My Irish Radio Music and Culture News – Details, episodes & analysis
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My Irish Radio Music and Culture News
My Irish Radio
Frequency: 1 episode/4d. Total Eps: 45

Step into the sound of Ireland with My Irish Radio Music and Culture News — the official podcast of My Irish Radio, your 24/7 home for the best in Irish and Celtic music.
Each episode brings you the latest news from Ireland’s vibrant music scene and cultural community — from new artist releases and upcoming festivals to stories celebrating Irish heritage across the globe.
Whether you love traditional reels and jigs, rebel ballads, pub favorites, or Irish rock and pop, you’ll find it all here — along with updates on what’s happening in Irish culture today.
🎧 Listen 24/7 at MyIrishRadio.com
for nonstop Irish and Celtic music — new and old, from Ireland and beyond.
And here’s your chance to take part:
💚 Host your own show!
Choose your playlist, share your passion, and make My Irish Radio — Your Irish Radio.
Email myirishradio@gmail.com
to get started.
Keep the spirit of Ireland alive — in every song, every story, every show.
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Ireland Now: Roots, Stadiums, And Strategy
samedi 15 novembre 2025 • Duration 14:34
Stadium anthems, language festivals, and a boom in Irish horror might sound like separate worlds, but they’re threads in the same tapestry: a country pairing deep roots with a confident global push. We walk through the week’s biggest cultural signals, from Westlife’s ten-night Three Arena run to the Cork Jazz talent pipeline, and unpack why those headlines matter beyond the music pages. The result is a snapshot of Ireland as both heritage guardian and export powerhouse.
We dig into how Culture Ireland’s €1.1 million investment across 33 countries turns art into strategy—spanning dance, film, literature, opera, theater, music, and visual arts—and why that breadth builds durable soft power. Along the way, we spotlight emerging acts pulling from folk textures and cinematic myth, and we connect those creative choices to a wider shift: artists speaking a global language without losing local flavor. That’s part of the reason Irish horror is traveling so well right now; it meshes commercial universality with folklore, landscape, and atmosphere that feel unmistakably Irish.
Culture doesn’t stop at the stage or screen. We explore the living force of the Irish language at major festivals, the public reverence for figures like Manchán Magan, and the way diaspora initiatives such as Digital Irish Tech Week convert identity into economic networks. Even local governance—the canceled Limerick Christmas market—signals rising standards that echo across culinary ambition and event quality. Tying it all together, we examine the idea of vibes-based politics, where sentiment and authenticity shape outcomes as much as policy lines, and ask whether cultural output is now feeding the national mood that guides the vote.
If you care about Irish music, film, language, or the mechanics of cultural soft power, this conversation brings clarity and context. Hit follow, share with a friend who loves Ireland’s sound and story, and leave a quick review to help more listeners find the show.
Your source for Irish music and culture news! Tune in for the latest in Irish and Celtic music, festivals, and heritage. Listen 24/7 at MyIrishRadio.com — and host your own show! Email myirishradio@gmail.com
From trad to rock — Ireland’s soundtrack lives here.
Listen worldwide at MyIrishRadio.com
Script compiled and read with voices from NotebookLM
How Music, Politics, And Diaspora Are Rewriting Ireland’s Story
jeudi 30 octobre 2025 • Duration 14:01
Episode 001 - 10-29-2025
Two tracks, one story: Ireland is celebrating its roots while reinventing its voice in real time. We map the surge from Westlife’s ten-night 3Arena milestone to the grit of Dublin drill, alongside tender singer-songwriter releases that keep vulnerability and identity at the center. The cultural stakes rise as Catherine Connolly steps in as president, Michael D. Higgins’ health draws attention, and ongoing debates about immigration and belonging pressure-test the national mood.
