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Ennio Morricone @ Kilmainham, July 28th

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,321 ✭✭✭sham69


    Can someone tell me what the last couple of tunes were please and what time it ended?

    We left at 10 to get home so missed the last few songs.
    Thanks.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 407 ✭✭Mec-a-nic


    I'm seriously contemplating booking tickets to Verona, just think I have to see him again as once just isn't enough. I've seen footage of that venue in Verona and it looks great.

    Go for it - Verona could be an amazing gig, but for different reasons. It will still be a huge crowd with risks of thunderstorms, but:-
    it's a 2000 year old arena, with a very vocal home crowd,
    the cheap seats are tiered so great sight lines (as long as you queue early and race to the good spots), and
    the acoustics are great (here's an example of an unamplified tenor and orchestra at twice the distance Morricone will play).


  • Registered Users Posts: 247 ✭✭Sanguine Fan


    I was at the Saturday show and it was my first time at a concert in Kilmainham. I have to say I agree with the comments about the unsuitability of an outdoor venue such as this for an orchestral concert. I have been to Slane and other festivals and you expect to see people wandering around during the performances with pints in their hands. At a concert like this, though, it's a bit off-putting to have so many people around you seemingly uninterested in the music.

    I don't know what the solution is though. There is no indoor venue in the country big enough to make money for the promoters or the performers in a concert like this. So if we have to see legends like Morricone in a field then I suppose there are worse places than Kilmainham.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 507 ✭✭✭argentum


    I was at the Saturday show and it was my first time at a concert in Kilmainham. I have to say I agree with the comments about the unsuitability of an outdoor venue such as this for an orchestral concert. I have been to Slane and other festivals and you expect to see people wandering around during the performances with pints in their hands. At a concert like this, though, it's a bit off-putting to have so many people around you seemingly uninterested in the music.

    I don't know what the solution is though. There is no indoor venue in the country big enough to make money for the promoters or the performers in a concert like this. So if we have to see legends like Morricone in a field then I suppose there are worse places than Kilmainham.


    There's a small building down in the docks called The O2 that everyone could have fitted into no problem.If he played Belfast 5 years ago to 2000 people and everyone made money then that was the solution.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 85 ✭✭mrblondecutsear


    Absolutely loved it and have been wanting to Ennio Morricone for years. No complaints myself from where I was sitting other than the two people sitting infront of me that took about 6 million photos and videos of the show with their iPhones that's a pet hate of mine. Other than that great set, great sound but I suppose I would've liked the seats to have a little bit more leg room


  • Registered Users Posts: 247 ✭✭Sanguine Fan


    argentum wrote: »
    There's a small building down in the docks called The O2 that everyone could have fitted into no problem.If he played Belfast 5 years ago to 2000 people and everyone made money then that was the solution.

    You're right about the O2 and I would prefer to have seen Morricone there. I don't understand the economics of concert promotion but maybe Kilmainham was a lot cheaper to hire.

    I paid 16 euro for my ticket to see John Barry in the National Concert Hall a few years ago. That seats about 1,400 so it can't have been a commercial proposition. Admittedly Barry only conducted about four numbers before handing over to someone else and the orchestra was made up of local musicians. Still, it was very little to see such a legend perform.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,720 ✭✭✭serfboard


    maybe Kilmainham was a lot cheaper to hire.
    I suspect that's it. There were almost 200 people on stage and they all have to get paid and then security, insurance etc. so hosting it in the O2 would have increased the ticket price I'd imagine. To what - 200 per ticket?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,539 ✭✭✭ghostdancer


    Live Nation own the O2. i'd imagine that since they're heavily linked with MCD, the fees to rent it for POD or Aiken are quite high, hence why POD/Aiken concerts are generally not there if possible. i presume this is why someone like Bruce Springsteen, who has ties with Aiken down through the years, has been in the (awful) RDS previously, and is now on a tour around the country (as another lot of gigs in the RDs would be overkill)....


  • Registered Users Posts: 911 ✭✭✭Mebuntu


    Can someone tell me what the last couple of tunes were please and what time it ended?
    Ended 10.15pm.

    Can't remember the exact order but if you mean the last two choral pieces from the Encores they were:

    Abbolison (from Queimada aka Burn)
    Here's to You (from Sacco e Vanzetti)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,321 ✭✭✭sham69


    ah great, thanks.
    We didnt miss anything really so..


