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David Attenborough - A Voice That Changed the Moral Imagination

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  David Attenborough A Voice That Changed the Moral Imagination By Kieran Beville  David Attenborough There are famous people, there are admired people and then there are the vanishingly rare figures who become woven into the emotional fabric of entire generations. Sir David Attenborough belongs to that last category. His hundredth birthday does not feel like the anniversary of a broadcaster or natural historian. It feels closer to a global moment of thanksgiving. For more than seventy years, Attenborough has occupied a singular place in public life. Politicians divide opinion. Celebrities fade. Cultural icons rise and collapse with fashion. Yet Attenborough endured, not because he chased relevance but because he dedicated his life to something permanently relevant: the living world itself. His achievement cannot be measured simply in programmes made, awards won or audiences reached, though the numbers are extraordinary. His true accomplishment lies elsewhere. He...

Donovan - Mystic & Living Legend Comes to Limerick

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                                                                          Donovan Mystic & Living Legend Comes to Limerick By Kieran Beville Donovan When Donovan first appeared on the British music scene in the mid-1960s, he seemed to drift in from another age—barefoot, poetic, with quiet intensity. At a time when the cultural world was shifting under the weight of youth rebellion, political upheaval and artistic reinvention, Donovan offered something at once simpler and more profound: songs that felt like ancient folk tales whispered through a modern psychedelic lens. Now, decades later, the Scottish troubadour—born in Glasgow in 1946—remains an enduring presence in music history. With a career spanning more than sixty years, he has long outlived the era that first embraced him, yet his work ...

Peter Donnelly - A Tribute

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  Peter Donnelly The Ongoing Creative Journey By Kieran Beville Across Ireland’s endlessly renewing music landscape, certain artists leave marks so deeply woven into the cultural fabric that their influence is felt long before their names are widely known. Peter Donnelly — guitarist, songwriter, vocalist, and self-taught visual artist — is one of those figures, hiding in plain sight. For decades he has been an essential part of Limerick’s creative bloodstream, most recognisably as a core member of The O’Malleys, a band whose history is equal parts folklore, grit, reinvention, and joyful absurdity. And speaking of absurdity – Peter Donnelly is renowned for his hilarious wit and repartee – one of the funniest and nicest guys you will ever meet. Donnelly is not the kind of musician who pursues the spotlight. Rather, he builds a world and invites people into it — a world shaped by music that resists categories and paintings that burn with emotional honesty. In both mediums, his...

Kate O’Brien - The Rebel Heart of Limerick’s Literary Soul

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  Kate O’Brien The Rebel Heart of Limerick’s Literary Soul By Kieran Beville There are writers whose names adorn the spines of forgotten paperbacks, and then there are those who somehow slip past the boundaries of time, remaining stubbornly alive in the air of their native places. In Limerick, that person is Kate O’Brien — novelist, playwright, exile, and proud daughter of a city she both escaped and immortalised. Even now, over half a century after her death, O’Brien’s spirit lingers in the elegant, defiant intelligence of her words. She remains Limerick’s great literary paradox — the insider-outsider who turned her city into both muse and battleground. A Woman Before Her Time Born in 1897, Kate O’Brien came into a Limerick where respectability was prized above imagination. The city was still a bastion of empire and faith, a place where young women were expected to be quiet, diligent, and grateful. O’Brien was none of those things. She was educated at Laurel Hill Conve...

A Quiet Thunder - Limerick’s Emma Langford

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  A Quiet Thunder Limerick’s Emma Langford By Kieran Beville There are singers who carry songs like lanterns—held out before them to illuminate their path—and then there are singers who seem to inhabit their songs, moving through them as if through secret rooms of a long-lived house. Emma Langford belongs emphatically to the latter. Over the last several years, the Limerick-born songwriter has become one of Ireland’s most distinctive voices, not because she chases grand gestures or the spotlight, but because she understands the sheer gravitational pull of authenticity. Her music doesn’t announce itself; it arrives like weather—gentle at first, then unmistakable, then unforgettable. Langford emerged at a moment when Irish folk was already in the midst of a quiet renaissance. Young artists were unpicking the seams of tradition and re-stitching them into new shapes. What she brought to that shift wasn’t just a crystalline voice or a penchant for elegant melodies—though she had...