Traffic madness today. I took this video at 3pm today at the halfway point in the Phoenix Park. In my view the side gates should be opened up now. I will be making that clear to the OPW. #dubwpic.twitter.com/eMB6Hkm3hX
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.”
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).
‘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.’
One of the problems when you do cycle lanes without planning permissions or EIAs is you get (for example) low-grade concrete kerbs along one of the few intact stretches of Dublin’s quays (and tbf outside Village’s office!) https://t.co/EnnmG4dl8h
Our high court challenge against An Bord Pleanála's decision to grant planning permission for the Connolly Quarter development has been successful. https://t.co/6cXwOAq1Fr