
Traditional music meets the unknown on Ultan O'Brien's latest album
The wonderful paradox underpinning Ultan O'Brien's new album Dancing the Line is its ability to sound both familiar and completely new at the same time—holding each half of the contradiction as equally true. That seems about right: there are six traditional tunes and seven new compositions by O'Brien, written in Leitrim and Clare between 2023 and 2024. The new and the old are balanced against each other.
O'Brien was raised in the musical tradition of his home in County Clare and has played and recorded with acts such as John Francis Flynn, Skipper's Alley, and Eoghan Ó Ceannabháin. There's a strong connection with Clare throughout the album: most tracks were recorded at Malbay Studios in the county, and field recordings from nearby Whitestrand, close to Miltown Malbay, feature heavily. Meanwhile, The Four Courts comes from the playing of Nell Galvin, who was born in Clare and to whom O'Brien dedicates the tune.
He wastes no time getting straight into the thick of things, opening Side A with Iron Mountain Foothills , showing the depth of sound available on the alternatively tuned alto fiddle used throughout the album. "I found that the resonance and growl of this lower-tuned instrument sat me perfectly into the sound-world I wanted to be in, giving vibrancy to my own compositions and nestling into the traditional music I grew up with," O'Brien said of his decision to switch to the alto fiddle for Dancing the Line .
Nic Gareiss's percussive dance, which first appears on the fourth track, The Boyne Hunt —a song O'Brien first heard on the 1951 Alan Lomax recording of Séamus Ennis—energises proceedings. The shuffle of his feet provides a real sense of urgency during the album's busier moments. On The Four Courts , the dance sounds at times like the deep breaths of a concertina's bellows, driving O'Brien's fiddle onward. There are striking moments throughout, particularly when O'Brien suddenly shifts the mood: the abrupt tempo change in Wayside Wonders , or the transition from The Four Courts to Rolling in the Barrel , for example.
The Forde Collection—a canon of pre-Famine traditional Irish music noted by William Forde—also provides three traditional tunes on Side A: It Was in the Year Eighteen Hundred and Four (though O'Brien notes it's unclear what happened in 1804) and the uplifting pairing of the jigs Domhnall na Griana and The Butcher's March .
Beyond the exuberant jigs, O'Brien offers expansive slow airs that explore the experimental side of his playing as the record shifts to Side B—O'Brien marking a clear delineation between the two halves. Packie's Pandemonium , from the playing of Packie Manus Byrne from Ardara, opens the second half. It's a luscious track of synth-like, sustained vibrato, followed by the equally rich Banbha's Ruins , with its ebbing and flowing melody. Martin Green's accordion provides an atmospheric accompaniment, blending with O'Brien's electronic flourishes.
These are followed by the album's most experimental pieces: Down in Whitestrand , Secret House in Fintra Beg , and Death Doula Meet close the album. Each features field recordings from Whitestrand near Miltown Malbay, or friends in conversation. You can hear the shared influence with John Francis Flynn on these tracks—it wouldn't be surprising to hear Secret House in Fintra Beg bleed into Flynn's version of The Zoological Gardens .
These final tracks, with their found sounds overlaid on ambient soundscapes, owe as much to Brian Eno as to traditional music—which is no bad thing. The result is a stunning and frequently surprising album that presents a vision of music rooted in the traditional genre, yet unafraid to reach beyond its boundaries for inspiration.
Dancing the Line is out now on Nyahh Records available HERE
See More: Fiddle Music, Irish Traditional Music
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Irish Independent
5 days ago
- Irish Independent
Green Triangle lands Gowran Classic as Joseph O'Brien dominates
Ridden by Ronan Whelan, who was having his first ride back after a month on the sidelines, Green Triangle (11-1) rallied over a thrilling mile and a furlong to beat And So To Bed by a head with with fellow O'Brien inmates Viking Invasion and Dignam following them home. O'Brien said: 'The horse got a good set-up. We were here to try and get some prize-money. I said to Ronan to get a positive start and give him a chance because we had been sending him to the front. 'He probably enjoyed that, first-time blinkers, and he got all the money. 'It was a good race. And So To Bed bounced right back to form. I thought if she came back to her Curragh run she was probably the one to beat in the race, and it looks like she did. 'This fella is a talented horse but a tricky customer. In Killarney he was going to win when he jumped out through the rail, he's always run pretty well. 'It was a great result. It's great prize-money and we obviously always try and target those races. 'The winner will probably turn up in a nice three-year-old handicap somewhere.' As for Whelan, O'Brien said: 'I'm particularly happy for Ronan because he got injured off my filly in the Curragh, he got a cut on the back of his head, and today is his first day back riding. 'I was feeling sorry for him, it was a freak accident, and it's great for him to get a winner and a big pot.' Dancing Teapot emerged as another winner for O'Brien in the Today's Gate Sponsored By The INPBA. Sent off the 11-8 favourite, the sister of Lockinge runner-up Dancing Gemini beat In My Teens by a length.


