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Barry McCormack plays 2 nights upstairs in Whelan's

  • 07-09-2011 11:42am
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 269 ✭✭


    First show is tonight! Details below. A perfect way to soothe those post-Electric Picnic heebie jeebies.

    Whelanslive.com presents two intimate nights of wonderful folk music with..

    Barry McCormack
    Upstairs In Whelan’s

    7th September (solo show) + support from Gary Fitzpatrick

    14th September (full band show) + support from Minnie & The Illywhackers

    Tickets €8 inc booking fee available to buy now from Whelanslive.com or call WAV Tickets [Lo-Call 1890 200 078]


    ‘McCormack takes his listener into dark, surreal and often downright funny territory...this is Patrick McCabe put to music. And just as in McCabe's novels the macabre and the hilarious often sit side by side.’ The Irish Independent


    'Last Night, as I was Wandering is a purgatorial stripmall facade of Nightown, populated by ghosts who walk: Kelly, Kavanagh, Behan, Dylan, MacGowan, the brothers Palace and Louvin and James Clarence Mangan...here's a body of song which understands that any port town is also a portal town, a hell door that admits all manner of strange sailors, strumpets and shape shifters.' - Peter Murphy, Hot Press

    'You could imagine Shane MacGowan or Luke Kelly blasting out these songs and if that's not a recommendation, we don't know what is.' - The RTE Guide


    Jubilee Allstars, Barry McCormack’s former band, were once aptly described as equal parts Velvet Underground, Leonard Cohen and Brendan Behan; and the records Barry contributed to before leaving the band in 2001 were influenced by the Irish song and literary traditions and American roots and rock music.

    It was the former influences that were brought to the fore on Barry's debut solo album We Drank Our Tears (2003), which was critically lauded for eschewing the introspective, soul-searching approach of his contemporaries in favour of songs inspired by the Irish storytelling tradition. Hot Press called it 'A melting pot of Brendan Behan, Bob Dylan and Shane MacGowan...McCormack has created an album of contemporary folk songs rooted in a tradition that goes back generations.'

    Perhaps ironically, it was encounters Barry had with American musicians, touring as support with Alt Folk/Country acts like The Handsome Family, Adam Snyder and Joe Pernice, which made him eager to explore the song tradition of his own country.

    The influence of the Dublin street-singing tradition, as well as his reading of the local history, are apparent on Barry's second record, Last Night, as I was Wandering (2006). 'His city is a purgatorial stripmall facade of Nightown', said Hot Press, 'populated by ghosts who walk: Kelly, Kavanagh, Behan, Dylan, MacGowan, the brothers Palace and Louvin and James Clarence Mangan.'

    McCormack’s third record, Night Visiting, (2008) was something of a departure in that the songs took on a rural feel in both setting and story. Inspired by local history, short stories and folk songs, the Irish Independent called it, ‘Patrick McCabe put to music. And, just as in McCabe’s novels the macabre and hilarious often sit side by side’.

    His hometown had been the inspiration behind Jubilee Allstars’ second album Lights of the City (2011), which saw the band gain some renown as Dublin eulogists. The title track, which Barry penned, was described by the The Guardian as ‘probably the first great song explicitly written about the bittersweet effects of urban gentrification’.

    His latest album, Small Mercies (2011), returns to this theme and also sees him returning to playing with a full band for a record that he feels shows him maturing as an artist and fulfilling the potential shown on earlier albums. The Irish Times’ Brian Boyd called it ‘a wondrous affair…writing of a post-boom Dublin landscape that you only thought Phil Chevron capable of…a triumph’.




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