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This is a summary of the year 2009 in the Irish music industry.
This list of songs or music-related items is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (October 2021) |
Issue date | Album title | Artist | Source | Sales | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
__ January | A Fire to Scare the Sun | Declan de Barra | His second album, featuring Cora Venus Lunny, the RTÉ Symphony Orchestra’s James Dunne, Kíla’s Brian Hogan and Mary Barneccutt from the Vyvienne Long Band. | ||
26 January | Some Kind of Kick | The Things | Released on Nicotine Records. | ||
5 February | Dolls and Jigsaws | Aoife Moriarty | [243] | ||
6 February | 100 Midnights | The Mighty Stef | Released on Firstborn Recordings. | ||
13 February | Everyday Demons | The Answer | [244] | Released by Albert Productions. | |
20 February | Blue Lights on the Runway | Bell X1 | [245] | ||
20 February | Coffee Houses | Television Room | Released on Faction Records. | ||
23 February | Untitled | Estel | [246] | ||
27 February | No Line on the Horizon | U2 | [247] | 484,000 copies in its first week [124] | Artwork Debuted at the top of the US charts, the band's seventh number one album in that country. Debuted at #1 in the UK. #1 in thirty countries internationally. [124] |
6 March | Hands | Emmet Scanlon and What the Good Thought | |||
6 March | Aye Aye Aye Aye | The Kinetiks | Recorded with Gareth Mannix and featuring the lead track "Lightbulb" and bonus cuts of previous singles "Bite the Bullet" and "Shuffle Your Feet". | ||
7 March | Beware of the God | Paranoid Visions | [248] | Eleven-track third album released three years after the band's official reformation, including the single "Missing in Action", which was one of the winners of the Hot Press/Tisch competition, the prize of which was a chance to have a professional quality music video made for them. | |
9 March | Let the Truth Be Told | Laura Izibor | [249] | Released on Atlantic Records. | |
20 March | And So I Watch You From Afar | And So I Watch You From Afar | [250] | Released on Smalltown America Records. | |
20 March | To The Pine Roots | Iain Archer | [244] | Full release to the nine-track album sold the previous year on the internet. Released on Black Records. | |
20 March | Trauma Themes Idiot Times | Jinx Lennon | [251] [252] | ||
20 March | Crooked Timber | Therapy? | [253] | ||
27 March | The Nightsaver | David Kitt | Artwork and tracklisting. Kitt's sixth studio album. | ||
__ April | TBA | The Brothers Movement | Debut album by the band formerly known as Mainline. | ||
10 April | We Love You Dark Matter | Dark Room Notes | [254] | Released on Gonzo Records. Recorded over a fortnight in July 2008 in a London studio, it features reworked versions of old songs such as "Love Like Nicotine" and "Shake Shake My Ceiling", and lead single "Let's Light Fires". Artwork. | |
17 April | Human Nature | Alphastates | [255] | Second studio album. Due for a U.S. release in late 2009. | |
17 April | Listen | Christy Moore | [256] | First studio album since 2005's Burning Times . | |
17 April | Strawberry Blood | Mundy | [257] [258] [259] | Fourth studio album. Artwork | |
24 April | The Beautiful Untrue | Jerry Fish and the Mudbug Club | [260] | ||
8 May | I'll Wait for Sound | Director | [261] [262] | Completed in LA in late 2008. | |
__ May | U2: Medium, Rare & Remastered | U2 | [263] | 2 CD package described as “a limited-edition collection of rare tracks and lost cuts spanning three decades in the studio”, containing songs such as "Love You Like Mad", "Smile", "Beautiful Ghost", "Xanax And Wine" and "Jesus Christ", previously only available as part of the digital The Complete U2 box set. Released on U2.com. | |
15 May | Transworld | Le Galaxie | [264] | Debut EP. | |
29 May | Pages | Julie Feeney | [265] | Artwork Launch details | |
