Ted Tocks Covers - Year 9 - Day 22
The Foggy Dew
Those who sacrificed everything on Easter Monday, 1916 were forever remembered by Canon Charles OâNeill.
âFor slavery fled, O glorious dead, when you fell in the foggy dew!â
#CanonCharlesONeill #TheChieftains #SineadOConnor #TheDubliners #LukeKelly #TheClancyBrothers #TommyMakem #WolfeTones #CelticThunder #ColmMcGuinness #DaoiriFarrell #Odetta #TheSnakeCharmer #U2 #TheCranberries

Long before U2 wrote âSunday Bloody Sundayâ a 32-year-old Catholic priest named Canon Charles OâNeill wrote âThe Foggy Dewâ. The title is symbolic. It speaks to a movement that helped to estaâŠ
The Wild Rover
Thinking back to yesterdayâs EAS 2025 social event, I think the song that attracted the greatest degree of audience participation was this one. Itâs very well-known and the chorus is great for a singalong. Anyone who has any Irish relatives â especially an uncle with a fondness for the drink â will certainly have heard this!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6DnR8v7X4zc
P.S. It wasnât sung by the Luke Kelly and the Dubliners last night.
đșđŠ #NowPlaying on #BBC6Music's #CerysMatthews
The Dubliners:
đ” The Rocky Road to Dublin
https://woodenelephants.bandcamp.com/track/rocky-road-to-dublin
from the album Shina
Finneganâs Wake â The Dubliners
Taking a short break of examination duties I thought I would post this version of the song Finneganâs Wake. It was first published in America in the mid-19th century, it is a ballad about the wake of a hod-carrier by the name of Tim Finnegan who is too fond of whiskey. One day, with a hangover, he falls off a ladder and dies. His wake gets a bit rowdy and eventually a bottle of whiskey is thrown over his body, which brings him miraculously back to life.
Itâs been in my mind since I got talking at lunch with some colleagues a while ago about James Joyceâs famous novel Finneganâs Wake largely because of the connection with particle physics via the word âquarkâ and thence to the Arthurian legends; for more of that see here. Anyway, one of the people there knew the song on which Joyce based his book and proceeded to sing a few verses of it, much to the surprise of the people sitting around us.
The interesting thing about the title is that Joyce dropped the apostrophe so it is not really about the wake of Tim Finnegan but lots of Finnegans waking up. The implication is that, in a way, weâre all Tim Finnegan. Thatâs exactly the sort of play on words â or in this case play on punctuation â that Joyce revelled in and with which Finnegans Wake is peppered.
Another reason for posting this is for a chance to see the iconic beards of the Dubliners, especially lead singer Ronnie Drew. Enjoy!
Something I've only just discovered: Luke Kelly was a card-carrying member of the Communist Party of Great Britain, and became an active participant in left-wing organisations such as the Young Communist League and the Connolly Association in England.
Fuair Bernard NoĂ«l âBanjo Barneyâ McKenna bĂĄs ar an 5Ăș lĂĄ de MhĂ an AibreĂĄn 2012. CeoltĂłir agus ball de The Dubliners a bhĂ ann. Sheinn sĂ© an bainseĂł tenor agus an mandolin.
#CeoilNahĂireann #BarneyMcKenna #BaileĂthaCliath #TheDubliners #Gaeilge #Gaeilinn
Bernard NoĂ«l âBanjo Barneyâ McKenna died on 5th April 2012. He was a musician and a much-loved founding member of The Dubliners. He played the tenor banjo, mandolin and melodeon. He was most renowned as a banjo player.
#Ireland #IrishHistory #IrishMusic #BarneyMcKenna #TheDubliners #Dublin #OnThisDay