Website Update

Good Listeners,

The website was down for 48 hours for service and updating.. Its now back on… I’m working on an album here I’ll post an update when that job is done Best for now …

Christy

2024 Hot Press

Live Report:  Christy Moore goes to the Opera

As part of a series of sold-out gigs that will see him on the road until October if not beyond, Christy Moore is going solo and audiences are loving it.

This was Christy Moore in his natural habitat, totally engaged with a Wexford Opera House full of fans, and his songs and stories teeming with heroes and villains.  It sure augurs well for the rest of his current tour.

Yes we had the hilarious ‘Joxer Goes to Stuttgart’ and a fabulous solo vocal version of ‘The Ballad of Ruby Walsh’, with a standing Christy trying out his best jockey moves.  But other heroes were honoured too, with Wally Page’s ‘The Biko Drum’ getting a welcome outing alongside Bobby Sands’ ‘McIlhatton’ and ‘Lyra McKee’, James Cramer’s tribute to the murdered Belfast journalist

The audience responded with vigour to Christy’s version of Martin Leahy’s fierce putdown of the cowardice of anonymous online trollers.  Leahy is the somewhat unsung hero who takes up his weekly position outside Leinster House trying to penetrate the hearts of politicians with his song ‘Everybody Should Have a Home’.

But then Christy is no fan of politicians, as you would gather from the wit and venom of ‘I Hate Politicians’ which neatly segued into ‘Don’t Forget Your Shovel’.

But there was something of a privilege in hearing for the first time Christy singing Jim Page’s brand new ‘Palestine’ which got the biggest cheer of the night.

‘North and South’ was another audience winner.  There were less politically-overt favourites too, ‘Beeswing’, ‘The Voyage’, ‘Welcome to the Cabaret’ and ‘The Time Has Come’, and two songs by younger brother Luka in ‘The City of Chicago’ and ‘I’m a Bogman’.  They were all delivered with Christy’s voice as strong and as wholesome as ever, his wit on full alert and real anger in his rhythmic guitar accompaniment whenever the song deserved it.

Walking out onto Wexford’s High Street we felt better equipped to face the ongoing depravity of the human race.  That’s what a close engagement with Christy Moore does to you.  As he said himself, he’s come a long way from The Unyoke Inn to the Opera House.

Jackie Hayden

DavĂłg Rynne Gig – 20th April 2024

My nephew DavĂłg Rynne has been singing in France & Germany for many years. He lives in France with his Family & will make a visit back to Ireland soon to play a gig in The Four Provinces, Kimmage, Dublin on Saturday April 20th 2024. I’ve not heard him sing since Spanish Point 25 years ago – Looking forward to hearing him again.Tickets @ 12 euro – available at Eventbrite – click – HERE

Christy

2023 Cork Marquee Review

Christy Moore Stars at 17th Marquee outing

How does Christy Moore remember all those words, eyes closed, singing and reciting around 10,000 words in two of the most joyful hours ever in the Marquee?

Could Shakespeare recite his hit eyes closed?  Total recall.  Christy [Moore] is the Arnie [Schwarzenegger – legends don’t need surnames] of Irish folk.  It’s just one of his many blessed mysteries.  He truly has the gods in his pocket.

With thunder and lightning threatening earlier in the day, we were hoping that Christy’s show in Cork’s Marquee would enjoy a degree of calm between the storms.  The gods smiled.

Mercurial, magical, and never one to pull his punches when a point of principle is at stake, Christy Moore really is so much more than Ireland’s undisputed champion of acoustic folk music.

His sold-out show was a thing of beauty, but it was more than that.  It was a moment to reflect on the issues currently facing society, not least homelessness.  He’s not just shaking a fist at authorities either.  When Christy plays Dublin’s Vicar Street in July, the entire proceeds will go to the homeless charity Focus Ireland.

At the Marquee, his passion is evident.  “I saw a woman begging on the streets on my way here today, she was in an awful way,” he says.  “I’d like to sing this song for her.  It’s called ‘Lemon Sevens’, which are tablets that some people crush and smoke.”

He also played “They’re Afraid to Use Their Names’, a new song about social media trolls written by Bandon’s Martin Leahy, with Christy also urging people to visit YouTube to view ‘Everyone Needs A Home”, the protest song Martin sings outside the Dáil every week.