29 May | Aliquot Strings | TUCAN | [266] | Debut album from the instrumental duo. | |
30 May | Fragile Things (EP) | The Ambiance Affair | [267] | ||
5 June | Grenade | The Chapman Society | [268] | Debut five-track EP. | |
5 June | Perfect Stranger | The Chapters | [269] | Debut studio album. | |
6 July | Jiggery Pokery | The Duckworth Lewis Method | [270] [271] | Neil Hannon/Thomas Walsh collaboration set to be the first Irish concept album about cricket. To be released on 1969 Records. Artwork | |
24 July | New Boots | Wallis Bird | [272] | Released on Rubyworks Records. | |
2 August | No Baggage | Dolores O'Riordan | [273] | Second solo album, released on Cooking Vinyl. | |
28 August | The Victory Dance | David Geraghty | [274] | Second solo album. | |
Unknown | Democracy of One | Colin Devlin | [275] | ||
Autumn | TBA | The Aftermath | Worked on with Noel Hogan. | ||
Autumn | TBA | D. C. Tempest | [276] | Debut album. | |
11 September | No Bird Sang | Ger Wolfe | [277] | Fifth album, produced by Peadar O'Riada, released on Raggedy Records, launched at Cork's Corner House Bar at 6 pm on Friday, September 11. | |
18 September | Trees Dream in Algebra | Codes | [278] [279] [280] | ||
18 September | Colours | Reemo | [281] | Debut album, launched in The Village on Wexford Street, Dublin, on 26 September. | |
18 September | After the Wedding | Sanskrit | [282] [283] | Artwork. Featuring banjos, accordions, trumpets and samples of the Pope's voice. | |
25 September | Tony Was an Ex-Con | The Coronas | [284] | Revealed at Oxegen 2009. | |
28 September | Singled Out | Eleanor McEvoy | [285] | Compilation album of 15 singles from McEvoy's four albums and her new single "Oh Uganda". | |
__ September | Proceeds | Neosupervital | |||
__ September | TBA | Royseven | Completed in the band's own Dublin studio and released on Roadrunner Records. | ||
9 October | You Can Make Sound | Delorentos | [287] | Artwork. Released on DeloRecords label through ADA Global distribution. | |
10 October | Analogue Droids (EP) | Cowboy X | [288] | Four-track EP, featuring the songs "Analogue Droids", "Squirrel Chase Ball", "Ed White's Glove" and "Villain In Disguise". | |
23 October | Strict Joy | The Swell Season | [289] [290] [291] | Featuring members of The Frames and recorded with producer Peter Katis in his Connecticut studio. US release due on 29 September 2009. General release date later pushed back from 25 September until 23 October 2009. | |
26 October | Yes Cadets (EP) | Yes Cadets | [292] | Follow-up to the quartet's debut single "Canada" which was released at the beginning of September 2009. | |
__ November | Live, Love, Lost It — NYC | Mark Geary | [293] | Live album recorded during the summer in New York City and released through Independent Records. | |
9 November | Up to Now | Snow Patrol | [294] | ||
13 November | Sidney Maxwell Williamson (EP) | Heritage Centre | [295] | ||
11 December | Little Revelations (rarities album); "Lucky Me", "My Villain Heart" and "Your Vandal" (box set of EPs) | Duke Special | [296] |
This list of songs or music-related items is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (October 2021) |
Issue date | Song title | Artist | Source | Sales | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
5 February 2009 | "Alphabet Soup" | Aoife Moriarty | [303] | ||
6 February | "There's a Darkness" | The Aftermath | |||
6 February | "Under the Weather" | Emmet Scanlon and What the Good Thought | |||
15 February 2009 | "Get on Your Boots" | U2 | [304] | Date of official digital release, but released on iTunes on 19 January. Originally titled "Sexy Boots", it had reached #1 in Irish Airplay Charts within a week. The video given an online debut on the website of the Irish Independent . #1 in Ireland, #12 in the UK – first time in 12 years a U2 single was not in the UK Top 10. | |
