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"Roísín Dubh" I Could Read the Sky: Iarla Ó Lionáird featuring O'Connor "Singing Bird" (traditional) 2001 "Angels Eyes" Interview with the Angel: Ghostland featuring O'Connor "She's So Beautiful" Waiting for This Madness to End... Aslan featuring O'Connor "Up In Arms" "The Shores of the Swilly" Lake of Shadows: Phil Coulter featuring O'Connor
The choicest flower of Munster, my Roisin Dubh If I had six horses, I would plough against the hill I'd make Roisin Dubh my Gospel in the middle of Mass I'd kiss the young girl who would grant me her maidenhead And do deeds behind the lios with my Roisin Dubh! The Erne will be strong in flood, the hills be torn
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The Róisín Dubh is a live music and comedy venue located in Galway, Ireland. It has hosted events such as the IMRO Showcase Tour [ 1 ] and the 2fm 2moro 2our. The name translates from the Irish language as the "little black rose". [ 2 ]
The last track "Róisín Dubh", consists of traditional songs, all arranged by Lynott and Moore, as well as many original parts. The song " Will You Go Lassie, Go " (also known as "Wild Mountain Thyme") is sometimes mistakenly credited as a traditional song but was in fact written by William McPeake and first recorded by Francis McPeake.
"Roisin Dubh – The Small Black Rose" – 3:13 "Le Voyage de Camouret/House of Hamill" – 4:37 "The Cat Rambles to the Child's Saucepan/Maire O'Keefe/Harry Bradshaw's" – 3:18 "The Missing Piece" – 4:14 "The Out and About Set: The Wandering Minstrel/Fred Rice's Polka/The Cabin Hunter/Out and About" – 5:09
Silent Disco, hosted by Dana Carr, is a free event that encourages participants to move in ways authentic to them. The 90-minute gathering offers music and headphones. The only thing you need to ...
Two of the founding members of Thin Lizzy, bass guitarist and vocalist Phil Lynott and drummer Brian Downey, met while at school in Dublin in the early 1960s. Lynott, born on 20 August 1949 in West Bromwich, England, to an Irish mother Philomena (1930–2019) and Guyanese father Cecil Parris (1925–2010), was brought up in Dublin from the age of three. [5]