An RTE poll placed Christy as Ireland’s greatest living musician.  He’s adored in the Marquee, which he sells out every year.  He’s loved like a local for a good reason.  “This is my 17th time playing in this tent.  I tried to have a song ready for last year’s show, I was writing it on the way down,  I have it [‘The Big Marquee’] ready tonight.

Huge applause, name-checking everyone listed in the Cork phonebook, from The Two Norries, John Spillane, Ricky Lynch, and the Irish Examiner.

Christy played solo, though ‘solo’ is too small a word – he’s bigger, both in terms of performance and charm than any 15-piece band.  The songs are huge: ‘Ordinary Man’, ‘Delirium Tremens’, ‘Viva la Qunita Brigada’, ‘Lisdoonvarna’, ‘Ride On’, ‘Beeswing’, ‘Lingo Politico (I Hate Politicians)’, with a sprinkling of ‘Don’t Forget Your Shovel’ and ‘Sonny’ (dedicated to the late Christy Dignam).

Incredible repertoire, but his personality is even bigger than the songs.  Down these parts, he can do no wrong.  He walks on water.

Joe Dermody
Cork Examiner

 

 

2021 Irish Times Review

Christy Moore:  Flying Into Mystery
Solid Outing from Ireland’s greatest treasure

Moore revisits songs by namesake Gary and Bob Dylan alongside a few new of his own.

“It has been a very different recording process this time around,” writes Christy Moore in the liner notes.  “Since 1969 I have been involved in recording but never with a total absence of live performance.  Since March 2020, all my focus has been on this album.”  You would imagine that Moore might have basked in the socially enforced leisure time, but a restless spirit is a restless spirit, and so he did what every other musician does as downtime looms – forget about relaxing, pick up a guitar and write songs.

As is usual for Moore, however, Flying Into Mystery revisits the work of other songwriters as well as throwing some of his own into the pot.  He is as astute a curator and collector as he is an original songwriter, and the crux of the album lies primarily in two songs, cover versions that Moore effortlessly makes his own.  The opening track, Johnny Boy, was written in the 1980’s by a different Moore (Gary), as a tribute to his friend, Phil Lynott.  It connects thematically with the closing track, I Pity the Poor Immigrant, written in the 1960’s by Bob Dylan.

The filling in the sandwich includes revisions of songs not only from his back catalogue but also known songwriters.  This isn’t Moore by numbers, however, rather another solid outing from (not that he would ever think of himself as such) Ireland’s greatest living national treasure.

Tony Clayton-Lea

2022 UNCUT Review

Christy Moore
Flying Into Mystery
Legendary Irish veteran still hitting the mark

As someone who has always road-tested his material before recording it, Moore faced a new challenge during lockdown: for the first time in a career lasting 50 years he was forced to make a studio album without having first developed the songs in front of an audience.  He’s responded bravely with a mature set of exquisitely crafted ballads, his simple guitar picking burnished with elegant piano-and-strings arrangements.  From his stirring climate change protest on ‘Clock Winds Down’ (“The ice caps melt, the Amazon burns, the grid goes down) to his deathless take on Dylan’s ‘I Pity the poor Immigrant’, the results are both masterful and moving.

Nigel Williamson

2022 RnR Magazine Review

Christy Moore
****
Flying Into Mystery

Bookended by ‘Johnny Boy’, Gary Moore’s heartfelt tribute to Phil Lynott, and Bob Dylan’s ‘I Pity the Poor Immigrant’, Flying Into Mystery is everything you’d expect from the esteemed son of County Kildare: well chosen contemporary songs, a smattering of trad.arr. and a few originals with the usual mix of politics, romance, humour and social commentary.

Right from the start Christy Moore’s unparalleled skills as a storyteller draw the listener in, whether he’s putting his own spin on traditional songs ‘Van Diemen’s Land’ and ‘Myra’s Caboose’ (aka ‘The Gander’) or taking contemporary songs, including Mick Hanly’s ‘All I Remember’ and Lynch’s ‘December 1942’, and making them his own thanks to a warm vocal performance that belies his seventy-six years.

