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Music | Interview 92% | 13 Jun 2002
Dillonology Peter Murphy
Can Cara Dillon sell her unique brand of folk music to fans of The Strokes? Rough Trade believe she can, and so does Peter Murphy.

Music | Interview 88% | 15 Dec 2000
The Man Who Built The Old Weird America Peter Murphy
It's been a long strange trip and no mistake, one that describes a discernible line from Harry Smith's Anthology Of American Folk Music through to the Handsome Family. But there's even more going on beneath the surface. GREIL MARCUS, the music critic's music critic, is PETER MURPHY's guide on a mystery train whose other passengers include Elvis Presley, Robert Johnson, Mark Twain, Nick Cave, The Blair Witch, Bill Clinton, The Band, Siniad O'Connor, Beck, William Burroughs, William Faulkner and Bob Dylan. And that's just the first class carriage. All aboard

Music | Interview 69% | 17 Aug 2000
Folkin Great Great Colm O Hare
English folk singer KATE RUSBY has been nominated for the Mercury Music Prize. She tells Colm O'Hare about sad songs, her Bon Jovi phase, and attracting praise from Blur s Graham Coxon

Music | Interview 64% | 30 Jan 2003
Union city dues Sarah McQuaid
News, gossip, gigs and new releases from the world of trad and folk music.

Music | Interview 63% | 31 Mar 1999
Flight Of The Earle Siobhan Long
With his new album The Mountain, STEVE EARLE has turned his hand to bluegrass. He talks to SIOBHAN LONG about the record, his colourful past and his love of Irish music.

Hot Features | Commentary 62% | 16 Jul 1987
E.C. Was Here Elvis Costello
As his singular contribution to the birthday party, guest writer Elvis Costello offers a handful of stories from his ten years on the beat, which serve to illustrate why, in his own words, “I’d rather be a folk music fan than a teen idol.”

Hot Features | Interview 61% | 27 Mar 2006
Folk Centre: Wolf Parade Greg McAteer
The songs of Ger Wolfe have drawn praise from the likes of Christy Moore and John Spillane. His new record might be his best yet.

Music | News 60% | 25 Aug 2003
Andy White gives peace a chance The Hot Press Newsdesk
Andy White's important new album forges the way forward for Irish folk music

Music Review | Album 59% |  9 Nov 2000
The Blue Trees Nadine O Regan
With the release of mini-album The Blue Trees, Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci are on a one-band mission to put folk music back on the popular map.

Music Review | Dance Single 58% |  5 Apr 2006
Keep Trippin' Richard Brophy
‘Keep Trippin’ could be Plak’s official tagline. The label is nonplussed about staying within the confines of conventional techno. On ‘Calypso 3000’, Quenum sketches out a blurry meeting between discordant funk and the fluctuating time signatures of Latin American folk music. The concoction yields a warm, hypnotic glow.

Music Review | Album 58% | 17 Jul 2006
My Secret Is My Silence Shilpa Ganatra
If one of the most respected musicians in Scotland (Roddy) decides that being in a dripping cool rock band (Idlewild) is momentarily dull and turns his creative attentions to the anti-rock (folk music), it’s only right that his hired team comprise of the best in the business (Kate Rusby, Dave Burlinton, and Michael McGoldrick).

Music Review | Album 58% | 26 May 1999
The Man From God Knows Where John Walshe
The Man From God Knows Where is a folk opera. American country legend Tom Russell and friends each play a role, as Russell attempts to chronicle his Irish/Norwegian family's history in America, from the 1820s to the present day, through a mix of country, blues and traditional Irish and Norwegian folk music.

Music Review | Single 57% | 20 Feb 2006
Marrakech/Belly Of The Earth Shilpa Ganatra
With folk music entertaining a possible resurgence thanks to Nizlopi, here’s an artist with the potential to follow suit. Making this a double A-side is a smart move by a smart guy, with ‘Marrakech’ being a tune you’d bring out for a good old (possibly drunken) sing-song. ‘Belly of The Earth’, on the other hand, reveals a more sombre and passionate element to Noelie, and might be played to accompany the bad kind of drinking. It’s a solid offering, and his imminent seven-date Irish tour should prove his full worth.

Music Review | Album 56% |  7 Jun 2001
Time Sex Love Billy Scanlan
Country and folk music have become a lot more sophisticated over the last ten years or so. Gone are the wailing laments, tales of drinkin’, divorce and beatings.

Music Review | Album 55% | 20 Jan 2000
The Skiffle Sessions, Live in Belfast Niall Stokes
You look up 'skiffle' in the Chambers 20th Century Dictionary and it says "a strongly accented jazz type of folk music, played by guitar, drums and often unconventional instruments etc. popular about 1957".

Music | Interview 41% | 18 Sep 2002
The agony in the garden Colm O Hare
Now back on the road with his own band, sometime Pogue Terry Woods recalls a near disaster on-stage with U2 in New York

Music | Interview 41% | 27 Oct 1999
The Doctor Makes His Rounds Niall Stanage
With his only Irish solo gig of the year coming up, DR MILLAR brings NIALL STANAGE up to date with his progress.

Music | Interview 40% | 16 Apr 2003
Snap, crackle, pop Phil Udell
Well, okay, not quite pop – more gay church folk music, really. Phil Udell introduces Toronto mavericks The Hidden Cameras

Music | Interview 40% |  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

Music | Interview 40% | 18 Aug 1999
Eden Ain't Cheatin' Siobhan Long
From their earliest days in Gothenburg, WEST OF EDEN have fused Celtic and Scandinavian influences to come up with a unique sound. SIOBHAN LONG met them.

Music | Interview 40% |  8 May 2003
Part of the union Sarah McQuaid
News, gossip, gigs and new releases from the world of trad, folk and roots music.

Music | Interview 40% |  8 Nov 2002
Farewell to the chief Sarah McQuaid
We give you all the low-down on live gigs, recording projects, news and good, old-fashioned gossip from the folk and trad music scene

Music | Interview 40% |  1 Oct 1997
Across the Great Divide Siobhan Long
Roots music may help build bridges between past and present and us and them, but the media stance is still often isolationist. So says simon emerson of the afro celt sound system. siobhan long takes notes.

Music | Interview 40% |  1 Oct 1997
Across the Great Divide Siobhan Long
Roots music may help build bridges between past and present and us and them, but the media stance is still often isolationist. So says simon emerson of the afro celt sound system. siobhan long takes notes.

Music | Interview 40% |  2 Aug 2002
Five cents' worth Oliver Sweeney
Young folkies Nickel Creek look set to conquer Europe following their runaway stateside success

Music | Interview 40% | 11 Jun 2002
Beets international? Stephen Robinson
Dr Sean Millar is back with an acclaimed new album, this time accompanied by The Beet Club, displaying a recently acquired maturity in both music and lyric. Yet he tells Stephen Robinson that he's happy to be still growing up

Music | Interview 40% |  1 Sep 1999
Rebel With A Cause Siobhan Long
KARAN CASEY may be a folk singer, but don t classify her as easy listening . Her music is infused with radicalism and eclectism. She spoke to SIOBHAN LONG.

Music | Interview 40% | 15 May 2002
Can I have some Gilmore Colm O Hare
Colm O'Hare meets 21-year-old Thea Gilmore, who visited Kilkenny's Rhythm 'n' Roots Festival in May to promote her third album, Rules For Jokers

Hot Features | Interview 39% | 19 Jan 2004
Break like the wind Tara Brady
The team that did for heavy rock in Spinal Tap have now turned their comedic attentions to ’60s folk in a mighty wind. interview Tara Brady

Music | Interview 39% | 10 Dec 2002
Traditional values Sarah McQuaid
Gossip, news, gigs and new releases from the world of trad and folk music

Music | Interview 39% |  6 Mar 2003
Underground phenomenon Hannah Hamilton
Having already played high-profile support slots with the likes of Joe Strummer and John Squire, Omagh folk-rockers The Basement are aiming to go overground in 2003.

Music | Interview 39% | 16 Mar 2007
Paws for thought Colin Carberry
Banjo bangin’ Americana revivalists Cat Malojian give honky-tonk music an Irish twist.