Extra.ie
26-05-2025
- Extra.ie
15 years ago this week: Villagers released Becoming a Jackal
Originally published in Hot Press in May 2010: Mentioned in dispatches by Jon Pareles in the New York Times. A glittering Other Voices set. A much-lauded appearance on Later… With Jools Holland. An upcoming slot at the Richard Thompson-curated Meltdown festival. Hailed by Jape man Richie Egan as embodying 'everything I hold dear about music'. Somethings gone very right for Conor J OBrien since the dissolution of his first band The Immediate left him free to hone his skills as a sideman for Cathy Davey before forming Villagers, an ensemble who, before theyd even released their debut album (more of which in a moment), were opening for acts like Tindersticks and Neil Young. 'Every single step of the way, you're constantly a sponge, trying to take stuff from people, how they sing, how they perform,' O'Brien says on an April afternoon in the Brooks Hotel in Dublin. 'I hope that never ends.' Before we proceed, did he get to meet ol' Shakey? 'I didn't speak to Neil Young. He kind of walked by us in a haze of green smoke and wandered to his dressing room. I spoke to his crew; they were all awesome. They are a mafia, but a very friendly mafia, a very helpful crew. You can tell they've all been with him for years, really old dudes. 'I was very excited watching him. I came to him quite late, I was only starting to listen to him properly at the beginning of writing these songs, which was two years ago. I think I just heard Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere and On The Beach and Harvest. Vampire Blues was very important, just the general looseness of it. Tommy (McLaughlin), who engineered the record and plays guitar in Villagers, he's a massive Neil Young fan, so he was very happy about my new love of Neil. We were just trying to maintain the space that's in some of his recordings and copy his drum sound, geeky little things like that. The songs had already been written, but it was more how to present them.' The album Conors is talking about is the extraordinary Becoming A Jackal, due for release on the Domino Recording Company. Says label boss Laurence Bell: Villagers is a powerful and brilliant blend of poetry and melody. Conor has the voice of an angel and performs with a rare intensity. I'm glad our paths crossed when they did. Bells Domino colleague Harry Martin recalls the label's first encounter with O'Brien: 'Myself and Laurence had actually seen The Immediate play at the Dublin Castle in Camden many years ago', he reveals, 'and we enjoyed that, it reminded us a bit of Sebadoh in the way they kept rotating as a band. It seemed like a novelty in a way, but a great performance, great songs. We were busy enough and thought no more of it, but when Cass McCombs came to play in Dublin towards the end of 2008, Villagers were supporting, and (Friction PR boss) Dan Oggly mentioned that I should check it out, that Conor was doing his own thing, freed of the band restrictions. I caught a bit of the set and was really impressed by it. 'And then a few months later, Laurence heard the track Becoming A Jackal and thought it was an amazing song, and asked me if I'd heard of Villagers. And I suppose when Laurence picks up on something, you start to think, I should really pay more attention to that. So I went to a show in Whelans last spring with a more attentive head on and was blown away.' Was the scope of the songs evident in early recordings? 'The early demos we heard were Jackal, Set The Tigers Free, quite a few songs he had knocking around, and he had, of course, the Irish seven and EP (On A Sunlit Stage and Hollow Kind). Conor pretty much had mapped out how it would all happen, up to Donegal with Tommy, he took 15 songs and came back with 15 great recordings, and we had to battle and fight and struggle getting it down to ten or 11. There's four amazing tracks left off the album; if you were to hear them, you'd probably weep. Well, get them out at some point. We're here for the long run. We're very excited about the first lap.' Villagers are, it's worth mentioning, the first Irish act to be signed to Domino, whose roster includes like-minded mavericks such as Franz Ferdinand, the Arctic Monkeys, Bonnie Prince Billy and James Yorkston. 'I remember reading that and going, 'Really?'' O'Brien says of this distinction. 'Maybe it's just a geographical thing.' Maybe it is. There is a strong sense of place about the album, and an even stronger sense of time. O'Brien, a Dun Laoghaire native, found himself looking beyond the pier and into a welter of possible pasts. 