Politically, Moore is bang on the money once again with ‘Clock Winds Down’, Jim Page’s timely and powerful reflection/reaction to the climate crisis but, as ever, he doesn’t dwell on the negative, tempering the doom and gloom with the humour of ‘Bord Na Mona Man’, his own homage to the ubiquitous Irish peat company.

Closing with ‘Zozimus & Zimmerman’, an autobiographical tale of watching Bob Dylan perform, Flying Into Mystery is yet another glorious release from a true master of his art.

Dave Haslam

“Flying into Mystery” Cover Art

Dear Listeners,

David Rooney created the sleeve for my recent album “Flying Into Mystery”.

He has now released a limited edition of high quality, signed prints which are available from his website.

A visit to David’s site reveals the extent of his work and what drew me towards our collaboration.

Check it out! https://www.davidrooney.com/

Christy

 

Chat with Ronan Collins

Dear Listeners,

In case you missed it, here is a link to my recent chat with Ronan Collins:

Ronan Collins Collection

9th August 2023

Sinéad.

Our Warrior Woman has been laid to rest.

Fearless and Fragile, may She Rest in Peace.

We send our condolences to all her Family and Loved Ones

I had the privilege of singing with Sinéad on a number of occasions.

Always from the heart, always creating magic in the moment.

Together we sang Nigel Rolfe’s memorial to Anne Lovett back in 1987,

Jimmy MacCarthy’s “Mad Lady and Me”, Ewan MacColl’s “First Time Ever”,

his “Sweet Thames Flow Softly” and Sinéad’s “In This Heart”.

The last song we sang together was “Lord Baker” for her “Sean NĂłs Nua” album.

Sinéad reached everyone on this Island and far beyond.

Today She is mourned, She will always be missed, She will never be forgotten.

 

Mick Blake wrote “Oblivious” which I recorded some years back.

A native of Donegal he has been living and teaching in Leitrim.

I love his work and the way he makes it

He did an interview recently on Highland Radio  https://fb.watch/m0B_Ax1thx/

 

David Rooney (who created the album cover for “Flying into Mystery”) has done an etching of James Connolly.

I will share the news here when a limited edition becomes available.

 

Work continues here on a bunch of new songs….

I am currently on the annual August break. The crew are resting

 

Paddy’s at the Boston Fleadh,

Johnny’s at the Hay in Rossnowlagh

Jeff’s at the lights in Sandymount Green

Mick’s with The Dubs on Hill 16

Davy’s up in Derry mixin’ Songs

Dickon’s at the Black & Decker hammer and thongs

 

Saw a good movie called Blue Jay.

Gonna go and see Oppenheimer.

Been practicing “The Sun is Burning in The Sky” (Ian Cambell) Hiroshima Nagasaki American Roulette (Jim Page), Clock Winds Down (Jim Page) After The Deluge (Jackson Browne), How Long (Jackson Browne).

Singing them to myself here in the workroom, despondent at times, but it’s an uplifting gift to have these songs to sing

 

Went to New Theatre in Essex St to see Ken Loach’s film on the shafting of Jeremy Corbyn by the Labour Party – “Oh Jeremy Corbyn” – an eye opener which confirmed what many of us have suspected these past years.

 

Listening to a new album from Steo Wall; “Street Music for Lost Souls”  – it’s a good listen.

 

It’s a grand August day here. It’s great to be alive – sending best wishes to all you songsters out there

 

Christy

Christy at Vicar Street 2023-2024

Dear Listeners,

Tickets for the annual run of shows in Vicar St.are on sale now.

 

November 22, 26, 29, 2023

December 4, 11, 29, 2023

January 2, 7, 11, 16, 19, 2024

Further details  here on the gig page

Such a profound loss. Our Warrior Woman – Fearless yet fragile. May SinĂ©ad Rest in Peace

Cork Examiner Review June 19th

 

Gig to Benefit People Experiencing Homelessness

Dear Listeners,

On Monday 10th July Christy will perform at Vicar Street with all proceeds going to Focus Ireland, founded by Sr Stan.

Focus Ireland is a national voluntary organisation that aims to advance the rights of people in homelessness, and works to prevent, alleviate and eliminate homelessness in Ireland.

