Lisa O'Neill

Lisa O'Neill

Thursday 05 October - Town Hall Theatre

Lisa O'Neill

Thu 5th October, 2023 Doors: 7:00pm
@ Town Hall Theatre

Strange Brew presents

LISA O'NEILL

Town Hall Theatre

Thursday 05 October

"You’ll be lucky to hear a better record all year” - Sunday Times *****

"The first indisputable classic of 2023" - UNCUT 9/10

"The bird kingdom gives lofty inspiration to the Irish singer-songwriter’s wild and wonderful fifth album." - The Guardian ****

"Transcendent and original - a triumph." - The Observer 

"O'Neill is a cultural hero in her own right. She has released five albums since 2009, building a reputation as a modern artist tapped into the ancient." New York Times 

 

“Vertiginous, violet-they scroll across the sky, words with wings VVV, whether wrens or angels one cannot determine, perhaps an alternate universe fusion of both, up down, high, low-dizzy, still; at peace, at war: redemption dreams arise from the clay: soul's peace, as the bird in the bough its little eye closes slowly: all is chance, they say, indeed-save this, indisputably, O' Neill's Art's gentle triumph.” - Pat McCabe

Following 2018’s traditional collection Heard a Long Song Gone for the River Lea imprint, The Wren EP in 2019, and an adaptation of Bob Dylan’s All the Tired Horses for the final scene of epic TV drama Peaky Blinders, Lisa O’Neill’s latest, her first album for the Rough Trade label, is entitled All of This Is Chance.

Long since noted as one of the most evocative singers and writers in contemporary Irish music, All of This Is Chance is a collection of new work that takes Lisa’s voice to greater heights, or depths, depending on which way you look at it.

Throughout all eight songs on this album it feels like O’Neill is writing in a constant state of wonderment. Not only a portrait of the artist in love with nature, but one perplexed by the ever-expanding gulf between it and modern society. O’Neill sings across that divide while simultaneously digging deep into the land, eyes transfixed on a universe of colourful birds, and beyond them stargazing into the atomized constellations of outer space of which we ourselves are fragments.