Avsnitt
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After the Plantation of Ulster in 1606, three McDonnell brothers, dispossessed, made their way south.
One of them settled on swampy uncontested land in Dublin, claiming themselves as its monarch.
Welcome to MUD ISLAND.
A refuge at the fringes of Dublin Society, Aran and Luke seek to learn of its colourful history of Smugglers, Highwaymen and MORE.
From secret passages to the bloody pirate escapades of Art Granger, its hard to believe what is now Ballybough and Fairview was a muddy slobland soundtracked by savage fights between the Mud Islanders and the Revenue Men, and stories of banshees and Collier the Robber.
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Unbeknownst to Luke when we started recording this episode, it was going to be dominated by Rat stories. There are Bananas too. Some may say we had too much fun recording this one, I say there's never such a thing. Join us in the fun backed by the beautiful ambient music of Gareth Quinn Redmond
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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ARAN and Luke turn to the Irish National Folklore Collection's Duchás Database and Irish mythology to read you the most effective bedtime story known to man.
FROM spooky bedtime stories about witch's sleep charms,
TO the Goddess of Sleep Caer and her lad, Aengus,
NOT to mention some folk cures on how to get a good night's rest,
IT'S all a dreamy doozy.
SPONSOR this week is: DRY-LINE - Boring you to Sleep. -
THE black stuff, stout, porter.
IT'S synonymous with Ireland, but why?
WHAT'S the difference between stout and porter?
PISRÓGS barrels into an episode of songs, stories and accounts all about the substance we love to make us silly.
MOST importantly we look at GUINNESS.
YOU probably know all of the tremendous work that Guinness has done for Ireland, Dublin and it's workers.
BUT there's a darker side to the black stuff that will have you saying... "Wait the Guinness family said WHAT during the 80s?"
AS with anything involving a feast of pints, this episode will have you loving and hating yourself for drinking.
Get it into ya like a good gosson -
GAELS - Forest People.
THIS episode will follow Irish trees through time from:
The temperate rainforest which existed before humanity's arrival on the island, to the 1% of tree cover that remains in our wake.
FROM the celts who venerated trees, to the Normans who cut them down liberally and the continued negligence by the Free State all the way to the current practice of forestry in Ireland today.
INTERESTINGLY, language can be used to plot the changing relationship between humankind and forests here in Ireland.
FROM Ogham, a language based on the natural world around us, to the present day where the word 'forest' can prove harmful in its vaguity.
PLUS, learn a possible scientific reason why the hawthorn (or fairy tree) might be such a feared bush.
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MERFOLK - Irish Mermaids - The Merrow (Murúch), Selkies & Siren.
IN this week's episode the lads travel from our seas, rivers and lakes through GALWAY and LEITRIM to KERRY and ROSCOMMON in search of MERFOLK - half-human half-aquatic beings which litter the mythology of almost every country.
THE BOYS are tracing the myth of Merfolk in Ireland from the source of our earliest mythology to the mouth of more recent folk tales. With the anatomy of the mermaid and the means of its aquatic abilities changing with time from story to story.
EXPECT yarns from 11th century monks and recollections from Tommy down the road.
MERMAIDS have long been associated with their allure, with tales of men selfishly kidnapping the poor creatures, or even drowning to death in awe of their beauty. This leads to wider discussion of mermaids as a symbol of the expectations of women.
THE LEGEND of children born here as the product of mermaid/human relations.
SO, depending on your second name, you too could be just a little bit fishy!
(ALSO we have fairy news chock full of cures and ferrets and all sorts)
Come dive in! Waters fine.
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In this episode, Luke and Aran fill your mug with all the seasonal delights you can gulp down. Join the boys by the toasty fire as they warm you up for a delightfully festive season.
If you have any stories you'd like to share please message us @pisrogspodcast on Instagram or email us on [email protected]
We would only love to hear any stories or tidbits you have relating to folklore, mythology, traditions, customs and all such matters.
Delightful music of Gareth Quinn Redmond featured in part of this episode.
