Amazing. Absolutely amazing.
My favourite part is at 1:38 when an Irish citizen knocks out a Fianna Fail politician offering free cheese.
Posted in Miscellaneous on November 30, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Amazing. Absolutely amazing.
My favourite part is at 1:38 when an Irish citizen knocks out a Fianna Fail politician offering free cheese.
Posted in Miscellaneous on November 29, 2010| 8 Comments »
Some reflections on our first birthday….
dfallon: A lot can change in a year. Interestingly, it is exactly a year today since we began this blog. It emerged, as hxci reminded me, out of a conversation in The Flowing Tide. At a History Ireland Hedge School in Phibsboro, a member of the panel refered to Come Here To Me! To me as a “mix of the Communist Party of Ireland and Saint Patrick’s Athletic”. Certainly, both have been known to feature! Much else has too.
The city herself has changed a lot in a year. It’s been an infuriating few months. Dublin, in some ways, has taken a serious fall from grace. Yet the blog is a tribute to Dublin, and not just the back alleys and highstreets of Dublin 1 and 2.
Much thanks goes to others in the blogging community of course. Pue’s Occurrences, the excellent group history blog, invited us to partake in a symposium for example, at a time when we were still a relatively new blog. Others, in particular the Irish Election Literature Blog, have sent on wonderful material that ended up here.
On a personal note, the highlights have been the blogs engagements with what is often reffered to as ‘the real world’. The 1916 And After walking tour I provided in the capital is one example, but others have included an Irish Blog Awards nomination and occasional appearances in printed word publications. Here’s to another year.
hXci: One year on and all has changed, changed utterly. Not necessarily for the good either. As the country has sank deeper into the mire, we’ve done our best on here to provide a balance between history, music, football and social commentary to keep people’s minds off things. And considering we did this fairly off the cuff after having a discussion about it in the Flowing Tide, I don’t think we’ve done a bad job. We’ve come a long way in a year, I think it has taken that for us to find our feet, so hopefully this next year will only get better; it sometimes surprises me the kind of articles that take off and get large numbers of hits or comments, but it’s always a nice surprise.
Getting shortlisted in the Irish Blog Awards after only being in existence a few short months was certainly one of the highlights of the year, but what really buoys me about this project is the amount of feedback we get on here as well as in the “real world.” We have close enough twice as many comments as we have articles and if anything, that suggests an interested readership; if we can maintain that, I’ll be happy come 29th November 2011.
Support from the online community, everyone from the diehards on League of Ireland forums like thebohs.com to those on similar blogs like Cedar Lounge Revolution and Pue’s Occurrences has been pretty fantastic, as has the real world support from the likes of History Ireland and down to the people who over pints tell you that they enjoy what we’re doing, a major thanks to all of you.
Who knows what the next year might hold in store, but no doubt, you’ll be getting more of the same on here. All the best!
JCarax As already mentioned, this blog celebrates its first birthday today. We published our first article on the blog on November 29 2009.
The history of the blog goes back a little further than that. I managed to find an old email in my inbox from the 14 September 2009 entitled simply ‘we should start a blog together’ which I had sent out to DFallon and hxci. It’s fantastic to be able to look at the initial discussion about what we should focus on and what we should call the blog. (Some of the other suggestions were OneAndOne.wordpress.com, UpToNinety.wordpress.com and KeepSketch.wordpress.com)
The last year has been a great success and the numbers speak for themselves. 100,000+ views, 500+ posts and 1,000+ comments. The only reason this blog has worked is because of the fantastic interaction between the articles and readers. I probably can speak for the others as well when I say that we value comments a lot more than views.
I don’t feel I’m exaggerating when I say that CHTM! has opened up an online platform, for aspects of Dublin music, politics, history and football, that wasn’t there before. We’ve also worked hard to help upload pamphlets, pictures and music that might have been otherwise forgotten or left gathering dust forever.
Special thanks to Conor (Dublin Opinion), Ciaran (Cedar Lounge Revolution), Antrophe (Soundtracksforthem.com), anarchaeologist, Mark H., my uncles John F. and Donal M. and everyone else who have helped us along the way. Here’s to another 12 months.
Posted in Events, Miscellaneous, Politics, Uncategorized, tagged Demo, dublin, ICTU March, protest on November 27, 2010| 3 Comments »
You took what was not yours,
went against your own bible,
you broke your own laws,
just to out do the rivals.Damien Dempsey, Colony

"Greed is the knife and the scars run deep." Print from the recent Maser/ Damo collaboration at today's demo, as spotted by Comrade O'Carroll
Whilst the lyrics of the Damien Dempsey’s “Colony” refer to imperialist colonisers like England, Portugal and Spain, the above lyrics may just as well refer to our own dear leaders. Poisonous and clueless shower the lot of them.
