Maxi (singer)

Maxi (born Irene McCoubrey, (1950-02-23)23 February 1950) is a former musician and radio presenter in the Republic of Ireland. Maxi performed with two girl groups and the Irish supergroup The Concerned in the 1970s–80s, also representing Ireland at the 1973 and 1981 Eurovision Song Contests. After an automobile accident left her hospitalized, she focused on becoming a presenter for Raidió Teilifís Éireann; she retired from the broadcaster in 2015 after 30 years therewith.

Maxi
Born
Irene McCoubrey

(1950-02-23) 23 February 1950
Occupation

Personal life

The third and final child of Madge and Sam, Maxi was born Irene McCoubrey on (1950-02-23)23 February 1950.[1] She grew up in Harold's Cross, and was given her nickname due to the letters "McC" in her surname.[2] As of February 2015, she had only been married once, from 1973–79, and bore no children.[1] In addition to her work in media, Maxi was a UNICEF Ireland representative.[2] As of December 2011, she lived in Blackrock.[3]

Music

Maxi
Instruments
Years active1964–2011
Associated acts

As a child, Maxi and Sam played the violin, and Madge played the piano. In addition to singing with the Little Dublin Singers and Young Dublin Singers, Maxi sang in the school choir at St Louis High School, Rathmines.[1]

When Eamonn Andrews wanted to create a girl group to sing backing vocals for his recording studio, he chose Maxi, Adele King, and Barbara Dixon because of how the combined singing voices sounded; the girls became Maxi, Dick and Twink based on all their respective nicknames. Maxi credited this imposed friendship with drawing 14-year-old McCoubrey out of her shyness. The group proved very popular outside Andrews' studio, and toured internationally (once to Mainz with chaperone Maeve Binchy). After seven years performing together, the group disbanded when they began developing conflicting goals. In 2015, Maxi told the Irish Independent that the three "are still getting along today. […] We're still friends, and chat and e-mail all the time."[1]

At 23 years old, Maxi was chosen to represent the Republic of Ireland at the Eurovision Song Contest 1973, performing "Do I Dream". At the competition in Luxembourg, Maxi and the Irish delegation disagreed on the arrangement of the song. When Maxi refused to perform, Raidió Teilifís Éireann panicked and sent Tina Reynolds to compete in her stead, giving the replacement singer only the flight from Ireland to rehearse the song. Ultimately, Maxi performed and received tenth place. Reynolds would represent Ireland the following year with "Cross Your Heart", placing seventh.[4]

In the late 1970s, Maxi applied to join the new girl group Sheeba. Though she was initially turned down due to her age (28), she eventually joined Marion Fossett and Frances Campbell as the third member of "Ireland's first sexy girl group." At Eurovision 1981, Sheeba came in fifth, singing "Horoscopes". After traveling to Holland and London to record tracks for a new album, the three women of Sheeba were hospitalized at Mayo University Hospital after a traffic collision in Castlebar; Maxi's head injury caused amnesia and needed more than 100 surgical sutures, Fossett received facial injuries, and Campbell had a collapsed lung. Sheeba were dropped by their record label after their recovery took too long, and though the three tried to succeed independently, the group ultimately broke up.[1]

In 1985, Maxi joined the Irish supergroup The Concerned to perform and record the charity record "Show Some Concern" in support of Concern Worldwide; the song was a number-one hit in March and April 1985. The Concerned also included Dave Fanning, Pat Kenny, Gerry Ryan, Linda Martin, Christy Moore, Mary Black, Adele King, Maura O'Connell, Freddie White, Eamon Carr, Johnny Duhan, Dave King, Clannad, The Blades, Stockton's Wing, The Golden Horde, and Those Nervous Animals. The music video was filmed at Windmill Lane Recording Studios.[5]

While she was bedridden in 2010–11, Maxi wrote 26 songs with Charlie McGettigan; McGettigan later recorded two, while Clara Rose Monahan recorded a third.[1]

Radio

Maxi was fascinated by radio since childhood. After the traffic accident that caused the fall of Sheeba, Maxi ventured into radio presenting on two inspirations. Firstly, Sir Pete Murray had told a younger Maxi that "she had a beautiful radio voice"; secondly, medical treatment after the crash required shaving her head, and working on radio afforded her the opportunity to perform without being seen.[1]

In autumn 1994, Maxi hosted a BBC Radio 2 program on Saturdays.[6] Maxi presented Late Date (from midnight until 2 a.m.)[1] on RTÉ 2fm for eleven years, worked on Thames' Name That Tune, was the first woman presenter of Rapid Roulette,[2] and for the eleven years prior to October 2011—when she fell ill[3]—she had hosted The Risin' Time on RTÉ Radio 1 from 5:30–7 a.m.[2] After 30 years of employment, Maxi officially retired from Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTE) on 23 February 2015.[1]

gollark: The answer is "very nitpicky".
gollark: Sorry, authoritative nameserver, not resolver.
gollark: I'm not sure how nitpicky about standards compliance dnspython is.
gollark: If you directly talk to the resolver you *might* be able to get around it?
gollark: *Why* exactly did you not have <#457999277311131649> muted?

References

  1. Smith, Andrew (23 February 2015). "The dawning of the age of Maxi". Irish Independent. ISSN 0021-1222. Archived from the original on 28 February 2019. Retrieved 25 September 2019.
  2. "Maxi Profile". Personally Speaking. Archived from the original on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  3. Campos, Adelina (23 December 2011). "I'm back - but only for Christmas, Maxi". The Herald. Archived from the original on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 20 September 2019. RADIO presenter Maxi will be back on the air for one day to celebrate the festive season with listeners.
  4. Tibballs, Geoff (2016). "Irish Eyes Weren't Smiling (1973)". The Good The Bad and the Wurst Unauthorised: The 100 Craziest Moments from the Eurovision Song Contest. Victoria Embankment: Robinson. ISBN 978-1-4721-3707-4.
  5. "Take a trip down memory lane as Concern say thanks to long forgotten Irish charity supergroup". Irish Examiner. 2 April 2018. Archived from the original on 25 September 2019. Retrieved 25 September 2019.
  6. "Search Results". BBC Radio 2. Archived from the original on 8 January 2020. Retrieved 8 January 2020.
Preceded by
Sandie Jones
Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest
1973
Succeeded by
Tina Reynolds
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