Thursday, February 26, 2009

What's on around the place tonight and the weekend..




FREE gig in Dolan's tonight as Live 95FM presenter Alan Jacques serves up three bands for your delectation..


Top of the bill is Dublin five-piece Heritage Centre, who are promoting their debut EP 'The City, The Tree and The Fox'. Haven't heard it yet (sitting on my desk at home) but their sound is described as somewhere between Weezer, Elliot Smith and Pavement. Now there's an eclectic bunch you wouldn't normally see in the same sentence.


Support from acoustic pop duo Star Crossed Enemies and Limerick's own Pio. Upstairs, Doors from 8pm.


Also tonight, American guitarist, composer and instrumentalist Gyan Riley takes to the stage in the Warehouse, a guest of Limerick Jazz Soc. Should be a good one. 8.30pm.

Out in UL, students from from the Irish Academy of Music are to play a 24-hour session this Thursday in order to raise funds for a fellow musician.
24 beats in a bar will begin at 10pm and the music won’t stop until 10pm on Friday. The 24-hour gig is in support of Luis Asturias, a Spanish musician who has lived in Ireland for the past 12 years.

Another FREE gig in Baker Place this Thursday as The Buzzmonkeys, Drumming Room and Hammered all play in the Tait Square venue.

Onwards:

Friday:

Baker's - Idle Hands/ Underground - Nu Killa Beats (9th Birthday)

Dolan's - Mark Geary (Upstairs - 18 bobs) / The Truth (Warehouse - 12 bobs)
The Club @ Au Bars - The Release Party (it's great fun - 11pm - 5 bobs)

LIT Millennium Theatre - Mundy (20 bobs - 8pm)

Trinity Rooms - The Block (9pm - free until 11pm - 8-10 bobs after)


Saturday:

Baker's - Built For Comfort, Beastmen (6 bobs) / Underground - Roots Factory - Brother Culture
Dolan's - Franz Ferdinand (Warehouse - sold out)
Trinity Rooms - Paul Webb, Mac 3, A2DF and Leon (9pm, free before 10pm, 10 bobs after)

Sunday:

Baker's - Bad Reputation present: Defect, 6 Feet Or Above Ground, Raised To The Ground

Trinity Rooms - I Love the 90s (Free before 11pm, 5 bobs after)

It's simply not all bad.. Meteor Award Nominations

I'm going to say something that many might find distasteful, or even outrageous.. The nominees for this year's Meteor Awards are actually (gasp, shock horror).. really not that bad.

In fact, they are the best list of nominations I have seen the corporate event go with in years and years - ever, probably..

Now I hold no sway to the fact that I was actually asked to be a member of the voting panel of judges* - as probably every other media hack in the country was, I'm not blowing any trumpets here, believe me - but if you look at the list, well, let's say the evidence speaks for itself.

Fight like Apes and the Loose are nominated in the best Irish band category (ok, so are the Script, Snow Patrol and The Blizzards - but two out of five ain't bad)

Can you believe it? Jape (Richie Egan), David Holmes, and Mick Flannery are all nominated in best Irish male. (Even the others, Damo Dempsey and Duke Special aren't too bad)

But wait, it get's better.. Lisa Hannigan (a shoo in), Gemma Hayes and chanteuse Camille O'Sullivan are all nominated for best Irish female..

I'll skip best Irish pop act (bet the house on the god awful The Script) and run straight to Irish album of the year. Consider the evidence:

FLA.. and the mystery of the Gold Medallion
Lisa H - Sea Sew
Messiah J and the Expert - From the Word Go
and (The Script and Snow Patrol - again, three out of five ain't bad)
Absolutely three of the best Irish albums of last year (and all due to play in Limerick in the next weeks and months, more on that soon)
(The lovely Lisa H on stage in the Belltable last year, gigs to come in the city soon, but I'm not allowed tell yet)
Not as bad as you would expect from a brash, industry driven event like the Meteor's. I'm hoping to go along for the craic (once I convince the LL that it is in their interest to let me go) so stay tuned for a report..
Wait, there's more!! Bon Iver in best International male, and Elbow for Best Band!