Music | Interview 39% | 23 Aug 2004
A little bit of what you Clancy Jackie Hayden
Legendary ballad singer Liam Clancy, of the pioneering Clancy Brothers, kicked off this year’s Fleadh Cheoil in Clonmel with a vintage performance in the Enfer village. Here he reflects on Fleadhs past and their current contributions to Irish culture.

Music | Report 39% |  8 Apr 2008
Kicking up a storm Greg McAteer
Dervish are daring to take folk music to places it has never gone before with a thrilling new multi-media stage show.

Music | Interview 39% | 19 Jun 2003
A rebel hand – and other stories Sarah McQuaid
News, gossip, gigs and new releases from the world of trad, folk and roots music.

Music | Interview 39% | 21 Aug 2006
The beginning of a great adventure Colm O Hare
Most people know Philip Lynott and Thin Lizzy as the swashbuckling rock ‘n’ rollers who produced hard rock classics like ‘The Rocker’, ‘The Boys Are Back In Town’ and ‘Don’t Believe A Word’. But there were other fascinating forces at work in Ireland at the end of the ‘60s, with poetry and folk music both influencing the rock scene hugely. Philip Lynott was at the heart of that development – a charismatic star in the making with a deep romantic streak and an innate lyricism that separated him from the crowd. Now, these qualities have been captured, as never before, on a remarkable CD, released for the first time, free with HotPress. Read on...

Hot Features | Commentary 39% |  1 Oct 1997
get back to where we once belonged Siobhan Long
It?s real, it?s now and it goes all the way back to the source ? roots music is taking the world by storm and Ireland is very definitely on the map. By siobhan long.

Music | Interview 39% | 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 39% | 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.

Music | Interview 39% |  5 Aug 1998
In The Court Of King Arthur Jackie Hayden
Jackie Hayden cuts to the chase with Davey Arthur.

Music | Interview 39% | 27 Jul 2007
King Richard Colm O Hare
Folk doyen Richard Thompson remains a singular presence in the roots music scene after four decades. Here he talks about “exile” on the US West Coast and his recent return to his electric rock roots.

Music | Interview 39% | 10 Jul 2007
With a banjo on my knee Jackie Hayden
The annual Johnny Keenan Banjo Festival has put Longford on the world music map. Jackie Hayden talks to the festival’s originator Chris Keenan about how it grew from initially being laughed at to becoming one of the most important folk festivals in the international calendar.

Music | Interview 38% | 31 May 2002
Mann alive Peter Murphy
Peter Murphy meets the female singer/songwriter who's gone solo in more ways than one, Aimee Mann

Hot Features | Interview 38% | 17 Jun 2008
Sister Act Colm Russell
She’s gotten hitched and given up the navel-gazing, and suddenly the world can’t get enough of her. As mainstream success looms, MARTHA WAINWRIGHT talks about marriage, familial rivalry and being asked out on a date - well, sort of - by Bob Dylan.

Music | Interview 38% |  9 Oct 2003
Songs Of Praise  
The second coming of Messiah J & The Expert, Ireland’s finest hip hop band.

Music | Interview 38% | 17 Aug 2000
Get Yer Kitt On Eamon Sweeney
Young Dublin songwriter DAVID KITT, talks about gigging, recording and being recognised in Centra

Music | Interview 38% |  6 Aug 1997
An Independent Has Her Day Patrick Brennan
Ani DiFranco does it her way whether it s writing songs, making records or running a label. Patrick Brennan encounters a singular talent.

Music | Interview 38% | 19 Mar 2008
Wit me baby one more time Roisin Dwyer
He used to be an actor but there's nothing showbizzy about Johnny Flynn's baroque folk-pop. He tells us what it's like to grow up in a thespian household and of his friendship with Kevin Spacey.

Music | Interview 38% | 25 Apr 2003
No smoke without fire The Hot Press Newsdesk
The Smouldering Sons Of The West say folk-you to anti-roots music prejudices

Music | Interview 38% |  8 Sep 1993
Shawn's Showdown Colm O Hare
Increasingly popular, critically acclaimed, a Grammy Award Winner - and yet, Shawn Colvin still sings those 'ol record company blues. Colm O'Hare lends a sympathetic ear.

Music | Interview 38% | 31 Mar 2003
Mull 4 London 0 Phil Udell
How lone Scottish islander took on the industry and won. Phil Udell talks to Colin MacIntyre aka Mull Historical Society

Music | Interview 38% | 17 Sep 2004
The Banjo Man Jackie Hayden
The legendary Earl Scruggs is the star turn at the upcoming Johnny Keenan Banjo Festival.

Music | Interview 38% | 19 Nov 2007
Divine Comedian Peter Murphy
Robert Wyatt has signed up to the indie rock label that gave the world Arctic Monkeys and Franz Ferdinand. Will it prove a heavenly marriage?

Music | Interview 38% | 27 Sep 2001
The Paul Brady fanclub Colm O Hare
PAUL BRADY’s long association with US legend BONNIE RAITT has been one of his most successful, particularly in terms of enhancing his reputation as a world ranking songwriter

Music | Interview 38% |  8 May 2003
AC does it Phil Udell
No longer carrying the ‘sound system’ with them, four albums in, the Afro Celts are “only at the beginning”.

Music | Interview 38% | 25 Oct 2001
Down the highway Phil Udell
PHIL UDELL talks to PHILLIP KING about his latest project, the music and politics documentary, "Freedom Highway"

Music | Interview 38% | 22 Jun 2006
Folk column: Lane academy Greg McAteer
The Streets of London concert will see old and new stars of the country and folk scene sharing a memorable bill

Music | Interview 38% | 16 Jan 2003
Council of war Sarah McQuaid
News, gossip, gigs and new releases from the world of trad and folk music

Music | Interview 38% | 17 Oct 2006
Scouse about that? Colin Carberry
Relocating to Liverpool, northern duo Pat and Nipsy hope some of that Mersey magic dust will rub off on their songcraft

Music | Interview 38% | 27 Sep 2001
The Paul Brady fanclub Colm O Hare
Curtis Stigers and Paul Brady have collaborated on a number of projects together, performing live on several occasions and writing songs

Music | Interview 38% |  7 Jun 2006
A musical Goliath Mark Keane
He may have started out as the classic underdog, but David Gray has gone on to become one of the most successful songwriters of his generation

Music | Interview 38% | 16 Sep 2004
Plan of Attack Colm O Hare
Nashville-based singer-songwriter Sandra McCracken looks set to be the latest sensation to break out of Music City.

Music | Interview 38% | 23 Jul 2002
What makes the grass grow green in Texas Peter Murphy
The outlaw loved by the in-law, Willie Nelson can draw 4,000 people outside Dublin virtually by word of mouth. But it ain't all middle of the road: as befits a veteran of the honky-tonks who had done battle with the IRS and the law, the country music legend can still get in touch with the dark side of Hank

Music | Interview 38% | 10 Jun 2009
Acoustic Beauty The Hot Press Newsdesk
The Mighty Stef favours the sturdy full figure-8 of the Lakewood M14.

Music | Interview 38% | 13 Mar 2003
Special agent Sarah McQuaid
News, gossip, gigs and new releases from the world of trad and folk.

Music | Interview 38% |  6 Apr 2006
Plucky Luciano Richard Brophy
Minimalist techno has a new hero in Chile-born DJ Luciano Nicolet.

Music | Interview 38% | 12 Oct 2000
Seeger After Truth Siobhan Long
At 81 years of age, folk pioneer PETE SEEGER is still active in the politics of song. SIOBHAN LONG meets a man fully deserving of the title 'living legend'

Music | Interview 37% | 25 May 2004
Andy work if you can get it Colm O Hare
Most people slow down a bit when they turn 60, but not trad legend Andy Irvine. Colm O’Hare hears about his latest collaboration with Donal Lunny, the Planxty reunion and the perils of being stranded in small German towns.

Music | Interview 37% | 11 Oct 2004
Coronation Street Phil Udell
Getting funky reggae grooves heard over the din of the capital’s rock bands is no easy task, but Dublin ska kingpins King Sativa are continuing to fight the good fight.

