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  2. God Save Ireland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_Save_Ireland

    The song was sung at football matches by fans of Celtic F.C. and the Republic of Ireland team. [citation needed] The melody of the chorus was adapted for "Ally's Tartan Army", the Scotland national football team's anthem for the FIFA World Cup 1978, this was itself adapted as the chorus of "Put 'Em Under Pressure", the anthem for the Republic of Ireland team for the FIFA World Cup 1990.

  3. List of Irish ballads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Irish_ballads

    "Arthur McBride" – an anti-recruiting song from Donegal, probably originating during the 17th century. [1]"The Recruiting Sergeant" – song (to the tune of "The Peeler and the Goat") from the time of World War 1, popular among the Irish Volunteers of that period, written by Séamus O'Farrell in 1915, recorded by The Pogues.

  4. Dear Old Ireland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dear_Old_Ireland

    Dear Old Ireland (also known as "Ireland Boys Hurrah!") is an Irish folk song of the nineteenth century. Its lyrics were written by nationalist politician and journalist Timothy Daniel Sullivan , [ 1 ] who also wrote " God Save Ireland ".

  5. The Patriot Game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Patriot_Game

    The song concerns an incident during the Border Campaign launched by the Irish Republican Army during the 1950s. It was written by Dominic Behan, younger brother of playwright Brendan Behan, to the tune of an earlier folksong, "One Morning in May" (recorded by Jo Stafford and Burl Ives as "The Nightingale"). [3]

  6. The Wearing of the Green - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wearing_of_the_Green

    The general format is that the narrator is a rebel who has left Ireland for exile and meets a public figure (Napper Tandy, in most versions), who asks for news from Ireland, and is told that those wearing green are being persecuted. Halliday Sparling's Irish Minstrelsy (1888) includes the anonymous "Green upon the Cape", dated to 1798. [3]

  7. Dick Farrelly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Farrelly

    Richard Farrelly (17 February 1916 – 11 August 1990) was an Irish songwriter, policeman and poet, composer of "The Isle of Innisfree", the song for which he is best remembered. His parents were publicans and when Farrelly was twenty-three he left Kells, County Meath for Dublin to join the Irish Police Force.

  8. Four Green Fields - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Green_Fields

    Four Green Fields is a 1967 folk song by Irish musician Tommy Makem, described in The New York Times as a "hallowed Irish leave-us-alone-with-our-beauty ballad." [1] Of Makem's many compositions, it has become the most familiar, and is part of the common repertoire of Irish folk musicians.

  9. Grace (Jim McCann song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grace_(Jim_McCann_song)

    In 2016 a recording was made by an Irish band Glaslevin as a fund-raiser for Celtic F.C.'s ultras supporters group Green Brigade, and in February 2024 members of the group were being encouraged to sing the song as a gesture of support for Palestine, with a statement: "'Grace' is a song of love, hope, loss, pain, steadfastness, resistance and ...

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