30 January 2009 | "The Great Defector" | Bell X1 | [305] | Internationally released on 3 February 2009. | |
27 February 2009 | "Postcards" | The Blizzards | |||
5 March 2009 | "Sometimes" | Reemo | [306] [307] | Produced by Marc Carolan and available on Reekus Records. | |
13 March | "Awful Cold" | Republic of Loose | [125] | ||
25 March | "Champagne Glass" | Alphastates | [255] | Mastered by Nilesh Patel, includes two Arveene & Misk remixes and taken from the trio's second studio album Human Nature | |
27 March | "Forgotten Man" | Peakin' Trippers | [308] | ||
23 April | "Bits & Bobs" | The Focus Group | [309] | ||
1 May | "Magnificent" | U2 | [310] | Released in CD, 7" and download formats, b-sides include "Breathe" (live from Sommerville Theatre, Boston) on the 7" and a live cut of "Vertigo" and a Justice remix of first single "Get on Your Boots" on the CD release. | |
1 May | "Sing It Without a Tune" | Director | [262] | Taken from the album I'll Wait for Sound and released through the band's own Crapshoot Economics label | |
8 May | "I Will Protect You" | Heritage Centre | [311] | Taken from their debut EP The City, The Tree and The Fox released in February 2009. | |
22 May | "Love Is a Tricky Thing" | Julie Feeney | [312] | Lead single from the Pages LP. | |
22 May | "Trouble with a Capital T" | The Troublemakers | [313] | Downloadable charity cover single recorded at Windmill Lane Studios for The Raw Sessions . The track was released in aid of the Irish Youth Foundation, with a performance on The Late Late Show on the day of its release. The group includes members of The Blizzards, Republic of Loose, Brian Hogan, Kevin Godley and some former members of The Horslips, who are the original performers of the song. | |
28 May | "I'm Every Woman" | Róisín Murphy/Sinéad O'Connor | [314] | Chaka Khan cover version released for ActionAid charity. | |
29 May | "Imagination" | D. C. Tempest | [276] | ||
12 June | "The Dry Law" | The Last Tycoons | [315] | ||
29 June | "The Age of Revolution" | The Duckworth Lewis Method | [316] | Digital release. | |
2 July | "To My Bones" | Wallis Bird | [272] | Video link | |
10 July | "This is Goodbye" | Codes | [279] | ||
10 July | "Dance with You" | Neosupervital | [286] [317] | ||
__ August 2009 | "Scream" | Jester | [318] | ||
__ August | "It's Not a Dream" | Sharon Corr | [319] [320] | Featured on the BBC Radio 2 A-list in its first week of release above other Irish artists such as Dolores O'Riordan (C-List), Reamonn (C-List), The Duckworth Lewis Method (C-List) and U2 (B-List). Manager John Hughes said: "Normally you expect to debut on the C-list and maybe progress to the B-list—but going straight to the A-list with a debut release is really special. It is a statement of how highly they rate the record". The song later entered the UK Airplay Top 50, climbing from #315 to #41 in one week. | |
__ August/September 2009 | "Oh Uganda/Hands Off Him" | Eleanor McEvoy | [285] | ||
__ September | "Listen Dear" | The Coronas | Video directed by Simon Eustace. Lead single from the album Tony Was an Ex-Con . | ||
11 September | "A Song from Earth" | Ger Wolfe | Lead single from the album No Bird Sang . | ||
18 September | "City Lights" | Sleep Thieves | [321] | The electronic trio's first proper single. | |
28 September | "Higher" | Jaded Sun | [322] | Taken from the album Gypsy Trip . | |
__ October | "Into the Trees" | Miracle Bell | [323] | Free download from band website. | |
__ October | "Rose" | Theme Tune Boy | [324] | 49 second single available in several formats including download. Released by Niall Quinn, formerly of The Hitchers and Pennywhores, under the name Theme Tune Boy. | |
2 October | "Secret" | Delorentos | [287] | From the album You Can Make Sound . | |
9 October | "And Another Thing..." | The Blizzards | [325] | Inspired by Eoin Colfer's And Another Thing... novel from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series. Also released in the United Kingdom. | |
