not a member? click here to sign up

Cois Fharraige Festival in Kilkee, Co. Clare

A pleasing weekend’s music, that made for an enjoyably relaxed comedown from the Electric Picnic.

Kilian Murphy, 24 Sep 2007

Things really kicked off in earnest at Cois Fharraige when The Blizzards – the penultimate act – arrived onstage on Friday evening. As it transpired, the Mullingar group represented a decent starting point for the weekend: their playful, disco-tinged pop-rock marks them out as one of few genuinely fun Irish acts, and a soaring cover of Heaven 17’s ‘Temptation’ proved to be a real highlight. Another plus point: vocalist Niall Breslin’s gigantic frame dwarfs his guitar to the point that he resembles an overgrown child playing a toy instrument. You’d have to love him for it!

To my ears, Fun Lovin’ Criminals – the evening’s bill-toppers – ran out of enjoyable variations on the formula that made them successful some time ago. A headline slot only serves to highlight their dilemma, as the set must be padded out with the wafer-thin rewrites they have been producing since their brief moment in the sun. Still, the paradox is that, on the night, ‘Scooby Snacks’ and ‘The Fun Lovin Criminal’ provide highs that few acts can match. They just need to hit a new groove once in a while, that’s all.

The smaller-name bands on Saturday afternoon ended up playing to relatively small houses. Neither The Kinetiks nor 28 Costumes successfully take the bull by the horns: they both inhabit the mainstream indie milieu of Franz Ferdinand or the Arctic Monkeys, but as yet – understandably perhaps – exhibit considerably less style. A similar accusation could be levelled at The Enemy, but they deliver their clichés with such snarling, teeth-gritting ferocity that the originality deficit is easier to ignore.

Context: many years ago, this budding music fan attended an Ash gig at which the first support act (name escapes me, came below Chicks on the bill, to give an idea of their profile) performed a set so obnoxious that it has remained buried deep in his subconscious to this day. Upon setting eyes on the Republic Of Loose’s lead vocalist Mick Pyro, there is a sudden, awful moment of realization – Pyro was a member of the offending group (I’m finally understanding how Ed Harris’ character in A History Of Violence felt, upon hearing that the man who gouged his eye out is now being feted as an clean-cut American hero).



Page 1/2     <Previous 1 2 Next> 



Artist Related Content

Latest Related Articles For This Artist

Cois Fharraige acts announced

Doves & The Zutons are among the heavy-hitters bound for Clare in September.


News: 2009-08-06

Latest Related Videos For This Artist

Contact Us

Hot Press,
13 Trinity Street,
Dublin 2.
Rep. Of Ireland
Tel: +353 (1) 241 1500

Email:info@hotpress.ie

Click here for more contact information.

Hot Press always welcomes feed back so if you've got something to tell us click here.

Advertise With Us

For more detail on how to advertise with Hot Press click here or call us on +353 (1) 241 1540