'It's a pretty powerful thing, thinking that way,' he admits. 'I think when you're making art, a lot of that can show itself in a really subconscious way that you shouldn't really be aware of. There's a real power in it, but it's dangerous; you have to preserve the individuality of your own writing to a certain degree. But you can't ignore the surroundings and the history of where you grew up.' O'Brien's songs are steeped in atmosphere, most evident on the album's opener, I Saw The Dead, as extraordinary a piece of music as you're likely to hear all year. Indeed, the term song hardly does it justice. The musical equivalent of a Hitchcock or Polanski film, it radiates the eerie magnetism of a fairytale, or maybe the moment in The Sixth Sense where we see what Cole Sear sees hanging bodies in a school hallway ('That's a really good scene in that film,' OBrien concedes). 'The night we signed the contracts, we were in a bar marking the occasion,' recalls Harry Martin,'a great pub called the Cats Back around the Wandsworth area down by the river. And Conor sat at the piano and started playing the melody line, almost to himself, and it hooked into our head, and then about a month later, this demo came through, and it was that song. The whole thing is timeless in many ways. It could be from any era.' Indeed, I Saw The Dead might be an album unto itself, with its ghostly vocal set to a modernist but melodramatic neo-classical piano line. It's a shoo-in for inclusion on the soundtrack of any Hollywood remake of Let the Right One In. 'I was trying to copy Philip Glass with the music,' O'Brien explains. 'I had this piano piece which didn't have any words for ages. The song is a repetitive chord sequence, which was a small part of a bigger musical piece, which had loads of different kinds of slightly dodgy rock opera parts, and I really needed to make myself edit them out. I was thinking, 'that's a good bit, and that's a good bit, and that's a good bit. Everybody should hear all these good bits, and they should all happen in these four minutes.' Which is not the way to write a song at all, I think the simpler the better.' And what of the creepy-crawly lyric? 'The words were… like all the songs, I was just playing with words. The title was the first thing, and I wrote the rest of the lyrics knowing it was going to be the first song, cos it was the last song I wrote for the album. I wanted to write a sweeping introduction. I knew Becoming A Jackal would probably be the second song, so the idea of scavenging… all these human traits that I was exploring, I wanted to make it almost grotesque and physical with I Saw The Dead, the You take the torso/And I'll take the head bit… I don't know why. I find it really hard to do interviews about these songs to be honest, cos they're all just automatic and a bit subconscious. It's that thing, talking about music is like dancing about architecture. That's my current motto right now. But at the same time, I've had good times figuring it out.' And presumably, he's having fun hearing people's interpretations and misinterpretations of the songs? 'Well, that's the thing. If you're writing a song, you're being playful, you're being childish, there's space, and a lot of people have different ideas about it. Someone will say, 'Is that song about a girl? Well, it obviously is for you. You just said it was!' But the artwork for that song is important as well, it's two old ships on which people had perished. In 1804 or something, Dun Laoghaire harbour hadn't appeared yet, and the only reason it appeared was two particular ships had perished on the rocks and hundreds of people had died, and I just had this image in my head when I was doing the artwork. But that was only after I'd written the song.' If Becoming A Jackal wasn't such a strong collection, O'Brien might have had some serious problems following that tune. Fortunately, the rest of the record is as rich in dramatic irony and emotional potency, sometimes digressing into Arthur Lee territory, as well as exhibiting a fair grasp of pre-rock' n' roll song-forms. The Meaning Of The Ritual, The Pact and Pieces all execute the classic David Lynch trick of juxtaposing doo-wop sweetness with pure horror. 'Transcendental darkness and the weirdness,' O'Brien laughs. 'You're onto me! That's what I was trying to go for in some of the songs. Dark imagery or feelings alongside really mundane domestic everyday things. Let them rest beside each other, peacefully. Or not so peacefully. The first time we saw Twin Peaks' Killer Bob was in the doily-like Palmer household. Which was, perversely enough, far more frightening than if we had encountered him in a cabin in the woods. 