12 October | "True Love1980" | Ash | [326] [327] [328] | Part one of the A-Z Series of fortnightly releases. | |
19 October | "Howl On" | Bap Kennedy | [329] | Taken from the album Howl On . | |
24 October | "Closer" "Wake Up" | Ever27 | [221] | Two singles released on the same day. | |
30 October | "Just Say Yes" | Snow Patrol | [294] | ||
__ November | "You Talked I Can Tell" | Alphastates | [330] | Third single taken from the band's second album Human Nature . Released on Magi records with their two previous singles, "Human Nature" and "Champagne Glass". | |
6 November | "Out of the Darkness" | Ham Sandwich | [331] | ||
19 November | "Vinegar Joe" | Sounds of System Breakdown | [332] | Available as a free download from the band's MySpace page. | |
23 November | "Comfort Zone" | The Answer | [333] | ||
__ December | "Wrong So Wrong" | Eleanor McEvoy | [334] | ||
2 December | "This Is to Mother You" | Sinéad O'Connor | [335] | Re-recorded version of her 1997 song released in aid of Girls Education & Mentoring Services (GEMS) as an anti-child prostitution single. Produced by Doc McKinney and Ali Shaheed Muhammad from A Tribe Called Quest, extra vocals provided by Mary J. Blige and Santigold. | |
11 December | "Sing to Me" | The Mighty Stef | [336] | ||
2009 | "Raise the Dead" | Colin Devlin | |||
2009 | "Let's Light Fires" | Dark Room Notes | [254] | ||
2009 | "Shine" | Laura Izibor | |||
2009 | "Big Bad Handsome Man" | Imelda May | [337] | ||
2009 | "Time" | Michele Ann Kelly | [338] | Dedicated to marriage equality. |
The 2009 Meteor Awards took place at the RDS in Dublin on 17 March 2009. Below are the winners: [352]
Award | Winner(s) |
---|---|
Best Irish Male | Mick Flannery |
Best Irish Female | Celine Hopkins |
Best Irish Band | The Script |
Best Irish Album | The Script – The Script |
Best Irish Pop Act | Westlife |
Best Irish Live Performance | The Blizzards – Oxegen |
Best National DJ | Ray Foley – Today FM |
Best Regional DJ | Dermot, Dave & Siobhan – Dublin's 98 |
Hope for 2009 | Wallis Bird |
Most Downloaded Irish Song | Galway Girl – Mundy and Sharon Shannon |
Best International Male | James Morrison |
Best International Female | Duffy |
Best International Band | Elbow |
Best International Album | Only by the Night – Kings of Leon |
Best Live International Performance | |
Industry Award | Niall Stokes [353] |
Humanitarian Award | Father Shay Cullen's PREDA Foundation [353] |
Lifetime Achievement Award | Sharon Shannon [354] |
The Choice Music Prize for Irish Album of the Year 2008 was awarded to Jape for the album, Ritual , at Vicar Street on 4 March 2009.
Oxegen was a music festival in Ireland, first held from 2004–2011 as a rock and pop festival and again in 2013 with dance and chart acts only. The event was regularly cited as Ireland's biggest music festival, and, by 2009, it was being cited as the greenest festival, being a 100% carbon neutral event in Ireland, although this claim is highly disputed as green-washing. It was previously called Witnness, which ran from 2000 and was sponsored by Guinness. The event was promoted by MCD and was sponsored by Heineken. Oxegen was originally a three-day festival, but from 2008 onwards, it was expanded to four days.
Republic of Loose were an Irish funk rock band from Dublin. Formed in 2001, the band formerly consisted of lead vocalist Mick Pyro, bass guitarist and vocalist Benjamin Loose, keyboardist Deco, guitarists and vocalists Dave Pyro and Brez and drummer and percussionist Coz Noelen.
Director were an Irish art rock quartet from Malahide in County Dublin. The group consisted of Michael Moloney (vocals/guitars), Eoin Aherne (guitars), Shea Lawlor (drums) and Rowan Averill. The band's 2006 debut album We Thrive on Big Cities was a critical and commercial success in Ireland. A follow-up album, I'll Wait for Sound was released in 2009.