The gig is now SOLD OUT, but if you want to contribute to this effort, you can make a donation on focusireland.ie and select Christy Moore Concert as the reason you are donating.

 See Christy speaking about Homelessness Here

Further details  here on the gig page

Four New Shows Announced

Dear Listeners,

We have announced four new Autumn shows.

On Sale Tues May 16th @ 1pm
Cork Opera House Nov 6th, 2023

 

On Sale Thurs. May 18th @ 10am
Waterfront, Belfast Oct 17th, 2023;
Armagh City Hotel Oct 19th, 2023;
Carrckdale Hotel, Dundalk November 19th, 2023

Further details  here on the gig page

Thank You All …

To all of You,

North-South-East & West Above & Below, Adout & Adin Who made contact who sent birth day good wishes cards texts gifts Thank You, each and every one.. so far,this 78th year, is going very well… Sligo beckons this week, some recording too, a few new songs on the bench.

With gratitude and best wishes

Christy

Castlebar – Oct 28th, 2023 on sale

Dear Listeners,

We have the following date on sale for 2023

Royal Theatre Castlebar Oct 28th, 2023

Further details  here on the gig page

A Chat to start 2023 …

A Chat to start 2023.

 

Good Listeners all,

 

It’s a busy day here in the workroom.

Thankfully the year has kicked off well with some gigs in Vicar Street Dublin.

Two new songs introduced – “Lemon 7s” by Brian Brannigan and “Lyra McKee” by James Cramer.

“The Big Marquee” is on the verge and “Zozimus and Zimmerman” chomping on the bit.

great to see some (long-haul) familiar faces returning after the yoke. The gig has been uplifted by the arrival of many new listeners.

The audience participation swelling to Barrowland proportions which is magnificent to behold. These nights the listeners sing joyfully in choral unison then listen carefully when a quiet song begins. After 56 years of gigging it never fails to inspire.

Thankfully the voice appears to be holding up – fingers crossed. I hope to continue as long as the voice box does (and the legs to carry it).

The crew are still intact and on the ball.  Paddy, Mick, Dickon, David, John and Geoff still 100% supportive as they strive to ensure that singer and listener can make the best of every gig.

 

Since covid, gigs have been confined to Ireland (32 Counties). It’s not known yet if or when we’ll ferry again. Air travel is no longer an option for me.

I’ve no specific recording plans but many ideas are kicking about.

Up until recent years, the “next album” would always have been a priority but that seems to have faded a bit. I’ve not tried to analyse this feeling –  Not sure whether it’s my age or the changing attitude to recorded music.

The public listening to music has changed utterly. The return to vinyl is promising – nothing beats good audio reproduction. The full sound of well-played, well recorded, well amplified music is still so rewarding, but the convenience of new devices seems to rule the roost.

Thankfully, many are coming back to gigs again…that’s where songs and music are at their best.

 

We attended a song circle last night – 35 people gathered and most of them sang at least one song. we heard numerous songs for the first time and many more were great favourites

An extra bonus was to hear two of my own songs sung by other singers. that’s a great buzz altogether – “On the Bridge” and “Come all You Dreamers” never sounded better.

 

I came across this Obituary to Ciarán Bourke, a founder member of The Dubliners. It appeared in the Irish Times after Ciarán’s death in 1988 & was written by my Brother-in-law Davoc Rynne

 

CIARAN BOURKE – An Appreciation – published in The Irish Times in 1988

I wasn’t the only one that noticed him at the Gorey Leinster Fleadh on a sunny weekend in 1962. Himself and Jennie were certainly not the kind of people that would be lost in a crowd. Ciaran, tall tangle bearded and dressed rough in a donkey jacket with bits of hay hanging from it and Jeannie, small wearing a hand knit gansey to her knees, walking barefooted. No, they would certainly not go un-noticed in a small town in the early 60’s when beards were as rare as ships in a forest, seen only on old men or apostles of JC. I had devoured Jack Kerouac’s Dharma Bums, but Ciarán Bourke was the first beatnik I had ever seen. I was determined to meet this man. Later in the year at the Fiddlers Club in Church Street in Dublin, I got my chance. I found out from him that he was a builder and general Jack of all Trades. I told him of a job available in Prosperous doing up an old house. He hitched down the following week, with difficulty. Long beards were discriminated against at the time! He told me he walked with his back to the traffic, thumbing, but when turning around his potential lift would put the boot down. He arrived with no baggage other than a Clarke’s tin whistle.

