Search Results for 'Blur'
11 results found.
DJ Corey nostalgic for Britpop
On the heels of the reform of Oasis, Monroe’s Live will celebrate the sound of Britpop with a special night of music from genre-defining bands next Friday, September 27.
My Fellow Sponges set to 'blur lines between gig and theatre'
MUSICIANS, WRITERS, performance artists, jugglers, videographers, animators, conductors, designers, and all kinds of doers, will partake in a genre defying ‘live music video’ experience, as part of the 2018 Galway Theatre Festival.
Cranky Face - Galway band release new single
CRANKY FACE, the Galway alternative/indie-rock band have released their new single, 'Vultures', the first track from their forthcoming EP which will be released later this year.
Blur tribute @ Monroe's Live
THEY ARE the only Blur tribute act in the world endorsed by the band themselves. They headlined Hyde Park on the closing night of the 2012 Olympics. Now they are coming to Monroe's Live.
Damon Albarn's Everyday Robots
IS IT surprising Damon Albarn has taken this long to make a solo album? As one of the major figures in British popular music for close to 25 years, Blur, Gorillaz, his collaborations with African musicians and composer Michael Nyman, have given him plenty creative endeavours to be going on with.
Win tickets to Blur @ HALO
GALWAY BLUR fans take note, HALO is holding a raffle this Saturday for tickets to see Blur live at the Royal Hospital Kilmainham in Dublin on Thursday August 1.
Indie Rocks @ HALO Live
THE NINETIES saw indie go from the underground to overground as shoegaze, grunge, and Britpop ruled the charts.
Indie Rocks @ HALO
THE NINETIES saw indie go from the underground to overground as shoegaze, grunge, and Britpop ruled the charts.
Nineties indie night @ HALO
THE NINETIES was when indie went from the underground to overground and spawned such genres as shoegaze, grunge, and Britpop.
Planet of sound
BLUR IS a band I’ve long had a difficult relationship with - from loving their early psychedelic indie pop, then despising their Britpop era, to regaining admiration for the quartet’s late 1990s triumphs.