The Blizzards are an Irish band from Mullingar in County Westmeath. They were formed by Niall Breslin in late 2004, and also feature Dec Murphy (drums), Justin Ryan, Anthony Doran, Louize Carroll (bass) and Aidan Lynch (keyboards). They have achieved multiple platinum record sales and have won numerous awards.
Dan Hegarty is an Irish radio presenter employed by RTÉ. He presents his show The Alternative on RTÉ 2fm Monday to Thursday from 10:00 pm – 12:00am. He is regularly dispatched to important musical events such as the Eurosonic Festival in The Netherlands, Electric Picnic and Oxegen for live broadcasting purposes, as well as being sent around the country to present the 2fm 2moro 2our. In 2008 Hegarty featured on the panel of judges for the Choice Music Prize and was sent to The Music Show to distribute advice.
This is a summary of the year 2006 in the Irish music industry.
This is an, as yet, incomplete summary of the year 2005 in the Irish music industry.
A summary of the year 2004 in the Irish music industry.
This is a summary of the year 2008 in the Irish music industry.
A summary of the year 2003 in the Irish music industry.
Oxegen 2009 was the sixth Oxegen festival to take place since 2004. It took place on the weekend of Friday 10 July, Saturday, 11 July and Sunday, 12 July at Punchestown Racecourse near Naas in County Kildare, Ireland. Kings of Leon, Snow Patrol, Blur and The Killers headlined.
The Kinetiks were a Meteor Award-nominated Irish rock, pop and indie musical ensemble from Dublin. They were vocalist and guitarist Gaz Harding, guitarist Sean Brennan, bassist Jim McGuire, and drummer Paul Donohoe. On 11 July 2008, they performed their biggest show thus far at Oxegen 2008 where they appeared second on the Green Room stage following Dirty Epics and prior to The Saw Doctors. They have also performed at the inaugural annual surf festival Cois Fharraige on 8 September 2007, Indie-pendence in August 2008 and Hard Working Class Heroes in September 2008.
Dirty Epics were a four-piece Irish new wave band formed in Greystones, County Wicklow, before relocating to Dublin. They were composed of vocalist Sarah Jane "SJ" Wai, bassist Richie Power, guitarist Darren McCoy and drummer Alan Delaney and were managed by Nadine O'Flynn. They have performed at numerous festivals and on television shows.
The 2009 Meteor Music Awards ceremony took place on 17 March 2009 in the RDS Simmonscourt, Dublin. It was the ninth edition of Ireland's national music awards. The event was recorded and it aired on RTÉ Two on 18 March 2009. The awards show was hosted by television presenter Amanda Byram.
The 2006 Meteor Music Awards took place in the Point Theatre, Dublin on 2 February 2006. It was the sixth edition of Ireland's national music awards. The event was later aired on RTÉ Two at 21:00 on Sunday 5 February and was hosted by the comedian Patrick Kielty. A total of seventeen awards were presented at the ceremony.
The 2008 Meteor Music Awards ceremony was held in the RDS Simmonscourt, Dublin, on Friday, 15 February 2008. Nineteen awards were presented. It was the eighth edition of the Republic of Ireland's national music awards. The event was later broadcast on RTÉ Two on Saturday, 16 February at 21:00 and was hosted by comedian Dara Ó Briain for the first time since 2004.
Aiken Promotions is a music promoter operating in Ireland. It is a former co-organiser of the annual Electric Picnic festival at Stradbally, County Laois, and also organises the Live at the Marquee event in Cork. Founded by Jim Aiken, the company has been seminal in bringing international acts to Ireland from the 1960s to the present day. Aiken was particularly successful in encouraging artists to perform in Ireland during The Troubles.
A summary of the year 2010 in the Irish music industry.
The 2010 Meteor Music Awards ceremony took place on Friday 19 February 2010 in Dublin. They were presented by Amanda Byram. The launch took place in La Stampa on 7 January 2010, and was attended by The Coronas and Danny O'Donoghue from The Script.
