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Red Roses For Me (with Spider Stacy and James Fearnley)

Three Castles Burning

Release Date: 06/19/2024

Irish Food History: From B.C. Times to the Grogan’s Toastie show art Irish Food History: From B.C. Times to the Grogan’s Toastie

Three Castles Burning

Irish Food History: A Companion is an extraordinary thing - a moment in Irish publishing history. Coming in around 800 pages, it covers everything from archaeology and food to the pub grub of today. Full of archival images, poetry, recipes and more besides, the book captures the best of what is happening in Irish food research. On this episode, editors Dorothy Cashman and Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire join me to go through this collection. The book is available from: https://booksupstairs.ie/product/irish-food-history-a-companion/

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Paula Meehan: History and Poetry show art Paula Meehan: History and Poetry

Three Castles Burning

Paula Meehan is a poet for whom history is a constant source of inspiration. In this discussion at the Dublin Festival of History, she reads a number of poems written throughout the Decade of Centenaries, as well as other work shaped by the past. Paula’s collection, The Solace of Artemis, is available from: https://booksupstairs.ie/product/the-solace-of-artemis/

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Lee Miller: From Hitler’s Bathtub to The Palace Bar show art Lee Miller: From Hitler’s Bathtub to The Palace Bar

Three Castles Burning

Lee Miller is best recalled now for her defining images of the Second World War. With Kate Winslet playing the role of Miller in a new film, it seems a good time to explore Miller’s visit to Dublin in the winter of 1946. Sent by Vogue to photograph James Joyce’s Dublin, her images capture scenes like Barney Kiernan’s public house and Belvedere College.  

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Catriona Crowe in Conversation (Live at the Seán Corcoran Series) show art Catriona Crowe in Conversation (Live at the Seán Corcoran Series)

Three Castles Burning

Catriona Crowe is former Head of Special Projects at the National Archives of Ireland. She is Ireland’s most recognisable archivist, and someone to whom all historians of modern Ireland are indebted. At the recent Seán Corcoran Series () we discussed archives, oral history and much more.

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The Moore Street Woman who Fought the Nazis (with Clodagh Finn and John Morgan) show art The Moore Street Woman who Fought the Nazis (with Clodagh Finn and John Morgan)

Three Castles Burning

Clodagh Finn and John Morgan have produced an important history of the involvement of Irishmen and women in the anti-fascist movements of the Second World War. One of the most extraordinary stories they have uncovered is Catherine Crean, a woman in her sixties originally from Dublin’s Moore Street. She would give everything in defence of democracy and in opposition to Hitlerism. The Irish in the Resistance is out now (Gill Books.)

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Destination Anywhere: Getting Around the Hibernian Metropolis show art Destination Anywhere: Getting Around the Hibernian Metropolis

Three Castles Burning

This year marks four decades of the DART. Along with that, the Luas has turned twenty. These two services have radically changed how we live in Dublin, but where did they come from and how did Dublin's transport history shape them? This episode explores these things and questions of tomorrow.

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A Sensation Once Again: Brian Warfield of the Wolfe Tones (Live at Mindfield, EP) show art A Sensation Once Again: Brian Warfield of the Wolfe Tones (Live at Mindfield, EP)

Three Castles Burning

Seeing the inevitable headlines on the horizon around the Wolfe Tones performing at Electric Picnic, I decided to reach out to Brian Warfield for a chat about his book, The Ramblings of an Irish Ballad Singer. Amongst other things, Brian spoke to me about his family origins, why the Tones recorded songs like 'The Sash', and the importance of the English folk music revival for his band. (Original image: Richard Walshe, Mindfield Flickr)

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Olympic Glory: Jack B. Yeats and The Liffey Swim show art Olympic Glory: Jack B. Yeats and The Liffey Swim

Three Castles Burning

The Liffey Swim is a beloved painting, and one of the most visited works in the National Gallery of Ireland. A century ago, it led to the first Olympic medal of the new Free State. With calls for the creative arts to return as a competitive dimension of the Olympics, this episode explores Jack B. Yeats and the cultural and political context of his win. Support TCB at www.patreon.com/threecastlesburning

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Nothing Highfalutin: The Brilliance of Hilary Heron (with Billy Shortall) show art Nothing Highfalutin: The Brilliance of Hilary Heron (with Billy Shortall)

Three Castles Burning

At the Irish Museum of Modern Art, a new exhibition explores the life and work of artist Hilary Heron.  Like many, I came away from it amazed that this important modernist sculptor was not better known here. Born in Dublin in 1923, her work achieved international recognition in her own lifetime. Dr. Billy Shortall is the author of an essay on Heron in the exhibition catalogue, and has done great work to bring her back to  deserved prominence. An article by Billy on Heron can be read at Support TCB:  

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On Tommie Potts and The Liffey Banks (with Martin Hayes) show art On Tommie Potts and The Liffey Banks (with Martin Hayes)

Three Castles Burning

More than just one of Ireland's most beloved musicians, Martin Hayes is also the author of Shared Notes: A Musical Journey. In his memoir he introduces us to a host of brilliant characters, ranging from childhood friends and relations in East Clare to those who would become central to The Gloaming. One figure we meet is Tommie Potts, a Dublin firefighter from the Coombe and a fiddle player. The Liffey Banks remains a beloved record. In this excerpt from a conversation at London's Féile MOTH, Hayes discusses Potts and revisits a tune that means much to him.  

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More Episodes

This year marks the 40th anniversary of Red Roses For Me, the first album from The Pogues. Borrowing its title from Sean O'Casey, it also carries literary influences like Ulysses and Brendan Behan proudly. As an exhibition on the London-Irish currently runs in Dublin's EPIC emigration museum, what better time to discuss this defining London-Irish band who still mean so much? Here Comes Everybody by James Fearnley (Faber & Faber) is available now.