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WATCH: Ed Sheeran hits pause on tour for surprise pub session in Wexford

WATCH: Ed Sheeran hits pause on tour for surprise pub session in Wexford

Extra.ie​5 days ago
If you thought Tuesday nights in Wexford couldn't get any more magical, think again.
Global superstar Ed Sheeran swapped stadium spotlights for the cozy glow of The Sky and The Ground pub this week, to deliver a surprise performance that will be the talk of the town for years to come.
The special appearance was part of Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann 2025 and supported by Guinness Ireland, who raised a glass to the occasion. If you thought Tuesday nights in Wexford couldn't get any more magical, think again. Pic: Mark Surridge
Taking a brief pause from his sold-out European Mathematics Tour, Sheeran delighted an intimate crowd with impromptu sets alongside a dream lineup of Irish talent; the electrifying Beoga, soulful Biird, rising stars Amble, and the ever-charismatic Aaron Rowe.
Between the trad tunes, sing-alongs, and the smell of fresh pints, Wexford had its very own global gig and not a stadium seat in sight.
Wexford holds a special place in Ed's heart, as a child he frequented the county multiple times a year to spend time with family and friends.
Recently reflecting about his connection to Ireland on The Louis Theroux Podcast, Ed said: 'We'd spend all of our holidays in Ireland. My first musical experiences were in Ireland. I grew up with trad music in the house.'
Ed's grandmother Anne was actually born in an 18th-century farmhouse near Gorey where the singer would later spend his summer holidays.
This is the same grandmother the singer wrote about in his song Nancy Mulligan, which was recorded in 2017. Global superstar Ed Sheeran swapped stadium spotlights for the cozy glow of The Sky and The Ground pub this week. Pic: Mark Surridge
The track touches on his grandparents' love story and how they married across the religious divide, with his grandfather William having been a Protestant from Northern Ireland.
Anne left home during World War Two to train as a nurse in London, this is where she met dental student Bill.
The couple married and went on to have five girls and three boys before returning to Wexford in 1983. The special appearance was part of Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann 2025 and supported by Guinness Ireland, who raised a glass to the occasion. Pic: Mark Surridge
The surprise pop up is the latest in a series of 'Old Phone' pop-ups.
The Thinking Out Loud Singer previously built a purpose built pub in Ipswich, Boston, then brought it to Coachella and his hometown of Ipswich.
He has now brought it to the acclaimed traditional Irish pub – The Sky and The Ground in Wexford.
Speaking on the performance, Caolán Barron, from the Barron family run pub said: 'We're delighted to welcome Wexford-man Ed Sheeran to The Sky & The Ground during The Fleadh Cheoil 2025. We've the spare room made up for him, and my mother has made him a chicken curry in case he needs feeding and all thanks to our closer partner Guinness for making it possible.'
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'I almost lost hundreds of euro': Fans warned as ticket scams rise ahead of Oasis gigs
'I almost lost hundreds of euro': Fans warned as ticket scams rise ahead of Oasis gigs

The Journal

time13 minutes ago

  • The Journal

'I almost lost hundreds of euro': Fans warned as ticket scams rise ahead of Oasis gigs

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Callum, from Coolgreany in Co Wexford, said the Facebook account he encountered was so convincing, he never thought to question it. 'It was someone I'd know from the area, Emmett*. He's going to the concert anyway, he got tickets with his friends during the mad rush,' Callum said. 'I didn't get mine at the time, so when I saw 'him' post about having a spare, I messaged and asked him to keep one for me.' It wasn't Emmett. Callum and his brother had both been following the cloned account for months, completely unaware it was fake. 'My brother didn't realise someone had copied Emmett's profile. Same name, same pictures, even mutual friends. It looked exactly like him.' He had nearly transferred the money when another local posted a warning online. The account wasn't real. 'I swear to God, I was just about to click pay. I almost lost hundreds of euro.' Callum Christie. Even after Callum stopped responding, the scammer kept messaging, still pretending to be Emmett. The fake account then got defensive when Callum started asking questions, and quickly turned things around by pushing him to prove he was real. 'They asked if I could send over a photo of Emmett's wife and kids. I guess to try and keep up the act,' he said. 'I even suggested I'd call over to their house, just to see if they'd admit anything, but they didn't bite.' 'I checked it again later and noticed there was no bio, just photos. But by then, I'd nearly handed over €200.' The account was later taken down after the real Emmett and several others reported it to Meta. Callum did eventually get a real ticket. It cost him more, but he knows it's legitimate – and it's going to be a big event for him. Advertisement 'It'll be my first concert. I've always said the only way I'd go to one is if Oasis got back together or if Elvis came back from the dead,' he said. With Oasis set to take the stage in days, experts are warning that scams like this are growing and evolving. 'Fraudsters are professionals' Niamh Davenport, head of financial crime with the Banking & Payments Federation Ireland (BPFI), told The Journal the idea that fake tickets are being sold at a price 'too good to be true' no longer holds up. 'What we're seeing now is people paying face value, or even more,' Davenport said. 'The red flag used to be a suspiciously low price,' she said. 'But now people are so desperate, they're willing to pay over the odds.' She said fake listings are mainly popping up on social media and unverified resale platforms. 'Facebook Marketplace is a big one. Fraudsters are professionals. They're using stolen images, building up trust over time, and targeting fans who are emotional about seeing their favourite band. For a concert like Oasis, people would pay anything. Even legitimate-looking resale websites can be deceptive, she added. 'The design might be perfect, the spelling might be flawless, but that doesn't mean it's real,' Davenport explained. 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‘An out-of-tune fiddle': Irish trad music is alive, but the pubs it is played in are dying
‘An out-of-tune fiddle': Irish trad music is alive, but the pubs it is played in are dying