Music | Interview 37% |  1 Oct 2003
Growing Up With Country Phil Udell
How El Diablo from dublin are helping return country music to its roots.

Music | Interview 37% | 14 Feb 2003
Southern comfort Phil Udell
The warm, multi-layered sound of Calexico is a result of the disparate music scene in the group’s home state, says band co-founder Joey Burns.

Music | Interview 37% | 25 Mar 2008
Rustic Development Patrick Freyne
Patrick Freyne talks to Ken McHugh of Autamata about his double life as artist and producer, his new album, Colours of Sound - and about moving to the country.

Music | News 37% |  1 Nov 2006
RTÉ Radio to host 2007 EBU Folk Festival The Hot Press Newsdesk
Ireland is set to host the 2007 European Broadcasting Union Folk Festival.

Music | Interview 37% | 24 Jun 2002
Ani are you okay? Eamonn McCann
The ever-righteous, incorruptible folkstress brings her eloquent brain to bear on music, politics, 9/11 and America's corporate delinquency

Music | Interview 37% | 17 Jul 2006
In God's country Colm O Hare
Country music’s stock has never been higher. First Johnny Cash gained an entire new generation of fans, then Hollywood began to pepper its films with bluegrass and roots music. Now, everyone from Jack White to Van Morrison is waking up to the magic of country. Ireland's getting in on the act too, with the launch of the Midlands Music Festival, a two-day celebration of all things hatted and booted. Colm O’Hare traces the rebirth of a genre.

Music | Interview 37% | 27 Aug 2002
A new day Eamon Sweeney
It's one of the most heartwarming and deserved success stories in music - how Beth Orton learned to cope with illness, rebuilt her career and found herself sharing studios and stages with artists as diverse as Emmylou Harris, Ryan Adams, The Chemical Brothers and David Kitt

Music | Interview 37% | 21 Oct 2003
A Spaceman Came Travelling Eamon Sweeney
Spiritualized are back with a new album which confirms Jason Pierce’s theory that “the best music is made by people who are out of control.” Loving the alien:

Music | Interview 37% | 26 Feb 2003
Good days at the office Olaf Tyaransen
From dark age to middle age, Nick Cave is such a far cry from the blood-spilling junkie of rock legend that these days you’re likely to encounter him commuting to his 9 to 5. Except of course that his job is writing and making music, his new album is called Nocturama and there are, he admits, some sizeable blow-outs in the memory banks.

Music | Interview 37% | 10 Jun 1998
Hart Of The Matter Siobhan Long
He may be a man of few words, but alvin youngblood harT's artistic lineage is not to be sneezed at: this is one bluesman whose experiences include a spell in the US Coastguard and a stint in Switzerland. Tape: siobhÁn Long.

Music | Interview 37% | 19 Oct 2005
What Katie did next Hannah Hamilton
Diminutive, multi-platinum acoustic princess Katie Malua is beginning to steer a blusier, more challenging path.

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 26 Jun 2003
Tommy guns it Jackie Hayden
40 years after the Clancy Brothers brought Irish ballads to an international audience and won famous fans like Bob Dylan, Tommy Makem is still committed to the power of song – but appalled at the way modern Ireland treats its own culture.

Music | Interview 37% | 31 Mar 1999
More Songs About Death And Botany Joe Jackson
New country? No. New folk? Perhaps. Better yet call it dark, maverick timeless music. JOE JACKSON meets GILLIAN WELCH.

Music | Interview 37% | 30 Mar 2000
BASS THE NEXT GENERATION Peter Murphy
After years as son of Charles , ERIC MINGUS is forging his own musical identity. He talks to PETER MURPHY about jazz purists, hip-hop and playing bass with Nick Cave.

Politics | Frontlines 37% | 22 Sep 1993
No Ivory Tower Jackie Hayden
Jackie Hayden reports on the impact of Tower Records new shop in Dublin

Music | Interview 37% | 12 Oct 2000
The Red Dirt Girl Siobhan Long
At 53, EMMYLOU HARRIS has finally taken up the pen and the result is one of her finest albums yet. SIOBHAN LONG journeys to New York to meet the reluctant songwriter.

Music | Interview 37% | 30 Nov 1994
State Of The Art Craig Fitzsimons
Craig Fitzsimons meets Jimmie Dale Gilmore, possessor of a unique high ’n’ lonesome voice and yet another great product of the Lone Star State who, belatedly, is experiencing a modicum of stardom himself.

Music | Interview 37% |  3 Oct 2007
Red on arrival The Hot Press Newsdesk
A new label aims to put Irish electronica on the map. But can it overcome declining record sales?

Music | Interview 37% | 22 Jan 1997
The Cream Of The Crop rrrr Siobhan Long
Trad legend PADDY MOLONEY of THE CHIEFTAINS singles out his own musical favourites of all time. Tape: SIOBHAN LONG. Pix: COLM HENRY

Music | Interview 37% |  2 Dec 1996
Pimp Up The Volume Richard Brophy
The Chemical Brothers meet Nick Drake? RICHARD BROPHY meets “the music alchemist’s dream”, the SNEAKER PIMPS.

Music | Interview 37% | 27 Mar 2003
State of the union Sarah McQuaid
News, gossip, gigs and new releases from the world of trad and folk.

Music | Interview 37% |  4 Aug 1977
Look What They've Done To Our Songs, Ma? Bill Graham
The Bothy Band got rhythm and some purists don't like it . . . Donal Lunny ... Triona Ní Dhomhnaill explain . . .

Music | Interview 37% | 25 Mar 2008
Foal if you think it's over Ed Power
Genre-busting art-rockers Foals are the moody face of the 'new eccentric' scene. And they've got tastemakers in a proper tizzy.

Music | Interview 37% |  4 Dec 2007
Swede Dreams Ed Power
Elfin Scandinavian popster Robyn muses on creative freedom and the vagaries of the industry.

Music | Interview 36% |  6 Jan 2004
Between the jigs and the reels. Sarah McQuaid
It’s been a big year for controversy of one kind or another in the world of folk and traditional music.

Music | Interview 36% |  7 Jul 1999
The Dark Stuff Joe Jackson
Creativity for depression? It s an exchange he can live with, says PAUL WESTERBERG, whose days of excess with The Replacements continue to haunt his latest acclaimed solo album Suicaine Gratification. Interview: JOE JACKSON.

Music | Interview 36% |  1 Nov 2005
Moore the merrier Greg McAteer
Christy Moore's new year shows in Dublin promise to revisit former glories.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 23 Sep 2009
A LITTLE BIT OF WHAT YOU CLANCY Tara Brady
LIAM CLANCY is in sparkling form as he looks forward to the release of a documentary on his life, which explains how he escaped the Irish Ayatollahs and wowed a young Bob Dylan in Greenwich Village.

Music | Interview 36% | 26 Jan 1994
Tales of Derring Do Andy Darlington
Those angry young Marxist Punk-Rockers THE MEKONS are back with a new album I Love Mekons and a contribution to a pro-abortion Woman’s Rights compilation . . . but they’re no longer quite so angry or young, not exactly Marxist, and their Punk is reinforced by Folk, Country and World Music! ANDY DARLINGTON finds out what the hell is going on in Club Mekon.

Music | Interview 36% |  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.

Music | Interview 36% | 12 May 1999
Ivers of Sound Siobhan Long
Are you ready for hip hop, be-bop trad? Then EILEEN IVERS is ready to take you to the bridge. SIOBHAN LONG meets the fiddle player with the world at her fingertips.

Politics | Hog 36% | 18 Mar 2003
A question of identity The Hog
With St. Patrick’s day on the horizon, the vexed question of what it means to be Irish once again comes to the fore.

Music | Interview 36% | 29 Sep 1999
The Tudor Age George Byrne
RICHARD THOMPSON s new album Mock Tudor consolidates his position as one of the most articulate and influential songwriters around. GEORGE BYRNE met him.

Music | Interview 36% |  4 Feb 1998
Maas Appeal Richard Brophy
Ewan Pearson makes music for the floor, the heart and the soul. Richard Brophy talks to the Soma soul man.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 14 Mar 2006
St. Patrick's Day: something for everyone Chris Donovan
There’s more to our national holiday than drowning the shamrock you know. In fact, no matter what your interest, St Paddy’s Day has something to offer.

