logo
#

Latest news with #Oxegen

Jay-Z once tipped Christy Moore $50 after he mistook him for a doorman
Jay-Z once tipped Christy Moore $50 after he mistook him for a doorman

Sunday World

time22-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Sunday World

Jay-Z once tipped Christy Moore $50 after he mistook him for a doorman

The pair crossed paths at a music festival in Kildare American rapper Jay-Z once tipped Irish music legend Christy Moore $50 after he once mistook him for a doorman. A New York Times article about the singer-songwriter, details the encounter which took place at Oxegen festival in Kildare, in 2011. The article explains how 'an older gentleman - bald, barrel-chested, in a black T-shirt' held the door to the V.I.P entrance open for the couple. 'Sweeping past, Jay-Z pressed a $50 bill into the man's hands, assuming he was a staff member or security, unaware he'd just tipped Ireland's most beloved living musician, Christy Moore.' Jay Z / Christy Moore (Getty Images) News in 90 Seconds - May 22nd Moore was at the festival as a surprise guest of headliners Coldplay, who closed out the final night. Before their performance, Jay Z's wife Beyoncé had just played the main stage as the second-to-last act of the weekend. The article went on to describe how Moore appeared on stage to the cheers of 60,000 fans, after Coldplay singer Chris Martin dubbed him a childhood hero. 'Moore had returned home after a long celebrated career… he'd become an icon, a national treasure, but a man still easily mistaken for the help.' The famous New York newspaper celebrated Moore, who recently turned 80, by featuring a host of Irish celebrities. 'Irish people see themselves in Christy,' Late Late host Patrick Kielty said. 'Part of it is because he does look like he could be the doorman at the venue. 'If you saw Christy behind a wheelbarrow, you'd think that looks right,' he continued. 'But when you see him with a guitar, you go, no, that looks better. And when you hear him sing, you know that's what he was meant to do.' U2 star The Edge added: 'Christy occupies a very rarefied part of Irish culture preserved for those who are trusted to speak of, from and for the Irish people. 'It's an almost priestly role, but one he handles without ever becoming pompous or taking himself too seriously.'

Shock moment Jay-Z & Beyonce mistook Irish music icon for ‘doorman' at Oxygen festival & tipped singer $50 revealed
Shock moment Jay-Z & Beyonce mistook Irish music icon for ‘doorman' at Oxygen festival & tipped singer $50 revealed

The Irish Sun

time20-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Irish Sun

Shock moment Jay-Z & Beyonce mistook Irish music icon for ‘doorman' at Oxygen festival & tipped singer $50 revealed

AMERICAN rapper Jay-Z once mistook Irish singer Christy Moore for a doorman at the Oxegen festival and tipped him $50, it has emerged. Ireland's most famous musician turned 80th this month but according to high profile piece published by the New York Times this week, Jay- Z and wife Beyonce presumed Christy was a security man when he opened a door for them backstage. 2 The celebs mistook Christy for a doorman Credit: Getty - Contributor 2 US superstar couple Jay-Z and Beyonce Credit: Getty Images - Getty The New York Times wrote how hours later the But earlier the piece details how 'pop's starriest power couples — Writes the New York Times: 'Sweeping past, Jay-Z pressed a $50 bill into the man's hands, assuming he was a staff member or security — unaware he'd just tipped Ireland's most beloved living musician, Christy Moore'. Late Late host READ MORE ON SHOWBIZ Patrick added: 'Part of it is because he does look like he could be the doorman at the you saw Christy behind a wheelbarrow, you'd think that looks right. 'But when you see him with a guitar, you go, no, that looks better. And when you hear him sing, you know that's what he was meant to do.' Chisty's 25th studio LP, 'A Terrible Beauty', debuted at No. 1 in the Irish charts last year, beating off competition from The Edge of Most read in Music 'It's an almost priestly role, but one he handles without ever becoming pompous or taking himself too seriously.' 'MOORE IS A RARITY' The US paper remarked 'in a music business perennially in thrall to the latest tech and trends, Moore is a rarity'. Christy said: 'I've not been on a plane for 25 years, not been on a ferry for five...I don't engage closely with social media. I use an old Nokia. I've been on the road since 1966, and yet my audience seems to get younger as I grow older.' Christy credits his incredible popularity with fans of all ages is down to the pandemic in 2020, when he filmed a series of online 'Lockdown Sessions' performances, ushering in a new wave of fans.