*The fact that I voted for the final two (and Lisa H, Jape and FLA) convinces me that my vote actually was hugely important, more so than any other media hack. So there.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Full interview with Mick Flannery

Full interview with Mick Flannery, who played in Dolan's last Friday. For thoughts on the live gig, see further below..

MUCH has been written about Mick Flannery’s reticence, the almost shy nature that he has, which sits in direct contrast to the emotionally frank and descriptive songs that he sings.

Contrasts abound with this young singer, his frank lyricism at seeming odds with his stonemasonry background. Flanney is himself hewn from something solid, his gravelly growl capable of soaring to great heights - his music diverse and encompassing, possibly reminiscent of a young Tom Waits.

We say possibly because it is almost impossible to pigeon hole the Cork musician, whose second album White Lies has been chosen as one of the ten best Irish records of last year, nominated for the Choice Music Prize. He is also nominated for a Meteor Award, but you get the feeling that he is probably less concerned with that honour.

But Flannery doesn’t seem overly concerned by anything, interestingly so for a man signed to a three album deal with EMI, who has (we think) massive potential, which is only beginning to be filled with this album.

Is this reticence a sort of act or front? Not world weariness, but just a refusal to deal in any of the music industry’s bullshit, a buffer against bluffers, if you will.

Although he released well-received debut album Evening Train in 2005, it was with the September 2008 release of White Lies that people began to sit up and take notice, and the last few months have been a whirlwind, as Flannery recognises.

“Yeah it has been interesting anyway - hectic. I didn't expect anything, I didn't really think about it - I just kind of drifted along, I suppose I'm still drifting along, which is probably a bad idea, but we'll see how it goes.

I suppose there are a couple of more people coming to the gigs, it could be word of mouth - maybe it is the record company, I don’t know. It would be easy to be overawed by the whole thing, so I try not to think about it too much.”

Behind the wall Flannery has constructed around himself lurks the easy humour of a joker, self-deprecating to a fault, but engaging. It is clear he wasn’t used to talking about himself when he got into this game.

“Yeah, I'm starting to get used to it now and I don't know if I like that either. This is grand now because you didn't start the conversation with (adopts tone) 'Mick Flannery - your rise has been described as meteoric, how does that make you feel?’” he laughs.
“I'd be very quiet most of the time. I suppose it is easier for the two of us if I talk. I can't say I look forward to interviews, but I don't mind them. It's a strange thing, I don't know you like, and it's a one way conversation, I'm not asking you questions. I wouldn't know where to start, we'd have to be sitting over a few pints."
Laughter punctuates this little speech, and talk moves to the album, which was recorded after he signed with EMI. “The record company lads wanted me to use a producer. I had never looked into producers before, what they did or what their role was - they said it gets things moved along, it's good to have an extra pair of ears around. It turned out anyway that I didn't know who to pick - the only person I would pick was Rick Rubin, and they weren't getting me him,” laughs Mick.

“Anyway, they got me this lad and it didn't really work out - to my mind anyway, he was more pop-orientated. We didn't really see eye to eye. It was uncomfortable and a big contrast to the previous time we recorded, because that was with a family friend in Cork.

Dublin was totally different. It felt like we were in a cave, starting at four in the evening and working till four at night - and there was often problems and tensions. That didn't work out that well so we had to go and re-record a couple of things with a different guy. I ended up getting a producer credit. I had been fighting my corner with this other guy all the time, so it ended up with me trying to call all the shots anyway, because I wasn't a huge fan.”

Although he says the end result was “close” to what he wanted, he says he can’t listen to it, laughing at his own seeming pretensions.

“I can hear the uncomfortableness in my own voice listening back to it, I can just imagine the scene as it was when we were doing it, me in front of the microphone, blood boiling and ready to punch someone. So I didn't listen to it much and I haven't in a while because we have been playing it so much.”

The contrast between recording his first record, which failed to make a huge impact, and the travails of recording his second are apparent. But is clear that that was necessary to produce this astonishingly diverse and personal record - even if this hasn’t yet dawned on Flannery.