Music | Interview 36% | 19 Oct 1984
Night And Day John Waters
Formerly, by his own admission, a perfectionist, an arch-worrier and an all-round uptight individual, Paul Brady is slowly but surely learning how to relax. As his Full Moon album rises, John Waters takes a long, close look at Paul Brady in a new light.

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 22 Jul 1998
Pride In The Name Of Dubh ?? ??
A special tribute to one of Galway’s best-loved venues, The Róisín Dubh, which is currently celebrating its fifth birthday.

Music | Interview 36% | 11 Oct 2001
The story of da funk Peter Murphy
GEORGE CLINTON By PETER MURPHY

Music | Interview 36% | 15 Jul 2002
25th Galway arts festival preview Colm O Hare
From 15-28 July 2002 Galway city hosts one of the most comprehensive of this year's arts festivals with esoteric offerings from the genres of visual art, music, theatre, comedy and lots, lots more

Music | Interview 36% | 19 Feb 1997
THE RETURN of the GRIEVOUS ANGEL Peter Murphy
Although arguably the outstanding female country artist of her generation, Emmylou Harris has always distanced herself from the Nashville mainstream. From early recordings with Gram Parsons and Bob Dylan through to her most recent Daniel Lanois-produced album Wrecking Ball, her work has been characterised by a maverick spirit and real fire in the belly. PETER MURPHY caught up with her in Dublin.

Music | Report 36% | 27 Oct 2009
The Foggy Jew Greg McAteer
It’s a wacky return to the world of vaudeville – but Mick Moloney’s new album is still an absolute joy from start to finish.

Music | Interview 36% | 26 Jun 1980
The Importance Of Being Irvine Dermot Stokes
Dermot Stokes records a personal history of Irish Folk through the eyes of Andy Irvine

Music | Interview 36% |  9 Jul 1997
STILL GOT THE BLUES John Walshe
MARY STOKES reminisces on her first decade as Ireland s premier blues artist, and looks forward to expanding her horizons in the future. Interview: john walshe.

Music | Interview 36% | 22 May 2003
Beck to the future Nadine O Regan
As Beck contemplates a belated sequel to Odelay, feel free to ask him any old question you like – just as long as it isn’t about that recent break-up with his long-time girlfriend. Oh, and make sure you don’t have the sniffles. Nadine O’Regan packs a hankie

Music | Interview 36% | 30 Apr 1997
BECK THE LOSER TAKES IT ALl Peter Murphy
Greetings From LA beck and tom petty get together in Los Angeles for an impassioned rap on songs, songwriting, showbiz, the Unplugged phenomenon and how too much music can boggle the mind. mark rowland listens in.

Music | Interview 36% | 15 Oct 2002
Richard’s return Paul Nolan
Richard Ashcroft spent the best part of the ’90s on a quest to make one of the great rock albums with The Verve. Having succeeded with Urban Hymns, he promptly broke up the band. Now, with the imminent release of his second solo album, Human Conditions, an upbeat Ashcroft discusses his excitement about collaborating with Brian Wilson, his youthful adventures in clubland, and why The Verve had to split

Music | Interview 36% | 13 Apr 2000
THE SECOND COMING OF JONI MITCHELL Joe Jackson
In the second and final part of our exclusive interview, JONI MITCHELL tells her story from the ground-breaking Blue to the present day. Having grown increasingly disenchanted with a music biz providing junk food for juveniles it took the classic songs of Billie Holiday and Etta James to restore her faith and give her own career a new lease of old life. Once a romantic always a romantic, she tells JOE JACKSON

Music | Interview 36% | 13 Apr 2000
THE SECOND COMING OF JONI MITCHELL Joe Jackson
In the second and final part of our exclusive interview, JONI MITCHELL tells her story from the ground-breaking Blue to the present day. Having grown increasingly disenchanted with a music biz providing junk food for juveniles it took the classic songs of Billie Holiday and Etta James to restore her faith and give her own career a new lease of old life. Once a romantic always a romantic, she tells JOE JACKSON

Music | Interview 36% | 13 Apr 2000
THE SECOND COMING OF JONI MITCHELL Joe Jackson
In the second and final part of our exclusive interview, JONI MITCHELL tells her story from the ground-breaking Blue to the present day. Having grown increasingly disenchanted with a music biz providing junk food for juveniles it took the classic songs of Billie Holiday and Etta James to restore her faith and give her own career a new lease of old life. Once a romantic always a romantic, she tells JOE JACKSON

Music | Interview 36% | 13 Apr 2000
THE SECOND COMING OF JONI MITCHELL Joe Jackson
In the second and final part of our exclusive interview, JONI MITCHELL tells her story from the ground-breaking Blue to the present day. Having grown increasingly disenchanted with a music biz providing junk food for juveniles it took the classic songs of Billie Holiday and Etta James to restore her faith and give her own career a new lease of old life. Once a romantic always a romantic, she tells JOE JACKSON

Music | Interview 36% | 18 Jun 1987
20 Years A-Growin' Bill Graham
The Christy Moore Interview by Bill Graham Christy Moore is out on his own. He can't be limited as just a folk singer or a popular artist. Rather he's increasingly an Irish national fixture with an influence far beyond the mere entertainer's reach.

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 28 Jul 1993
GOING UP THE COUNTRY ?? ??
HOT PRESS CONTINUES ITS SERIES ON HOLIDAY DESTINATIONS AT HOME WITH A LOOK AT LETTERKENNY AND ITS ATTRACTIVE AND HISTORIC ENVIRONS

Music | Interview 36% | 26 Jan 1994
The Star Of The County Clare Gerry McGovern
From her humble origins in Corofin, Co. Clare to The White House, Sharon Shannon has blazed her own unique trail across the landscape of Irish music. Her extraordinary success notwithstanding, she has remained an enigmatic and elusive presence, renowned for the child-like sense of wonder she radiates. Here, for the first time, she opens up, telling her own remarkable story to Hot Press. Interview: Gerry McGovern.

Music | Interview 36% |  2 Nov 1994
The Star of the County Clare Gerry McGovern
From her humble origins in Corofin, Co. Clare to The White House, SHARON SHANNON has blazed her own unique trail across the landscape of Irish music. Her extraordinary success notwithstanding, she has remained an enigmatic and elusive presence, renowned for the child-like sense of wonder she radiates. Here, for the first time, she opens up, telling her own remarkable story to Hot Press. Interview: GERRY McGOVERN.

Music | Interview 36% | 22 Jun 2006
Nashville communication Peter Murphy
When indie godhead Frank Black hooked up with several veterans of the Nashville session scene the results were thrillingly different to his work with The Pixies

Music | Interview 36% | 29 Sep 1999
It Never Rains But It Pours Colm O Hare
COLM O HARE speaks to Fran Healy and Dougie Payne of TRAVIS about ongoing success, irritating Radiohead comparisons and avoiding the nightmare of 9-5 existence.

Music | Interview 36% |  9 Mar 1994
All Things Bright and Beautiful Jackie Hayden
In the past, many Irish people suffered from an inferiority complex about their own culture – about the language, music, film and literature of this island. But music is one arena where things have changed dramatically. Report: Jackie Hayden

Music | Interview 36% |  2 Mar 2000
Astral Years Niall Stokes
He scored his first hit single as lead singer with Them in 1965, with Baby Please Don t Go . In 1968, he released his debut solo album Astral Weeks, which is widely regarded among critics as one of the most important and complete records of the past 50 years. But these are just two early landmarks in a remarkable career which finds Van Morrison still on top of his game 40 years since he made his debut with his own skiffle group, The Sputkniks, at a school concert in Orangefield in Belfast. In an exclusive interview, carried out for the RTE television series From A Whisper To A Scream, and published in the run-up to Van s latest Irish dates, he talks to Niall Stokes.

Music | Interview 36% | 25 Aug 1993
Mary s Back Pages Joe Jackson
Or should that be Black pages? Mary Black and her long-time friend, producer and collaborator Declan Sinnott look back over ten years of solo work, and the steady progress which finds her ready to take on the world with her latest album, The Holy Ground. Interview: Joe Jackson.