Hozier — from Wicklow to the world
Hozier — from Wicklow to the world

Irish Post

time13-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Post

Hozier — from Wicklow to the world

'IT feels surreal to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the album that changed my life. I'm forever grateful to everyone who has been listening since the beginning.' So said Hozier on March 17th, not only the day on which Ireland commemorates its national saint but also his 35th birthday. Surreal is right: On September 13th, 2013, Hozier released his debut single, Take Me to Church. On April 16th, 2025, the songwriter/musician was named by Time magazine as one of the year's 100 most influential people in the world. We have questions, and they include the following: How did that happen? How did a quiet-spoken teenager go from writing songs in the comfort of his County Wicklow home to effectively ripping up the rule book and securing, in pop music terms, a variant of world domination? Follow the clues, is our advice. It started, of course, with no such ambitions. It helped that Andrew Hozier-Byrne was raised in a creative family environment, with an artist mother and a working father who dabbled in blues, gospel, and jazz music. By the age of 15, Hozier had taught himself to play the guitar, had written a few songs, and sang in his school choir. After he completed the Leaving Certificate, he went to study music education at Trinity College, missing some exams in his first year so he could record demos for a record label (Dublin-based Rubyworks, which remains his Irish record label home). 'I chose to do the recording,' he said, 'and when requesting a year's deferral was told that I hadn't really earned that right.' He recalls his brief time at TCD with fondness. 'I met some amazing people there, but yeah, I'm a university dropout.' The first clue: obstinacy, self-belief, tenacity. His time at college wasn't fully wasted in terms of performative experience, however. While there, he was part of the Trinity Orchestra, and with them he performed at open-air festivals such as Oxegen and Electric Picnic, delivering late-morning and early-afternoon string-driven renditions of well-known songs. Eventually, original songs emerged, none more so glorious than Take Me to Church. Good though the song is, it's the video (directed on what you might call a shoeless-string budget by Irish filmmaker Brendan Canty) that equally struck a nerve. Referencing aggressive authoritarianism towards gay people in Russia through a story of lovers on the receiving end of conflict and assault, the video (which at the time of going to print had been viewed 931 million times on YouTube) quickly became a calling card for the suppressed, irrespective of sexuality. The second clue: Commitment to authentic stories, whatever the subject matter. A full year after Take Me to Church, on September 19th, 2014, the self-titled debut album was released. Poised between acoustic folk, guitar blues, and roughhouse R&B, it didn't take long for the album to ignite. Here's where it gets interesting, however. Many artists achieve rapid, spitfire success only to stumble in the aftermath. It certainly helped that Hozier's manager (Caroline Desmond, who had been guiding/mentoring him since even before the early days of recording demos for Rubyworks) knew her way around the music industry. She is one of the great unsung female managers of recent times, renowned throughout the international music industry as someone who knows how to apply chess-game strategies to potential scenarios. The dynamic works: a very fine musician, disciplined and relentless in his search for songwriting perfection and a highly skilled tactician who doesn't suffer fools gladly in her quest for the best kind of high-profile commercial success. The third clue: Surround yourself with people who are better than you at what they do and trust them implicitly. After four years, on September 6th, 2018, Hozier released the four-track EP Nina Cries Power, a stopgap until his second album arrived in early March 2019. Wasteland, Baby! contained songs with dystopian themes that reflected culturally and/or morally bankrupt environments. Hozier had clearly been doom-scrolling various news channels and picking up items about serious global events such as climate change, the European migrant crisis, the rise of neo-nationalism, and the consequences of Brexit. Mental anguish and fatigue, said Hozier, had indisputably seeped into the songs. Many Irish people, he noted, have a close and healthy relationship with despair, 'which is not always a bad thing. I think there are wonderful areas to explore in that. We're living in very interesting times, and in many ways, unprecedented times. Holding onto optimism, finding a silver lining or having something to hang onto, something that provides you with an amount of hope and which gives you a sense of faith in people and faith in the kindness people are capable of, is what a lot of the songs on the record were trying to reach for.' The strength of the songs was enough to satisfy the fans. The fourth clue: Create a supply and demand situation by making fans wait several years for new music (and if the songs have serious themes, then make sure they have robust and/or beautiful melodies). What happened next wasn't a surprise. The album crashed into the US Billboard 200 chart at number one. Alongside the delight of the fans was the critical acclaim and the subsequent live shows, which proved that Hozier the performer ably matched Hozier the songwriter. It would be another four years before his third album was released, a delay imposed by the pandemic and not necessarily another supply-and-demand scheme devised by the artist/manager relationship. Unreal Unearth was released on August 18th, 2023, and if the inspiration for the album was no less than Inferno (the first part of Dante Alighieri's revered 14th-century narrative poem The Divine Comedy), then the songs hit home like darts bunched together in a bullseye. Hozier admitted the source/influence for Unreal Unearth may have gone over people's heads like fireworks on Guy Fawkes Night, but the subsequent commercial success laid to rest any accusations of creative overreach. The fifth clue: You can write songs about any arcane or academic subject under the sun or the moon, but no one cares provided you can whistle along to the melodies. Just over 12 months ago, in April 2024, Hozier became the first Irish artist to have a number one in the US singles chart since Sinead O'Connor did the same with Nothing Compares 2 U in 1990. Hozier's Too Sweet was the song that made him the fourth Irish music act (O'Connor, U2 twice, and Gilbert O'Sullivan) to achieve this. Through a mixture of serendipity and the song's innate quality, Too Sweet gained organic (that is, not through marketing-approved planning) traction on the social media video-sharing platform TikTok. In turn, this generated further growth on Spotify and other song-streaming channels. Within weeks of release, Too Sweet had accrued over 200 million Spotify plays, so a number one spot was assured. As of writing, the song's Spotify plays are close to 1.5 billion, and Hozier's long-term presence in America is guarantee In many ways, his success has cold-shouldered the usual applied techniques for commercial success. In an interview with the Irish Times last year, Hozier's Dublin-based label manager, Niall Muckian, outlined why archetypal marketing methods don't work when it comes to the Wicklow songwriter. 'He stays away from industry tricks. He puts his fans first. I think staying true to the fan base is the absolute number one most important thing.' And that, readers, is clue number six. The 10th anniversary of Hozier's debut album is celebrated with a Special Edition to be released on Friday, May 16th. Hozier plays the Main Stage, Electric Picnic, Friday, August 29th, See More: Andrew Hozier Byrne, Electric Picnic, Hozier, Hozier's New Album

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store