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LOCALLY sourced IRISH FOLKLORE, stories, cures and laughs based on the words YOU, the listener, chose via our instagram: @pisrogspodcast (God help us)
THE boys titter their way through tales of:
GEESE screaming down children's necks,
WEASELS jumping down horses ears,
GIANTS stealing cows,
EELS eating loved ones!
ALL served with piping hot tea and the musical styling of Gareth Quinn Redmond.
REVENGE, biscuits, CRYSTAL BALLS, biscuits, THE PÚCA and tea....
TIS ALL in there and it's all sourced directly from the National Folklore Collection's Dúchas Archive.
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THE first Irish witch burning, and the first known record of a Coven in the world.
PETRONILLA de Meath was tortured, interrogated and eventually burnt at the stake on the 3rd of November 1324, in Kilkenny.
HER charge? Witchcraft.
"AND though she was indeed herself an adept in this accursed art of theirs, she said she was nothing in comparison with her mistress, from whom she had learned all these things and many more."
DE Meath was maidservant to Alice Kyteler, a woman whose Husbands all had the unfortunate habit of dying . . . soon after marrying her.
WAS Kyteler: INNOCENT? MONEY-GRABBING? A WITCH?
CULTURALLY, Irish witches are more commonly associated with Goddess figures, such as the Cailleach Beara (Learn more in our previous episode) than the iconic and horrific witch burning that plagued Europe and America from the 15th Century.
IN FACT, for a superstitious nation, witch burning barely reached double digits in Ireland compared to the hundreds in continental Europe.
WHY? The boys attempt to find out just THAT.
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Guess what? Aran is back....... And he's broke; shoes, wallet, the whole lot. So no better man to find than that Leprechaun with his fat crock of gold. In this episode Aran and Luke pull together stories from the ages to find the origins of the Leprechaun. How did all the tropes come to be? Hop in and found out with some gorgeous ambient music accompaniment by Gareth Quinn Redmond and plenty of hearthy chuckles. Hup
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OH THE BRAIN, the thing piloting your swiping fingers and fidgeting thumbs right now.
HE'S a pretty complex boy,
BUT would you believe that all the way back in the 7th century a monk by the name of Bricin was poking holes in injured warrior's skulls AND doing a damn good job on it too?
LEARN about the:
THOUSAND-year-old medical art of trepanation.
GOD of medicine in Ireland and the surprisingly terrifying origin of the River Barrow.
BRAIN BALLS and the man whose head exploded when he heard of a certain someone's crucificion. -
LABIAS and Gonads, the foreplay has ended. It's time for our episode of bollocks on the GENITALS NA HÉIREANN.
LEARN ABOUT:
Queen Medbh's insatiable sexual appetite, her STALLION lover and the time she carved a new path in the river with the power BETWEEN HER LEGS.
IRISH APHRODISIACS such as badger mickey and rabbit skin.
EX-PRIESTS who would marry you off at their gaff for the cheap and would tear the certificate up if you had the coin.
FILTHY place names and SHEELA NA GIG.
PLUS, learn how every standing stone in Ireland is just a big fat member.
LISTEN to this one in a dark room before and after a shower with the picture of the baby Jesus out in the shed.
OH BABY.
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AN DIABHAL, The Devil, Old Nick, The Old...Boy?
WE all know of the devil, he's the red fella with the horns who is likely to be the ruler of our infinite misery if indeed it is true that you should fast on Friday, he also is the mascot for hot sauces and red wine. He's a busy lad.
BUT the devil in Irish Folklore is far from the fallen angel of Danté's Inferno, at his best he's like Al Pacino in Devi's Advocate and his worst, like Elma Fud in Looney Tunes.
THE rule of thumb? In Irish folkore, the devil is either a simpleton you owe money to (TV License Inspector) or the subject of your night terrors (Your Landlord).
LEARN about:
LOFTUS HOUSE where the devil played cards with a woman, steeping her in love and driving her insane.
MUIRDEACH'S HIGH CROSS and its ornate representations of demons.
THE DEVIL IN LANGUAGE and how it reflects satan as the anti-thesis.
THE devil as a half-witted slime ball who just cant catch a break.
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THE STONE HOUSE OF THE SUN
THIS Donegal antiquity has been the quiet sentinel of Ireland, WITNESS to our shared history -
FROM the Tuatha Dé Danann to midnight mass, its a long-time fan of our stuff.
