My Irish Radio Music and Culture News

Guinness, Gigs, And Government: What Could Possibly Go Wrong


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A country can’t stand still when its music evolves, its courts reset the rules, and its people demand answers. We dive into Ireland’s living tension—preserving what makes the culture sing while reshaping the systems that guide the next generation.

We start with the soundscape: Deirdre Masterson’s timeless clarity, Alana Thornburg’s collaborative edge with Faro, and Aaron Ruth’s self-funded statement that tradition is a platform, not a fence. Hot Press spotlights a wave of artists, from the electrifying Brick Nasty to Lankum’s drone-heavy postfolk that proves ballads can be both ancient and unsettling. Institutions keep pace, too. The National Symphony Chorus Ireland marks forty years, while the National Concert Hall’s 2025 Bursary Awards back violinist Sam Monadero Egan and soprano Deirdre Ereton. Belfast prepares to honor James Galway, and Kneecap’s leap into a fine art exhibition shows how quickly cultural lines redraw.

Then the ground shifts. The UK Supreme Court mandates a broader religious education curriculum in Northern Ireland, pushing schools toward multi-faith literacy and testing long-held norms. Survivors of church abuse press for a public inquiry, insisting that delays compound harm. The Irish government’s spending choices tell their own story: $50 million for regional connectivity and a new theater in Newry, and a landmark land acquisition at Castletown House to secure the physical archive of heritage. With Simon Harris stepping into finance leadership and unemployment ticking up to 5.3 percent, policy priorities around housing and cost of living take center stage.

On screen, House of Guinness earns buzz for marrying period grandeur with modern power struggles, while filming wraps on a Liam Neeson project confronting the Tuam Babies tragedy—art pushing national memory into daylight. We close with community resilience after a heartbreaking crash in Louth, a reminder that culture, law, and economics ultimately answer to human need. If this journey through music, policy, and memory resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review—what should Ireland protect first, and what must change now?

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Script compiled and read with voices from NotebookLM

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My Irish Radio Music and Culture NewsBy My Irish Radio