He laughs when I suggest that he is only pretending to be grumpy - “Ah, when it suits me” - and I question him about the indifference he expresses, and if he set out to impress people in the beginning.
“Well, I would have set out to impress people alright - you're not going to want to leave people disappointed. But, it wasn't for adulation or for my own ego or anything like that, I just enjoy it.”

Monday, February 23, 2009

Five things I did in the last five days..

A fairly eventful last couple of days, here's the top five, in sort of reverse order;

5 Took a trip to the Kodak Theatre:

Yup. Took the hit, arranged a day off work and watched the Oscars live, 'till the wee early hours of this morning, five o'clock to be exact. The first time I've watched them live in a few years, glad I did too, must say.
Delighted for Slumdog, Danny Boyle was a very earnest and deserving winner, as was Sean Penn, who took the opportunity to admonish the many watching who had voted against the gay marriage bill, no doubt there was a few shifting uncomfortably in their sits. Felt for Mickey Rourke though, thought he deserved it every bit as much as Penn.
The highlight? Philippe Petit - star of Man On Wire - balancing the Oscar for best documentary on his chin.
The lowlight? The director flashing to Brad and Angelina when Jen Aniston was presenting, the flicker of annoyance on Jolie's face said it all.
Hugh Jackman did a good job, though he was relegated to the sidelines for a lot of the show.

4 Had a hangover:

See posts 3,2 and 1, below

3 Took a trip to old Ireland:

Ok not that old, but ventured out to Dirty Nelly's in Bunratty on Saturday evening, the first time I have spent any great time in the notorious tourist trap. Surprisingly good fun, watched the Munster match, eat, drank and enjoyed the music on offer. Sore head for my troubles afterward of course.

2 Took a trip to see a grizzled roar:

Went to Mick Flannery on Friday night. Had many an argument after.
Clearly the Corkman is going to divide as many as he inspires, owing to the nature of his personality and performance.
Incredibly introspective - "this is going to be mostly miserable" - and performing a clutch of songs that should send the audience running for the door, and it did, in some foolish cases.
This is a show that just should not work in any way, shape or form.
Yet it does.
At times stunning, mostly riveting and almost always stirring, Flannery sits, head down at the piano, growling out his tunes - not in the depressive vein of a bog standard Irish singer-songwriter (go on, you can think of a few), but in the gruff tones of a man who appears at least twice the mere 25 years of age he apparently is.
As the show progresses, Flannery picks up the pace slightly, allowing his very fine band to stretch their legs slightly; Near Or Far, California, Goodbye and Wait Here the undisputed highlights.
Afterward I catch Flannery for a quick chat.
"You caught me on a talkative day," he says of the day we conducted our interview, and then stares at his feet for a couple of minutes, before he is surrounded by young girls, eager for a photograph - and each time, though obviously uncomfortable - he obliges, cigarette dangling from his mouth.
It might all be an act, and it shouldn't work. But it does. Superbly.

1 The "God particle":

Went to see the Gentlemen's Tea Drinking Society in the Belltable on Thursday night.
A weird, Faustian blend of Stephen Hawking, Martin McDonagh and Quentin Tarantino - and some other elements I haven't decided on yet.
Ransom Productions were behind this stage show - featuring a specially commissioned David Holmes soundtrack, well, at least one track - which deals with life, the universe and everything. Specifically, the society are a group of old Cambridge friends who meet once a year to get drunk and discuss physics - and to rant and rave at each other, driven by central character Brian, a demented physicist who believes he has found a way to trap and control the "God particle", using a Hadron collidor that the British government have secretly constructed in the subway tunnels under London.
This was a mad, crazy, funny, violent, coarse and thought-provoking piece, powered by the strong performances of the actors, and the innovative set design. For more, see here.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Not another Friday the 13th

This sounds cool, fair play to Ciaran for the heads up. Nice to see the Rowing Club in use every so often. Good knows we need plenty of diversion at the mo.. and the Kerrynini boys are always good at what they do..

