The pride of Dublin, Pat Barrett (Ten Speed Racer, Hedge Schools) is back with a wonderful new project called Arrivalists.
All the songs on the new album Last Of The Written Pages were written, played, sung, recorded and mixed by Pat himself, including this ethereal beauty which sounds like The Blue Nile having a spiritual experience.
Former Turn singer Oliver Cole (top) charms the Christmas socks off us with this quirky Yuletide love song with a twist.
Oliver writes:
“Cuddle a Puddle tells the tale of a true Christmas romance. A love story that blossoms and melts but leaves the heart warmer and wiser for next year.”
All proceeds go to Temple Street Children’s University Hospital in Dublin.
Oliver has also just released a download-only live album Live At The Grand Social via his bandcamp page.
It’s not really Christmas until you’ve tipsily belted out Shane & Kirsty’s ageless duet at closing time.
But can I interest you in an intimate and beautifully sung cover version of the Pogues classic by Irish-born Megan O’Neill (top)?
Coming on the back of her second album Getting Comfortable With Uncertainty, Megan writes:
“‘Fairytale of New York’ has always been my favourite Christmas song and a bold choice to cover, I will admit! I was really hesitant about covering such an iconic song but I knew that if I was going to go for it, it had to be so uniquely my own and a far cry from the original sonically.
“I think myself and Mark Caplice (producer) have managed to capture something special here. Our haunting version of this song really captures how heartbreakingly sad the story actually is.”
Nick says: We kissed on the corner and danced through the night.
London-based Irish neo-soul singer Carrie Baxter (top) seduces with this slinky number from her 8-song EP What Now.
Carrie says:
“I wanted this song to feel like a late night diary entry. I wanted it to be very intimate and reminiscent of nostalgic moments between the two people. It was important for me to make the song chilled but have a very sexy edge to, evoking a sense of forbidden lovers.”
Purveyor of ye olde London Palladium-style musical comedy, English songsmith John X Henry (top) has a defiant message for the finger-wagging ‘Karens’ in the UK and timely support for the unmasked.
Introducing a blistering video (apparently a cover of a song by ‘The Romboids’, whom I can find no record of…anyone?) and a Gofundme we can all get behind.
The Cylinders write:
‘In October 2021 Eric Flanagan, a member of the Dublin Airport Police & Fire Service, decided that for this year’s Christmas charity drive they would try something different.
Always willing to support the DAA staff charities, the firefighters and police officers dug deep and tapped into the endless hidden talent within the force, to produce a rocking video that will give everyone a much needed boost (of rocking medication) after a tough year and a half.
We need people to indulge their inner rock star, take out your air guitar, dig deep and donate to these fantastic charities. St. Francis Hospice The Mater Foundation Feed Our Homeless.’
The Cylinders are Mick Gurley, Eric Flanagan, Cian Delaney, Keith McDonald, Del Godson and Col Reid.
Dublin pop newcomer Pastiche (top) comes out swinging in the video for her new single, which was shot in Laragh House, County Wicklow, by director Louis Maxwell.
Pastiche writes:
“Lyrically, ‘Bad Loser’ is about your inner demons and, in a way, celebrating them. It reads like a diary entry and it’s all very much drawn from personal experiences that I’ve had with my own mental health.
“The moment the song was in the demo stage I had a vision of a house of horrors where all of my demons and sides of my personalities came out to play, displayed to the world.
“Each character is a metaphor, every set is intentional, every colour used sheds a different light on me. I think once you watch the video you really understand the song to a whole new degree, just as I intended It to be enjoyed.”
Louth’s finest purveyor of indie guitar tunesmithery is back with the latest in his monthly series.
Paul writes:
“This is a short documentary on some of the many ways in which you can crash land on love’s dirt road from falling in love to falling flat on your backside.
“It is truly an indie song as it is packed with melody and is also short and sweet. The sound is a result of all of the beautiful guitars and vocal melodies that have poured into me. The very essence of a pop song with the most beautiful raw edge!
“This year I have been putting out one song every month. These can now be found wherever you like to listen to music. All of these songs will be released early next year as an album.
“All work emanates from my one-roomed cabin in the deepest darkest woods of Ireland’s north east.”