We follow the heat around festivals and discovery—Cork Jazz drawing six-figure crowds, a Battle of the Bands opening doors, and Borderline spotlighting emerging acts—showing how Ireland keeps the pipeline flowing. Then we widen the lens: Liam Neeson’s South Sudan visit turns cultural capital into humanitarian focus, while Culture Ireland’s call for curators to shape the 2027 Venice Architecture Pavilion asks a bigger question: which stories of tradition and modernity will define Ireland’s future image? Fresh acclaim for Dan Colley and the Lost Lear Company and renewed interest in the Guinness dynasty underscore how past and present keep sparking new work.
Diaspora threads hold fast in Boston, where GAA championships and investment in the Irish Cultural Center make heritage a daily practice. And the soundtrack fits the journey: the Irish Lassies’ Immigration Stories fuses Appalachian and Celtic folk to honor movement, loss, and home-making. Through music, politics, architecture, and sport, we bring you a clear, connected briefing on where Ireland stands—and where it’s headed. If you enjoyed this cultural deep dive, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help others find us.
Your source for Irish music and culture news! Tune in for the latest in Irish and Celtic music, festivals, and heritage. Listen 24/7 at MyIrishRadio.com — and host your own show! Email myirishradio@gmail.com
From trad to rock — Ireland’s soundtrack lives here.
Listen worldwide at MyIrishRadio.com
Script compiled and read with voices from NotebookLM
Grammy Nods, Shoegaze Sellouts, And A Pony Walk Into A Pub
lundi 17 novembre 2025 • Duration 14:31
A wave of wins, a new oath of office, and a viral jig—this week’s story of Ireland moves fast and cuts deep. We trace the lines from indie-pop polish and shoegaze legends to classical compositions earning Grammy nods, then follow that momentum into the civic arena as Catherine Connolly’s inauguration reframes the national mood. Along the way, Other Voices expands its mission with a new stage built for exchange, and Irish dancing pros show how tradition thrives when it meets the right platform, taking centuries of craft into TikTok-fueled liftoff.
We dig into the real engine behind the headlines: infrastructure. From Cork’s grassroots pride and Galway gigs to Dublin’s arena readiness, the scene shows maturity across venues and audiences. Danny Larkin’s evolving conversation with a classic hymn exemplifies how artists honor roots without turning into museum pieces. And the sports desk mirrors the same optimism—Portugal toppled at the Aviva, a decider with Hungary on deck, and the U17s proving the development pipeline is working.
Heritage takes tangible shape at the new Connemara Pony Heritage Center, tying a native breed to ecology, tourism, and regional identity. We also face the hard context that rounds out the national picture: flooding from Storm Claudia and a difficult safeguarding disclosure from the Presbyterian Church in Northern Ireland. All of it feeds one core question we leave on the table: should cultural strategy lean on physical anchors or digital reach? Our take points to a blend—festivals that program for streamability, heritage sites that seed creator content, and artists who treat archives as launch pads, not cages.
If this kind of connected storytelling helps you see Ireland’s big picture, tap follow, share with a friend who loves Irish culture, and leave a quick review with your favorite moment from the show.
Your source for Irish music and culture news! Tune in for the latest in Irish and Celtic music, festivals, and heritage. Listen 24/7 at MyIrishRadio.com — and host your own show! Email myirishradio@gmail.com
From trad to rock — Ireland’s soundtrack lives here.
Listen worldwide at MyIrishRadio.com
Script compiled and read with voices from NotebookLM
Guinness, Guitars, And Government Money Walk Into A Bar
mardi 13 janvier 2026 • Duration 15:29
Irish culture is moving with uncommon speed and clarity—trad bands storming streaming charts, packed live rooms humming from Dublin to abroad, and a confident voice shaping books and prestige TV. We connect the big picture: how grassroots energy, smart public investment, and global recognition are fusing into a genuine cultural surge rather than a passing trend.
We start with the sound: 22 Irish acts landing in the top 100 streams signals a shift in listening habits and identity. Names like Kneecap, Sprints, Kingfisher, Lankum, and Fontaine’s D.C. map a spectrum where folk lineage and post‑punk edge fuel mass appeal. The live circuit stays vibrant with TradFest on the horizon and steady new releases, while international headliners treating Dublin as a must-play confirm Ireland as both scene and destination.