Worryingly tho, and brought to my attention by this poster, is that there is to be a second Friday the 13th in March. Christ, I only just about survived the first one...

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Currently listening to..

I'm currently listening to the following, and liking them very much:

Howling Bells - Radio Wars
Animal Collective - Merriweather Post Pavilion
Bell X1 - Blue Lights on the Runway
Ladyhawke - Ladyhawke
Mick Flannery - White Lies

A rather diverse collection. I'll be back with my impressions regarding the above when I get a few spare minutes/hours.

The Release Party gets its release

This thing got born out of anger and frustration..

You can say that again, I was there..

We want a release. We're tired of bad news, tired of the knot in our stomach.

Right on..

We want something to look forward to.

Yes, we do..

Big records, on big speakers, in a nice room, with friends and family and a smile on our lips.

Sounds great..

'Cause we just want to say something, and we just want to play something.

Cool..

Music is the answer they say. People are the answer, we add.

Yes!

Soul in the speakers means soul in the speaker.

I like the sound of that, very catchy..

So let's speak. Let's think. Let's dance and drink, laugh and kiss, once a week.

Every week.

You may have seen this rather crytic speech make its around town on little fliers, seeking to let people know about a new party, happening once a week. It began as a bile-filled rant about the state of the nation (I was there), but became something much better. As the idea grew, it became a night for people to relax, have fun, hang out, listen to some good music and, well that's essentially it.

So last week saw the launch of the Release Party, and 300 people turned up to the newly refurb'd club downstairs in Aubars to celebrate and listen to Stevie Wonder records. And dance.

This turned out so successful it is planned to run weekly in the same location, with similar nights taking place in Cork, Galway and Dublin very soon. Plus potential interest in Edmonton, Shanghai, New York and Sydney (I'll go set these up shall I?)

Respected Djs such as Aim (Fri, March 6) and New York's Qool DJ Marv (pic above - Fri, April 3) are due in town for shows in the near future. This has all been made possible by Eightball and full info is available here and here.

The release party is about having a party, and a release. The release party is yours, made by you, for you and yours. Simple.

The Killers to headline at Oxegen - shock horror


MCD tell me that this is "just announced", The Killers are to headline at Oxegen in July - obviously this has been one of the most well-known facts about this summer's annual trip to Punchestown.

Not much else to say but, Yawn.. Not to impressed with their choice of headliners (Kings of Leon and the increasingly poppy Killers) so far, but on closer inspection there are a number of interesting acts already announced, including:

Blur (woo-hoo!)
Bloc Party
Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
Elbow
Yeah, Yeah, Yeah's
Pendulum
Fight Like Apes

That's a bit more like it. Obviously the current climate is having an impact on festivals scheduled to take place in the summer, seems there won't be anywhere near the same number as last year, be interesting to see who takes a punt.. Not much word on Electric Picnic yet, but news expected soon.

The Cork marquee gigs are slated to take place again this summer, with mixed line-up - I'll wait for Slane to see the Prodigy - but they play Cork on June 18, also playing are Gilbert O’Sullivan (June 20), Kasabian (June 21), Christy Moore (June 27), Josh Ritter (July 4), Rod Stewart (July 7)

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Delorentos no more?


This just in off the wire (frankly a bit bizarre if you ask me - but obviously a knock-on effect of the band's record company folding before Christmas. A shame, especially after the buzz created by In Love With Detail - superb Irish album - and various tours, nationally and abroad)

Delorentos released the following statement today:

We've got some sad news.

It's with a very heavy heart that we have to let you know that Ronan has decided to leave the band. He feels it’s best for him to move on and do other things.

The three of us will still be making music and will let you know what happens next.

As our songs always came from the four of us playing together we've also decided that it wouldn't feel right to continue "delorentos" without him.

We're all very proud of the songs we've written over the last year, we feel they're some of the best we've ever done, and as a result we're determined not to discard them or let them go.

Next month, the four of us are going to record this album together and plan on making it something we'll all be proud of.

