glonn wrote:Replying to my own thread...three years later.
Anyway, I just watched the film Hidden Agenda and there is a brilliant scene where Ron and Terry are playing rebel songs in a Republican club in Belfast. They do one number that I am unfamiliar with and then Young Ned as the scene moves to the basement. Good film, even better with Terry.
GK
territa wrote:ummm, damn near four years now... (!) and it's still one of my favorite albums.
glonn wrote:Replying to my own thread...three years later.
Anyway, I just watched the film Hidden Agenda and there is a brilliant scene where Ron and Terry are playing rebel songs in a Republican club in Belfast. They do one number that I am unfamiliar with and then Young Ned as the scene moves to the basement. Good film, even better with Terry.
GK
Maija wrote:I just looked up some Kavana CDs, and 'Everyman is a king' is on 'Think like a Hero' (1990). Hmmmm. Just listened to the (shitty quality) sample, and it seems to be along the lines of his version of 'Young Ned' (aka Not That Brilliant). Well, it's just a sample.
Low D wrote:Maija wrote:I just looked up some Kavana CDs, and 'Everyman is a king' is on 'Think like a Hero' (1990). Hmmmm. Just listened to the (shitty quality) sample, and it seems to be along the lines of his version of 'Young Ned' (aka Not That Brilliant). Well, it's just a sample.
For the record, i dig Ron's version of that. And I think Think Like a Hero along with Coming Days are two of the most brilliant albums ever, the promise of "world music" fully delivered (ok, heavy on the Irish, perhaps...) But seriously, wow, you could do a lot worse than to own these two albums (but no, don't expect 'em to sound like the Pogues at all). I listen to those albums, and it's like when i listen to the stuff Levon Helm does nowadays with his band - how the hell is it that this amazing stuff exists only at the margins, when it's about 150 times better than what you hear on the radio? These bands are so talented, so full of soul, and so rocking... and nobody notices.
Home Fire gets a lot of attention, as does The Bucks' Dancing To The Ceili Band, I suspect largely due to Terry's involvement. And don't get me wrong, they're fine albums. But Think Like a Hero & Coming Days top anything he's done before (ok, so i've not heard it all) or after, in my opinion.
Shaz wrote:Think Like A Hero is one of my all-time favourite albums, and I also listen to Home Fire a lot. I'm sorry Ron doesn't seem to be recording now.
Low D wrote:Shaz wrote:Think Like A Hero is one of my all-time favourite albums, and I also listen to Home Fire a lot. I'm sorry Ron doesn't seem to be recording now.
He did an M.A. in Irish History the other year - there's a good comment on the state of non-corporate music: you're better off as a grad student!
Shaz wrote:Low D wrote:Shaz wrote:Think Like A Hero is one of my all-time favourite albums, and I also listen to Home Fire a lot. I'm sorry Ron doesn't seem to be recording now.
He did an M.A. in Irish History the other year - there's a good comment on the state of non-corporate music: you're better off as a grad student!
Sigh, yeah! I read somewhere he'd done it. And I think he was also involved in compiling an Irish folk box set. I miss his music a lot -- he was one of the best live musicians I've seen.
Shaz wrote:Low D wrote: And I think he was also involved in compiling an Irish folk box set. I miss his music a lot -- he was one of the best live musicians I've seen.
That might actually be the 4-disc box set HE put out. It's pretty much an M.A. in Irish History right there (not to mention a PhD in fine arts!). Think of it as and expanded verion of the 2-disc set of a few years before: Irish Songs Of Rebellion, Resistance And Reconciliation
http://properuk.com/artists.php?action=alview&alid=2019
Shaz wrote:Shaz wrote:Low D wrote: And I think he was also involved in compiling an Irish folk box set. I miss his music a lot -- he was one of the best live musicians I've seen.
That might actually be the 4-disc box set HE put out. It's pretty much an M.A. in Irish History right there (not to mention a PhD in fine arts!). Think of it as and expanded verion of the 2-disc set of a few years before: Irish Songs Of Rebellion, Resistance And Reconciliation
http://properuk.com/artists.php?action=alview&alid=2019
I've got that! The one I was thinking of was putting together a collection for someone like Topic of other Irish traditional musicians' work. IIRC, there were themed discs, including the Irish in Britain. Wish I could remember what it was called!
Shaz wrote:Clash Cadillac wrote:The one I was thinking of was putting together a collection for someone like Topic of other Irish traditional musicians' work. IIRC, there were themed discs, including the Irish in Britain. Wish I could remember what it was called!
I believe your thinking of the 7 disc set made from the Topic catalogue on Globestyle titled:
CDORBD 081 Treasure My Heart
CDORBD 082 I'm Leaving Tipperary
CDORBD 085 The Rushy Mountain
CDORBD 090 Hurry The Jug
CDORBD 092 Happy To Meet, Sorry To Part
CDORBD 093 The Coolin'
CDORBD 094 A Living Thing
philipchevron wrote: To hear what he sounded like as a bar-band king, try to get hold of the first/only album by his band Juice On The Loose (vinyl only) from around 1981/82. No Irish music on this, but he brings a definite Corkonian edge to soul classics like Irma Thomas's "It's Raining".
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