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Dublin Inquirer Podcast

Dublin Inquirer

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Dublin Inquirer is an independent local newspaper covering city affairs in Ireland's capital. This is our podcast, a mix of radio-style features on the city, and audio from news and musical events that we run.
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Elizabeth Laprelle’s first singing partner was, she says, her mother Sandy Newlin. In this month’s Music at Marrowbone Books, Laprelle talks to Martin Cook about ballads and banjos, combining story-telling with music, and the influence of her hometown barber. “I’m a collector, not a composer,” she says, finding pleasure in songs that may not be new…
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Rachel Ní Chuinn swapped guitar for clarinet a few years ago, which she melds with live electronics into expressive sound. In this month’s Music at Marrowbone Books, the musician and sound artist – and member of the Dublin Laptop Orchestra – performs some of her improvisations. They build on themselves, reverberating, layer upon layer. Thinking abo…
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Sinéad and Catríona Kennedy often play Donegal-style traditional tunes, but sometimes they're originals. Where do those songs come from? It's like they're hanging in the air, in a space, waiting to be plucked, says Sinéad. "I feel like tunes are kind of around, and you happen upon them." In this month's Music at Marrowbone Books, the Kennedy Sister…
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Some of Danny Carroll's song-writing starts with an essay, he tells Martin Cook, in this month's Dublin music podcast. That's to get his thoughts straight. Then, he'll simmer that down into the snarky commentary on modern life that runs through the songs of Shrug Life. You can hear him perform and talk about some of those tracks here and how his mu…
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Supply & Demand is a four-episode podcast about Dublin’s housing crisis. In this final episode, we’re asking: why aren’t we building the right homes for people? Why aren’t they the right shape or size, why aren’t they in the right place, and why do they cost so much? To answer those questions, we’ll have to get down to the foundations of how housin…
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In this latest episode of our Music at Marrowbone Books podcast, Consuelo Breschi and Lucie Azconaga of Varo talk about their journeys from Florence and Bordeaux to Ireland's trad music scene. And, alongside Belfast bouzouki player Frank Tate, they perform some traditional Irish tunes with "sensuous, harmonious" vocals and "mystical" countermelodie…
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Supply & Demand is a podcast about Dublin’s housing crisis. Over the course of four episodes, we look at the history of housing in the capital, the recent growth of renting in the city, new pressures on the housing stock, and the stumbling blocks that slow down new construction. Finally, we look forward and ask, what will Dublin be like in twenty y…
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Supply & Demand is a podcast about Dublin’s housing crisis. Over the course of four episodes, we look at the history of housing in the capital, the recent growth of renting in the city, new pressures on the housing stock, and the stumbling blocks that slow down new construction. Finally, we look forward and ask, what will Dublin be like in twenty y…
  continue reading
 
Supply & Demand is a podcast about Dublin’s housing crisis. Over the course of four episodes, we look at the history of housing in the capital, the recent growth of renting in the city, new pressures on the housing stock, and the stumbling blocks that slow down new construction. Finally, we look forward and ask, what will Dublin be like in twenty y…
  continue reading
 