A temple for the sun god Baal,
THE original home of the O'Neill Clan, the site of Niall of the Nine Hostages conversion to Christianity by Old Man Patrick and the eventual hideaway for Catholics in penal times.
ARCHAEOLOGISTS also found a stone phallus there, for you stone-cold lovers out there.
IT'S been watching us a while okay so maybe give IT a listen HUH!?
Source: Samuel Scott (The National Folklore Collection) Music: Gareth Quinn Redmond. Art: Aisling Larkin Design.
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KILLESHIN, Church of the Glen of Uise,
PLACE of Oisin.
TALES from Killeshin, Carlow and its surrounding areas chosen by YEE.
SONS of legends, MEN catching rabbits, HIBERNO-ROMAN arches, IRISH acres v ENGLISH acres,
NED of the HILL?
IT'S all in our spin around Killeshin! (AS well as a man who kills his goat in drunken anxiety).
STRAP into the passenger seat and put Mr. Gareth Quinn Redmond on the AUX baby.
Music - @GarethQuinnRedmond Illustration - @AislingLarkinDesign
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TALES from local areas submitted by YEE (@pisrogspodcast on Instagram).
THIS episode unwinds forgotten yarns from Dromore West SLIGO, Birr Co. OFFALY and Inchicore DUBLIN.
VENGEFUL knights, evil spirits, cursed churches, stolen BUTTER.
A lean mean and captivating spin through the land of IRE. -
AWOO, ehem.
IN this episode a priest and our old friend 'Gerald of Wales' come across a pair of werewolves, they have a chat with them and give them a bit of communion for their trouble.
LYNCANTHROPY, the transformation of humans into wolves.
IT'S a phenom that transcends borders, there are werewolves in Germany, Greece, The Balkins . . . and the counties Kilkenny and Laois.
OSSORY was a kingdom in Ireland which spread across these two counties, give or take.
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THE BOY(S) discuss the weird, wonderful world of FOLLIES and their impractical existence, as well as their unlikely connection to the FAMINE.
EVER wanted an old man living in your back garden?
EVER want a slice of Egypt in your ends?
EVER build something to break?
ARISTOCRATS did.
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NEW GROUND for the podcast,
WITH Aran preparing to venture into the bowels of the Amazon, Luke holds down the fort, but not alone, as the Pisrogs Podcast takes on its its first roguish interview with the rambunctious Ronan O'Raghallaigh!
RONAN is an artist from county Kildare who took the matter of disassembling his colonization into his own hands, by taking part in a Bealtaine Baptism over quarantine and becoming a 21st Century Druid.
HE'S also a really nice guy!
OPEN YOUR EARS TO:
Shamanic drum visions, spirit animals and personal journeys
Celtic art and its misreading as purely 'decorative'
The collective conscious, Surrealism, Franis Bacon, Karl Jung, Psychedelia and Naas
Tales of Manannan the sea god and his tomfoolery,
The Celts siege on Rome and the origin of the term for which Ronan titled his first exhibition -
VAE VICTIS - WOE TO THE VANQUISHED -
JOIN the boys as they discuss everything under the big sonic sun - From the mythological invention of music, to the instruments of the past, to the magic behind the instruments and their players . . . A meal for the ears!
“NO enemy speaks slightingly of Irish Music, and no friend need fear to boast of it. It is without a rival, Its antique war-tunes, such as those of O'Byrne, O'Donnell, MacAlistrum and Brian Boru, stream and crash upon the ear like the warriors of a hundred glens meeting; and you are borne with them to battle, and they and you charge and struggle amid cries and battle-axes and stinging arrows. Did ever a wail make man's marrow quiver and fill his nostrils with the breath of the grave, like the ululu or A Muire ir Truag of Munster” - Thomas Davis
ULULU, ULULU!
MUSIC has a place at the core of one's imagination of the Irish 'scene' a place so central that its place within the setting can often be overlooked:
A dimly lit room, pipes and pints, feet tapping, chats going, and all there for the sound produced by fiddles, bodhrans, whistles and hums. - Visa fler