DECLAN O’ROURKE ANNOUNCES UK SPRING TOUR OF AWARD-WINNING ALBUM ‘CHRONICLES OF THE GREAT IRISH FAMINE’
‘The Great Saint Lawrence River’ from Chronicles nominated in Best Original Song category at the BBC Radio Two Folk Awards 2018.
Chronicles voted Irish album of the year 2017 Irish Mail on Sunday “will surely come to be seen as his defining album.”
Nominated for Album of the year, Critics choice, 2017 – fRoots magazine U.K.
Voted No.1 Folk / Trad release of 2017 – London Celtic Punks webzine.… “An amazing album.”
Voted ‘Album of the year 2017’ by Marty Whelan on RTE Lyric fm… “Truly special.”
★★★★ – Songlines Magazine UK… “Delivered with consummate grace. Beautifully played. Exquisitely detailed.”
Reviewed over 13 consecutive days in ‘The Woodstock Whisperer’ (online publication, NY) “Remarkable.”
Voted one of Irish Beats ‘Best Irish Albums of 2017.’ by Beat FMs Rob O’Connor… “A masterpiece.”
“Epic” – Cara (Aer Lingus inflight magazine).
DECLAN O’ROURKE PLUS FULL BAND UK TOUR APRIL 2018
April 10 Borderline, London
April 11 Greystones, Sheffield.
April 12 The Met, Bury
April 13 Queens Hall, Edinburgh
April 15 Tolbooth, Stirling
Chronicles Of The Great Irish Famine, the brand new album by Declan O’Rourke, was released in October 2017.
Fifteen years in the making, this epic song cycle combines the best of traditional Irish music and the heart of modern song-writing to present a series of extraordinary true tales from the most dynamic period in Irelands history.
‘Poor Boys Shoes’ the first song of the collection, was inspired by a passage from John O’Connor’s book “The Workhouses of Ireland.” O’Rourke recalls, “The hair stood up on my neck when I read the lines ‘The man who carried his wife from the workhouse to their old home, mile after weary mile, and was discovered next morning dead, his wife’s feet held to his breast as if he was trying to warm them…’ I had stumbled into a chapter of history I knew almost nothing about. I wanted to share these stories the best way I knew how, through song.“
The Great Irish Famine, An Gorta Mór, was by far the most impactful era in the recorded history of Ireland. The effect on the population was so devastating that seven generations and 170 years later, Irelands population is still far from where it was in the 1840s. The Famine marked the beginning of a boom in Irish immigration resulting in over 80 million across the world claiming Irish heritage today.
The album covers hyper-real photo illustration features O’Rourke and band members re-enacting a scene from one historical tale. Following the ambush and shooting of the landlord Manning in Co.Westmeath, locals formed a mob, found Manning’s body, hacked the corpse into pieces and threw them into a ditch.
In another story from 1849, the 23 year old captain Curry Shaw abandoned his passengers and made off in the only lifeboat when ‘The Hannah’ struck ice in the frigid waters off Newfoundland. He left them to their fate. In an age where people are still fleeing their homelands en masse, struggling to escape tyranny and poverty, too often in vessels unfit for human transportation, these stories are as relevant as ever and speak to us of our own humanity. Says O’Rourke, “The songs in this project are an attempt to bring fresh air to an unhealed wound, and to remind the Irish people of what we have overcome.”
Nine of the album’s musicians including Mike McGoldrick, Dermot Byrne, Floriane Blancke, Jack Maher, Chris Herzberger, Gino Lupari, Rob Calder and John Sheahan, performed ‘Chronicles’ around Ireland in December 2017 to a standing ovation each night, and will take it abroad throughout 2018 and 2019.
The winter of 2018 will mark the 170th anniversary of the peak of this most significant series of events.
‘Chronicles of the Great Irish Famine’ is available here.
‘Chronicles of the Great Irish Famine’ is available here.







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