With one third of CHTM nursing a bad headache from his birthday last night whilst on a plane to the Basque country for some football tourism, it was up to the remaining two thirds to take to the streets today, alongside an estimated 100,000 others. Irish media are using a figure of 50, 000 but I defy that, the ICTU demo last year had 120, 000 and this certainly came close to that. From my viewpoint, it took approximately an hour for the march to stream past before I joined in the left block towards the back. Impressive showing it has to be said. Lets get the same outside the Dáil on budget day.
(kudos to http://www.aaocarroll.org for the pic!)
Posted in Miscellaneous, Music, tagged Jazz in Dublin on November 22, 2010| 2 Comments »
I’ve always been fascinated by the crusade against jazz music in 1920’s and 1930’s Ireland. A piece in the past on aspects of the hidden history of soccer in the capital touched on a GAA convention in 1930 which called for the banning of “jazz dancing”.
The title of this post comes from an Irish Times report from October 12, 1927. In it, Signor Pietro Mascagni was asked for his opinion on jazz music. “I am for sound in music and against noise” he noted.
This 1938 piece from The Irish Times is among my favourite finds to date however, coming from June 20. The crusade against jazz was very much alive and well in the capital. Other “inferior music” was also condemned. Mad times.
Still, not everyone in Dublin was scared away. Here’s a 1930 ad for a Dublin music shop advertising stocking “the latest jazz tune” among other things.
Give me some time, and I’ll try knock out a piece down the line on jazz in the capital. There’s a fascinating little subculture alright!
Posted in Miscellaneous on November 21, 2010| 3 Comments »
As mentioned in a post earlier on, I did an excellent Bloody Sunday focused walking tour of Croke Park today with John Campbell from the Croke Park Museum.
Below, I’ve uploaded a few snaps of an almost completely empty Croke Park. Beautiful.
(Any info on this excellent image? donal.ofalluin.2009@nuim.ie)
(more…)
Posted in Miscellaneous on November 20, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Kudos to the artist ADW and Broadsheet.ie for bringing my attention to it.
How apt. Listen up FF and co.
Think (think) think (think) think (think) think (think)
You think (think) think (think) think about it
You better think (think) think about what you’re trying to do to me
Yeah, think (think, think), let your mind go, let yourself be free
Let’s go back, let’s go back, let’s go way on back when
I didn’t even know you, you couldn’t have been too much more than ten
I ain’t no psychiatrist, I ain’t no doctor with a degree
It don’t take too much high IQ’s to see what you’re doing to me
You better think (think) think about what you’re trying to do to me
Yeah, think (think, think), let your mind go, let yourself be freeOh freedom (freedom), freedom (freedom), freedom, yeah freedom
Freedom (freedom), freedom (freedom), freedom, oh freedom
Posted in Miscellaneous, Music on November 20, 2010| 1 Comment »
Facebook has been buzzing with this fantastic new song about the IMF. It was apparently written, recorded and uploaded online in one evening. Within 24 hours, it has been played nearly 500 times. Major props to SoundMigration.
Céad míle fáilte To the IMF
We hope we meet you on the streets –To fight you to the death.
And we know how you got here -Back room deal and open arms
As you try to suck the life from us – With your structural reformsThey just lit a fuse -Its time for us to choose 2
You must think were fucking stupid —-Feed our fears with blocks of cheese
It’ll take more than dairy products -To keep us on our knees
Don’t talk to us about violence – You hypocritical scum
Just look at all our hospital – An the homeless on the run
Destitution politics – Death by credit card
By you cant kill the love we have – for justice in our heart
Check out the rest of the lyrics here.
Posted in Miscellaneous on November 17, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Shay Healy has written a poem on the state of Ireland’s financial crisis. Enjoy.
1. If Finn Mac Cool came back again
I wonder what he’d say
When he sees the state of chassis
That old Ireland’s in today
Nearly half a million on the dole
Who’s next to join the queue
It’s possible the bird shit
Is about to land on you
We were sold out by the builders
Buying land up left and right
They were borrowing in millions
To the bankers great delight
Cos the bonuses were flying round
Like snuff would at a wake
Oh one half of them was giving
With the other half on the take
2. Twas on September 28th
A meeting was convened
Both BOI and AIB
We’re up the creek it seemed
The meeting never happened
Brian Cowen, the Taoiseach swore
But he’s just another liar, and he should be shown the door.
And along with Mary Harney and her fucked up H.S.E.
The should put those assholes on a raft and push,
them out to see
Cos there’s old folk lying on trollies
And there’s helpless children dying
But no one’s prepared to take the blame
And no one will resign.