
Irish Chamber Orchestra and renowned pianist to play Beethoven compositions at Kerry venue
The South African-born pianist brings his own blend of brilliance to Beethoven's music and, following on the success of Piano Concertos Nos. 1 and 3 in October 2023, he is turning his attention to Piano Concertos 2 and 4.
Each piece promises to be a dramatic dialogue between Bezuidenhout and the orchestra, from fierce defiance to tender vulnerability while pushing boundaries with bold, expressive depth.
Piano Concerto 2 is said to sparkle with youthful charm and wit while Concerto 4 is said to be intimate and emotional before soaring to a radiant finale.
The Irish Chamber Orchestra and Kristian Bezuidenhout will play the Tralee venue on Friday, June 20.
Tickets can be purchased online for €28.50 (retired/unwaged: €26) plus booking fees at siamsatire.com
The Irish Chamber Orchestra will play the University Concert Hall in Limerick on June 19 and The Whyte Recital Hall in Dublin on June 21.
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RTÉ News
3 hours ago
- RTÉ News
African musicians join Clare traditional music festival
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Sunday World
8 hours ago
- Sunday World
How strong Irish roots shaped the Gallagher brothers to become Oasis
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School photos of Noel Oasis's roots lie in the south Manchester suburb of Burnage, where they grew up in a working-class background. The original band line-up shares with another great Manchester band, The Smiths, the intriguing connection of Irish lineage. Most members of both groups derive from Irish emigrants who fled their mother country in the 1950s and 1960s to seek work in the then industrial hub of Manchester. The Gallagher brothers' parents originated in Ireland. Their mother, Margaret, more commonly known as Peggy, came from the quiet west of Ireland town of Charlestown in Co. Mayo, while their father Tommy grew up in the village of Duleek, Co. Meath. The other original members of Oasis, Paul 'Guigy' McGuigan, Paul 'Bonehead' Arthurs and Tony McCarroll also had Irish roots, but more distant than the Gallaghers. So it was with more than a touch of irony that the 'Irish mafia' link in Manchester should prove so important. 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Noel's schooldays also involved a lot of truancy, smoking marijuana and sniffing glue. When he too left with no qualifications, a careers officer said he'd end up working at the local McVitie's biscuit factory where their mum used to toil. A photo from a Gallagher family wedding in Ireland around 1973 shows Tommy holding Noel Their dad Tommy formed his own Under-14 Gaelic football team and Noel recalls scoring a point in Croke Park in Dublin during a schools tournament. They were also cub scouts and they made their debut stage appearance in the annual school nativity play at St Bernard's Roman Catholic primary school in Burnage, with Liam donning a fluffy suit to play the part of a lamb! Both brothers had run-ins with the law in their early days. Noel was put on probation when he was caught robbing a corner shop at the age of 16, while Liam's only known misdemeanours involved driving cars and motorbikes without insurance. Their parents used to bring the whole family to Ireland every year. 'Until I was about 15 myself and my two brothers would spend six weeks every summer and three weeks every Christmas in Mayo,' Noel recalls . Oasis rocking Slane in 2009 'That's a lot of time when you're a child. Mayo had a church, a post office and about 300 pubs. It was all farmland and I was a bit freaked out by all the sheep because I'm from Manchester. 'We'd never seen the likes of nettles and fields and stacks of hay and all that. But it was great — the three of us used go fishing all the time. 'Our cousins there never dared laugh at our English accents because they would have got a clip around the ear if they did. It was a great childhood and it's something I talk a lot about to Johnny Marr, who had a similar upbringing. 'Me Mam was determined to give us some Irish culture 'cause we were used to concrete flats and stuff. It was a bit of a culture shock for the first four or five years but we just grew to love it. I still do to this day and the great thing about coming to Ireland is at the airport when you know that smell in the air is turf burning. It almost brings a tear to your eye. 'I think that being brought up an Irish Catholic is both the best and worst way of being brought up. The whole thing is all that religion b***ks, which I don't go for at all. 'The best thing is the culture, particularly the music. I mean, I really don't like ceilidh music, it's not my cup of tea, but at least I can understand where it's coming from. 'I really believe that the whole Irish Catholic thing does shape the way you view the world. I still have this guilt thing, it never really leaves you. But then I think I have it less than my parents and the next generation will have it less than me, so maybe it will just wither out.' 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'He used to sneak girls into the house. He usually took girls upstairs because that was where the record player was. He'd play music to them all night, but up until he was 14 Liam used say 'I hate girls, they do my head in''. Then just before the big bust-up at home, Tommy took Liam on a trip to his native village of Duleek. 'He was good at pool, but he was also good at the pull too,' Tommy chuckles. 'All the girls in the village were mad for him. I made a man out of him — he was drinking pints of lager in Big Tom's pub, winning games of pool for a fiver and being a bit of a hit with the birds.'


The Irish Sun
11 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Amy Schumer stuns fans as she uses a walker after surfing accident and secret spinal surgery
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