It'll be our last collection of songs as delorentos, and we hope you'll like them.We want to thank everyone that's supported us since we started, we'd never have gotten this far without you.

We hope to play a gig or two to say goodbye.

We'll be in touch soon with more details. Ross, Níal and Kieran and Ro

Monday, February 16, 2009

Mick Flannery in conversation with the Limerick Leader


Cracking chat with Cork musician and Choice nominated artist Mick Flannery last week, one of the most entertaining I've had in a long time. He gave some very honest answers to every question I asked him.
See below for an entertaining (I think so anyway) slice of our conversation. See Leader 2 this weekend for the full interview.


(From about five minutes into the conversation)

(Me) What do you think about talking about yourself - you weren't used to it at the start?

(Mick) Yeah, I'm starting to get used to it now and I don't know if I like that either. This is grand now because you didn't start the conversation with (adopts tone) 'Mick Flannery - your rise has been described as metoric, how does that make you feel?"

(Me) I'm buttering you up though! (he laughs)

I don't fucking talk, like. You've got me on a day when I'm not hungover as well. I'd be very quiet most of the time. I suppose it is easier for the two of us if I talk. (we both laugh)

(Me) Do you like doing this type of thing (phoners)?

I can't say I look forward to them, but I don't mind them. It's a strange thing, I don't know you like, and it's a one way conversation, I'm not asking you questions. I wouldn't know where to start, we'd have to be sitting over a few pints.
(Fast forward a few minutes)

(Me) Tell us a bit about making/recording the album (White Lies)?

The record company lads wanted me to use a producer. I had never looked into producers before, what they did or what their role was - they said it gets things moved along, gets things done quicker, it's good to have an extra pair of ears around. It turned out anyway that I didn't know who to pick - the only person I would pick was Rick Rubin, and they weren't getting me him. (laughs)

Anyway, they got me this lad and it didn't really work out - to my mind anyway, he was more pop oriented. We didn't really see eye to eye. It was uncomfortable and a big contrast to the previous time we recorded, because it was a family friend in Cork, who I used to go out to on weekends and eat dinner with his family. Up in Dublin was totally different. It felt like we were in a cave, starting at four in the evening and working till four at night - and there was often problems and tensions.

So eventually I said there's something going on here. That didn't work out that well so we had to go and re-record a couple of things with a different guy. I ended up getting a producer credit.

(Me - I see that, it says Mick Flannery on the album sleeve)

I didn't get on with that c*** at all. (laughs)

I had been fighting my corner with this other guy all the time, so it ended up with me trying to call all the shots anyway, because I wasn't a huge fan. Don't print too much of this bad shit!
Mick Flannery plays in Dolan's Warehouse this Friday night, February 21.

David Holmes provides perfect score for Gentlemen's Tea Drinking Society



DESPITE boasting one of the most bizarre names we have yet to encounter in the theatre world, the Gentlemen’s Tea Drinking Society is a play to be very excited about.

There are two reasons for this; one, the barmy title is backed up by the equally baffling-sounding subject matter which deals with a demented physicist and is set on the eve of the destruction of the universe; two, and far more importantly in our opinion, it features a score specially written for the occasion by Belfast musician David Holmes (pictured above), a prospect that has us mouth-a-watering with anticipation.

You see Holmes is the man who made the Ocean’s 11 movies move with that extra bit of zip and zing, the man who made Steven Soderbergh appear far cooler than his appearance would suggest, who provided the soundtrack to George Clooney’s seduction of Jennifer Lopez in the noir-filled comedy caper Out of Sight.

Holmes was also responsible for one of the finest albums of last year, the electro-rock sonata The Holy Pictures. Suffice to say he has got some game. This will be the former DJ’s first crack at writing a musical score specifically for the stage, hence why we are getting so excited.

The Belfast DJ was approached to write the score by Belfast based theatre company, Ransom Productions, who won rave reviews and awards for their debut play Hurricane, the one-man show about the life of one of snooker’s most notorious champions, Alex Higgins.

This time out Ransom focus their attention on CERN, the Hadron Collider and a scientist who claims to have discovered the secret of the universe.

