
Gilla Band at In the Meadows review: Musical Marmite from Ireland's own Velvet Underground
Gilla Band
In the Meadows, Royal Hospital Kilmainham, Dublin
★★★☆☆
A bulldozing onslaught of pure noise marks the start of Gilla Band's tumultuous set at the
In the Meadows
festival at Dublin's
Royal Hospital Kilmainham
.
Fully justifying their reputation as one of the country's most uncompromising bands, their performance is a mix of short, sharp shocks and longer, bludgeoning interludes. It's like listening to the end of the world as relayed via the medium of early 1980s post-punk.
Without being hyperbolic, there is a case that the group (who previously went as Girl Band) are a sort of Velvet Underground of 21st-century Irish indie music. They aren't stars in their own right, but their impact can be heard all over.
Fontaines DC – off headlining Barcelona's Primavera Festival as Gilla Band take to the stage in Dublin – have named them as an influence. Idles Irish-born guitarist Mark Bowen has identified Gilla Band as one of the driving forces in the upsurge of new rock in Ireland in recent years. 'They made something that was completely new. When you listen to the first album, I don't think I've heard a band that sounds like this before,' he told The Irish Times in 2024. 'They've spawned the idea that you don't need to rely on UK or American culture to inform our culture.'
READ MORE
Such praise is worn lightly by Gilla Band, whose third album, Great Acclaim, was released in 2022 on London's Rough Trade – the label that championed The Smiths and, more recently, Mercury-nominated Irish trad band Lankum.
Fans at Gilla Band's performance at the Royal Hospital, Kilmainham, Dublin. Photograph: Dara Mac Dónaill/The Irish Times
Wearing a rumpled jacket and shirt, singer Dara Kiely looks like a civil servant who's arrived at the gig straight from back-to-back Zoom calls. His banter is limited to the occasional 'hello'. Under stark red-and-blue lighting, he and the rest of the band perform without swagger or showmanship as they begin with Backwash, which starts off sounding like post-punk stalwarts The Fall and ends up resembling the soundtrack to an alien invasion.
Gilla Band have a murky prehistory as an Arctic Monkeys-style collective of guitar urchins called Harrows. Correctly concluding that Ireland didn't need another so-so indie band, they went from the next potential Picture This to a portrait of the musical apocalypse, influenced more by Francis Bacon then Franz Ferdinand.
There is real darkness threaded through the pummeling, too. Kiely has talked about issues around anxiety. The group's second album, 2019's The Talkies, began with a recording of the singer breathing through a panic attack (foreshadowing Fontaines DC's single Starburster, which explores the same subject). The sheer, howling intensity of it all means their music isn't for everyone – or perhaps even most people. At In the Meadows, it has the quality of nerve-shredding Marmite as Kiely uncorks his lacerating wit on Post Ryan ('In recovery/I'm in recovery/I'm just the same prick').
They conclude with the funny and terrifying Eight Fivers – where nightmarish lyrics accompany a Stygian avalanche of guitar. 'I spent all my money on shit clothes, shit clothes,' howls Kiely. 'Didn't get 'em from Wicklow/Didn't get 'em from Arklow.'