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  • Registered Users Posts: 247 ✭✭Feeded


    Pdoghue wrote: »
    Went Saturday night and had mixed feelings. The sound was great where we were down in the seats in the last block just in front of all the food and drink stalls. What almost ruined it for me were people constantly walking up and down the aisles, and this wasn't just going to the bathroom. It wasn't a rock concert; why couldn't folk just sit still for 90 minutes, is it too much to ask?

    Totally agree...at one point I saw a fella rush back to his seat with two pints and his iPhone out in front of him recording Gabriel's Oboe...a bloody waste of a ticket!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,030 ✭✭✭lc180


    Going to see Blur at the Royal Kilmainham on Thursday, just wondering was there plastic sheeting on the ground?

    Need to know if i will be breaking out the wellies....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 407 ✭✭Mec-a-nic


    lc180 wrote: »
    Going to see Blur at the Royal Kilmainham on Thursday, just wondering was there plastic sheeting on the ground?

    There was stiff plastic under the seats, but in the food/drink areas there was grass (mud), bark chips (meh), cones and tape (around the really big puddles on paths) and you had to get through all that before the seats.

    If the rain keeps up, don't dress like the Morricone crowd (white jeans, high heels, designer jewellery under crappy plastic ponchos...:rolleyes: ) bring the wellies...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,030 ✭✭✭lc180


    Mec-a-nic wrote: »

    If the rain keeps up, don't dress like the Morricone crowd (white jeans, high heels, designer jewellery under crappy plastic ponchos...:rolleyes: ) bring the wellies...

    Ah damn thats the look i usually go for....

    Cheers for the info!


  • Registered Users Posts: 15 kamituco


    Can someone please identify the complete setlist (in sequence) for last night's concert (or Saturday's), especially in relating to the several en cores.

    This is the setlist for both nights as per the booklet:

    Dublin28_July.png

    But as 'Mebuntu' has pointed out there were some additional pieces performed including:

    Abbolisson (from Queimada aka Burn)
    Here's to You (from Sacco e Vanzetti)

    Looking for a comprehensive list in sequence please....:confused:


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Computer Games Moderators, Entertainment Moderators Posts: 29,732 CMod ✭✭✭✭johnny_ultimate


    I wouldn't know Abbolisson, but if that was the first encore song then it went like this:

    Abbolisson (from Queimada aka Burn)
    Ecstasy of Gold (repeat)
    On Earth As It Is In Heaven (repeat)
    Here's to You (from Sacco e Vanzetti)

    Loved Here's To You, always wanted to hear that sung by a choir that size. Perhaps could have built up the vocals a tad slower, but amazing nonetheless.


  • Registered Users Posts: 749 ✭✭✭Bozo Skeleton


    Ennio Morricone, the orchestra, and the choir were magnificent. Fantastic to hear music I've always loved come to life. The Ecstasy Of Gold was one of many highlights, gave me goosebumps. I felt like I was floating on air walking back in to town.
    I was up front and central in a seat next to the aisle (yowza!). The clattering of peoples shoes walking up and down the aisle was a bit of an annoyance, as were the two girls beside me who occasionally chatted, breaking the spell of the music from time to time. But overall, I thought it was a brilliant concert.
    The rain stopped right as it started, phew.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,711 ✭✭✭C.K Dexter Haven


    Mec-a-nic wrote: »
    I can understand how people could be awed by this show, but having seen Morricone in Belfast 5 years ago, the Dublin concert was a major anti-climax.

    10,000 people does not an intimate venue make, and the large minority of people who arrived late and just kept walking around was annoying. The seating was terrible - rusty folding chairs, cable tied together and jammed into tiny rows was bad but the terrible sight lines ruined it. If I wanted to watch a video screen and amplified music, I would have saved €250 and watched the DVD.
    (Belfast was 2000 people in an acoustic auditorium, raked seating, no video screens, minimal amplification and doors that were closed before the show started. Still plenty of drink and craic).
    I enjoyed the music this time but it would have been so much better if staged in The Point. :(

    You've confirmed my own reasoning for not going to this concert. I saw one of his concerts on SkY Arts and it was an enclosed square, somewhere in Europe- looked well organised but not overly big.

    When I heard the venue was Kilmainham, I decided there and then I wouldn't be buying a ticket. I just couldn't imagine the concert being "brilliant". I'm sure some folks here enjoyed it but I think I would have gone home disappointed.