'That's true, it's got the total childishness of 50s teenage life. There's a sweetness and beauty to doo-wop music that when you put it in a certain context…' Scare the bejesus out of a soul. That other Lynch favourite, Roy Orbison, had it too. O'Brien, as it happens, is a fan of the Big Os' gothic pop operas. You can hear it in songs like Ship Of Promises and That Day. 'The chord changes, the lyrics, everything works with Roy Orbison,' he enthuses. 'He's a master. Although I'm not too sure about Drove All Night! That's kind of weird. But still kind of cool.' O'Brien, for all his impeccable sensibilities, is not afraid to occasionally go OTT. There are moments in his songs when, bizarrely enough, I'm reminded of Richard Harris doing Jimmy Webb's MacArthur Park. 'I don't know that,' he confesses, 'but I saw The Field recently for the first time. Amazing. I'd never read it or seen the play. I thought Harris was phenomenal, I was completely in that film, his acting, the ideas that it raised, it was mindblowing. It gives you really strong ideas about power and lust and the sadness of the whole thing, how it turned him into a complete monster. And that scene where he's fighting the sea, it's like Lear in a storm or something.' If there's an equivalent operatic moment on the Villagers' record, it's at the end of Pieces, when O'Brien abandons language and howls at the moon. A great moment, precisely because it dares to go beyond indie-schmindie notions of restraint. 'I remember recording the demo for that,' he says, 'and it was about three or four in the morning, and I was on a break from touring with Cathy Davey. Pieces was written in about five minutes, but the arrangement took about a year, and when I came upon that doo-wop version with the different time signature on the piano, it opened the song up for me. I remember having this moment of epiphany, howling as I was recording it, really excited and joyous, the most joyful experience I've ever had, which contrasts with the song's meaning or feeling. That jackal howl.' That jackal howl. A phrase to put hair on your chest. And an atmosphere not a million miles away from Elvis' Blue Moon. 'I think it's just blues,' O'Brien concludes. 'A lot of people in interviews have gone, (adopts Euro accent), 'What exactly is Pieces about? What was happening to you in your life at that time?' And I can't remember, it's just like a blues song, you're singing, and you hope whoever is listening to it knows what you mean in their own terms. You're not trying to focus on your ego, you're not trying to get everyone in the room to listen to your problems, you're putting it out there so it can make a general connection. You can just howl. Everyone's going to understand that.' Listen to Becoming a Jackal below:


RTÉ News
25-05-2025
- RTÉ News
Sanders to unveil 'Johnny I hardly knew ye' plaque in Athy
Bernie Sanders and his wife Jane O'Meara Sanders are due to unveil a plaque commemorating the song 'Johnny I Hardly Knew Ye' in Athy Co Kildare this afternoon. The US Senator's visit is part of the 'Made of Athy' campaign, which, since it began in 2018, has seen the town erect some 26 plaques in honour of notable figures with a connection to the town. Senator Sanders' wife Jane O'Meara Sanders can directly trace her ancestors, the Coyles, back to the south Kildare town. Written in the 19th century, 'Johnny I Hardly Knew Ye', an Irish anti-war folk song, tells the story of an Athy woman who reunites with her lover Johnny, now unrecognisable after returning from war. A plaque commemorating the song will be officially unveiled at 3pm at St Michael's Cemetery - followed by a traditional music session in the nearby O'Brien's pub. Before that, Senator Sanders and Ms O'Meara-Sanders will give an address to the public in Athy Library at 2pm. They will be joined at the event by Made of Athy founder Colm Walsh, and the Mayor of Athy, Cllr Aoife Breslin. Other musical figures commemorated by the Made of Athy campaign include Johnny Marr, guitarist of The Smiths, Buzzcocks drummer John Maher, and Stones Roses bassist, Gary "Mani" Mountfield. Yesterday Senator Sanders delivered a keynote address at the Robert Tressell Festival at Liberty Hall in Dublin. The event brought together trade unionists and labour activists from Ireland and abroad. Senator Sanders is due to meet President Michael D Higgins at Áras an Uachtaráin tomorrow. President Higgins previously met Senator Sanders during his visits to Ireland in February 2024 and June 2017.