Music | Interview 36% | 25 Aug 1993
Mary s Back Pages Joe Jackson
Or should that be Black pages? Mary Black and her long-time friend, producer and collaborator Declan Sinnott look back over ten years of solo work, and the steady progress which finds her ready to take on the world with her latest album, The Holy Ground. Interview: Joe Jackson.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 25 Aug 1993
MARY'S BACK PAGES Joe Jackson
Or should that be Black pages? Mary Black and her long-time friend, producer and collaborator Declan Sinnott look back over ten years of solo work, and the steady progress which finds her ready to take on the world with her latest album. The Holy Ground. Interview: Joe Jackson

Music | Interview 36% | 18 Dec 2003
Whole Lotta Love Eamon Carr
30 years after the music was originally recorded, Led Zeppelin topped the record and DVD charts in 2003 with the sound and vision of the band in all their pomp and glory. The guitar hero’s guitar hero, Jimmy Page reflects on the passion for music which inspired him then – and now.

Music | Interview 36% |  8 Nov 2006
The bling that shakes the barley Ed Power
Messiah J and The Expert aim to put Dublin hip-hop on the map. To do so, they must tackle several deep-set prejudices – such as the belief that Irish people can’t rap.

Music | Interview 36% | 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

Music | Interview 36% | 26 Jul 2002
Come gather 'round people Colm O Hare
From the biggest international names to the most dynamic local creations, festivals make Ireland a good place to be in summer, even when the sun refuses to put in an appearance

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 25 Jun 2007
A little help from our friends Craig Fitzsimons and Jackie Hayden
To celebrate hotpress’s thirtieth anniversary issue, we thought we’d break out the bubbly (and the tea!) and invite round a collection of Ireland’s biggest stars.

Music | Interview 35% | 15 Sep 1999
Not The Same Old Story Joe Jackson
PAUL BRADY has had an embattled career. In the course of it, he has made great music, won new fans and lost old friends. He has written powerful songs, locked horns with his record company, even contemplated quitting the business entirely. Now finally, he has come to new realisations about himself and about the enduring power of love. Interview: JOE JACKSON.

Music | Interview 35% | 23 Feb 2007
First among sequels Peter Murphy
Pressure? What pressure? Kaiser Chiefs are back with a new record that makes nonsense of all that difficult second album stuff.

Music | Interview 35% | 18 Mar 2008
What Sarah did next Greg McAteer
Having exiled herself to Cornwall, Sarah McQuaid is about to release the eagerly-awaited follow-up to her debut album.

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% |  4 Apr 1991
Bringing It All Back Home Liam Fay
U2, Elvis Costello, The Pogues, The Waterboys, Emmylou Harris, Hothouse Flowers, The Everly Brothers, Christy Moore just some of the dozens of artists who contribute to an adventurous new five part TV series which traces the extraordinary return journey that Irish traditional music has made to America and beyond. Here, Liam Fay previews the programmes, talks to Philip King who originated and nurtured the project and hears many of the participants explain how they discovered the importance and influence of Irish music.

Music | Interview 35% | 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.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 12 May 1999
Colorado Uber Alles Peter Murphy
The High School massacre: PETER MURPHY sees an old spin being put on a new horror.

Music | Interview 35% |  6 Feb 2006
The black stuff Greg McAteer
Frances Black has returned to her folk roots and released her most extraordinary record yet.

Music | Interview 35% | 12 Nov 2003
To Hell And Back Phil Udell
When Ryan Adams gave his record company an album called 'Love Is Hell', they declined to release this “fucking dark, twisted sad and morose” record. so Adams decided instead to record a loud, punky, uptempo album called 'Rock N Roll'. and guess what? now we get to hear both.

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% | 24 Oct 1981
Irish Ways ... Irish Laws Bill Graham
The Moving Hearts Interview by Bill Graham

Music | Interview 35% | 27 Jul 2007
Return of the hardcore troubadour Peter Murphy
Steve Earle is known for his passionate political views. But never mind standing firm in the face of conservative America. The hardest thing he ever did was follow Christy Moore onstage.

Music | Interview 35% | 28 Sep 2000
The Transformer Peter Murphy
The first rule of interviewing LOU REED is that you don t: he interviews you. Peter Murphy survives the turning of the tables and is rewarded with thoughts on Joyce, Wilde, Dylan, Ginsberg and on becoming an elder stateman for the alternative thing .

Music | Interview 35% | 14 Mar 1981
To cut a long story short Neil McCormick
Neil McCormick falls in love again

Music | Interview 35% | 14 Mar 1981
To cut a long story short Neil McCormick
Neil McCormick falls in love again

Music | Report 35% | 25 Jun 2007
Gone but never forgotten  
30th Anniversary Retrospective: They died before their time – but they remain legends in contempary music.

Music | Interview 35% | 16 Sep 1998
THE DONAL LUNNY STORY Niall Stokes
It s been a long, long way from there to here and DONAL LUNNY has been at the centre of things every step of the journey. He has achieved enormous acclaim and considerable success with Planxty, The Bothy Band and Moving Hearts. Now with the launch of his latest band and their eponymously titled album COOLFIN, he takes time out to reflect on all of the major figures who have contributed to the extraordinary revival of folk and traditional music that has taken place over the past 30 years. He also recalls the highs and the lows the heartbreak, the good times and the great music that he himself has enjoyed as one of Ireland s finest and most influential musicians. Interview: Niall Stokes. Pics: Colm Henry

Music | Interview 35% | 10 Jan 2005
It's the Music in Me Niall Stokes
He may be better known as manager of The Corrs – but John Hughes has been a musician for well over 30 years. Besides, with a US top 50 album to his credit in the 1980s, his new record – the remarkable Wild Ocean – is just the latest instalment in an extraordinary journey that has taken him close to the edge and back. interview: Niall Stokes

Music | Interview 35% |  5 Sep 2008
One irish rover Peter Murphy
Irish music lost a folk giant, with the passing of Ronnie Drew. We pay tribute to the man and speak to some of the musicians who knew him best.

Music | Interview 35% | 23 Mar 2004
Riders on the Storm Hannah Hamilton
On the eve of the release of the group’s new album Winning Days, The Vines’ bassist Patrick Mathews gives hannah Hamilton the inside story on the tensions that threatened to split the band, hanging with Steve-o and the Jackass crew, and the group’s heretofore undeclared love of the Clancy Brothers.

Music | Interview 35% | 27 Apr 2000
Sex & Drugs & Diddley Aye Joe Jackson
This is THE CHIEFTAINS as you've never encountered them before - more like mad, trad and dangerous to know than the grand-daddies of Irish traditional music. Smoking dope with Philip Lynott! Busting muscles through wild sex! Yes, it's the bits that aren't in the official biography. But, soft, not a word to Paddy, OK? Part One of an exclusive two-part interview. By JOE JACKSON.

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% | 14 Dec 1994
KIND of WILD - KATELL KEINEG IN AMERICA Helena Mulkearns
Helena Mulkerns catches up with the charming Dublin-based chanteuse on a tour of East Coast college campuses, and finds a wilfully free spirit at ease with her sexuality – if not with the industry’s categorisation of such guitar-wielding women.

Music | Interview 35% | 18 Sep 2002
Still angry after all these years Colm O Hare
Paul Weller has a reputation as one of the most truculent men in pop, with a deep-seated dislike of the promotional process. But with the release of his latest solo album Illumination, the man who once led The Jam and the Style Council agreed to put himself in the firing line. Looking back over a career that's studded with success, he's reflective and forthright - but the anger that inspired much of The Jam's finest output still burns

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 11 Aug 1993
WIDE AWAKE IN IRELAND Jackie Hayden
It isn't just a matter of government policies, says Jackie Hayden. Record companies, radio stations, banks and even audiences all have a part to play.

Music | Interview 35% |  4 Feb 1998
Wales Of The Unexpected John Walshe
WHAT IS the connection between The X Files, massive drinking bouts, Man United fans and top ten hits? CATATONIA, that s what. The Welsh guitar popsters are currently nestling in the upper reaches of the charts with their hit Mulder And Scully , and JOHN WALSHE talks to vocalist CERYS MATTHEWS about their meteoric rise to the top.

