Irish

Timmy the Brit Comes Home

June 19th, 2008 by Steve Bowbrick

Here's a gorgeous, dreamy doc from RTE. It's about a teacher of Irish dance born in Britain and returning to the bottom left-hand corner of Ireland to pursue his passion, but you really don't need to know that. You could easily listen without knowing a thing about the subject matter. You could tune out and enjoy the layered mix of voice and music , memory and emotion—it's like ambient music. Or you could pay attention and enjoy the story of Timmy "The Brit" McCarthy, Irish dancer.

I'm linking to RTE's MP3 because the Irish aren't encumbered by a Trust and a bunch of service definitions that require them to delete their MP3s after a week. Let's hope they don't change their minds.

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The Look of The Irish

April 28th, 2008 by Steve Bowbrick

Over at RTE Ronan Kelly has got a bit of an NPR thing going on. He's making documentaries that have that disarming, dreamy feel that I expect from the best output of American public radio stations like Chicago Public Radio and WNYC. Here's a really excellent show that went out around Paddy's Day in March about being Irish. Not being Irish in the hard-hitting sociological-analytical kind of way but being Irish in the allusive, poetic kind of way. This is open-ended, discursive radio that rarely arrives at a conclusion. Stories don't resolve neatly, segments are loosely-linked, themes approximate.

Some people really don't like this. They find it lazy and purposeless and want something tougher and better organised. Sometimes I agree but that's mostly because it's such a difficult technique to get right. It would be very easy to make something slack and undemanding from this material. I'd like to hear more like it in Britain, though. I'd like to hear what would happen if some of Britain's factual radio talent was let off the hook a bit and allowed to play. With the occasional exception on Radio 3, though, the BBC's really too uptight to create such loosely-structured radio here. I think Feedback would be swamped if Mark Damazer routinely ran shows like Kelly's (or like This American Life or Radio Lab, for that matter). Pity.

Anyway, this show is full of good stories. In one segment some really good material comes from the simple device of phoning people up who happen to be called 'Patrick Day'. A treat (MP3).

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