Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Capital D Puts Shanganagh House In Limelight


Shankill’s Shanganagh Park House was the subject matter for one of the segments of RTE’s Capital D programme earlier this month.

The house, which is run as a community centre, has seen an upsurge in interested course applicants since the episode was broadcast.

Course co-ordinator Anne Farrell believes the Capital D episode will only enhance the centre’s already growing reputation.

“The publicity really has helped us here”, she says. “A lot of local people didn’t know we were here at all until now and there have been a lot more enquiries about the courses we run here since the programme”.

Although course applicants are on the increase, Anne still thinks that older members of the Shankill community are not being helped enough. “A lot more could be done for the elderly here”, she says. “There are not really any other courses for them in the area, apart from the ones we have here”.

Children’s play groups, adult education classes and senior citizen’s courses are all run in the house every weekday. Situated in the middle of the Rathsallagh estate, the house is ideally located for people in the community to get together on a regular basis.

The massive Georgian house has certainly seen many ups and downs over the years. In 1984 a basement fire destroyed much of the building and it was not opened again until 1987. Another fire in 1992 caused it to close its doors once more. It wasn’t re-opened again until 1993 when president Mary Robinson was on hand to snip the re-opening ribbons.

More than one million euro was spent on refurbishing the house in 2005. Funding was obtained by Dun Laoghaire Rathdown County Council, the Department of Environment and Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

KNEEL: IT’S MR. YOUNG



Neil Young rocked Dublin on June 29th with a blast of a show at Malahide Castle. The sunny, rainless weather was absolutely perfect for an outdoor concert and the 21,000 or so fans lapped up every minute of it.

Neil Young’s concerts really depend on what mood you get him in. Not up for it and he will plough through the set with hardly a blink in the audiences’ direction. He was certainly feeling groovy for this one with sarcastic jibes and slapstick manoeuvres to accompany a plethora of cracking live tracks.

Wearing a paint stained shirt and looking as rugged as ever, Mr Young played like a hurricane on this occasion.

Jumping straight into Love and Only Love from Ragged Glory, Neil chewed up his guitar for ten minutes and proceeded to spit it back out at the mesmerised audience. With an incredible oeuvre to pick from, Mr. Young changed the mood back and forth throughout the gig, switching from electric to acoustic and stopping for a quick organ grind too.

While the electric stuff, including My My, Hey Hey, Spirit Road and Powderfinger was top-notch, the mellower parts of the show were on another level altogether. Acoustic versions of Old Man, The Needle and the Damage Done and Unknown Legend were simply spine-tingling. Sitting behind the organ for Mother Earth, Neil reminded us of just how musically gifted he actually is.

With wife Peggy on backing vocals to lend support, Neil was in his element. Minus any strong Irish winds he swayed the crowd with his awesome talent alone.

Finishing the main part of the concert with an astonishing version of No Hidden Path, Neil was persuaded by the chanting spectators to perform one more song in an extremely short encore. A brilliant, roaring, up-tempo version of The Beatles’ A Day in the Life ended the proceedings for the night. Then this well known legend popped off stage and let the crowd disperse to hum and sing his tunes on the way home.