Irish Times

time39 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

‘An out-of-tune fiddle': Irish trad music is alive, but the pubs it is played in are dying

As the Fleadh Cheoil wraps up in Wexford , there will be plenty of time to reflect on the popularity of traditional music in Ireland. The previous weekend in Waterford, the 11-piece all-female trad group, Biird, drew a huge crowd at the All Together Now festival , and were later seen playing an impromptu session with Ed Sheeran during the Fleadh. Music festivals across the country now prominently feature traditional music being performed next to contemporary genres. Line-ups, support and main act combinations, and even the sounds within groups themselves are often in collision between the traditional and the new. These revolutions are both radical and referential, but none of this would be happening without the countless players, families and places that have held and passed on tunes over centuries. At the core of this heritage is the traditional music session. Over the past 20 years, a quarter of Ireland's pubs have closed, with rural areas the most adversely impacted. Like an out-of-tune fiddle, there is discordance at play with regards to the hunger for traditional music among younger generations, and the disappearance of places where it can be played, honed, shared and learned in unamplified sessions. READ MORE This brings us to Co Clare, probably the most important site of traditional music in the country. Kilfenora is a village with a storied musical history, especially with regards to the Kilfenora Céilí Band, making the place the home of céilí music. And yet if you are a musician in the village, and you want to drop in on a regular session in a pub, you'll have to drive to Doolin, Ennis or Miltown Malbay. Kilfenora Corner: A group of people has come together with a plan to purchase and reopen Linnane's Pub as a community space and social enterprise, with a focus on safeguarding musical tradition. Photograph: Ben Taylor Crucially, Kilfenora has its own sound. This subset of our intangible but vital heritage comes from the people, the land and the place. It is a sound that generated and infused tunes across the centuries through families, house dances and sessions. But where to play and pass on these tunes today? A group of people has come together with a plan to purchase and reopen Linnane's Pub in Kilfenora as a community space and social enterprise, with a focus on safeguarding the musical tradition of the area and promoting local culture. They are currently crowdfunding the project, asking for the public's help, and they need €350,000 to buy the pub and €150,000 to bring it back into use. Kilfenora Corner: 'These are the kinds of spaces that Ireland's rural villages and towns need more of. It's an idea with integrity.' Photograph: Ben Taylor The pub was the headquarters of the great Kitty Linnane, where many legendary musicians played. The plan for the project, entitled Kilfenora Corner, includes reopening the pub as a hub for unamplified sessions, with potential for a community garden, market space and creche. The project has also been approached by someone looking for a space in which to make flutes. These are the kinds of spaces that Ireland's rural villages and towns need more of. It's an idea with integrity, and imbued with a collective spirit and love of heritage and culture. Aoife Kelly is one of the people behind the project. A concertina player from a family of fiddle players, she comes from a long line of musicians, which now includes her siblings' children. Her family are all from Clare - her mother from Kilfenora and her father's side from the west of the county - and she divides her time between Kilfenora and Dublin. Her paternal grandfather was John Kelly, a member of Ceoltóirí Chualann, alongside Seán Ó Riada and founding members of The Chieftains . Aoife Kelly is one of those behind the Kilfenora Corner project. Photograph: Ben Taylor Her maternal grandfather is Jimmy O'Donoghue, aged 96 and from the townland of Clogher. When Kelly found rare photographs of house dances from the area in his home, 'Jimmy could tell me everybody in the photo, where it was, when it was, how there was an American wake for a woman in one of the photos - his memory is amazing.' She also discovered old tapes of local musicians, which formed the basis of her Sounds of Kilfenora project. Kilfenora, 1955. Aoife Kelly's maternal grandfather is Jimmy O'Donoghue (96), from the townland of Clogher. When Kelly found rare photographs of house dances from the area in his home, 'Jimmy could tell me everybody in the photo, where it was, when it was...' A recreation of the 1955 Kilfenora photograph, taken in 2022. 'You have Doolin, which has a lot of mic'd sessions. But we say 'unamplified', because that's what we do. You want to go into a pub, get a gang together, and play. There are house sessions, and that's all well and good, but they're for our friends – you're not playing with new people and meeting other people. It sounds strange, but when musicians find a place to play, it's quite special.' Linnane's could be that place once more. [ A Breton in Ireland: 'My wife calls me a culchie, which I completely embrace' Opens in new window ] Across Ireland, there is a growing number of people exploring community ownership of pubs and other third spaces. Accessing and administering finances for this are difficult, because our system around loans, mortgages and ownership is geared towards the individual and the corporate. But if the public got behind Kilfenora Corner, and the project was successful, it wouldn't just be a space for a community with a great spirit, a place to showcase Kilfenora's heritage, and a new hub for traditional music to be played, shared and passed on. It could demonstrate a people-powered model to save, preserve and invigorate villages and towns with a sense of potential and joy, not to mention to create jobs and attract tourism. Kilfenora Corner: all about preserving musical traditions of the past. Left to right are Noreen Lynch, Bridget Lynch and Tom Hegarty in a historical photo from Kilfenora. 'People are on screens, they're at home, they're lonely,' Kelly says, 'If you can have something like this to bring people together, then wouldn't that be a wonderful thing to do?'

Niall Horan cashes in on success of worldwide tour with €2.2m paycheque
Niall Horan cashes in on success of worldwide tour with €2.2m paycheque

Irish Independent

timean hour ago

  • Irish Independent

Niall Horan cashes in on success of worldwide tour with €2.2m paycheque

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