Product Description
How do we create a deeper public discussion around music? What can folk music tell us about our society? How do we support music in our towns, villages and cities? And what can Ireland teach the world about music? For over two decades, Toner Quinn, founder and editor of the Journal of Music, has been writing about these questions and more in the multi-faceted world of Irish music. In this book, he gathers a selection of his essays and articles. From Martin Hayes to Jennifer Walshe, Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin to Sinéad O’Connor, and from the impact of the economic crash to the fallout from the pandemic, this collection provides a rare insight into Irish music in the twenty-first century. Rich in ideas, What Ireland Can Teach the World About Music explores what makes this culture unique, and the challenges it faces into the future.
Toner Quinn is a musician, writer, editor, publisher and NUIG lecturer. In 2000, he founded the Irish music publication JMI – The Journal of Music in Ireland (later The Journal of Music), which received the Utne Independent Press Award for Arts Coverage. He has recorded a traditional fiddle album with Malachy Bourke, edited a collection of essays on the Irish writer Desmond Fennell, and recently published a volume of his own writing titled What Ireland Can Teach the World About Music. He lectures in publishing at the University of Galway.