This is a summary of the year 2011 in the Irish music industry.
Almost 20 Irish acts played SXSW 2009 in March, joining the 1,900 acts who performed on 88 stages in front of 13,000 international delegates in Austin, Texas.[ permanent dead link ]
Following a review in these pages last week, the following letter from Chris de Burgh was sent to our Letters Editor, and has also been widely circulated
Irish bands and artists will be invited to apply for this year's Hard Working Class Heroes festival when the event is launched in Dublin next Tuesday. The showcase festival, which offers a platform to signed and unsigned bands from north and south of the border, will take place on October 16th–18th in various venues. Full details of the entry process will be announced at its launch, but organiser Angela Dorgan of the Federation of Music Collectives told The Ticket that another Invasion – when a high-profile act curates a programme of music from their home country – is on the cards. The festival will take place in venues around Temple Bar, but Meeting House Square will not be used this year, as bad weather in 2008 forced organisers to move bands to indoor venues at the last minute. The other venues are The Academy 2, The Button Factory, Think Tank, Eamon Dorans, Andrew's Lane Theatre and Twisted Pepper. Dorgan said: "I think year on year, we're always surprised at how fantastic Irish music is. Given the albums that bands have been bringing out this year, I am so excited about this year's festival." The closing date for entries (which can be completed online) is July 30th, and the bands selected to play will be chosen by a panel of Irish and international industry bods.[ permanent dead link ]
The festival is now established as an essential must-see/do on Ireland's music calendar, but you'd think that through the years the level of quality acts would be dwindling. Not so, says organiser Angela Dorgan.
YOUNGER IRISH people may only know his music from the Boyzone cover of Father and Son, but Yusuf Islam (aka Cat Stevens) is to begin his first tour in 33 years in Dublin. His old hits such as Wild World and The First Cut Is The Deepest will make up part of his first proper Irish concert at the O2 on November 15th. Yusuf Islam gave a "performance of sorts" at University College Dublin in April 1994 before an audience of 600.
This work was cut short, however, when angry sections of the audience walked out, shouted out, booed, whistled, slow-handclapped. In fairness to these people, paying money to hear formatted Broadway/West End versions of their hero's songs was not what they paid good money for. [...] "Now I know how Dylan felt like," he said, in reference to Dylan's liberating/estranging folk-to-rock appearance in 1965 at the Newport Folk Festival, as the remaining audience took refuge from bewilderment and hostility in songs such as Peace Train, Moonshadow and a Ronan Keating-accompanied Father and Son . But it was too late. It's an interesting point of conjecture: how patient a supposedly loyal audience will be when faced with – as 61-year-old Yusuf himself admitted – an artist who has reached an age where he feels he wants to please himself. The answer is not very patient at all.
The most shocking aspect of the churlish, insulting and aggressive behaviour of the audience at Yusuf Islam's 02 show last Sunday was the nature of the people shouting the abuse at the singer. This was, in the main, a well-heeled 50-something demographic who had cleared "windows" in their diaries to reconnect with the sounds of their salad days. But when Yusuf declined to behave like a human jukebox, they unleashed their bespoke fury. "Sing the fuckin' hits" and "We want Cat Stevens you bastards" were two of the considered observations I heard from the seats around me. [...] Tony Clayton-Lea, who reviewed Yusuf's show for this paper, says that the behaviour he witnessed on the night was the worst he had experienced in 20 years of reviewing.
Paul McCartney is to play the O2 in Dublin on December 20th, his first date in Ireland in six years. His concert is one of eight in a short European tour which will also include his first date at the O2 in London. It will be called the Good Evening Europe tour and will start in Hamburg where The Beatles honed their musicianship 50 years ago. [...] McCartney last played Ireland in May 2003 shortly after his marriage to Heather Mills. It was his first concert in Ireland since The Beatles played their only Irish concerts at the Adelphi in 1963 and the Ritz in Belfast.[ permanent dead link ]