Music | Interview 35% | 27 Oct 1999
Sweethearts Of The Rodeo Peter Murphy
With a new tribute album to Gram Parsons on release, PETER MURPHY enlists the help of co-executive producer EMMYLOU HARRIS to recreate the tale of Southern Gothic that was the late singer s life.

Music | Interview 35% | 15 Dec 1993
THE TRAVELLING MEDICINE SHOW Bill Graham
PACK YOUR LEMSIP AND NIGHT NURSE AND PREPARE TO DO BATTLE WITH THE BEIJING FLU AS THE SAWDOCTORS TACKLE THE SOUTH OF ENGLAND ON THEIR LATEST TOUR. CURRENTLY BETWEEN LABELS THE BAND’S U.K. FANBASE IS INCREASING STEADILY, EVEN IF THE CONCEPT OF ‘DESIGNER BOGMEN’ HAS YET TO PENETRATE THE SHIRES CHECKING THE TEMPERATURE: BILL GRAHAM.

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% | 17 Dec 1987
BAND ON THE RUN Bill Graham
Bill Graham travels to Louisiana to discover that U2 are once more in the throes of a re-birth.

Music | Interview 35% | 21 Mar 2005
This Mortal Coil Paul Nolan
Online Exclusive: hotpress.com presents the final ever interview with electro-industrial pioneers Coil

Music | Interview 35% |  6 Jul 2000
The Second Coming Of David Gray Niall Stanage
It's all changed for DAVID GRAY. Within the past month he has played a series of sell-out gigs across the US, gone top ten in the UK, and returned to this country to celebrate the release of Lost Songs. In a hotpress exclusive, NIALL STANAGE reports from New York, Boston, London and Dublin on the globalisation of Ireland's favourite Welshman. Hotshot hitman: STEVEN FISHER

Music | Interview 34% | 13 Oct 2004
REM as Buck would have it Olaf Tyaransen
They are one of the most interesting and enigmatic groups in rock. They are also one of the biggest, with a string of multi-million selling albums to their credit. But they don’t like interviews much, making themselves available for only a handful in Europe to coincide with the release of their new album Around The Sun. Once Peter Buck sits down opposite a microphone, however, a different face of REM reveals itself, as he talks eloquently about life, family, downloads, air rage, Iraq, Bush – and The Thrills.

Music | Interview 34% | 27 Feb 1986
OUTSIDE IT'S DONEGAL Bill Graham
In the magical, wind-swept landscape of Ireland's remote north-west the cameras roll as U2's Bono and Maire of Clannad make the video for their collaborative single "In A Lifetime". Bill Graham joins the entourage at work and at play and talks to the main protagonists.

Music | Interview 34% |  3 Feb 1999
All Revved Up Peter Murphy
. . . and ready to go. Mercury Rev s recent album Deserter s Songs was met with a rapturous critical reception, even topping the Hot Press critics end-of-year poll. On their recent Dublin visit they spoke to Peter Murphy about the album, The Band and their volatile past. Jonathan Donahue pics: Cathal Dawson

Music | Interview 34% |  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.

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.

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% | 19 Apr 2005
Blood On The Tracks Peter Murphy
Or how Garbage tried and failed to kill each other during the making of Bleed Like Me. Interview by Peter Murphy.

Music | Interview 34% |  8 Apr 2005
Blood On The Tracks Peter Murphy
Or how Garbage tried and failed to kill each other during the making of Bleed Like Me.

Music | Interview 34% |  3 Feb 1999
If You See Her Say Hello Joe Jackson
Joni Mitchell and Bob Dylan at Madison Square Garden? It doesn t get much better than this. JOE JACKSON goes backstage for a brief but revealing encounter with Joni and, from a vantage point to die for, finds two 60s legends who can still send shivers up the spine at the end of the millennium.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 16 Dec 1996
So Then, Andy, Did You Ever Sleep With Gaybo? Joe Jackson
He may well be RTE s only living intellectual but ANDY O MAHONY, host of The Sunday Show, will long be remembered by many as the man who asked Deirdre Purcell if she ever did the bold thing with Gay Byrne. JOE JACKSON gets the self-styled closet determinist to come out of the closet. Pix: Colm Henry

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.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% | 16 Dec 1996
The Last Of The High Kings Liam Fay
inishing off a year in which his immersion in the craziness of orthodox religion won him a top journalism award, Liam Fay finds himself standing atop a windswept Hill of Tara in the dead of night in the depths of winter all the better to survey the diverse landscape of paganism and witchcraft in 90s Ireland.

Music Review | Album 34% | 17 Jan 2002
There Is No Eye: Music For Photographs Compiled (and photographed) by John Cohen Kim Porcelli
…No Eye is beautifully presented – each song arrives with a few (amazing) photographs and a brief illustrative tale.

Music Review | Album 33% |  5 Mar 2009
The light of which I speak Patrick Freyne
Traditional music that didn’t happen for some reason

Hot Features | Reports 33% | 24 Apr 2009
The crack is mighty Greg McAteer
Folk fans who are too purist about the genre forget that it’s the flaws that make traditional music so wonderfully distinctive in the first place.

Music | News 33% | 29 Oct 2009
Annabelle Chvostek for Ireland The Hot Press Newsdesk
Canada's Juno award-winning Annabelle Chvostek kicks off her tour of Britain and Ireland with a gig in Belfast on Wednesday, November 11 at The Real Music Club at The Errigle Inn.

Hot Features | Reports 33% | 31 Aug 2009
Twangs For The Memories Greg McAteer
Some of the best purveyors of folk music from the United States will shortly descend on Galway for the city’s annual Americana Festival.

Music Review | Album 32% | 30 Oct 2009
The Sleepers Patrick Freyne
Brits take the folk-rock back

Music Review | Album 32% |  7 Jun 2001
Pause Billy Scanlan
Two years after the release of the debut Four Tet album Dialogue, Kieran Hebden is back with Pause, an album so fresh that it could make sour milk drinkable again.

Hot Features | Reports 32% | 29 Jan 2009
America the Great Greg McAteer
The United States is a unique nation with a singular sense of its place in history and in the world. Little wonder it’s produced so much great music

Music Review | Album 32% |  9 Aug 2004
Good news for people who love bad news Ronan Fitzgerald
There are circles in America in which Modest Mouse are heralded as the band of drifters who will bring folk to the hipsters.

Music Review | Single 31% | 28 Apr 2005
Topknot [feat. Bubbley Kaur & M.I.A.] Phil Udell
Poor Cornershop looked so damned uncomfortable throughout their whole chart topping experience that you feared it would scar them forever and they’d never want to make records again. They have, however, sunk happily back into semi-oblivion and knocked out a stream of fantastic singles, of which 'Topknot' is by far the best.

Music | News 31% | 17 Jul 2006
Arts Minister pays tribute to late O Domhnaill The Hot Press Newsdesk
The Minister for Arts, Sport & Tourism, John O’Donoghue, has led the tributes to traditional musician Micheal Ó Domhnaill who died suddenly last week.

Music Review | Album 31% | 17 Dec 2008
Motion To Rejoin Edwin McFee
New mexican drone rock duds. Tune free zone.

Music Review | Live 31% | 21 Mar 2005
Live At The Sugar Club, Dublin Tanya Sweeney
By all accounts, Willy Mason lives out of a van, which is currently stationed in California while he embarks on his European tour. Listening to his minimalist set packed with worldly, well-travelled gems, it certainly shows. It being his first Irish show, Mason is predictably a little tipsy (“Hell, I even drink like an American,” he drawls). Although he has become something of a media darling of late, he seems slightly disoriented by tonight’s rapturous reception.

Music Review | Album 31% | 13 Oct 2003
Songs For Creatures Richard Brophy
The prevailing mood of the album is best captured by sprawling space rock odysseys like ‘Hips For Scotland’.

Music Review | Album 31% |  6 Mar 2006
After the Morning Steve Cummins
After The Morning succeeds in matching Cara Dillon’s voice with more challenging and, for her, more experimental material.