In this episode, Wicklow-born multi-instrumentalist and folk artist Anna Mieke plays some songs at the bookshop in The Coombe. And the musician and songwriter also chats with Martin Cook about the piano that always tempted her in her hallway, the different personalities of the instruments she plays, her many travels, and her love of Cork.…
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In this episode, you'll hear Richie's story. About picking mushies over Inchydoney Bay in 1993, about how he spent a summer on building sites in London, about how he later ended up in prison, and about how he died. This is the fifth episode in a six-episode podcast memoir by Dave Lordan, centred on a party in a bedsit in Dunmanway, West Cork in 199…
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In this episode you'll hear about how a bully gave The Orange his nickname, and how he grew into it and embraced it at university, when he was warrior-tall and strong as a heifer, with a ginger crown and a love of ecstasy and mushrooms. And you'll learn how he dropped out and hit the road, and how the music ended for him. This is the fourth episode…
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Until recently, Dublin-born, Clare-raised Branwen Kavanagh was best know as half of Twin Headed Wolf – the other head being her twin sister Julie. These days, she is simply Branwen. She is soon to release a new record, which also features violinist Nicholas Cooper and clarinetist Deirdre O'Leary. In this podcast, she talks to Martin Cook about mixi…
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In this episode you'll hear about faeries, the Virgin Mary's appearance in Inchydoney, "wrecking", how Dan McCarthy, as I will call him, had tresses and a goatee that made him look like a pirate or a musketeer, and how he died. This is the third episode in a six-episode podcast memoir by Dave Lordan, centred on a party in a bedsit in Dunmanway, Wes…
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In this episode you'll learn what happened to Chill Out Timmy, hear about the trials and tribulations of a Curehead love affair, and encounter the curse of Edmund Spenser. This is the second episode in a six-episode podcast memoir by Dave Lordan, centred on a party in a bedsit in Dunmanway, West Cork in 1993, five teenagers who gathered there, and …
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Five teenagers gather at a party in a bedsit in Dunmanway, West Cork during mushroom season in 1993. Only one – Dave Lordan – is left on this Earth in 2018. The other four youngsters have tragically passed. In this six-episode podcast memoir, Lordan will delve into each of the four dead friends' lives, and each of their deaths, in turn – before end…
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When talk turns to the health of Ireland's media, national publications and websites generally sop up much of the attention. But how are local and regional publications faring? Are we headed the same way as in the United Kingdom, where the number of regional journalists has halved in recent years? Or is the landscape sturdier here? And what, if any…
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Sheesham, Lotus and 'Son brought their banjo, fiddle, sousaphone and more to a corner of the Liberties for a recent session of old-time sounds, raucous tale-telling and a bit of clogging. In this month's podcast, Martin Cook talks to the Canadian trio about life on the road, the instruments they have made, and why they used to dress in sepia.…
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Sasha Hsuczyk's influences range from her first love – Irish traditional music – to the old Sacred Harp songbooks, to the country music of Kitty Wells. Ahead of her recent gig at Marrowbone Books in the Coombe, she spoke to Martin Cook about how a Los Angeles-born, Pennsylvania-based vegetable farmer became such an accomplished musician. Listen in …
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From the publication of hate speech and the promotion of hot-air controversialists, to the use of technology and social media to draw readers into an addictive diet of endless news consumption, are news organisations hurting their readers? At an event run by Dublin Inquirer, Banter and DIT’s Centre for Critical Media Literacy, a panel of experts di…
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What's the solution to the affordable housing shortage in Dublin? What role should social housing play in solving this crisis? With our friends at Banter, we recently got together a panel of experts to discuss these and related questions: Debbie Mulhall, Community Development Worker in Dolphin House; Michelle Norris, Head of the School of the Schoo…
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In this first episode of Music at Marrowbone Books, fiddle-player Danny Diamond performs at the Dublin bookshop (on 16 Nov. 2017), and chats with Martin Cook in his studio about his music and life. Diamond is a member of the Nordic/Irish band Slow Moving Clouds, and has also put out a series of acclaimed albums, including NORTH with Conor Caldwell …
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JC’s in Swords is Ireland’s largest independent supermarket, a much-loved north Dublin institution. But it’s besieged by budget competitors like Lidl, which has literally moved in next door. Recently, JC’s laid off 20 long-term employees. In this podcast from April 2016, Lorcan Archer sits down with the boss, Michael Savage, to ask why, and what th…
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Why are the the Samuel Beckett and Tom Clarke bridges so far apart? a reader asked us. It makes for some long walks for pedestrians crossing the Liffey in the Docklands, he said. So we set off to find and answer for him, a journey which touched on the history of the Docklands, the ferryboat business, a pile of tripe, and plans for two new bridges.…
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