He could converse on any subject under the sun. Hours we spent discussing how to cook a chicken without plucking it. Any open-hearth cooking, using pots, spits, cranes or whatever, he was past master at. He saw the open fire as the centre of the universe, were all domestic and social activity took place. Every night he picked a prime position and rolled his blanket down in front of the fire. He also had the amazing gift of bringing the best out in everybody. He discovered dormant talents in people in Prosperous they hardly knew they had themselves. Some that hadn’t played for 20 years he got them to bring out their instruments and have a go again. They sang to him, told yarns and played music and he was very tolerant of their rustiness. Ciaran sang “The Cruise of the Calabar” – “it’s only forty verses and I won’t detain you long”, played superbly the “Cuckoo Hornpipe”, told stories and to any audience and an audience could be one. I remember a local Garda Sergeant arriving in full uniform with his set of pipes. He played for an hour for just the two of us. Other sessions weren’t quite so small and intimate. One night all the Dublin beatniks arrived. There was Dusty, Stan, Ben, Nat, Jeannie, Rusty, Dick, Jake, names that float to my mind. Some had no names and no addresses. There were fires lit and food was cooked and a dozen pints could be bought for a pound, if you had a pound!

These were heady pre-TV/Walkman days that I will always remember, but for Ciaran Bourke they would not have happened for me. He was the centre of it. The house eventually got restored and it still doesn’t let in the rain and the toilet still works! Only three times I met Ciaran since. Once on a fleeting visit to Prosperous, next at Christy Moore’s wedding when we were all too drunk to converse and lastly at Luke’s funeral when we were all too sad to talk.

Ciaran Bourke will remain in many a mind. He was salt of the earth, a wild and hilarious man.

May the sod rest lightly on him.

D.R.

 

I thought that some of you might like to remember Ciarán – a truly gifted Troubadour.

It was in Davoc’s house that the “Prosperous” album was recorded 52 years ago.

Since then, Davoc and my sister Anne have been living in West Clare where they are both involved in making music and song. They can be heard here; https://www.rynnefolk.com/

 

Tuesday January 10th.

Last night in Vicar St rang clear in my head – it just seemed to flow. Before me, beneath me, beside me, around me, gathered a gaggle of listeners who travelled with me every verse of the way. To my right, somewhere in the room was a very special listener. a precious person who participated in their own very special way. Every now and then I feel blessed to hear those special sounds – Thank You dear listener, whoever you may be.

 

It was night 10 of a 13-night run in the Dublin venue that, for a variety of reasons, is close to my heart. Since it first opened 25 years ago, I’ve played there perhaps 200 times. I know every nook and cranny of the room. I’ve also attended numerous gigs as a listener – Jackson Browne, Lisa O’Neill, Roseanne Cash, Damien Dempsey, Tommy Tiernan, Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Dylan Moran, Janis Ian, Jackie Mason, Steve Cooney, Kila and others. I’ve played many benefit gigs there in support of front-line workers. The venue is run by the Aiken Family. Last year marked 50 years since my first gig with Aikens. Back then the late Jim Aiken promoted a Planxty Concert in The Carlton Cinema on O’Connell St in Dublin. It was to mark the release of the first Planxty Album (the black one!). That was a night to remember. It’s heart-breaking to see what has become of O’Connell Street –  the Main Street in our Capital City has been turned into a Monopoly Board where Dublin City Councillors/Planners/Developers/Builders/Gambling & Burger Joint Proprietors wreak havoc on that once gracious thoroughfare.

 

Last night’s gig featured these songs (not in this sequence – I’m working from memory here)

Chicago

Quinte Brigada

Lyra McKee

Lemon 7s

GasĂşn

Lisdoonvarna

Magdalen Laundry (Joni Mitchell)

Clock Winds Down

Ringing The Bell

Nancy Spain

Black is The Colour

On the Mainland

Back Home in Derry

Joxer

Amsterdam

Ordinary Man

Ride On

Stitch in Time

Welcome to the Cabaret

The Voyage

Allende

Motherland

Sail On Jimmy

Spancilhill

 

Today I hope to record a video gig for the contingent of Irish Soldiers on UN Service in the Golan Heights – hopefully they’ll get to see it on Patrick’s Day in the GPO at their camp. we’ll record it in a room where the road crew lodge. a chair, a guitar, a camera, a recorder and away we go.