Follow the money and the validation. Culture Ireland’s funding—over €1.1 million for 129 projects across 33 countries—turns momentum into a plan for cultural export and soft power. UNESCO status for Gracehill anchors heritage in the global canon, bolstering tourism and scholarship and reinforcing confidence at home. Meanwhile, the diaspora keeps culture alive in everyday life, right down to care settings where music and stories help preserve memory and dignity.
Stories travel, too. A fertile pipeline of debut authors signals deep creative health, and House of Guinness shows how local history becomes premium global IP by blending period sweep with contemporary tension. All of this rises alongside tough realities: a shifting political landscape that can reshape priorities, and urgent debates around AI misuse brought to parliament by the Gardaí. The throughline is a blueprint—legacy plus access, investment plus ethics, pride plus policy. Are we watching Ireland evolve from cultural exporter to creative capital?
If you enjoy the show, follow, share with a friend who loves Irish music and culture, and leave a quick review—what part of the surge excites you most?
Your source for Irish music and culture news! Tune in for the latest in Irish and Celtic music, festivals, and heritage. Listen 24/7 at MyIrishRadio.com — and host your own show! Email myirishradio@gmail.com
From trad to rock — Ireland’s soundtrack lives here.
Listen worldwide at MyIrishRadio.com
Script compiled and read with voices from NotebookLM
Streams, Reels, And Really Old Things Found By Farmers
vendredi 9 janvier 2026 • Duration 16:53
Irish music is exploding on the world stage while Ireland doubles down on protecting its past—two stories that are shaping one powerful cultural moment. We pull together hard data, fresh releases, and heritage milestones to show how a small island is making a big, strategic impact.
We start with the numbers behind 2025’s surge: Amble’s breakout album Reverie, Fontaine’s DC holding top-selling status for a second year, and the steady global pull of Hosier and CMAT. Then we jump into the creative frontiers—Child of Prague’s turbocharged instrumental fire, Thumper’s raw rock intensity, and Seamus Fogarty’s atmospheric storytelling—while spotlighting how artists like Kyson Point blend folk roots with modern textures. The thread running through it all is authenticity, from Kneecap’s Irish-language political hip-hop to the fearless genre mixing that keeps listeners leaning in.
Zooming out, we connect artistry to infrastructure. Culture Ireland functions as a smart export engine, supporting established names and elevating rising voices through showcases and tours. On the heritage side, Gracehill’s new UNESCO World Heritage Status secures global recognition and funding for a rare 18th-century planned settlement, while local discoveries like Bronze Age axe heads keep history vivid and close. Memory lives in the present too, with a look at the Miami Showband Massacre anniversary and the unresolved questions it still raises.
This is a clear picture of synergy: contemporary success grows from respected roots, and heritage gains new urgency through living art. Along the way, we consider the social and economic context—political reflection, cost-of-living pressures, and tourism gains tied directly to cultural storytelling. Want more of this world? Subscribe, share with a friend who loves Irish music, and leave a quick review to help others find the show. What should Ireland prioritize next: sustaining global buzz or securing ancient sites? Tell us your take.
Your source for Irish music and culture news! Tune in for the latest in Irish and Celtic music, festivals, and heritage. Listen 24/7 at MyIrishRadio.com — and host your own show! Email myirishradio@gmail.com
From trad to rock — Ireland’s soundtrack lives here.
Listen worldwide at MyIrishRadio.com
Script compiled and read with voices from NotebookLM
How Celtic Throne Blends Irish Dance, Cinematic Music, And Epic History
mardi 9 décembre 2025 • Duration 31:43
An Irish dance show with a beating heart, a cinematic spine, and a family’s will to make culture live—Celtic Throne 2 takes center stage. We welcome lead dancer Jude and producer George to pull back the curtain on how a homegrown troupe turned years of training, cross-discipline grit, and a fierce love of heritage into a touring spectacle that’s winning over audiences across the UK and the U.S.
