Paul McDermott (broadcaster)

Paul McDermott is an Irish producer and broadcaster best known for his audio documentaries on the bands Five Go Down to the Sea?, Stump, Microdisney and the 1970s experimental musician Michael O'Shea. His documentaries tend to focus on bands who had attracted attention in their time but whose history had been lost; in particular he is regarded for his coverage of the early 1980s Cork music scene.

Paul McDermott
Born
Ireland
OccupationDocumentary producer
broadcaster
Notable credit(s)
RTÉ Culture
Irish Times
Sunday Independent
Websitehttps://www.clippings.me/learnandsing

McDermott has written for RTÉ Culture, The Irish Times and the Sunday Independent, and is the host of "Songs to Learn and Sing" with Dublin City FM. Originally from Cork, he now lives in Dublin where he is Head of Media & Arts at Rathmines College of Further Education.

Career

Describing the Five Go Down to the Sea documentaries "Get That Monster Off The Stage, parts I & II", broadcaster Mike McGrath-Bryan said in 2019 that they "comprehensively cover both the legacy of Finbarr Donnelly and really the post-punk scene that was operating out of [Cork in the early 1980s]. [The documentaries] lead to an increased knowledge of the history of the Cork music scene; the relative ahistoricality has been shaken off".[1] The documentary won the "Best Radio Production" award at the 2002 SMEDIAs, and went on to win the “Radio Production of the Year” award at the O2 SMEDIA Awards that uear. Myles Dungan, chairman of the judging panel, said: “This is a fascinating snapshot of the vibrant Cork music scene of the 80’s. The producer constructed a compelling account of cult rock hero Finbarr Donnelly. The program itself is an excellent weave of music and the spoken word, and is unobtrusively informative." The documentary was re-edited in 2008 to include contributions from band guitarist Ricky Dineen. In a later interview, Dineen who said that after Donnelly, the band's vocalist, died in 1989, he withdrew from playing music until the revival of interest created by the documentary.[1]

His 2017 documentary on Microdisney, "Iron Fist in Velvet Glove", was described by The Guardian as "brilliant",[2] while Hot Press wrote it was "the stellar work of [a] post-punk historian".[3]

"No Journeys End" was recorded in 2018 and debuted in August 2019 on RTÉ lyric fm. It covers the life of Michael O’Shea, a travelling street musician from Carlingford, County Louth, whose only album, the self-titled "Michael O’Shea", was released in 1982.[4] A review in the Irish Times described the documentary as "retracing the picaresque life of innovative street musician Michael O’Shea to fascinating effect".[5]

McDermott writes for RTÉ Culture, and contributes to the Irish Times and the Sunday Independent.[6] He hosts the weekly music magazine "Songs to Learn and Sing" on Dublin City FM.[7]

Audio documentaries

  • "No Journeys End – The story of Michael O'Shea", RTÉ lyric fm, 2019[6]
  • "Iron Fist in Velvet Glove", UCC 98.3FM, 2017; Newstalk, 2018 and 2020[8][3]
  • "Lights! Camel! Action! – The Story of Stump", UCC 98.3FM, 2016[9][10]
  • "Get That Monster Off The Stage", UCC 98.3FM, part I 2001 (re-edited in 2008), part II 2016[11]

References

  1. McGrath-Bryan, Mike (22 May 2019). "Red on Red - Episode Sixty Eight - Big Boy Foolish". redfm.ie. Cork's Red FM. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  2. Collins, Pádraig. "How I fell in love with Microdisney". The Guardian', 4 February 2019. Retrieved 22 June 2020
  3. "Microdisney documentary premieres on Cork radio on Friday". Hot Press, 23 November 2017. Retrieved 14 June 2020
  4. "No Journeys End, the story of Michael O’Shea". Medium.com. Retrieved 22 June 2020
  5. Heaney, Mick. "Lyric FM faces high noon". Irish Times, 21 September 2019. Retrieved 22 June 2020
  6. "Cult musician Michael O'Shea's journey - The Lyric Feature". RTÉ, 26 August 2019. Retrieved 14 June 2020
  7. "Songs to Learn and Sing". Dublin City FM. Retrieved 22 June 2020
  8. Mccrea, Jonathan. "Documentary On Newstalk: Iron Fist in Velvet Glove– the story of Microdisney". Newstalk, 19 May 2018. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  9. "Lights! Camel! Action! – The Story of Stump". UCC 98.3FM. Retrieved 14 June 2020
  10. Carroll, Jim. "The wrap says “freeze”". The Irish Times, 11 January 2016. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  11. "New Finbarr Donnelly oral history". Hot Press. 31 May 2016. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.