Search Results for 'European folklore'

10 results found.

Scottish Trad Innovators Project Smok to Bring Contemporary Style to Monroe’s Live

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Haunting, melodic and bordering on the unconventional, Project Smok are an innovative Scottish trad band, who are blurring the boundaries between the traditional and the modern. Known for their ability to effortlessly blend trad music with contemporary new-age pop influences, Project Smok draw inspiration from indie pop acts like The 1975, LANY and Bon Iver, to more time-honoured, West Coast styles of playing.

Aleksandr Nisse to play Galway Cathedral tonight

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Aleksandr Nisse, Titular Organist at Dublin’s Pro-Cathedral, gives the next concert in Galway Cathedral’s summer series, playing an organ recital on Thursday 4 August at 8:00pm.

Ballinasloe Panto presents ‘Little Red Riding Hood’

Ballinasloe Panto is currently presenting its very own version of the classic Little Red Riding Hood, with several dates and shows still remaining.

Expressions School of Speech and Drama presents ‘Elf Junior’

Caroline Cunningham established Expressions School of Speech and Drama more than 10 years ago and it has grown and developed over those years into the fantastic facility it is today.

Away with the fairies - Human Child

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Come away, O human child!

Away with the fairies - Human Child

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Come away, O human child!

The dark power of the supernatural

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ONE OF the most sensational murder trials in late 19th century Ireland was that of Bridget Cleary in 1895, who was burned alive by her husband and cousins, who sincerely believed she was a ‘changeling’.

‘A degree of darkness in the mind’

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Remarkably, and that is a word already used in this drama, the court accepted Michael Cleary’s plea of manslaughter. He was charged with the murder of his wife Bridget by burning her to death, but the jury accepted that Cleary had really believed that his wife had been transformed into a ‘changeling’ by the fairies; and it was only a concoction of herbs and fire that would release her from its spell.

‘Amongst Hottentots one would not expect to hear of such an occurrence’

When the Kilkenny essayist Herbert Butler came to write about the burning of Bridget Cleary in 1960 he acknowledged that Slievenaman was always known for its mysterious past. Looking across the Tipperary border from his fields, he described it as ‘a pale blue hump with the soft, rounded contours of ancient hills whose roughness have been smoothed away by time. Finn MacCool lived there as did Oisin and Oscar, and 50 beautiful maidens, who gave it its name The Mountain of Women.’ In Bridget Cleary’s time, it was also the home of Denis Ganey, the local herbal doctor, and a man respected and feared for his knowledge of fairylore. It was to this house that Michael Cleary ran to on the afternoon of Thursday March 14 1895. He pleaded for a cure for his wife whom he believed had been taken by the fairies, and replaced by a woman that was not the Bridget Boland he had married.

Selkie comes to land at The Barn

Through the ages, from Maine to our own stormy shores, stories are told of seals shedding their skins and becoming women…and of fishermen falling in love with them.

 

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