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Don O’Connor - A Limerick Musician's Life in Reform & Beyond

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  Don O’Connor A Limerick Musician’s Life in Reform & Beyond Don O'Connor By any measure, Don O’Connor is one of those artists whose influence outweighs his profile. For decades he has been a steady rhythmic pulse in Irish music, a performer, writer and community figure whose work has rippled far beyond the stages he first stood on. From the raw energy of Reform to later explorations in world, folk and community music, O’Connor’s story mirrors Limerick’s musical coming-of-age. A city, a time, a beat To understand Don O’Connor, you first have to understand Limerick at the moment he came of age. The city in the late 1960s was restless and creative, caught between tradition and the promise of something louder, freer and more international. Dance halls still mattered, showbands ruled the roads, and young musicians absorbed influences from radio, imported records and British and American rock. O’Connor was part of that generation that didn’t wait for permission. Music wasn’...

Shades of Red - by Vivienne McKechnie

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  Shades of Red A Poet’s Eye on the Ordinary and the Eternal by Kieran Beville Vivienne McKechnie There is a quiet confidence about Shades of Red , the latest collection from Limerick poet Vivienne McKechnie. It does not shout for attention or rely on fashionable obscurity. Instead, it invites the reader into a world where the ordinary becomes luminous and where the deepest human concerns are approached with honesty, compassion and considerable craft. Published by Revival Press, the collection gathers poems that move through memory, grief, love, loss, friendship, animals, history and the strange passage of time itself. The result is a book that feels both intimate and expansive, rooted in lived experience yet reaching towards larger questions about what it means to be human. McKechnie, who was born in Dublin and has made her home in Limerick, is already well known in literary circles. She holds an MA in Creative Writing from the University of Limerick and has taught Eng...

Vissionary of Celtic Fusion - Joe O'Donnell

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  Joe O’Donnell Visionary of Celtic Fusion By Kieran Beville Joe O'Donnell In the wide and complicated map of Irish music, where every county likes to claim its heroes and legends, Limerick’s musical exports often stand in sharp relief: the showband-era stalwarts, the early punks, the global pop successes. Yet behind the familiar names lies a figure whose impact is harder to summarise, harder to categorise and therefore easier to overlook. Joe O’Donnell—violinist, composer, arranger, bandleader and fearless sonic explorer—has spent more than fifty years constructing a musical world so distinctive that it exists almost entirely on its own terms. For many listeners, he remains a footnote, a name glimpsed on old vinyl credits or cited by musicians who know just how deep the well runs. But those who have encountered his work, especially his 1977 magnum opus Gaodhal’s Vision, tend to speak of him with a mix of admiration and puzzlement: admiration for his originality; puzzlement...

The Range and Register of Contemporary Poetic Voices

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  The Range and Register of Contemporary Poetic Voices What an Editor Must Hear Before Choosing What Readers Will Read By Kieran Beville When the American poet Archibald MacLeish declared that “a poem should not mean but be”, he articulated a modernist ideal that has echoed through much of twentieth-century poetry. Yet anyone surveying contemporary poetry today quickly discovers that no single dictum commands universal allegiance. Some poets still pursue the compressed symbolism of modernism. Others return unapologetically to narrative. Some cultivate the speaking voice of conversation while others construct dense linguistic architectures that reward repeated reading. Formal verse has experienced an unexpected revival even as free verse continues to dominate. Performance poetry has reshaped expectations of rhythm and audience. Eco-poetry, documentary poetry and hybrid forms have expanded both subject matter and technique. If there is one defining characteristic of contempor...

Eric Bibb – Blues Legend

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  Eric Bibb – Blues Legend Brings Music of Hope, Healing and Peace to Dolans By Kieran Beville Eric Bibb A reverential evening in Limerick There are concerts where audiences arrive expecting entertainment and there are others where people gather in search of something deeper. Eric Bibb’s appearance at Dolans Warehouse on Saturday night belonged firmly in the latter category. The atmosphere was unlike that of a typical blues concert. Respectful would be too weak a word. The audience seemed almost reverential, listening with an attentiveness that reflected both the stature of the performer and the spirit of the music. Born in New York in 1951 into a family deeply immersed in the American folk tradition, Bibb grew up surrounded by some of the most influential musicians of the twentieth century. His father, Leon Bibb, was a noted folk singer and actor while family friends included Pete Seeger and Bob Dylan. After moving to Europe as a young man, Bibb gradually forged his ...