Niamh Parsons

Niamh Parsons (born in Dublin, Ireland) is a singer of contemporary and traditional Irish music.[1][2]

Niamh Parsons in Dublin.

Career

Niamh Parsons started her professional career in 1990, in Belfast. Having been singing at sessions around Dublin, Niamh first joined the band Killera from 1984–89. Joining her husband Dee with his band the Loose Connections in 1990, Parsons released two CDs with this band. Since then she has toured extensively in Europe and the US with the Loose Connections, the traditional group Arcady and with Dublin guitarist Graham Dunne, with whom she has been playing since 1999. She has also appeared solo at many festivals and venues in Ireland, USA, Italy, Denmark, Holland, Spain, France, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Belgium, Japan and Great Britain.[3][4]

She was asked to play before President Clinton and Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern in Capitol Hill, Washington. She has also made several appearances on the Irish TV station RTÉ. She has released eight albums since 1992. Her 2002 album Heart's Desire won the 2003 Association for Independent Music award.[5]

Niamh is also on the Executive of the Musicians Union of Ireland. www.mui.ie

Discography

  • Loosely Connected with the Loose Connections (Greentrax, 1992)
  • Many Happy Returns ARCADY - (Dara/Shanachie, 1994)
  • Loosen Up with the Loose Connections (Green Linnet, 1997)[6]
  • Blackbirds and Thrushes (Green Linnet, 1999)
  • In My Prime with Graham Dunne (Green Linnet, 2000)
  • Heart's Desire with Graham Dunne (Green Linnet, 2002)[3]
  • Live at Fylde with Graham Dunne (2005)
  • The Old Simplicity with Graham Dunne (Green Linnet, 2006)
  • Kind Providence with Graham Dunne (2016)
gollark: See, that's also a problem.
gollark: I think in some smart TVs basic UI features like "switch input" are part of the fragile "smart" bit.
gollark: Also apparently subsidized by data gathering.
gollark: Because the built-in thing is insecure and bad.
gollark: Meanwhile, an external box like an RPi (£50 or so including basic accessories, it's fine) will get support for... probably 10 years or so? And you can swap it separately. And you can be sure of exactly what's running on there. And it has the same security as a standard computery device, i.e. not great but workable.

References

  1. Irish music gets younger and older at the same time, Boston Globe, March 16, 2001.
  2. Alarik, Scott (2003). Deep Community: Adventures in the Modern Folk Underground. Cambridge, Mass.: Black Wolf Press. ISBN 0-9720270-1-7.
  3. Richardson, Derk (May–June 2003). Review. Yoga Journal. p. 184. Retrieved 12 November 2009.
  4. Wallis, Geoff (2001). The Rough Guide to Irish Music. London: Rough Guides Ltd. pp. 115–117. ISBN 1-85828-642-5.
  5. Website
  6. Review: Irish Music Magazine
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