Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Thea Gilmore - 'The St. Stephen's Day Murders'

Released in 2009, Thea Gilmore's Christmas collection Strange Communion is a gem of a record that never seems to receive the annual radio airplay it so richly deserves. This well-crafted collection of songs opens with the goose-bump inducing Sol Invictus, an ode to the Roman Sun God whose festival fell upon the 25th of December, includes a cover of Yoko Ono's Listen, The Snow Is Falling and takes in part of Louis MacNeice's Autumn Journal along the way.

As Christmas albums go I'll admit it's not your usual collection of festive sugar and cinnamon; there are no songs of magical snowmen or pleas for presents under the tree here, instead the songs have a refreshing feeling of a cold Winter about them, replete with observations on the family festivities that most all will find familiar.

One such ditty is a rousing cover of an Elvis Costello and Paddy Maloney song, the St. Stephen's Day Murders, which was written for The Chieftains' 1991 album The Bells of Dublin. This tale of drunken the-day-after-Christmas-Day hijinks, of too much Tia Maria and Irn Bru, of Gin-soaked whiskers and exploding televisions, is a suitably wry take on celebrations for the feast of St. Stephen as you would expect from Mr Costello. 

Thea's version of the song features the vocal talents of famed ex-Shirehorse and BBC Radio DJ Mark Radcliffe, his dry delivery balancing Ms. Gilmore's melodic vocals. If you've recovered from yesterday's over-indulgence, and need a tune to soundtrack your lunch of cold Turkey and baked potatoes, you could do no better than playing this to your loved ones.

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