bootboy 26% |  7 Jul 2004
The can do spirit aka BootBoy
From Bill Clinton’s infidelity to his country’s version of foreign policy, the concept of “moral indefensibility” makes a twisted kind of sense in the United States

Music Review | Album 26% |  2 Dec 1990
Viva Dead Ponies Bill Graham
Like Dinsdale Piranha in the old Monty Python sketch, Cathal Coughlan uses sarcasm. Sometimes with a sledgehammer, elsewhere with a stiletto - but he never stoops to the tender, poisoned compliments of polished English irony. Cathal Coughlan is no member of the loyal opposition.

Hot Features | London Calling 26% | 20 Jan 2000
Home and away Barry Glendenning
BARRY GLENDENNING suffers a less-than-triumphant homecoming before returning to his very own Desolation Row.

Music Review | Album 26% | 19 Feb 1982
Beautiful Vision Dermot Stokes
"Hey Jimmy, I want to go home! Hey Jimmy, I been away too long…" And you feel like shouting yeah to the way he sings it, to the way the voice reaches into your soul like only the most expressive instrument can, like Muddy Waters' slide, or Charlie Parker's sax, or Mavis Staples' voice… but you know what he's talking about as well.

Politics | Bootboy 26% | 15 May 2009
The Truth Will Out- At Last aka BootBoy
To get ahead in Irish society, a dubious attitude towards the truth has always helped. But as chickens come home to roost it is, at long last perhaps, time for change

Hot Features | Comedy 26% |  5 Jul 2001
Brendan shines Stephen Robinson
STEPHEN ROBINSON meets BRENDAN BURKE, the lab-technician who swapped a microscope for a microphone

Politics | Bootboy 26% | 21 Jan 1998
PROSTITUTE: A FRANK EXCHANGE OF VIEWS aka BootBoy
I forgive Esther Rantzen for That s Life. Not many people can reach into their souls and find such forgiveness possible, but for me it s suddenly been made easy. She s produced an excellent documentary series on BBC1, Prostitute.

Politics | Bootboy 26% |  1 Apr 1998
WHO S SORRY NOW? aka BootBoy
There s a school of thought that says it s not the damage that s done when a child is hurt that causes problems later in life; it s the failure to repair it. Mistakes are made by parents all the time; after all, they are only human.

Politics | Bootboy 26% | 31 Jul 2009
New Skin for an Old Ceremony aka BootBoy
Why should same-sex partners be denied the opportunity to sanctify their love with the matrimonial ceremony?

Politics | Bootboy 26% |  9 Jun 2009
The kids are alright, treat 'em right aka BootBoy
For decades Irish authority figures prattled on about family values, while in real life our attitudes to children were Victorian compared to Mediterranean cultures. It’s time the State enshrined their welfare in our constitution.

Politics | Bootboy 26% | 16 Dec 1996
* A * CHRISTMAS CAROL aka BootBoy
"Make it Christmassy," they said. Ho, ho, ho.

Hot Features | Comedy 26% | 13 Apr 2000
PATRICK S DAY Nick Kelly
Louth comic Patrick McDonnell has seen his profile rise of late, courtesy of TV appearances. But he d be quite happy to scratch my arse and watch Countdown , he tells NICK KELLY.

Music Review | Album 26% |  1 Dec 1993
Trad Siobhan Long
THE DUGGANS: “Trad” (Cló Iar-Chonnachta)

Music Review | Album 26% |  1 Dec 1993
An t-Oileán Aerach Siobhan Long
JOHNNY CONNOLLY: “An t-Oileán Aerach” (Cló Iar-Chonnachta)

Music Review | Album 26% |  1 Dec 1993
The Celtic Fiddle Festival Siobhan Long
KEVIN BURKE, JOHNNY CUNNINGHAM AND CHRISTIAN LEMAITRE: “The Celtic Fiddle Festival” (Green Linnet)

Politics | Bootboy 26% |  5 Jul 2001
A chemical timebomb aka BootBoy
Compared to heroin, ecstasy is a terrifying drug

Politics | Bootboy 26% |  8 Jul 1998
The Healing Game Dermod Moore
Our culture is increasingly influenced by the New Age values of individual expression and emotional candour. To “get in touch with your feelings” is a moral imperative; the creed of the New World Order.

Hot Features | Sam Snort 26% | 23 Jan 2006
The leader of the gang Sam Snort
In which our correspondent stuffs it to the politicians and all things MOR before things suddenly take a very strange twist indeed.

Hot Features | Reports 26% | 16 Dec 2008
Christmas down under  
Although born in Melbourne, Australia, Liam Finn regards Auckland in New Zealand as his spiritual home. He takes us on a tour of some of his favourite neighbourhoods.

Hot Features | Comedy 26% | 18 Aug 2004
The all-seeing eye Paul Nolan
Private eye columnist Craig Brown on why there’s no danger of satire going out of business.

Music Review | Album 26% | 24 Oct 2002
Remember this classic album: Patti Smith's Horses Peter Murphy
 

Politics | Bootboy 26% | 29 Oct 1997
Why I ve Stopped Having SEX aka BootBoy
My little sister s getting married. Date not set yet (i.e. she s not pregnant). That hasn t stopped our dearly beloved radical if-a-priest-comes-near-my-coffin-I ll-spit-at-him mother from going wholeheartedly potty with plans to redecorate the entire house in gleeful anticipation of the expected and expectant hordes.

