Country and Irish
{{Short description|Subgenre of country music local to Ireland}}
{{Infobox music genre
| name = Country and Irish
| other_names =Culchie and Western
| image =
| stylistic_origins = Country, Irish traditional music, showband, folk
| cultural_origins = Ireland
| instruments =
| derivatives =
| subgenres =
| fusiongenres =
| regional_scenes =
| local_scenes =
}}
Country and Irish, also known as Culchie and Western,{{Cite web|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/putting-galway-in-the-smut-jills-smuts-and-feeks-alan-murdoch-receives-a-crash-course-in-the-language-of-the-sawdoctors-1481291.html|title=Putting Galway in the smut: Jills, smuts and feeks. Alan Murdoch receives a crash course in the language of The Sawdoctors | The Independent | The Independent}} is a musical subgenre in Ireland formed by mixing North American country-style music with Irish influences. It is especially popular in the rural Midlands and North-West of the country, but less so in urban areas or in the South-West where more traditional Irish music is favoured. It also remains popular among the Irish in Britain, particularly among the older generation. In a review of the album Round the house and mind the dresser: Irish country house dance music, Vic Gammon observes that the music was partially inspired by a desire for cultural independence.Hall, R. (2002) Round the house and mind the dresser: Irish country house dance music. British journal of ethnomusicology, 11, p. 151–154, 2002.
History
Country and Irish music emerged from Ireland's showband scene, where local bands would play American pop standards tailored to Irish sensibilities.{{Cite web|url=https://www.vice.com/en/article/irish-country-guide-hugo-duncan-prayforpatrick/|title=A Quick Guide to the Unkillable Power of Irish Country Music|first=Brian|last=Coney|date=January 22, 2018}} The showband scene was especially strong in Northern Ireland and border counties on account of restrictions on live music performances during Lent in the Republic of Ireland in the 1950s and 1960s.{{Cite web|url=https://www.irish-showbands.com/history2.htm|title=History of the Showbands|website=www.irish-showbands.com}} Johnny McCauley, who performed extensively for Irish expat audiences in London in the 1950s, is regarded as the first songwriter to compose songs in an American country music style with lyrics that specifically referenced Irish subject matter.{{Cite web|url=https://www.farmersjournal.ie/country-sound-the-man-who-created-the-country-and-irish-genre-531934|title=Country Sound: the man who created the country and Irish genre|website=www.farmersjournal.ie}} His songs were covered by artists such as Big Tom and Larry Cunningham at a time when the showband business model was in decline, allowing these artists to pivot to selling recorded music.{{Cite web|url=https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/country-and-irish-legend-johnny-mccauley-dies-in-london-aged-86/26835409.html|title=Country and Irish legend Johnny McCauley dies in London aged 86|date=March 23, 2012|website=Independent.ie}}
Artists
{{or section|date=November 2021}}
Artists who would fit this genre include:
{{div col|colwidth=22em}}
- Philomena Begley
- Big Tom
- Nathan Carter
- Richie Kavanagh
- Crystal Swing
- Larry Cunningham
- T.R. Dallas
- Mike Denver
- Mary Duff
- Kathy Durkin
- Mick Flavin
- Michael English
- John Farry
- Foster and Allen
- Cliona Hagan
- John Hogan
- James Kilbane
- Johnny Loughrey
- Margo
- Lee Matthews
- Susan McCann
- Johnny McCauley
- Johnny McEvoy
- Lisa McHugh
- John McNicholl
- P. J. Murrihy
- Declan Nerney
- Paddy O'Brien
- Daniel O'Donnell
- Derek Ryan
{{div col end}}
Media
Country and Irish is featured on national and local media. Most local radio stations outside Dublin have a music show dedicated to country music, on programs such as Country Roads and Céilí Lár Tíre on Midlands 103 and on The Country Lounge on CRCfm. RTÉ Radio provide an hour of each Saturday with Country Time with Sandy Harsch.{{Cite web|url=http://www.rte.ie/radio1/country-time/|title = Country Time}}
In television, many of the country and Irish musicians had TV shows on RTÉ One during the 1980s such as The Sandy Kelly Show and The Red Hurley Show, but by the 1990s many of those shows had been axed by RTÉ. RTÉ also broadcast Country Music Television on RTÉ Two during the 1990s. In the 2000s, RTÉ produced a retrospective series, A Little Bit Country, featuring stars from the golden era of Irish country music.
The Irish Language Television service TG4 has provided a number of country and Irish programmes in its schedules such as Glór Tíre ("Country Voice").
Ireland West Music Television, a 24-hour country and Irish channel, was founded in the UK and Ireland in 2011.
Album artwork
Country and Irish music is notable for its highly distinctive album artwork style. In most cases this involves the artist superimposed over a pastoral landscape.{{Cite web|url=https://www.shortlist.com/news/album-covers-reimagined-as-irish-country-records-is-absolutely-hilarious|title=Modern Album covers reimagined as Irish country records is absolutely hilarious|date=September 8, 2016|website=Shortlist}}