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Horslips continued their Celtic Rock style of fusing traditional Irish music and rock, using traditional jigs and reels and incorporating them into their songs. For example, "Dearg Doom" is based on O'Neill's March , while The March of the King of Laois forms part of "More Than You Can Chew".
The last Horslips' event in this phase of their career was a TG4 tribute show recorded and broadcast live on 25 March 2006 before a live invited studio audience. A number of Irish personalities were interviewed, in Irish, about what the band meant to them and how Horslips shaped modern Irish music.
Biography is a greatest hits compilation album by Irish Celtic rock band Horslips.The first disc comprises each of the band's singles that were released in the UK. The second comprises the B-sides to each of those singles, some of which have never been released on CD before.
Happy to Meet – Sorry to Part is the debut album by Irish folk rock band Horslips. It was first released in Ireland in December 1972 as their début album, on their own Oats label (Oats MOO 3). Before this, they had released the same year three singles: Johnny's Wedding/Flower amang Them All and Green Gravel/Fairy King in Ireland and The High ...
The Book of Invasions: A Celtic Symphony is the sixth album by the Irish Celtic rock band Horslips. It was a concept album based on an adaptation of Irish legends built into a complex story. It is named for the Lebor Gabála Érenn , a book of Irish mythology known as The Book of Invasions in English.
Dancehall Sweethearts is the name of the third studio album by Irish rock band Horslips.Recorded during the 1974 World Cup Finals, the songs were loosely based on the travels of the famed 18th century blind harper, Turlough O' Carolan.
He was in the pioneering Irish Celtic rock band Horslips as bass player, vocalist and front man. [2] After the breakup of Horslips, Devlin released the 1983 solo album Breaking Star Codes. Horslips reunited from 2004 - 2006, [3] and again from 2009 - 2019. He has directed for the screen, producing a number of U2 videos in the 1980s. [1]
Occult Hymn is the only EP by Danger Doom, released in 2006 as the follow-up to their debut album, The Mouse and the Mask. [4] It contains seven tracks and was released as a free download on Adult Swim's website on May 30, 2006. Its name is a reference to a line in Danger Doom's song "A.T.H.F.", and intentionally rhymes with "Adult Swim."