Dominic Mulvany

Dominic Mulvany (born 1956) is a singer-songwriter from Dublin who has released a number of singles and albums, mainly via his 'Kish' record label, since the 1980s.

His career commenced with the release of "In The City / Your Smile is on My Mind" in 1981 (on Kish). With 'Ibiza', his follow-up single (released on Vixen records), he attained very large amounts of airplay in Ireland; this in turn led to several high-profile TV appearances (including RTÉ's Kenny Live show and Nighthawks).

Further singles followed, including one produced by Arsenal and Irish International football player John Devine: "Travelling People".

Dominic has released three albums: Stranger on My Highway (1985), Vagabond Moon (1990) and Diving for Pearls (2004). The last of these was produced by Irish singer-songwriter Chris Singleton, whom Dominic taught piano. Dominic also engineered some of Chris Singleton's early material - an album called 'Start'.

Discography

In The City / Your Smile is on My Mind - 7" Single, Double A-Side, 16 May 1981. Kish Records K001

Ibiza / There I Go Again - 7" Single, 3 August 1982. Vixen Records FM004

Hello, I've Come to Say Goodbye / Stephen's Green - 7" Single, 14 Jan 1983. Vixen Records FM007

Into Your Love Again / If There was Something I Could Say - 7" Single, 4 June 1983. Vixen Records FM009

Watching The Northern Lights / Stranger On My Mind - 7" Single, 22 Feb 1984. Vixen Records

Travelling People / She's Late in Arriving - 7" Single, 19 August 1986. Kish Records K002

Vagabond Moon / From a Seaside Town - 7" Single, 3 October 1990. Kish Records K003

gollark: You seem to be suggesting that a lack of headphone jacks is fine because I can just carry another device for no non-headphone-jack reason.
gollark: I don't want to carry two devices when my phone has an entirely usable audio player app (and can even do video, and store 128GB of stuff, and that sort of thing), and actually has a headphone jack.
gollark: ... but my phone can play audio fine?
gollark: Especially since the alternative seems to just be proprietary headphone things which use up the one port on most phones.
gollark: I think being annoyed about the dropping of a standard and useful I/O feature for dubious reasons is fair.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.