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Archive for December, 2009

Rare Dublin pub rock single that has just been put up on youtube.

From The Irish Punk Punk & New Wave Discography, “Good pub-rock style punk rock and one of the few Dublin 1977 singles to make it into Henrik Poulsen’s book ’77: The Year of Punk and New Wave’.

The East Coast Angels were finalists at the Limerick Civic Week Pop ’78 competition which was eventually won by U2.

In 1978, Gaynor and Hannigan formed The Romantiks. Gaynor and Dave Flanagan were later in The Shy. Jimmy Gaynor also fronted his own Jimmy Gaynor Band. An earlier East Coast Angel (Brendan?) (bass) was later in The Business.”

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Walking down the Grand Canal from Portobello Bridge (La Touche Bridge) to Leeson Street Bridge on Thursday got me thinking about an amusing prank from October 1968 that I heard some years ago. Here’s the original Irish Times article published in full.

AN ‘ICEBERG’ FLOATED DOWN THE CANAL
The Irish Times. October 4 1968.

Unknown pranksters turned over a mile of the Grand Canal in Dublin into a bubble bath yesterday. The sequence of events was described Dragnet style by Jimmy Parsons, lock keeper of Lock Cottage, Portobello Bridge. “At 2:30am, a night nurse in Portobello nursing home looked out the window and saw white foam rising 30 feet out of the lock and overflowing on to the bridge and roadways. At 5am the police arrived. All they could do was watch. At 7:30am the fire brigade came. They said it looked lovely but that they couldn’t help”.

By then, Dubliners were on their way to work. The wall of foam hampered traffic at the bridges at Porotobello, Charlemont street and Leeson Street. Hundreds of curious people jammed the canal-side.

Portobello Today. Flickr user Miroslav Čuljat.

“It’s really like a fairyland” a schoolbound youngster breathed. “I’m going to be late for work” said a typist who had jumped off her bus “But it’s worth it – I’ll never see a sight like this again”.

Hours later some of the original watchers were still there, still spellbound, gazing at the foam writhing upwards in a Disneyland ballet.

The high wind scooped great gobbets of froth from the lock gates and flung them into the sky. Other pieces, too big to fly, rolled over the roadway like huge snowballs. “Lookit – it’s snowing” two messenger boys bellowed in chorus, beside themselves with excitement.

Portobello Bridge today

“All we want now is Brigit Bardot in that bubble bath”, observed a man with a ballroom sheikh hair-do.

Jimmy Parsons arrived, with a weed-rake on the end of a 10-foot pole. Poling about on the bottom of Portobello lock, he said over his shoulder, “This must have been caused by jokers dumping detergent or soap – powder into the locks. The way the foam keeps coming up, the stuff is still down there. It’s an expensive joke. They must have thrown hundredweights of it to whip up this froth”

Giving up on the search, he sat on a lock-gate and said “You should have seen it at dawn. Like icebergs it was. Icebergs floating down the Grand Canal”.

Angrily aloof on the canal – bank nearby, two swans looked on. After a while, they took like seaplanes in search of pure water. But the foam stayed and so did the crowds…

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A quick anecdote….

Sure, I'm choked with the thirst....

A rare picture of Behan at the Zoological Gardens, Phoenix Park.

I had intended doing a long article containing some pictures and tales of Dublin’s finest but I’ve decided too break it down and will try post up a new one every day or two…


One autumns evening, after a days hard work, Brendan Behan collapsed into a diabetic coma off the top of Grafton Street. It was at a time when he was at the height of his drunken notoriety and passers-by naturally thought he was just pissed as a fart. They took him to the nearby surgery of  a fashionable and well respected Dublin Doctor. The doctor decided to take a cardiograph and, somewhat nervous of his patient, took the chance to humor him a bit. He explained the workings of the cardiograph needle as it registered the faint heartbeats of a very sick and semiconscious Brendan. “That needle there is writing down your pulses, Mr. Behan, and I suppose, in its own way, it is probably the most important thing you have ever written,” to which Behan replied; “Aye, and it’s straight from me heart, too.”

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Gigs (3rd – 5th Dec.)

Propagandhi + Strike Anywhere. The Village, 3 December.

Propagandhi, long-running Canadian political punk band. I really like their earlier stuff. To be honest, not too keen on their new “heavier and more technical heavy metal-influenced sound”.

Supporting are Protest the Hero, “a progressive metal band” (don’t sound like my cup of tea) and Strike Anywhere, excellent political melodic hardcore punk. Saw them last year in Ruaille Buaille and was very impressed. Looking forward to seeing them again.

(As an added bonus, Propagandhi will be interviewed by CHTM’s hXci; the review should appear some time over the weekend!)

The Village
Doors 7.30pm
Tickets €18 (Decent for three touring bands)

Paranoid Visions + Bionic Rats. The Thomas House, 4 December.

Paranoid Visions, in your face, long running Dublin punk band with The Bionic Rats, hard working, constantly gigging ska + reggae group. With DJs Traycee Oi Town and JB from Ska Patrol (Near FM). It’s hxci’s birthday so I don’t think I’m going to get to this but it’s well worth publicising and I hope they get a good crowd.

Thomas House
Doors 8pm
Tickets €9 (It’s for a good cause!)

The Revellions + The Pacifics. Shebeen Chic, 5 December.

Garage/Zombie Rock/Surf gig. Personally, it’s not really what I’m into but I’m going along to see my mates who play in The Pulpit.

Shebeen Chic.
Doors 9pm.
Admission €3 (Bargain!)

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