We trace the origins from Oklahoma to Britain, where Jude trained under Riverdance great John Carey, and into a creative process that treats Irish dance like high storytelling. Golden Globe–nominated composer Brian Byrne scores the production with sweeping, film-ready music, while an LED backdrop sets the scene for battles, councils, and journeys. The narrative follows Olam, an ancient sage who carries culture from Jerusalem after 586 BC and helps it flower in Ireland, confronting enemies of memory and meaning along the way. It’s not just steps; it’s characters, conflict, and purpose you can feel in the floor.
Beyond the myth, we talk craft: tricking and acrobatics threaded into hardshoe, dancers who also play instruments, and a family army backstage stitching costumes, loading LEDs, and keeping a 40-person cast moving. The UK crowds were tough and thrilled—some even called the show better than Riverdance—fueling a winter run through the Midwest with an eye on a summer tour. If you’re ready to experience Irish dance with cinematic power and a story that fights for what matters, grab tickets at CelticThrone.com, dive into the YouTube behind-the-scenes, and stream the score to bring the pulse home.
Subscribe, share with a friend who loves live performance, and leave a review to help more people find the show. Got a city we should visit next? Tell us where we should bring Celtic Throne.
Your source for Irish music and culture news! Tune in for the latest in Irish and Celtic music, festivals, and heritage. Listen 24/7 at MyIrishRadio.com — and host your own show! Email myirishradio@gmail.com
From trad to rock — Ireland’s soundtrack lives here.
Listen worldwide at MyIrishRadio.com
Script compiled and read with voices from NotebookLM
Irish Soft Power, Hard Questions
vendredi 5 décembre 2025 • Duration 14:43
Irish music just rewrote the scoreboard. Kneecap outstreamed The Beatles in Ireland, Kingfish topped the year’s plays, and Fontaine’s DC earned major award nods—signals of a confident scene where local taste builds global clout. We trace how this home-first momentum powers a sophisticated export pipeline, why authenticity travels, and how living traditions—from folk revivals to enduring acts like Aslan—anchor the surge with memory and meaning.
The story widens beyond the charts. We examine cultural identity under the spotlight, from reports of a potential Eurovision boycott tied to humanitarian concerns, to the quiet triumph of UNESCO recognition for Gracehill. Heritage and language revival gain ground while film and theater elevate complex narratives, including harrowing survival tales and fresh looks at Irish women’s history abroad. Culture becomes mirror, megaphone, and meeting place for a nation deciding how it wants to be seen and who it wants to be.
Then comes the hard question: what happens when soft power meets hard limits? Housing shortages, infrastructure gaps, and a two-track economy driven by global tech test the foundations beneath the creative boom. We connect the dots between cultural wins and everyday realities, asking how policy, planning, and partnership can turn acclaim into affordability and access. The takeaway is candid and hopeful: Ireland’s voice is stronger than ever, but the chorus needs homes, transit, and spaces to thrive.
If this conversation resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review. Your voice helps this community grow—and keeps the music playing.
Your source for Irish music and culture news! Tune in for the latest in Irish and Celtic music, festivals, and heritage. Listen 24/7 at MyIrishRadio.com — and host your own show! Email myirishradio@gmail.com
From trad to rock — Ireland’s soundtrack lives here.
Listen worldwide at MyIrishRadio.com
Script compiled and read with voices from NotebookLM
Guinness, Gorillas, And A Farmer With Bronze Age Luck
mardi 2 décembre 2025 • Duration 15:28
The week’s stories collide in the best way: a festival bill that pairs Fontaines D.C. with Gorillaz, a hip-hop single that stares down a terrorism case, and a period TV saga pitched as Downton Abbey meets Succession. We follow the energy from main stages to back rooms, from trad on tour in New York and Boston to a harp-and-trad collaboration that treats heritage as a living lab.
We zoom out to the cultural screen, where “House of Guinness” promises ruthless family stakes and sharp humor, and the NUA Collective steps onto a London stage with institutional support from Culture Ireland. That export drive mirrors a push at home: new political momentum for the Irish language, plus documentary makers unsealing brutal chapters like the alleged 61-day live burial of an Irish laborer. The past isn’t quiet anymore; it’s talking back through art, policy, and public memory.
