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Simple idea from the lads over at Sweeney Mongrels which will no doubt reel in a good bit of publicity.

Sweeneys are looking for DJs to gig on the ground floor on Monday evenings

The deal is:

• Send us a written dream set list names of songs and artists
• To sweeneysmongrel@gmail.com please put set list as the subject
• We’re looking for hip cool tunes not popular charts
• All genres, all decades
• The three most popular set lists amongst our panel of judges shall be short listed
• The short list will be published on our FaceBook profile and put to the public test
• Sweeneys friends and fans will decide who wins
• Bobs your uncle you’ve a gig at Sweeneys
• You will be rewarded by a feed of pints for you and your closest pals

A Parcel Of Rogues.

Come hair to me!

Right, don’t get me wrong, I’m not slagging either of these blokes- my family are gifted with foreheads you could play handball off; but I just spotted this on the back of a paper that shall remain nameless (a red top hated by the red half of Liverpool, I didn’t buy it, my housemate did.)

Heads up lads, and no shame

They really are leaving themselves open for no end of slagging next season, not to mention the fact that Cretaro has buggered back off to Sligo and Ian Ryan has been with Shels for just over a year now!

Unless you’re a newcomer to CHTM, you’ll know that on one Sunday a month the three of us, in the company of a small group of friends head out on a pub crawl, with pubs carefully selected by one member of our troop but not revealed until we’re standing outside the door. Five pubs with a bit of history thrown in, what better way to spend a Sunday afternoon.

Unbeknownst to ourselves, we hit a landmark on January’s crawl and didn’t celebrate it in style. We’ve been wondering how long it would take us to reach the hundred pubs mark on CHTM! and we did it here, and in less than a year- with three of our number drinking bottles of Lech and another a Lithuanian beer called Svyturys in O’Byrnes Bar, on the corner of Capel St. and Bolton St. Don’t get me wrong, we found it to be a lovely place; any pub with an open fire gets our vote of confidence pretty much straight away. It was just the fact that we thought our hundredth pub would be a great pint of Guinness in an institution like Mulligans or the Lord Edward; our fault really, covering them in the first couple of pub crawls.

O'Byrnes Bar, taken from the Tale of Ale blog

O’Byrnes though- a lovely pub with sound staff and a great taste in decor- the walls are bedecked with some classic 7″ records alongside old Hot Press covers and obligatory pictures of the Dubliners, Thin Lizzy and the likes.  We neglected to take the comfy looking couches inside the door in favour of the seats down the back beside the (unfortunately dying) fire. This place has been known as a “corner of death,” in that any business opened here in recent years rarely lasts too long, but the current owners have done a fine job in bringing something to the place, offering a range of Irish craft beers and ales which come highly recommended from the excellent Tale of Ale blog. Great tunes filtered in over the stereo too, a mix of classic and Irish rock. As nice as it was, its a pub I’d like to return to on a busy night to really see what its like. As with all of the pubs on this crawl, there was no smoking area. Lucky we only had the one smoker with us so!

Bodkins, by the ever brilliant Infomatique, from Flickr

And so, we ventured across the road to Bodkins. Probably our first “student bar” to visit on a pub crawl, this was more a space filler between bars one and three than one I’d normally pick. Lets call it a “cultural experiment.” We were joined here by a pub crawl newbie and happily started into the Guinness. €4 a pint, not bad for the city centre, but certainly not the best pint of Guinness we have tasted on our rounds; a bit of an aftertaste and it lost it’s head very quickly. They do a €5 bar menu and thats probably the cause of that. They also have free wifi and do a “laptop loan” (“unless you’re an asshole” as per their site, which is fair enough.) There’s not many places left in the city centre with pool tables, but this being the closest DIT Bolton Street has to a student bar, you can see why they’re there, alongside a signed Man. Utd. jersey in memory of a young lad that passed away, a jukebox and plenty of televisions showing the footie.  It has drink deals (three bottles of Sol for a tenner and that kind of thing, ) but in complete opposite from our next stop, its certainly no local.

Continue Reading »

We’ll start with this one?