Music | News 31% | 10 Nov 1999
A Brief History of Trad Jackie Hayden
Irish roots music keeps growing in influence and popularity. JACKIE HAYDEN examines the phenomenon and salutes the trailblazers.

Music | News 31% |  2 Jun 2009
Adam Green joins The Cribs on tour The Hot Press Newsdesk
The former Moldy Peaches frontman will play support to The Cribs on their upcoming Irish tour.

Music | News 31% | 18 Jun 2009
Petr Pandula's Open Letter to Irish musicians The Hot Press Newsdesk
Why he thinks that trad musicians have lost their way

Music Review | Album 31% |  8 Dec 1999
Timeless Jackie Hayden
Despite an impeccable pedigree that goes back to the bands Na Sulteoiri and Oisin in the '70s, Geraldine McGowan is one of the most unsung female singers on the home folk circuit, a situation partly exacerbated by her domicile in Germany where she is one of the dominant figures on the live music scene.

Music Review | Album 31% | 18 Mar 2002
The Affair Richard Brophy
However, if you're looking for something truly worthwhile in the 'loungecore' department, you could do worse than check this debut album by Ralph Lamb and Andy Ross

Music | News 30% | 17 Sep 2007
The Wedding Present to play Belfast The Hot Press Newsdesk
Indie pop veterans The Wedding Present are coming to Belfast in November.

Music Review | Album 30% | 25 Aug 2004
Fishes And Fine Yellow Sand Sarah McQuaid
The instrumental quality is impeccable and the singing glorious.

Music Review | Album 30% | 21 Jun 2001
The Girls Won’t Leave The Boys Alone Oliver Sweeney
You are strongly advised not to leave this cherishable album alone

Music | Homefront 30% | 13 Sep 2001
Life O'Reilly Hannah Hamilton
HANNAH HAMILTON meets PAUL O'REILLY and hears about his progress from Slayer to Kittser to Swords domination!

Music Review | Album 29% |  9 Nov 2000
The Coast Of Malabar Oliver Sweeney
For three decades now Jimmy Crowley has been ploughing the most individual of furrows, unafraid to debunk myths, legends or the conventionally popular.

Hot Features | Reports 29% |  3 Feb 2009
Mourning absent friends Greg McAteer
It was a bleak fortnight for Irish music with the loss of a beloved record store and one of our foremost folk acts.

Hot Features | Fashion 29% |  4 Sep 2007
Let's talk about, X Tim Smyth
You won’t find Bennie Reilly of Little Xs For Eyes chasing the latest trends. She’s more comfortable finding her own style

Music Review | Album 29% |  3 Dec 2002
Nuada: Music Inspired By The Film The Wicker Man Sarah McQuaid
The multi-part harmonies throughout have more in common with Crosby, Stills & Nash or the Byrds than with anything produced in the last few decades, which is no bad thing.

Industry | Reports 29% |  7 Feb 2003
HOT PRESS YEARBOOK ?? ??
An Entire Industry At Your Fingertips

Music | News 29% | 27 Oct 2009
Irish Musicians wow the Welsh The Hot Press Newsdesk
A group of traditional musicians from The Danescastle Music Group in Wexford attracted much acclaim for their performances in Wales last weekend.

Music Review | Album 29% | 17 Jan 2001
David Johansen and the Harry Smiths Peter Murphy
David Johansen on the other hand, one-time front man with the New York Dolls (a moment's silence please), stays perfectly still and croaks his blues truths with all the grizzled gravitas of a fellow who has seen the three days.

Music | News 29% | 20 Jul 2009
Temple Bar TradFest is going to France The Hot Press Newsdesk
Paddy Keenan and Tommy O'Sullivan among the acts to play the Interceltique Festival in Brittany.

Music Review | Album 29% | 24 Nov 2005
Live Phil Udell
As a snapshot of three nights at Dundalk’s Spirit Store in August – and hats off for eschewing the usual Dublin venues – it’s a bit odd.

Music | News 29% | 17 Jan 2002
A Noble cause The Hot Press Newsdesk
Sinead O'Connor duets with Luka Bloom on "Love is A Place I Dream Of", written in honour of Irish social activist Christina Noble

Music Review | Album 29% | 31 Mar 2004
The House Carpenter's Daughter Phil Udell
For a while, back in the day, it looked like 10,000 Maniacs were going to become the world’s literate American rockers of choice. REM, however, stole that mantle and the band finally split without ever really shaking off the cult tag.

Hot Features | Caught In The Net 29% | 19 May 2003
Spinal chords Stuart Clark
 

Hot Features | Reports 29% | 14 Jul 2008
Getting Moore than they bargained for Greg McAteer
Heckling the opening act at a Christy Moore gig can bring unforeseen consequences, as some punters found out recently.

Music Review | Album 28% | 27 Jan 2009
Merriweather Post Pavilion Edwin McFee
Cult psychedelic merchants go mainstream – with uneven results

Music Review | Album 28% |  9 Nov 2000
Diving For Pearls John Walshe
Diving For Pearls is the debut album from Scottish singer/songwriter Allie Fox and it’s as warm and intimate a collection of songs as you are likely to hear this year.

Music Review | Album 28% | 27 Mar 2009
Trauma themes idiot times Edwin McFee
Dundalk’s chief rebel MC comes good on his third album

Music Review | Album 28% | 20 Apr 2004
UN Phil Udell
Chumbawamba have always been a band of contradictions

Music Review | Live 28% | 26 Mar 2009
Emmy the great live at Crawdaddy, Dublin Clare O'Reilly
 

Industry | Reports 28% |  3 Jan 2007
Compass point Greg McAteer
Annual article: With Compass Records taking over the Green Linnet catalogue, the Nashville label has now become one of the biggest traditional imprints in the business.

Music | News 28% | 22 Nov 2006
Tweedy pie Greg McAteer
A solo Jeff Tweedy show, a new Poozies retrospective, Christy appearing on Later With Jools, and Kila’s pre-Christmas shows: it’s a busy time in the folk world.

Music | News 28% |  3 May 2006
Gavin Friday contributes to all-star album The Hot Press Newsdesk
Gavin Friday has been talking about his involvement in a Johnny Depp-inspired project that also involves Bono, Andrea Corr, Tom Waits, Nick Cave, Bryan Ferry, Antony & The Johnsons, Richard & Linda Thompson, Loudon Wainwright and some of his former Virgin Prunes bandmates.

Music Review | Album 28% |  1 Feb 2001
Solar Shears Oliver Sweeney
A couple of years ago I saw the Shoogles at the Cambridge Folk Festival - it was without doubt one of the best sets of the entire weekend. Shooglenifty's roots are in Scottish folk music, but their electrified line-up, including a rhythm section, means that there is a more contemporary tone to what they do.

Music Review | Album 28% | 26 Mar 2002
Golden Age Of Radio Nadine O Regan
The atmosphere throughout these twelve acoustic tracks is gentle and intimate. Ritter's voice possesses a compelling, rustic quality

  28% |  6 Apr 2004
THE HOT PRESS YEARBOOK 2007
15% online discount!
 
If you're vaguely involved in the music biz, the Hot Press Yearbook is ESSENTIAL. So don't put off the inevitable - buy it online and get 15% off!

Music Review | Album 28% | 18 Jan 1985
5 Singles And 1 Smoked Cod Liam Mackey
This is a timely and welcome release on the part of Auto Da Fe.

Music Review | Album 28% | 23 Feb 2006
Se Jackie Hayden
Like their English counterparts Flook, Lunasa continue to plough their no-vocal take on the Irish tradition with considerable success, and those who enjoyed the zest and brio of their live Kinnity Sessions will luxuriate in this fresh studio-bound set.

Music Review | Album 28% |  1 Mar 2002
Belladonna Liam Mackey
Ultimately though, Tyrrell's voice, like his music, defies all easy classification bar the only one that matters - like the Glaswegian and the Dubliner, this man's got soul

Hot Features | Reports 28% |  3 Jul 2009
Inside Track: Cats Entertainment Roisin Dwyer
News and gossip from the domestic front

Music | News 28% | 17 Jan 2008
WORLD EXCLUSIVE: U2 and Kila collaborate on Ronnie Drew tribute The Hot Press Newsdesk
U2, Simon Carmody and Kila have led a collaboration on a special tribute to Ronnie Drew, which was recorded in Windmill Lane Studios in Dublin, over the past few days.