It's thrillingly, brutally uncompromising. Stepping out of the festival tent, into the cool, calm evening daylight, there is a sense of a storm having passed – that the listener has completed a sort of indie rock Stations of the Cross.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
9 hours ago
- Irish Times
From that Small Island review: Colin Farrell sounds in pain, as if he pressed on despite urgently needing the loo
It has become fashionable to portray Irish history as one calamity after another: invasion, famine, The 2 Johnnies . Will the horrors never end? But From that Small Island – The Story of the Irish, RTÉ's ponderous portrait of the country from the Stone Age to the present, goes out of its way to avoid such cliches and to show us the bigger picture. The Horrible Histories version of Ireland, whereby everything was great until the Brits showed up, is carefully avoided. Lots of fascinating facts are crammed into the first of four episodes (RTÉ One, 6.30pm). We learn that the original inhabitants of Ireland were dark-skinned and blue-eyed. It is also revealed that the Battle of Clontarf was not the native Irish against the Vikings so much as the native Irish against Dublin and their Viking allies. It was the medieval equivalent of a Leinster final, with the Dubs going down to a last-minute free. But if sprinkled with intriguing nuggets, much about the series is familiar, if not formulaic. Following on from 1916: The Irish Rebellion and 2019's The Irish Revolution, it is the latest RTÉ historical epic to rely on moody drone shots of the Irish landscape, an infinite staircase worth of academics and gravel-voiced narration by an Irish actor. [ 'We Irish were never homogeneous. Always hybrids, always mongrels' Opens in new window ] This gig has previously gone to Liam Neeson , who narrated The Irish Rebellion, and Cillian Murphy , who provided voiceover on The Irish Revolution . Now it's Colin Farrell who goes from playing Penguin to talking about pagan practices in Portumna. But while he does his best to breathe life into an episode that traces the arrival of the first farmers in Ireland and the later coming of the Vikings, he sounds ever so slightly in pain throughout, as if he had decided to press on when he urgently needed the loo. READ MORE From that Small Island has a thesis: that Ireland has always been a globalised nation – neither a destination nor a leaving point, but an international crossroads. In Italy , former president Mary McAleese discusses the influence on the Continent of medieval Ireland's great wandering monk, St Columbanus. She adds that his teachings were key to the founding of the European Union – although she does not fully explain this claim, leaving it to dangle in the dry Italian wind. But grand ambitions run aground on dull execution. As with the Liam Neeson 1916 documentary – which this series shares a writer with, University of Notre Dame's Bríona Nic Dhiarmad – there is a feeling of observing a dry academic exercise made with one eye on overseas audiences rather than something intended to bring history alive for Irish viewers. Tellingly, this voice-of-god style of storytelling has fallen out of favour elsewhere. On British TV, for instance, historians are forever getting their hands dirty and making history come alive by staring it straight in the face. That isn't to suggest Farrell should do a Lucy Worsley and dress up as Brian Boru. But wouldn't From that Small Island be so much more fun if he did? And that, in the end, is what is missing. Irish history is tumultuous, tragic, funny and bittersweet – but this worthy-to-a-fault series removes all the blood, sweat and tears. It belongs firmly in the 'eat your greens' school of documentary-making – and cries out for more spice and sizzle.


Extra.ie
15 hours ago
- Extra.ie
Who is Lyra Valkyria? - Dublin WWE star defeated by Becky Lynch
It was Limerick versus Dublin on Saturday night when WWE's Becky Lynch faced Lyra Valkyria at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood, California for Money in the Bank: Los Angeles. Becky, 38, was victorious on the night, winning the WWE Women's Intercontinental Championship for the first time ever. The victory comes not long after 28-year-old Valkyria was victorious over the Limerick woman at WWE Backlash in May of this year. It was Limerick versus Dublin on Saturday night when WWE's Becky Lynch faced Lyra Valkyria in St Louis at WWE Backlash. Pic: Georgiana Dallas/WWE via Getty Images Saturday was the culmination in a lengthy feud between veteran Becky and her friend-turned-foe Lyra, with fans taking to X praising the two women. But just who is Lyra Valkyria? Aoife Cusack is an Irish professional wrestler, who goes by the stage name Lyra Valkyria. She was previously known as Aoife Valkyrie, and has also been referred to as Valkyrie. The Dublin native is 28 years old and has been in the wrestling industry for almost ten years. View this post on Instagram A post shared by LJ_Cleary (@lj_cleary) Lyra is engaged to fellow pro wrestler LJ Cleary (Lee Joseph Cleary) with the pair getting engaged in September 2024 after ten years together. Confirming the engagement at the time, LJ took to Instagram and wrote: '10 years together celebrated by getting engaged to the person I will be