*** RESCHEDULED DATE***
Enthusiastic Eunuch Presents
Poor Creature
+ special guests tba
The Button Factory
Saturday 4th April
Tickets ā¬22.50 via
https://billetto.ie/e/poor-creature-tickets-1287945
History is a chronological timeline, often misinterpreted and disputed. Rooted in landscape and geography, people and moments, it thrives on contradiction: victors and losers, mythology and reality. Within that landscape, songs are arguably subject to even more contrasts. Songs that have existed for centuries can seem immutable and anchored to time. A new generation of Irish musicians are keen to acknowledge that musical legacy, while reimagining the songs within a contemporary context.
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Poor Creature are one such, a trio comprised of Ruth Clinton, Cormac MacDiarmada and John Dermody. All three are members of other bands (Landless and Lankum respectively) who have built a large following on re-interpreting songs from the past. They formed during lockdown and the original line-up was initially just Ruth and Cormac. āRuth and I had played together a lot before and then lockdown hit. Suddenly we had a load of time at home with a room full of instruments, so it started from there,ā says Cormac. The decision was also not a conscious one, adds Ruth: āWe never said: āletās start a bandā it was more āletās arrange this songā and see what happens.ā
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Their first gigs were online during the pandemic as part of cultural festivals. āOne was an online event called Box Moon, organised by Natalia Beylis and Decy Synnott. Musicians and artists from all over the country made videos at home and watched them together on Twitch, a rare moment of community at that time. We made a tape recording of An DraighneĆ”n Donn, using Ruthās new theremin. It grew from there.ā It slowly built into something. John joined about 18 months later and remembers their first gig, a benefit show to pay for a hip operation for a friendās greyhound, for which they had no time to rehearse. āWe just improvised and couldnāt even hear each other ā but it was kind of magical, and that sort of carries into how we make the songs.
The process of creating the arrangements is very much driven by the instruments themselves, specifically with a vintage organ. āRuth got this lovely, old Hohner Organetta, which has a bunch of pre-programmed drumbeats. We sometimes start with one of them and the song develops from there, like on āAll Smilesā and āThe Whole Town Knows.ā So we had these fixed, looping beats, with no deviation. Later, when John joined, he added a natural kind of ebb and flow. We got the best of both worlds: this fixed thing, and then something else dancing around it, says Cormac. āWhen I joined and we went into the studio, the spine of everything was already in place,ā says John. āSome of it was simple, but it was also tricky because in terms of metronomic timing, folk music doesnāt necessarily give a shit about drummers ā timing is often at the behest of the singer. Often, I come in after the fact so itās a different relationship and a different conversation happening in the songs. So on the quieter moments, rather than something that is foundational and perhaps providing that momentum, there is something more conversational happening, more like weaving.ā
It makes sense that Poor Creature manifested out of the lockdown. In times of surrealness and separation thereās comfort in looking back to the past, to stories of being parted, of love and of loss. āThereās definitely a unifying theme of loss and separation on nearly all the songs on the records. When working on āThe Whole Town Knowsā (a Ray Lynam & Philomena Begley track), it transformed from a song about cheating hearts to something else. āIt talks about how we canāt go on living this way, which became a metaphor for the climate crisis and the general destruction of the planet. āLoreneā, which Cormac sings solo, is an epistolary tale of missing someone, and the despair of unanswered letters, which channels Chantal Akermanās News From Home.
There are hundreds of songs the band could have chosen for the record, but decisions were made by specific motivations. The bones of a tune had to appeal, and there was zero interest in playing a version of someone elseās song verbatim. With music thatās being passed down, and reworked, it gets given a new context with each generation. āFor us, itās important to pull something else out of a song, itās not necessarily about turning everything into an apocalyptic stomper⦠each track has something that speaks to our DNA,ā according to John.
Poor Creatureās sound ā particularly in the context of contemporary Irish folk ā offers something unique. Thereās the gauzy, underwater, almost psychedelic seams of āBury Me Notā and āAdieu Lovely Erinā. āAll Smiles Tonightā and āHicksā Farewellā nod to the influence of American folk/bluegrass acts like Doc Watson and the Louvin Brothers. These shifting sounds are made possible by producer John āSpudā Murphy, who has produced all of Lankumās albums, and worked with Junior Brother, ĆXN, Pretty Happy, Ye Vagabonds as as well as the final two albums by The Jimmy Cake, with whom John has played for over 20 years. āSpud is just incredibly talentedā, says Cormac. āHeāll keep sending back mixes, and they just keep on getting better and better. Heās got this attention to detail and ridiculous ears ā heās also pretty patient, which helps.ā
The album ends with a song theyāve been performing for a long time, āWillie-Oā. Itās another song of loss ā and of being visited by the ghost of a dead lover. āItās like that Brian Friel idea of people talking about mythological figures as though theyāre your neighbors, like theyāre just down the road,ā says Ruth. āThereās something about these two things ā the everyday and the fantastical ā being entangled, which I think Irish music does so well.ā This also sums up All Smiles Tonight, moving through stories and loss and history to create an otherworldly and timeless album for the ages.
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