Music Review | Album 28% |  1 Sep 1999
Onward Through It All, I Feel Like Singing Today Stephen Rapid
The second volume of the groundbreaking A Town South Of Bakerfield compilation opened with the Jim Lauderdale song 'What Am I Waiting For'. It was enough to make me a fan.

Music | News 27% |  9 Nov 2006
Appalachian Once Again Greg McAteer
Bluegrass maestro Chris Thile is putting Nickel Creek on hold and setting out on the solo route.

Music | News 27% | 17 Aug 2006
Folk column: Same old Damo Greg McAteer
While fans mourn the Seamus Ennis Centre, there’s a great line-up at the Kilkenny Arts Centre, and Damien Dempsey returns to Ireland.

Music | News 27% | 26 Sep 2006
Folk column: Death of a legend Greg McAteer
The passing of Geoff Harden leaves a gulf at the heart of the trad scene.

Music Review | Album 27% | 19 Sep 2003
Talkin' Honky Blues Phil Udell
The comparisons with Beck and DJ Shadow are understandable, yet this is a talent that looks set to outstrip them all.

Hot Features | Reports 27% |  7 Nov 2008
Viva Glasgow  
There’s more to Glasgow than Rab C. Nesbitt, Rangers/Celtic turf wars and Taggart. Adele Bethel, vocalist with Sons And Daughters, sings the praises of her native city.

Music Review | Album 27% | 28 Apr 1999
Equally Cursed And Blessed Peter Murphy
The most remarkable aspect of Catatonia's success is that they articulate that rarest of values amongst the pop clamour: common decency. The warmth transmitted through this quintet's songs makes breakfast radio almost digestible.

Music Review | Album 27% | 15 Jun 1984
Ride On Niall Stokes
After his divorce from Moving Hearts, dejection must have seemed almost like a friend to Christy Moore.

Music | News 27% |  5 Sep 2005
Folk Centre Greg McAteer
Folk and trad news by Greg McAteer

Music | News 27% | 19 Jun 2007
Folk Centre: War is over if you want it Greg McAteer
Folk and trad news by Greg McAteer.

Music Review | Album 27% | 25 Sep 1986
Life’s Rich Pageant George Byrne
Two weeks ago, Life’s Rich Pageant sounded to these ears like a formulated cop-out, an undignified retreat where previously REM had charged remorselessly forward.

Music Review | Album 27% | 21 Sep 1994
Path Across The Ocean Colm O Hare
BARRY GLEESON: “Path Across The Ocean” (Wavelength)

Music Review | Album 27% | 25 Oct 1980
The Mist Covered Mountain Dermot Stokes
De Danann, outmoded by the Celts. Supplanted by the Iron Age. So they retreated into the hills and mastered their magical powers. The true traditionalists who still had the suss on the newcomers, and for all their old-fashioned ways were able to out-manoeuvre the modernistic and industrialised Celts. More traditional and yet more advanced.

Music | News 27% |  5 May 2005
Folk Centre Greg McAteer
News from the folk and trad scene with Greg McAteer

Music | News 27% | 18 Jun 2009
The Open Letter The Hot Press Newsdesk
Open letter to Irish traditional music and folk community

Film Review | Film 27% | 14 Jun 2004
The Basque Ball - Skin Against Stone Craig Fitzsimons
Basque Ball is an endlessly fascinating document, of far wider potential appeal than to political-geography obsessives. For the latter, it’s an absolute feast.

Music | News 27% | 18 Sep 2007
Folk Column: The no bell prize Greg McAteer
Folk and trad news by Greg McAteer.

Music Review | Album 26% | 22 Nov 1980
Supertrouper Niall Stokes
ABBA have seldom been acknowledged by those who arbitrate or presume to arbitrate on matters of rock taste. Apart from a brief flirtation about five years ago, rock culture – in as much as the phrase actually signifies anything concrete – has continued to stick them with the legacy of their Eurovision success.

Music Review | Album 26% | 24 Nov 2006
Those The Brokes Peter Murphy
An accomplished but uncontroversial second album that sticks rigidly to the template established by its predecessor. Not that adhering to form and formula is necessarily a bad thing. Shakespeare did it. So did Chuck Berry.

Music | News 26% |  5 Aug 1998
Northern Exposure Siobhan Long
Siobhan Long steps into an electric ballroom of sounds, sense and sensibilities at the KAUSTINEN FOLK FESTIVAL in Finland.

Hot Features | Reports 26% | 28 Jan 2008
Here's to you, Ronnie Drew The Hot Press Newsdesk
With Bono and Simon Carmody orchestrating it, and Kila minding the gap, the recording of a tribute to one of the most important and widely loved figures in the history of Irish music turned into a very special occasion indeed.

Politics | Message 26% |  4 Nov 2004
The Results Are In... Niall Stokes
There was more than one election causing furrowed brows in HP central over the past fortnight.

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.

Music Review | Album 26% | 13 Feb 2007
Neon Bible Colin Carberry
Funeral was by no means a fluke. The Arcade Fire are unquestionably the real deal. And to prove it they’ve now thrown in another contender for ‘best record of the decade’.

Politics | Message 26% | 18 Oct 2007
It's time for more Irish music on Irish radio Niall Stokes
A simmering dissatisfaction with the amount of Irish music being played on Irish radio bubbled over at Music Ireland, with a debate that was, by turns, lively and illuminating.

Politics | Message 26% |  9 Oct 2008
Reaping Reagan's Whirlwind The Hog
The global economic meltdown of the past fortnight is a ruinous consequence of Ronald Reagan's '80s crusade against regulation. The question now is: where will it end?

Music | News 26% | 22 Apr 2005
Folk centre Greg McAteer
Opinions are somewhat divided on the future of trad – some feel the music should retain its explicit links with the past, while others contend that the only way for the genre to survive and flourish is through stylistic diversification. Plus the usual round-up of news from around the country.

Music | News 26% | 27 Feb 2009
The Brady bunch Greg McAteer
A state-backed arts scheme yields surprisingly sublime results for trad devotees. Meanwhile, Paul Brady has a treat in store for fans.

Music | Homefront 26% | 11 May 2000
VOL. 31 LEITRIM Siobhan Long
Although one of Ireland s smallest counties, Leitrim boasts of a strong musical heritage that can trace its lineage back to the 15th and 16th centuries with ease.

  25% | 20 Jan 2000
PROBLEM ARTICLE  
 

Music | Homefront 25% |  8 Jun 2000
#33: DUBLIN Siobhan Long
Well, reader, we ve finally reached the end of our journey, after navigating our way across the length and breadth of the 32 counties (and detouring briefly to New York for a tincture of the tastiest in that honorary 33rd county).

  25% | 20 Jan 2000
PROBLEM ARTICLE  
 

Industry | Reports 25% |  9 Feb 1994
PUBLISH AND BE DAMNED! Colm O Hare
It may not seem as glamorous as appearing on Top of the Pops but it can be a hell of a lot more lucrative. That’s right, publishing is one of the most widely misunderstood and underestimated aspects of the music industry. The message for Irish songwriters: get weaving! There’s classics that need writing . . .

Music | News 25% |  8 Sep 1993
The Artists ?? ??
A closer look at the current Round Tower roster

Hot Features | Education Feature 25% | 17 Feb 1999
The Learning Zone Jackie Hayden
JACKIE HAYDEN offers a guide to training for careers in sound and vision.

Music | News 25% |  6 Mar 2006
Folk Centre: There's no other Seamie Greg McAteer
Folk and trad news by Greg McAteer

Music | News 25% |  7 Sep 1994
Back To Acoustics Jackie Hayden
The official launch of the BACARDI/HOT PRESS BAND OF THE YEAR reflects the increasing success of acoustic music in Ireland. Report: JACKIE HAYDEN.

  25% |  1 Feb 2006
Other Voices: the complete line up  
RTE2 have plenty of live music action to keep us placated for the next few weeks - here's the line up of bands and when to catch them. For more about the Other Voices series, click on the link at the very bottom.

 

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