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Archive for 2010

Saturday night drinks in The Bernard Shaw with Simon went well, as they do, and on the way out the door I noticed the flyer for the exhibition ‘Exact Fare Only’. Essentially the exhibition is a collection of pieces from Dublin artists inspired by journeys on Dublin Bus.

The flyer, if you bother taking a scissors to it, can be folded into a the shape of a Dublin Bus. Then, you cut holes for the sides to fit into (I’m a lazy man, notice the masking-tape) and you’re away. If you’ve loads of time like me, you can colour the thing in . Look at it!

Amazing. Get on it. My only regret is not thinking of scanning the sheet up here so you could all spend Monday morning making mini 3D Nitelink buses too. Innovative flyer gets a thumbs up.

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Thanks for giving it a go.

Road Records closed today. About an hour ago, they tweeted this:

Last song of the night Teenage Fanclub “Everything Flows”, extremely loud. Doors are closing for the last. Goodbye everybody.

After 13 years, the shop had no doubt become a Dublin institution for those of us keen on indie music, the feel and sound of vinyl records and the whole culture that goes with that. A little out of my way, I’d venture in on occasion and then wander off through the arcade and home, normally with a new record. Or an old record, with a new home.

Above: Neil Hannon of The Divine Comedy giving My Lovely Horse a go in Road Records, back in May.

While it looked like Road was safe having called off its last goodbye, it was obvious no benefit gig would save the place now. The owners described the situation on the site, noting:

This time, I am sad to say, there is no alternative for us, we have literally tried everything in our powers to keep this place operating and nothing has worked for us. It hasn’t been an easy decision to make, if anything its even more difficult than two years ago, we have had amazing support from people but nothing we do seems to work anymore.

Thinking back today on some of the great records I bought there, and a few instantly come to mind. I remember being very young on my first trip in, having just scored a vinyl player from the big Santa lad himself. I gave these two a play today. Sadly, I didn’t make it in as I’d planned.

Best of luck to the owners in life from here, and thanks for your contribution to Dublin life and youth culture. Keep it vinyl.

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There was a time, back when the world was black and white and “Playstations were made out of wood” (Bo Selecta, well done if you got it) , when you’d come home from town with a good half dozen Dublin focused magazines at the bottom of the bag.

Things have been pretty grim of late, with few Dublin magazines of note. Totally Dublin is a staple of course, but beyond that there isn’t much going. Much as I enjoy a flick through the quality Dubliner Magazine, the Larkinite in me can’t be seen buying The Hedild, (If I want to know what Sinn Féin are up to, I’ll read their website lads…) so I rely on finding a copy on the bus. Le Cool is another one I go seeking out.

Now, Punt has arrived on the scene.

It looks the business, inside and out. I picked my copy up in Tower Records, but it’s available in a whole heap of places, including The Winding Stair, Urban Picnic, Bookworms and elsewhere.

Punt is an ad-free zone by policy. The only ads you’ll find here will be non-commercial and from our Punters

Thank the lord for that.

Pop over here for a looksie. It’ll set you back the cost of a double cheeseburger in Maccies.

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“For they give us a four-minute warning
When the rockets are on their way
To give us time to panic, and Christians time to pray”

The Dubliners- Protect And Survive.

Surely there is one of these hiding in every house in Ireland, the excellent 1965 Civil Defence ‘Survival in a Nuclear War’ booklet? The page above is particularly silly and worthy of posting, but it doesn’t get much more sensible elsewhere.

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Snapped on the Dublin Bus home from work. Every bus I’ve been on in the last week has been much the same.

Made me long for a simpler time, remember these? Delighted somebody put this on YouTube. Before people were turning pocket money into chunky markers and wrecking the buzz. Embedding disabled it seems, how annoying. Give it a click then.

Wouldn’t catch these kids carrying chunky markers around in those shocking school bags either.

By pure chance, I spotted two friends (including our own jaycarax there on the right), discussing this exhibtion on Facebook. It’s on tonight. Timely.

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The team is made up of British players (Irish, North Irish, English and Scottish).

– from the Juventus website, describing Shamrock Rovers Football Club.

Quick as a flash, toutless and sites like it already feature ads from people looking for tickets for next weeks Shamrock Rovers/Juventus tie, set up as a result of last nights Rovers victory in Israel. Based on the write up off the Juve website, they’ve probably got the lads watching Sligo Rovers DVDs in preperation.

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Likely to pop into Filmbase on Saturday for this.

Summer Edition is back for 2010! The Artists book, Comic and Zine fair is happening again at Filmbase, Curved Street, Temple Bar on Saturday July 24th from 11am – 5pm.
This free event features over 40 exhibitors from Ireland and the UK showcasing the best in independent and self-publishing. All the exhibitors create, design and produce their publications themselves and the fair is a unique chance to see the diversity and originality of book arts happening in Ireland today.

If comics are your thing, you could do worse than to pick up the current issue of Totally Dublin magazine, which has a great feature piece on Irish comic artists. For me, it is the personal zines that make events like Summer Edition for me. If you see me, say hello.

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“It appears certain that Nationalism has gained a great deal and lost a little by its union with Labour in the Insurrection of Easter Week, and that Labour has lost much and achieved something by its avowal of the National aspirations of the Irish Nation”

-Sean O’ Casey.

Joe Hanley as Fluther Good, in rehearsal for The Plough and the Stars.

There is no night quite as exciting to see a play as on its first night before the general public. Lines have been practiced, outfits adjusted, props moved slightly this way or that way, feedback taken on board. The stage is set by now, and nothing is as telling as the reaction of a sold-out house to a performance.