spending the rest of my life with, and she is the love of mine.' The victory comes not long after 28-year-old Valkyria was victorious over the Limerick woman at WWE Backlash in May of this year. Pic: Cooper Neil/WWE via Getty Images Cusack made her wrestling debut in 2015 under the name Valkyrie Cain after one year with training school Fight Factory Pro Wrestling. In 2020, she was signed with WWE where she was assigned the ring name Aoife Valkyrie, and competed with NXT UK. Her first match took place on February 13 and resulted in a win over French woman Amale. Following the closure of NXT UK in 2022, Valkyrie moved to NXT where she adopted the name Lyra Valkyria. Cusack made her wrestling debut in 2015 under the name Valkyrie Cain after one year with training school Fight Factory Pro Wrestling. Pic: Rich Frieda /WWE via Getty Images The Dubliner's first title charge was in 2023 for the NXT Women's Championship at NXT Stand & Deliver, but her bid was unsuccessful. She picked up the NXT Women's Championship in October 2023, defending the title in November. Last year, Valkyria was promoted to the RAW brand, with her on-screen debut seeing her save Becky Lynch from a beatdown by Dakota Kai, Iyo Sky and Kairi Sane from the Damage CTRL team. On Saturday night, Valkyria was defeated by Limerick fighter Becky Lynch in California, with Lynch claiming the Women's Intercontinental Championship as a result. By any means necessary!#AndNew #MITB — WWE (@WWE) June 8, 2025 The match nearly ended on a nine-count before both women managed to get back into the find where they traded hits in the final stretch of the bout. As per a stipulation agreed prior to the match, Valkyria had to raise the hand of the new champion and wrap the title belt around her waist in a show of respect and good sportsmanship. THIS IS AWE-SOME!#MITB — WWE (@WWE) June 8, 2025 Fans took to X to have their say following the thrilling Women's title match, with many lauding Valkyria. THIS IS AWE-SOME!#MITB — WWE (@WWE) June 8, 2025 One wrote: 'Lyra Valkyria has had one of the best reigns in a while. She's been consistently great in-ring & elevated to a different level, the future is very big.' Another called: 'Lyra Valkyria you will be a World Champion next year.' A third added: 'Becky Lynch already having the best women's feud since?… her feud with Bianca. She is the best there's ever been.'


Irish Times
15 hours ago
- Irish Times
Slowdive at In the Meadows review: Forget Oasis, this sonic supernova is the perfect 1990s comeback
Slowdive In the Meadows, Royal Hospital Kilmainham, Dublin ★★★★★ Band reunions are in the headlines again ahead of this summer's return of Oasis – coming to a stadium near you at a premium price. But the Gallagher brothers will be doing well to have a comeback one-fifth as glorious as that of Slowdive , the early 1990s alternative pop underdogs whose reunion several years ago has seen them break out of their chrysalis and spread their wings gloriously. That victory lap ticks off its latest milestone at the In The Meadows festival in Dublin, where their headlining slot on the tented second stage is a wondrous serving of balmy space-pop. Back in the 1990s, the band – from the Thames Valley outside London – were derided by the then-mighty rock press for their lack of rock'n'roll swagger and all-round sense of artful dreaminess. Their unassuming, psychedelic music saw them lumped alongside Dublin's My Bloody Valentine as pioneers of a sound called 'shoegaze' – sniffed at in the moment yet hugely influential over the decades. Slowdive performed at the In The Meadows festival, at the Royal Hospital, Kilmainham, Dublin, at the weekend. Photograph: Dara Mac Dónaill/The Irish Times First time around, the band never played in Ireland. They are now making up for lost time. In The Meadows is the third Irish show in under two years. Amidst the occasional rain shower and gathering twilight, it is a palate-clearing panacea, beginning with sonic supernova Shanty from their 2023 album, Everything Is Alive. READ MORE [ Iggy Pop at In the Meadows review: Old-school rock has rarely felt so timeless and incendiary Opens in new window ] [ Gilla Band at In the Meadows review: Musical Marmite from Ireland's own Velvet Underground Opens in new window ] Slowdive are a five-piece, but the focus is on singers Rachel Goswell (later seen up on the grass slope grooving to festival headliner Iggy Pop) and Neil Halstead. Their voices have a mutually complementary, hazy quality and are well paired with the vast weather fronts of guitar, particularly on 1990s tracks such as Catch the Breeze and Souvlaki Space Station. Accompanied by a gently blistering light show, their set is beautifully overwhelming. Surreal, too, if you were that one audience member up front trying to get lost in the band's haunting soundscapes whilst also following, in real-time, the Cork-Limerick penalty shoot-out in the Munster Hurling Final. They finish with the gorgeous assault of Golden Hair – originally by lost Pink Floyd frontman Syd Barrett and accompanied by a video projection of his scowling, puzzled face. But there is another surprise as the music rises to an ear-splitting sob and the face of Carry On star Sid James fills the screen – a glint of humour mixed with the emotion-melting spectacle.