Author Archives: Nick Kelly

Ah here.

Yesterday.

Phoenix Park, Dublin.

OPEN the side gates!

Thank Frida it’s Friday.

That means your favourite part of the week: the music competition.

This week I want to know: What is your favourite song whose title features a European city?

Here’s mine.

Answer below for a chance to win a continental cool €25 Golden Discs voucher.

The winner will be chosen by my translator.

Please include video links if possible.

Lines MUST close at Saturday 11am.

Nick says: Good luck!

Last week’s winner here.

Golden Discs


Villagers – Nothing Arrived

Continuing our series of underrated Irish music since 1960, reader Brother Barnabas coos over alt.folk heroes Villagers, led by Conor O’Brien.

Nothing Arrived appeared on their second album awayland in 2013. This live performance is from the Ian Dempsey Breakfast Show on Today FM.

Brother says:

“An extraordinary songwriter.”

Nick says: Leave it to Mr. O’Brien.

Villagers

Mary Coughlan – Family Life

Now this is something special.

National treasure Mary Coughlan conjures a deeply felt cover of The Blue Nile‘s heartbreaking Christmas ballad Family Life from her new album Life Stories.

Mary says:

“The track ‘Family Life’ is deeply personal to me, I think it will resonate with people this Christmas in particular.”

Ain’t that the truth.

And here‘s the original version.

Nick says: Happy Christmas, Mary.

Life Stories

Tomorrow.

In an interview with Seamus the Dog on RTÉ’s After School Hub, Education Minister Norma Foley will announce a no-homework day for all students.

Via Independent.ie:

Between now and Christmas teachers across the country can pick a day to give their students an evening free of homework.

The homework pass will be available to download from RTE.ie/learn from tomorrow afternoon.

Ms Foley says it’s a golden ticket…

Um.

Anyone?

Government issues no-homework day for all children in Ireland (Independent.ie)

The Subterraneans – Game Show

Continuing our series of underrated Irish music since 1960, reader axelf makes the case for 1980s/’90s act The Subterraneans, who comprised Derek Barter (bass, vocals), Paddy Brady (guitar), Brian Murphy (keyboards) and Colm Coughlan (drums).

Game Show was produced by Pete Holidai (of The Radiators fame) and released by Mother Records in 1991.

Axelf writes:

“I heard this gem on MT USA wayyyy back. It was a staple of the show for many months.”

Nick says: The name of the game.

The votes are in.

Last week, with a dollar-friendly €25 Golden Discs voucher offer, I asked you to name your favourite song whose title features an American state?

You answered in your dozens.

But alas  there could be only one winner.

Third Place:

California (All The Way) by Luna

Joe Koyote writes:

‘From the 1994 sophomore album “Bewitched”. A slice of dream pop heaven. Fun fact: main man Dean Wareham was firmly an East Coast kinda guy, after moving from his New Zealand birthplace he spent most of his life in New York (plus a spell in Boston). But a few years ago re relocated to Los Angeles as his son was in college there. So he made it… All the Way… to California, eventually.’

Runner-up:

Reno Dakota by The Magnetic Fields

Specific Gravity writes:

“Reno Dakota, there’s not an iota of kindness in you, You know you enthral me and yet you don’t call me, It’s making me blue, Pantone 292.”

69 Love Songs is a hell of a collection of impeccable songs, running the full emotional gamut. Would be great to see them back in Dublin.’

Winner:

Nebraska by Bruce Springsteen

Johnny writes:

‘Recorded on a Teac Tascam 144 Portastudio, in his living room, with a simple tape recorder, instead of the studio, he then ran these recording through a Gibson Echoolex to add reverb and echo, sent the tapes in.

It’s an essential record in the history of home recording – he wrote the songs, put them down on a demo, that demo became the record. It didn’t sell particularly well and got no airplay. The magic or genius was, with the right amount of reverb and echo, a cheap speaker in a car sounds lush and dreamy.

A great driving album, quite dark, Nebraska is the retelling of Terrence Malick’s Badlands, a film based on the 1957–58 killing spree of Charlie Starkweather. The Starkweather murders were meaningless, and the randomness of that violence and inability to explain it, is the album.’

Nick says: Thanks all.

Last week: Win Nick’s Voucher

This afternoon.

Free the cheap, ugly lanes.

Meanwhile….

Bright Falls – The Widows Homes

A house is not a home…

Introducing Bright Falls, the project of singer/songwriter Eddie McCormack (top)  from Thurles, County Tipperary.

The video, shot in a dilapidated house by Dominic Coleman and Benjamin Walsh, complements the song’s theme of a broken relationship.

Nick says: Bright here, Bright now.

Bright Falls