 

 

Then to hear the news from West Kerry …

Seamus Begley has died. What a Gaeltacht man was he. A gentle giant of a man with the most beautiful singing voice, His polkas, reels and jigs were the heart of many the set.

His slow airs always full of passion and pathos. On top of that his charm, his fun and roguery were infectious. I toured with Seamus and Steve Cooney way back. The excitement of their music has stayed with me ever since. Deepest Sympathy to his Family, his Friends and to the Community he so cherished.

 

Days later – dark of night – not sure what date we’re at.

The Vicar Street run of gigs came to an end – 13 nights over 6 weeks.

My thanks to all who make the venue such a great place to work.

My own Team, Aiken’s Crew and the Vicar Street Operation all working together towards the same conclusion.

 

Time now to reflect as we look forward to what lies ahead.

May the songs and music keep our spirits high.

 

Christy

 

New Date announced for Limerick May 19th

Dear Listeners,

We have the following dates on sale for 2023

University Concert Hall Limerick May 19th,
TLT Drogheda July 5th
Theatre Royal Waterford July 19th and 21st
Great Northern Bundoran September 26th

Further details  here on the gig page

A few remaining dates still on sale

Dear Listeners,

University Concert Hall Limerick May 4th,
Castlecourt Hotel Westport May 24th
Cork Live at the Marquee June 17th,
Slieve Russell Cavan June 23rd
INEC Killarney June 30th,
TLT Drogheda July 5th
Theatre Royal Waterford July 19th and 21st
Great Northern Bundoran September 26th

Further details  here on the gig page

A few remaining dates still on sale

Dear Listeners,

University Concert Hall Limerick May 4th,
Radisson Hotel Sligo May 11th,
Castlecourt Hotel Westport May 24th
Cork Live at the Marquee June 17th,
Slieve Russell Cavan June 23rd
INEC Killarney June 30th,
TLT Drogheda July 5th
Theatre Royal Waterford July 19th and 21st
Great Northern Bundoran September 26th

Further details  here on the gig page

ALL VICAR STREET SHOWS SOLD OUT

EXTRA AND FINAL VICAR STREET SHOW ADDED JAN 17TH

Christy Moore
Extra and final Vicar Street Show date added
17 January 2023 
 Extra date on sale at 3pm today Friday Sept 30th

We are today announcing an extra and final date at Dublin’s Vicar Street – 17 January 2023. This means that Christy will play 13 dates at Vicar Street spread across November, December and January.

Pre Sale link to Vicar Street shows

Dear Listeners,

There have been posts to the website asking about how to get notice of pre-sale.

The Artist Pre Sale link to Vicar Street shows is scheduled to be delivered on Monday Sept. 26th to all valid email addresses registered with the current newsletter.

Artist Pre-sale tickets on sale Tuesday September 27th via link received by email.

Tickets On Sale to General Public  Thursday 29th September at 9.00am

Vicar Street

Nov 23 & 29 2022

Dec 5, 7, 12, 14 & 18 2022

Jan 2, 4, 9, 11, 15 2023

CHRISTY ANNOUNCES 12 NIGHTS IN VICAR STREET

Dear Listeners,

I am happy to announce we are planning 12 shows in Vicar Street starting in November.  Hope to see you along the way.

 

Tickets On Sale   Thursday 29th September at 9.00am

Nov 23 & 29 2022                 Dec 5, 7, 12, 14 & 18 2022               Jan 2, 4, 9, 11, 15 2023

Doors open 7pm Show starts 8pm

Further details  here on the gig page

CONCERT IN SUPPORT OF CORK LIFE CENTRE

Dear Listeners,

I’m very pleased to tell you that in Tribute to Don O’Leary, I will be playing a concert at the Cork Opera House on Sunday Nov 6th in support of Cork Life Centre.  Tickets go on sale Thursday September 15th.