This is a fascinating read. It’s a 1934 Communist Party of Ireland leaflet regarding the threat of fascism to Ireland, and looking at the international situation. I’ve had this scanned up for a few days but am tragically internetless so pardon the delay. It was part of a collection of leaflets gathered by the Gardaí at left wing demonstrations in the capital in the early 1930s. As ever, click to expand.

MC Mannix Flynn

(c) The Irish Times

Mannix Flynn, the Irish playwright, author, actor and current Independent Dublin City Councillor, is as you know running in the 2011 General Election in the Dublin South East constituency.

As posted before, Mannix rapped on the classic single Dublin Rap which was recorded by The Corporation and released in 1982, the same year as Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five’s The Message.

The Corporation were a “once off recording project” comprising of Imgmar Kiang and Johnny Byrne (1956-97) who were both in the early Dublin punk group the New Versions and later went on to form the band Max.

The single Dublin Rap had several guest artists including journalist and Horslips drummer Eamon Carr and backing singers Marian Woods and Billi Webster. Apologies for the minor jumps in the song, the 45 single was quite scratched.

Now 29 years later, Mannix drops the rhymes again. Amazing. It kicks off at 19 seconds in. The lyrics seem as relevant now as ever.

Remembering Bang Bang

Thomas Dudley a.k.a. Bang Bang was one of Dublin’s most loved and remembered street characters. Dudley was a big fan of cowboy films and in the 1950’s and 60’s he traveled all over Dublin staging mock shoot outs with people using a large church key as his “gun”.

2011 marked the 30th anniversary of his death and last week the Lord Mayor of Dublin, Gerry Breen, presented Dublin City Archivist, Dr. Mary Clark with a key that belonged to Bang Bang.

The key was presented to the Lord Mayor by Gerry Doherty, a great friend of Thomas Dudley who held the key for many years and will now be available to view in the Reading Room of Dublin City Library & Archive, 138-144 Pearse Street, Dublin 2.

The only known photo of 'Bang Bang'. Credit - gormangenealogy

THOUGHT YOU’D SEEN the back of Brian Cowen? You’d be wrong. The infamous “nudie” paintings of the former Fianna Fail leader have made a comeback – on the wall of a Dublin pub.

The Taoiseach may have signalled his intent to step down from national politics in the upcoming general election but he hasn’t yet faded from view for patrons of Sean Mac D’s pub in Harold’s Cross – Journal.ie

Guinness Mid Strength

I was surprised to see Guinness Mid Strength on offer recently in the Teachers Club at Parnell Square. I can’t recall seeing it anywhere else in the city beforehand, though I knew it was available on trial apparently around the city. Guinness Black Lager, north of the border, has been doing rather well for itself, but I am a traditionalist with regards the black stuff and A Pint of Plain is best when it’s just that. No funny business, unless it’s a Black Russian.

So, Mid Strength. A friend ordered a pint, and sat it next to a pint of the real deal. They look the exact same. There’s no difference in the head or appearance. With an alcohol level of only 2.8pc, low when compared with a normal pints 4.2pc, one could see the appeal for some who had a journey to make or work in the morning. Believing in giving everything a shot, I got a taster.

It’s light. Too light for me. “A glorified milkshake” is how one of the table described it, and I had to agree completely with that assessment. It’s far from terrible, but it just isn’t Guinness is it? In the Teachers Club, it comes in 40c cheaper than a regular pint, but many institutions selling the pint flog it at the same price as a regular one. The richness of a pint is what makes it, and sadly it seems you can’t mess with that.

Give it a go.

“It’s much more a large town than a small city….”

Last week I sat down with the folks at Designing Dublin, to do a brief interview for their excellent NearFM Podcast. We chatted about Dublin now and Dublin then, everything from ghost signs to the Wood Quay protests, walking tours of the city and our random pub “drop inn’s” among with other stuff. My part begins at 9:39.

More information on their excellent project can be found in the vimeo clip below. Visiting their office space, and seeing the feedback from Dubliners, was a pleasure. I got a real kick out of the project and what they’re doing with it.

You can listen to the podcast over here.

Dublin West Punks.