‘Emotional’ and ‘surreal’: Fans return to live music with Iveagh Gardens concert

ireland
‘Emotional’ And ‘Surreal’: Fans Return To Live Music With Iveagh Gardens Concert
James Vincent McMorrow performing at the Iveagh Gardens in Dublin on Thursday evening © PA Wire/PA Images
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James Ward, PA

Music fans who attended the first large-scale concert in Ireland since the pandemic began described the experience as “emotional” and “surreal”.

A pilot concert taking place at Dublin’s Iveagh Gardens on Thursday evening welcomed 500 fans to witness performances by James Vincent McMorrow and Sorcha Richardson.

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It is the first in a series of pilot live entertainment events, employing staggered arrival and leaving times for fans, who remained in pods of up to four people.

Demand for the gig was huge, and tickets sold out almost instantly.

Coronavirus – Thu Jun 10, 2021
People watch James Vincent McMorrow on stage during Ireland’s first major live gig since the pandemic, at Iveagh Gardens in Dublin. (Brian Lawless/PA)

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Those who managed to get their hands on them couldn’t believe their luck.

Tanya Quinn and Orla Ormond, both from Dublin, said it felt “surreal” to finally attend a concert.

“I think back to this time last year and something like this happening, it’s kind of surreal” Orla said.

Reflecting on the scramble for tickets, Tanya said:  “I had taken on the big task of trying to get the tickets, and fighting with the website for 25 minutes. After a lot of refreshing I finally got the tickets.”

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“And I swanned in then after the hard work was done” Orla joked.

Coronavirus – Thu Jun 10, 2021
James Vincent McMorrow on stage at the Iveagh Gardens in Dublin. (Brian Lawless/PA)

Tanya added: “It feels amazing, absolutely amazing. I went to a small gig in March 2020, before everything shut down. I guess my last proper gig would have been December 2019.

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Orla added: “I can’t even really remember. I had a really quiet first few months of 2020, which I regret, obviously. But it was 2019, at least.”

Oisin McGramm, from Craigavon, Co Armagh, said the event marked a return to normality.

“It’s pretty good. 500 people, it’s not a bad crowd. It kind of feels like it’s going back to normal, which I think is important. I’m just looking forward to a bit of freedom,” he said.

He was joined by his friend Claire Murphy from Co Cork, who had managed to snare the coveted tickets for them.

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She said: “I don’t know how it happened. I was just refreshing a lot, clearing my cache. I knew they were sold out, but somehow two showed up. I thought it sold out in three minutes, but I got them 25 minutes after.

“It’s unreal. Everybody is saying ‘how did you manage to get two tickets?’ I had three devices going. It’s going to be emotional I think.”

Coronavirus – Thu Jun 10, 2021
James Vincent McMorrow. (Brian Lawless/PA)

Dubliner Leah Brennan said: “We’re buzzing, absolutely buzzing. We’re really excited, especially with it outdoors and the sun shining.

“I think it’s about time that they’re finally doing something for the music industry.”

Speaking before the show, James Vincent McMorrow described returning to the live stage as “magic”.

“It feels incredible. It is a feeling I haven’t personally felt in the longest time,” he told Newstalk.

“Even the last shows I played my expectation was there would be another show, but there wasn’t.

“I’ve been doing this for the last 10 years, so you get a different feeling. You get butterflies but it is not the same. So today I woke up and it feels like, I don’t know, like magic.”

Coronavirus – Thu Jun 10, 2021
Crows in their designated pods at the concert. (Brian Lawless/PA)

He described feeling a sense of personal responsibility to fans, many of whom were coming to their first concert in over a year.

He said: There is obviously a weight of expectation that you can’t help but feel.

“This is the first proper, proper show back in a long time and I want to do it justice. I want to really live up to that expectation and show something.”

He said musicians have found the pandemic particularly tough, with many feeling they were at the back of the queue for a return to normality.

“If you don’t work with music, it’s very hard to describe it. I assume it’s comparable to other industries, but this is the only one I’ve known” he said.

“One of my drummers, Paul, described it as, when he found music, he found his tribe, he found his people.

“This is a group of people who all live the same life, whether it’s a guitar tech or someone in my position, or in a band.

“We’ve all done it because we love it and we understand the sacrifices, but we do it because this gives us our sense of meaning, our sense of purpose.

“To see that come back yesterday, when we went down to the Iveagh Gardens to do our first soundcheck was honestly the greatest thing I’ve felt in the longest time.

“Seeing all these people that I got so used to seeing, and hadn’t seen for a year-and-a-half. It was really magical.”

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