Based on the reaction tonight, The Plough and the Stars should enjoy a fine run now it is back home where it belongs.

Undoubtedly one of the most controversial plays to emerge from The Abbey, it is no doubt the one that first comes to mind for many when discussing the iconic Theatre. The riots that emerged during its 1926 run at The Abbey are well documented. These disturbances were, among other things, reactions to the sight of a prostitute on stage, the appearance of the Irish flag in a public house and the use of the words of P.H Pearse. For some, the play was seen as dismissive of the ideals of the men of 1916, and the leading Irish progressive figure Hanna Sheehy Skeffington was among those who disrupted the first performance of the play. A great irony was the fact O’ Casey had previously wrote so highly of her husband Francis, the pacifist who was murdered in very suspicious circumstances during the Rising.

In Sheehy-Skeffington, and not in Connolly, fell the first martyr to Irish Socialism, for he linked Ireland not only with the little nations struggling for self-expression, but with the world’s Humanity struggling for a higher life.

When The Abbey later refused The Silver Tassie, in 1927, O’ Casey left it behind him. The Abbey has never been able to leave O’ Casey behind it however, and The Plough and the Stars has returned to its stage on numerous occasions. This latest performance, directed by Wayne Jordan, is one I’ve been eagerly awaiting for months.

The characters in the play are not easy to carry. I have seen this play performed in the past in a way that did not quite do justice to the weight of characters like The Covey and Fluther. They’re supposed to be passionate, and nothing if not loud. Joe Hanley could not have got Fluther better, and over a ‘post-play pint’ I heard this view shared by many. Fluther is a loveable character despite all his faults, and produces many wonderful lines in the work. Best to hear them read right. His physical manner on stage also matches the character, and he completely makes the character his own, whether pacing a room or returning from an ‘Easter week shopping raid’.

(more…)

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Raves and free parties are few and far between in Dublin, so the chance of a ‘secret’ BYOB gig in the city centre should probably be taken advantage of. (Even its only on for 4 hours!)

Medusa welcomes you to A Midsummer Night’s Party on July 24, 2010. This creative happening of electronic beats, holistic and visual arts is practically a free night out for guests – €3 adm + B.Y.O.B. in a luxurious central D2 location.

This party is invite only and there are limit…ed places so to be added to the guestlist please enter your name by following the link below:

https://spreadsheets.google.com/viewform?formkey=dFRmOFFodjAxQWpDODdWNVRaa1VGTHc6MQ

Full details about the night will be emailed to all those who sign up closer to the day with directions to the venue, line-up etc.

300+ guests have already signed up to attend on Facebook. (If you like the whole secret garden buzz, check out this amazing looking event across the pond.)

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“The old guard and the new”, this is a classic Fianna Fail election leaflet encouraging the public to get behind two 1916 veterans (Oscar Traynor and Harry Colley), “stand by De Valera” and to put faith in two newer faces, Eugene Timmons and Charles Haughey. It is a most unusual piece, from the Dublin North East constituency.

Traynor is a well-known figure in Irish political history, in command at the Metropole Hotel during the 1916 Rising. Unusually, he was a soccer-man, and had toured Europe with Belfast Celtic in 1912. The image below is taken from a piece on his time at that club over on the excellent Belfast Celtic historical site.

Traynor (Goalkeeper) with the rest of the Belfast Celtic team in 1912.

Harry Colley had also taken part in the Rising, and the leaflet notes that he was “..left for dead at a Dublin street barricade” during the rebellion.

Ultimately, Charles Haughey would fail to win a seat in 1954, obtaining 1,812 votes. When Haughey did obtain a seat three years later in 1957, it was at the expense of Colley. The rest, as they say, is history.

Click to expand and read:

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Today, I started a volunteer work placement in the archives of the Irish Labour History Museum. My day job for the next few weeks will be cataloging the archive of the Wexford ITGWU branch (c. 1978 – 1990) along with some Wexford Labour Party material. They were saved by our good friend Conor McCabe from Dublin Opinion just before they were thrown into a skip! Here are some gems from today:

ITGWU Wexford Membership Cards for employees of North Slob Farming Company, 1987.

Back of ITGWU Wexford Membership Cards for employees of North Slob Farming Company, 1987.

Header of letters to Labour Party delgates for the 31st Annual Conference in Cork City, May 1985.

ITGWU sticker, date unknown.

ITGWU ballot paper, date unknown.

Invitation from ITGWU Social Clun to Presentation Dinner Dance (to mark retirement of Tom Carr P.C. Branch Secretary) Talbot Hotel, Year unknown.

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Telepathe

Soon, I will have no money at all. The logic behind this is that for the first summer in yonks plenty of international talent is making its way to the city, taking my income in exchange for gig tickets. The upcoming gig from Joanna Newsom was exciting enough at first.

Telepathe are a band I’ve been on and on about for months to anyone who’ll listen. Coming from that great electronic music borough that is Brooklyn, they came to my attention with their 2009 effort Dance Mother, produced by David Sitek of TV On The Radio. An electronic band if such specific labelling was required, their roots and influences span a broad musical field. Hip hop influences mix with punk and noise-pop influences, and the sound that comes out of the big musical machine is unique to say the least.

I’m not the biggest fan of Whelan’s (Too dark for me, few lightbulbs’d be great lads…) but as with my recent trip to see Ted Leo exceptions do arise. I look forward to this one.

Telepathe play Whelan’s on August 14. Tickets are available from tickets.ie , priced at €15. It’s a Saturday, if you’re wondering….

Also, that legend Andy Milonakis off the telly reckons they’re good for the money. You’d trust him.

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