Politics | Bootboy 26% |  9 Jan 2003
Love will tear us apart aka BootBoy
Though sex is seldom just sex, the erotic is definitely another country and a resident visa can prove difficult to acquire

Hot Features | Reports 26% |  1 Jul 2008
Working man's blues Tara Brady
Indie film-maker Brian Cox's phenomenal work rate sees him continually criss-crossing continents for his art.

Politics | Bootboy 26% |  3 Sep 2002
He says, she says aka BootBoy
If men and women have problems relating to each other due to different linguistic cultures, so too do many gay men

Politics | Bootboy 26% | 31 Jan 2006
The greasy pole aka BootBoy
On the matter of Stringfellows, says our columnist, there’s no exploitation, unless it’s mutual exploitation.

Politics | Message 26% | 15 Jan 2003
For Pete’s sake Niall Stokes
The Who’s leader’s action in accessing child porn may have been misguided rather than sinister

Hot Features | Comedy 25% | 11 Oct 2001
The Bottler did it Stephen Robinson
STEPHEN ROBINSON meets BRENDAN GRACE, the father of Irish alternative comedy and (as Fr. Fintan Stack) the scariest thing about Fr. Ted

Hot Features | Comedy 25% | 22 Dec 1999
Gone But Not Forgotten Nick Kelly
We'd like to point out that comedian and author ian macpherson chose the headline himself. Still, what did happen to the great bright hope of Irish comedy? NICK KELLY finds out.

Politics | McCann 25% |  5 Mar 1997
A Guy Called Gerald Eamonn McCann
Eamonn McCann discovers a great lost Irish writer who was also a priest

Politics | McCann 25% | 30 Mar 2005
Papal Bull Eamonn McCann
Parishioners and priests alike have responded angrily to attempts by the Bishop of Derry to surreptitiously impose a levy aimed at covering the costs of clerical sex abuse cases. Plus: The different face Sinn Fein presents in the US and the hypocrisy of Cardinal Cormac Murphy O-Connor.

Hot Features | Comedy 25% |  9 Aug 2005
Comedy potboiler Dermot Carmody
The funniest sketch show in Irish comedy history, Stew, is returning for a second run.

Music | News 25% |  2 Mar 2000
Agnes Bernelle - An Appreciation Siobhan Long
AGNES BERNELLE s death last month brought a truly remarkable life to a close. SIOBHAN LONG looks back, in the company of Gavin Friday, Philip Chevron and Alan Amsby.

Politics | McCann 25% | 30 May 2006
Guilty Secret Eamonn McCann
In which the Feast of Our Lady of Fatima causes our columnist to flashback to the one that got away...

Politics | McCann 25% |  4 Sep 2007
Oh, Mandy Eamonn McCann
A gobsmacking performance heralds the arrival of a major new talent.

Music | News 25% | 17 Jun 2005
Folk Centre Greg McAteer
News from the trad and folk world with Greg McAteer

Hot Features | Reports 25% |  5 Nov 2008
The Grass Grows Meaner on the Other Side Olaf Tyaransen
He was the underclass delinquent who almost became a chess grandmaster and then stumbled into literary acclaim. John Healy looks back upon a life less ordinary.

  25% |  5 Oct 1994
Fruit Of The Heart  
 

Politics | McCann 25% | 20 Dec 2005
Bono and the Wolf Eamonn McCann
Annual article: Injustice was as rampant in 2005 as ever before, to no-one’s surprise.

Politics | McCann 25% | 25 May 2000
ON THE MARCH Eamonn McCann
Thousands of anti-racism protesters take to the streets of Dublin

Politics | McCann 25% | 15 Aug 2006
From a scream to a whisper Eamonn McCann
Agit-prop star David Rovics kicks against the pricks while Radio Ulster DJ and songwriter Eamon Friel beguiles.

Politics | Bootboy 25% | 24 Aug 2004
Even drearier steeples aka BootBoy
Bible belt homophobia imported wholesale to Ulster via the internet.

Politics | Bootboy 25% | 17 Feb 2003
My boyfriend deliberately infected himself with HIV aka BootBoy
Reading a controversial article on “bug chasing” – gay men who deliberately have bareback sex with HIV positive men – inspired our columnist to go public for the first time about a traumatic episode in his own love life.

Politics | McCann 25% |  9 Nov 2000
It Happened To A Bishop Eamonn McCann
Far from boring but curiously incomplete that s Dr Edward Daly s autobiography

Politics | McCann 25% | 30 Mar 2000
Kow-Towing To Clinton Eamonn McCann
EAMONN McCANN casts a critical eye over the record of the US president, and the claims made on behalf of the man who wants to succeed him.

Music Review | Album 25% |  6 Aug 1982
Nebraska Niall Stokes
The time has come when we can no longer pretend that we’re in control. An incipient sense of cosmic disorder, for the past year gnawing away at the fringes of our collective consciousness, has suddenly become devastatingly palpable.