Heritage and law set the scaffolding for what comes next. Gracehill secures UNESCO World Heritage status, while a Westmeath farmer’s anonymous Bronze Age axe-head discovery sparks nationwide protection efforts. The UK Supreme Court’s ruling in Northern Ireland redraws the map for religious education, requiring schools to teach beyond Christianity and nudging classrooms toward genuine pluralism. Add a culturally focused dementia center in Birmingham and a sobering 20 percent drop in Ireland’s birth rate over 11 years, and the stakes are clear: identity, care, and economics are converging. We close by asking where education—North and South—will lead a more diverse island over the next decade.
If you’re into Irish music, screen storytelling, and the policies shaping real lives, this one’s for you. Listen, subscribe, and leave a review with your take on the question we pose at the end—what should schools teach to build a shared Irish identity for the future?
Your source for Irish music and culture news! Tune in for the latest in Irish and Celtic music, festivals, and heritage. Listen 24/7 at MyIrishRadio.com — and host your own show! Email myirishradio@gmail.com
From trad to rock — Ireland’s soundtrack lives here.
Listen worldwide at MyIrishRadio.com
Script compiled and read with voices from NotebookLM
Bob Dylan Tips His Cap, Westlife Breaks The Box Office, And A Metro Meets Its Match
mardi 25 novembre 2025 • Duration 15:57
A rare song choice lights the fuse: Bob Dylan steps into Killarney and revives a Paul Brady classic after 34 years, nodding to the enduring pull of Irish folk. From there we surf the shockwave across a country negotiating spectacle and substance—Westlife’s surging demand, fresh arena dates on the horizon, and a thriving alternative ecosystem where collectives like the Camomil Club give emerging artists the scaffolding to build careers. We talk playlists, pipelines, and why institutional support like National Concert Hall bursaries matters when the box office spins around legacy giants.
We also widen the lens to culture’s architecture. Other Voices keeps access front and center with livestreams from St. James’ Church, and the Dublin Fringe Festival celebrates two decades of practical tools for theater and dance. On screen, House of Guinness channels history with sharp wit, proving that heritage isn’t just preserved—it evolves. Then sport connects the dots globally: a Donegal remembrance for All Blacks captain Dave Gallagher and Olympian Deirdre Duke aiming for an All-Ireland title with London’s Holloway Gales show how diaspora clubs sustain competitive Irish identity far from home.
Modernization tests the social fabric. We unpack the high-stakes legal challenge to Dublin’s 10 billion euro Metrolink, from land acquisition to heritage and environmental review—case by case, the state must weigh national benefit against local cost. In a striking counterbalance, a new cash-access law mandates ATMs within 10 kilometers of most homes and businesses, prioritizing inclusion over pure digital efficiency. Finally, we track two major court stories—the scope of the Deirdre Morley inquest and a reopened 1981 case—reminders that justice in Ireland holds a long memory. Tune in for a clear map of how music, policy, and community negotiate the line between heritage and horizon. If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review to keep the conversation moving.
Your source for Irish music and culture news! Tune in for the latest in Irish and Celtic music, festivals, and heritage. Listen 24/7 at MyIrishRadio.com — and host your own show! Email myirishradio@gmail.com
From trad to rock — Ireland’s soundtrack lives here.
Listen worldwide at MyIrishRadio.com
Script compiled and read with voices from NotebookLM
Guinness, Gigs, And Government: What Could Possibly Go Wrong
jeudi 20 novembre 2025 • Duration 15:17
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?
Your source for Irish music and culture news! Tune in for the latest in Irish and Celtic music, festivals, and heritage. Listen 24/7 at MyIrishRadio.com — and host your own show! Email myirishradio@gmail.com
From trad to rock — Ireland’s soundtrack lives here.
Listen worldwide at MyIrishRadio.com
Script compiled and read with voices from NotebookLM