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 10,087 Mod ✭✭✭✭marco_polo


    In fairness the sound was about as good as it possible for an outdoor venue, could never compare to an auditorium of course but it was more than good enough and didn't detract much a very enjoyable evening.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 911 ✭✭✭Mebuntu


    sham69 wrote: »
    We didnt miss anything really so..
    On the contrary you missed two of his most powerful and compelling compositions.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,321 ✭✭✭sham69


    Mebuntu wrote: »
    On the contrary you missed two of his most powerful and compelling compositions.


    Not a huge fan of Abbolison to be honest, kind of disappointed I missed
    Here's to You.

    I was delighted to hear the theme from H2S as I heard it years ago and fell in love with with, Deborah's theme is also a fav as is the leone stuff and Gabriels Oboe so I got to hear everything I wanted (apart from the untouchable stuff which I know is not held in high regard but I love it)

    All down to taste I suppose :)


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,387 ✭✭✭eisenberg1


    Mec-a-nic wrote: »
    There was stiff plastic under the seats, but in the food/drink areas there was grass (mud), bark chips (meh), cones and tape (around the really big puddles on paths) and you had to get through all that before the seats.

    If the rain keeps up, don't dress like the Morricone crowd (white jeans, high heels, designer jewellery under crappy plastic ponchos...:rolleyes: ) bring the wellies...

    The Morricone crowd? Guilty of the poncho (2 euro and kept me dry) but no heels....maybe you can tell where you can get a size 10?


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,387 ✭✭✭eisenberg1


    Absolutely loved it and have been wanting to Ennio Morricone for years. No complaints myself from where I was sitting other than the two people sitting infront of me that took about 6 million photos and videos of the show with their iPhones that's a pet hate of mine. Other than that great set, great sound but I suppose I would've liked the seats to have a little bit more leg room

    Same here, hadn't been to Kilmainham before so not sure what to expect. Concert super, but too short. Venue/weather not so good. crap seats, too tight......where else would you pay this price and be expected to sit in a puddle....I would not risk outdoor in Ireland again. People pay big money for tickets and then spend all the time taking photos, getting up for drinks. You cant go little over an hour without a plastic cup of overpriced plonk? The lady beside me( 4 mm away) is contstantly texting, talking. I thought umbrellas would be confiscated at entrance ?

    A wonderful concert marred by people arriving late, and wandering in and out during concert....No wonder the show was as short as it was, Mr Morricone probably thought " To hell with this...."


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,937 ✭✭✭implausible


    eisenberg1 wrote: »
    Same here, hadn't been to Kilmainham before so not sure what to expect. Concert super, but too short. Venue/weather not so good. crap seats, too tight......where else would you pay this price and be expected to sit in a puddle....I would not risk outdoor in Ireland again. People pay big money for tickets and then spend all the time taking photos, getting up for drinks. You cant go little over an hour without a plastic cup of overpriced plonk? The lady beside me( 4 mm away) is contstantly texting, talking. I thought umbrellas would be confiscated at entrance ?

    A wonderful concert marred by people arriving late, and wandering in and out during concert....No wonder the show was as short as it was, Mr Morricone probably thought " To hell with this...."

    In fairness, confiscating umbrellas would have been cruelty. It rained solidly for the hour or two before Morricone came on. It's bad enough getting wet while watching the concert, but being drenched beforehand would have ruined it. Myself and my friend stood at the back under the brolly and only took our seats before he came on to minimise the amount of time being soaked!

    I was amazed by the droves of people heading for the toilets, the gig wasn't that long! Also, I expected a mostly middle-aged crowd and a lot of women, but were confused by seeing a lot of groups of men in their twenties and thirties - is it the fact that he soundtracked so many westerns?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,720 ✭✭✭serfboard


    I expected a mostly middle-aged crowd and a lot of women, but were confused by seeing a lot of groups of men in their twenties and thirties
    Film geeks :)

    Can you imagine what it would be like if Thomas Newman ever came to town?


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,243 ✭✭✭symbolic


    serfboard wrote: »
    Film geeks :)

    Can you imagine what it would be like if Thomas Newman ever came to town?

    Yeah the guy beside me kept chatting away about Tarrantino movies, seemed to have zero interest in being there. The people walking up and down to the toilet constantly from early on was so strange.

    The venue and crowd really took from the experience. Shame.


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