The black comedy was written by and stars Richard Dormer (pic below) as the demented physicist Brian, as well some of the cream of UK acting talent in the form of David Ireland, Howard Teale and Matthew Flynn.


The Gentlemen’s Tea Drinking Society will be performed in the Belltable next Wednesday and Thursday, February 18 and 19. Tickets are available on 061-319866.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Natty dread

Good one in town tonight, as the Wailers make the trip to Dolan's Warehouse, continuing a tour they started on the 30th anniversary of the release of the seminal Exodus album, to play what Time magazine voted the album of the 20th century. High praise, and not unwarranted when you consider the classics contained within; Released in 1977, it contained the likes of the title track, Jamming, Turn the Lights Down Low, Three Little Birds, and the superb Waiting in Vain.

Of course Bob's not around to play with these lads, but they are some of the original members of Marley's troupe. Let's be specific, here's the basic blurb..

"The nucleus of the Wailers formed in 1969, when Bob Marley, Bunny Wailer, and Peter Tosh recruited the Barrett brothers – bassist Aston “Family Man” and drummer Carly – from Lee Perry’s Upsetters to play on hits such as Lively Up Yourself, Trenchtown Rock, Duppy Conqueror, and many more beside..

Bunny and Peter left in 1973, two years after the posse signed to Island records. It was at this point that the in-demand Barrett brothers – whose rhythms also underpinned innumerable seventies’ reggae hits by other acts – assumed the title of Wailers, and backed Marley on the group’s international breakthrough album, Natty Dread. Under Family Man’s musical leadership, they then partnered Bob Marley on the succession of hit singles and albums (including Exodus) that made him a global icon, etc etc..

Drummer Carlton “Carly” Barrett died in 1987, leaving his brother as the main beneficiary of the Wailers' mantle. Subsequent line-ups have revolved around Family Man, who is widely regarded as one of the world’s greatest bass players (modest too).

Family Man (you'll love this, so called because he has fathered something like 52 kids, wow) and lead singer Elan Atias form the main axis of the current Wailers line-up."

Interestingly, Family Man sued Marley's estate a couple of years ago, citing a right to royalties, which he claimed to have been promised by the reggae superstar, but this action failed, much to his chagrin.

There you have it. Family Man contributed some of the finest bass lines in musical recording history, and has been cited by musicians such as Flea as a massive influence.

I'll be at this, front row, centre. See you there.

UnFringed awards

The UnFringed awards were presented last Saturday night, finishing off a superb nine days of original theatre, comedy and music - most of which played, thankfully, to large and appreciative audiences.

There was fierce competition in each of the categories, with much debate taking place as to the deserving winners - I know this because I was a judge, and was witness to skin and hair flying (I jest). Full list is below, well done to all that took part, and to the winners!

Best Female Performance
Deirdre Burke – Down the Valley, Performance Lab

Best Male Performance
Shane Casey – Love, Peace & Robbery

Best Production
The Magic Boy – Yew Tree Theatre

Spirit of Innovation
Down the Valley – Performance Lab

Judges’ Special Award
Choke Comedy Improv

Thursday, February 5, 2009

On the FRINGE..

Excuse my lack of activity over the last week or so. Back now. I know it has been on since last Friday but UnFringed 2009 is still alive and kicking, and perhaps the highlight of the week was last night's Choke Comedy Improv, my sides still hurt from laughing. And the first sell out of the Belltable's new reign in Red Cross Hall (I think, at the very least the first sell out of UnFringed 09).

Magic Boy was good, as was the Hunt for Red Willie. I'm reserving judgement on most of the rest of the stuff I have seen, as is my perogative. (Who do I think I am, Britney Spears?)

Anyway, although it is Thursday, there is still loads to see, including Mr Jarlath Regan (above Fri, 10pm) and Redmond O'Toole and his funny guitar (tonight, 8pm, go and see what I mean), plus various theatrical highlights including Down the Valley, Stop/Over and American Poodle. Full info here.

If you haven't been out to see something already, shame on you. Still time tho, so get moving.