Tag Archives: music

Council speaks out on busking rules

TDR The Liffey

Dublin City Council has issued a statement on the proposed new rules on busking in the city. What do you think?

Currently no regulation exists to control Busking and Street Performance in Dublin City and the Council has been actively pursuing this issue over the last two years, it was agreed that bye laws were necessary.

Following a public consultation process for the Draft Bye Laws, a total of 88 submissions were received from performers, residents, business owners and city workers. The vast majority welcomed regulation with the main problem cited as noise.  A lot of people visiting and working in the City find the noise levels very invasive.

At a special meeting of its Strategic Policy Committee for Arts, Culture, Recreation and Community held earlier this week, Dublin City Council considered these draft Bye Laws to regulate street performance in the City and the various suggestions and responses received from the public.

The Committee agreed to recommend the proposed bye laws to the full City Council for final ratification at its upcoming meeting in February.

Cllr Mary Freehill, Chairperson of the Strategic Policy Committee , “I welcome this proposed regulation that will make for a more balanced, fair and level playing pitch both for performers and City Centre dwellers, business and workers. I am very pleased that we also agreed that the Bye Laws will be reviewed six months after implementation. We will invite public comment in September and responses will be reviewed by this Strategic Policy Committee in October. The review will particularly focus on the management and workability of the sound levels proposed.”

 

The draft bye laws propose the following (revisions to previous draft bye laws)

  • Issuing of permits for performing, maximum noise level of 80 decibels – performance time frame 11am to 11p.m.

 

  • A person may only perform for a maximum of two hours on the same site and  not perform twice in the same location within a 24 hour period

 

  • Performers must be 3 meters away from business entrances/dwellings.

 

  • Compliance will be monitored by Dublin City Council on a regular basis

 

  • Ban on dangerous props has been removed and a requirement to hold public liability insurance has been included.

 

The report submitted to the Strategic Policy Committee (SPC) can be obtained by emailing cra@dublincity.ie  A copy of the draft bye laws which will now be amended to reflect the recommendation of the SPC and submitted to the February meeting of the City Council can also be obtained by emailing cra@dublincity.ie

If ratified by the City Council the bye laws will take legal effect in March.

Hudson Taylor to release album in March

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Hudson Taylor will release their debut album Singing For Strangers through Polydor on March 23rd. The Dublin duo, brothers Harry and Alfie, have amassed a huge underground following over a series of well-received EPs and singles and the 18-track album is a perfect honing of their breezy, beguiling folk-pop. “We want to be able to look back in a few years’ time and be proud of our songs,” says Alfie. “Our music is raw and folky, like Crosby, Stills and Nash or Simon & Garfunkel. We’re really coming into our own and we’ve been recording some great stuff,” adds Harry. The pair have also announced a mammoth UK and Irish tour to take place throughout February.

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They have certainly been hanging round in the right circles: they supported Jake Bugg on his arena tour earlier this year and ended up performing twice in one day when they played with the Rolling Stones in Hyde Park. Harry and Alfie spent the majority of 2014 putting the finishing touches on Singing For Strangers, which follows the critically-acclaimed singles Chasing Rubies, Battles and Weapons. The record was produced by the band and long-term collaborator Iain Archer with help from Mike Einziger and Danton Supple in London, LA & Eastbourne.

Over the course of their EP and single releases, Hudson Taylor have garnered a dedicated following and their Youtube and Vevo videos have had almost five million views. February and March will see the band play some of their biggest headline slots yet, with the tour including dates at London’s Shepherds Bush Empire and Dublin’s Olympia Theatre. The band’s live shows have been met with an increasingly fevered reaction. “We want to be known as a live band,” says Harry. “We plan on touring constantly – forever.” Hudson Taylor are on the brink of a big breakthrough. The stage is set.

Listen up here!

The Band will also be heading out on their biggest headline tour to date in February, dates below.

Headline Tour Dates:

Sun 1st Feb 2015            Edinburgh          The Caves
Tue 3rd Feb 2015            Newcastle          Riverside
Wed 4th Feb 2015           Leeds                Brudenell Social Club
Thu 5th Feb 2015            Sheffield             Plug
Sat 7th Feb 2015             Manchester       Academy 2
Sun 8th Feb 2015            Birmingham       Library
Mon 9th Feb 2015           Nottingham        Rescue Rooms
Tue 10th Feb 2015          Cambridge         Junction 2
Thu 12th Feb 2015          London              O2 Shepherds Bush Empire
Fri 13th Feb 2015            Brighton             Concorde 2
Sun 15th Feb 2015          Oxford               O2 Academy 2
Mon 16th Feb 2015         Falmouth           Princess Pavilion
Wed 18th Feb 2015         Exeter               Phoenix
Thu 19th Feb 2015          Bristol               Trinity Centre
Fri 20th Feb 2015            Liverpool           O2 Academy 2
Sat 21st Feb 2015           Belfast              Mandela Hall
Mon 23rd Feb 2015         Galway             Roisin Dubh
Tue 24th Feb 2015          Dundalk            Spirit Store
Thu 26th Feb 2015          Dublin               Olympia Theatre
Fri 27th Feb 2015            Kilkenny            Set Theatre
Sat 28th Feb 2015           Limerick            Dolan’s
Sun 1st Mar 2015            Cork                 Savoy

Tickets are available from www.hudsontaylormusic.com/gigs

The Dublin Reporter chats with Ger Eton from the Marionettes

by Barry Dickson

Tipped by the press as being ‘the future sound of Irish Music’, Dublin’s Les Marionettes are up to the challenge…they have just released their new E.P Meet My Generation on Saturday past at Dublin’s Grand Social.

The band Members are Keith Farrell, Ger Eaton, Derren Dempsey & Lucy Coady.

Keith Farrell & Ger Eaton have been familiar faces on the Irish music scene for a number of years now. Between them, they have played with Mundy, Cathy Davey, Duke Special, Fionn Regan and Jack L. These collaborations have seen them play Drums at Glastonbury, Bass Guitar at Slane Castle & Harmonium on Later with Jools Holland……

Indeed these experiences would satisfy most of their contemporaries, but their desire to create the perfect pop record has brought them to form ‘Les Marionettes’.

I caught up with them to find out more…