Ad
related to: flogging molly christmas song
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Music videos 8 The discography of Flogging Molly , an Irish-American Celtic punk band, consists of seven studio albums , three live albums , one extended play , fifteen singles and eight music videos .
Flogging Molly is an Irish-American seven-piece Celtic punk band formed in Los Angeles in 1994, led by Irish vocalist Dave King, formerly of the hard rock band Fastway. They are signed to their own record label , Borstal Beat Records.
On March 20, 2024, Dave and Flogging Molly covered The Pogues' "The Old Main Drag" at the Sinéad & Shane (billed as "a St. Paddy's Celebration of Sinéad O'Connor and Shane MacGowan") at Carnegie Hall concert in New York City. [5] Flogging Molly followed up their summer 2024 European tour with a headlining run in the US in September/October. [6]
Flogging Molly was due to kick off a Road to Rebellion tour in the U.S. later this month. The tour was scheduled to begin in St. Petersburg, Fla., on Feb. 24 and end in Tucson, Ariz., on March 12.
"Return to Molly Malone's", a piece on a concert which Flogging Molly performed on Saint Patrick's Day at Molly Malone's Pub in Los Angeles, where the band first played. "Rebels of the Sacred Heart", music video with live footage shot at the Wiltern Theater.
The album is the first for the band on Rise Records and reunites them with Steve Albini, who recorded two albums of theirs almost 20 years prior. [1] Edwin McFee of Hot Press reviewed the release, giving it a score of seven out of 10, noting that this album shows off the band's best qualities, without departing from their "tried and trusted style".
"Christmas Is The Time To Say I Love You" Billy Squier: 1980s Rock "What's My Age Again" Blink-182: 1990s Punk "Adam's Song" Blink-182: 2000s Punk "Drunken Lullabies" Flogging Molly: 2000s Punk "Requiem For A Dying Song" Flogging Molly: 2000s Punk "Underneath It All" No Doubt: 2000s Pop "Don't Speak" No Doubt: 1990s Rock "Blue Christmas" The ...
[5] Punknews.org gave the album 5 out of 5 stars and said that "every song is a keeper, without a clunker in the bunch". [3] The review also called "Salty Dog" the "quintessential Flogging Molly song" and noted the album's contrast between aggressive punk-influenced songs and slower ballads like "The Worst Day Since Yesterday".