All Proceeds to Cork Life Centre. Cork Life Centre

Further details  here on the gig page

 

The Cork Life Centre is an alternative education project for young people who cannot access their education in the mainstream secondary school system.  www.corklifecentre.org

2nd Carrickdale Hotel Show announced for November 18th.

Dear Listeners,

First show gone, but we now have a second show scheduled for November 18th.

Tickets on sale Monday  July 25th.

Further details  here on the gig page

CONCERT IN SUPPORT OF WOMEN’S AID

Christy Moore announces concert in support of

WOMEN’S AID

Vicar Street, 11th July 2022

Tickets on sale this Monday 23rd May at 9am

Christy Moore today announced that he will perform a special concert at Vicar Street on 11th July in support of Women’s Aid.

Women’s Aid has been working to stop domestic violence against women and children since 1974. As a leading support service, their ethos is based on listening to and believing women, and giving them the support they need to escape and recover from abuse. In addition to this, through advocacy, representation and policy reform they seek to create an Ireland where domestic violence is not tolerated. Women’s Aid will remain at the forefront of this endeavour, supporting women and advocating for change, until Ireland is free from domestic violence against women and children.

Tickets for this special concert, priced at 50 euro, go on sale this Monday 23rd May at 9am from Ticketmaster.ie

For more on Women’s Aid go to www.womensaid.ie

Change of Venue for July Show

Dear Listeners,
We have had to change the venue for our July 20th show. It is now scheduled to take place at the Mullingar Park Hotel on the same date – July 20, 2022. All previously purchased tickets remain valid.
Please accept our apology for any inconvenience caused.
Further details  here on the gig page

Spring and Summer Calendar

Dear Listeners,

There are still tickets available for:

Thurs May 26th – Limerick Concert Hall

Sat June 11th – Tullamore Cout Hotel

Fri June 17th – Slieve Russell Hotel, Cavan

Fri July 15th – National Opera House, Wexford

Hope to see you soon.

Further details  here on the gig page

Killarney Show Rescheduled to April 23rd.

Dear Listeners,

Unfortunately I have tested positive for Covid-19 and will have to reschedule this weekend’s gig in the Gleneagle INEC Arena. The show will now take place on Saturday April 23rd. All previously purchased tickets remain valid for this new date. I am feeling well and I thank you for your continued support. Looking forward to seeing you all in Killarney on April 23rd.

Christy

Further details  here on the gig page

VICAR ST CONCERT IN AID OF IRISH RED CROSS UKRAINE APPEAL

Dear Listeners,

Please join us in Vicar St. for a Benefit Concert on April 11th at 8pm.

CONCERT IN SUPPORT OF IRISH RED CROSS UKRAINE APPEAL

11th April 2022 @ 8pm

Vicar Street, Dublin. Fully Seated.

Tickets € 50 on sale Wednesday 16th March at 9am

ALL PROCEEDS TO THE IRISH RED CROSS TO ASSIST IN THEIR WORK

The Irish public have been so generous up to now in supporting the Irish Red Cross in their humanitarian work for the refugees and those who continue to live in Ukraine during the ongoing crisis. Even if you cannot attend the concert, you can donate on the Irish Red Cross website (www.redcross.ie) or on Revolut. All funds received will go directly to Red Cross partners in Ukraine and neighbouring countries to assist them in their humanitarian efforts, to repair vital infrastructure, support health facilities, reconnect families separated by conflict and provide life-saving food and hygiene items as well as shelter given the cold and snow on the ground.

Further details  here on the gig page

Another Few Dates To Tell You About

Dear Listeners,

Happy to announce a few new shows for your diary.

Carlow on April 8th

Sligo on April 27th

Two Kilkenny shows on May 19th and 21st

Naas on June 2nd

Cavan June 17th

And a second Galway show on Sept 2nd.

Hope to see you at one of them.

Further details  here on the gig page

More Shows Added to the Calendar

Dear Listeners,

We have added shows in the National Concert Hall, Dublin;  University Concert Hall, Limerick;  Wexford Opera House;  Leisureland, Galway.

Further details  here on the gig page

MORE GOOD NEWS!

Dear Listeners,

We have added shows in Waterford, Drogheda, Mullingar, Killarney, Athlone and Limerick.

Further details  here on the gig page