Paul Cleary

Paul Cleary

Paul Cleary was singer, guitarist and songwriter with The Blades, and is considered one of Ireland’s most important songwriters, topping all the Irish polls as best singer/songwriter in the early eighties, and three of his songs, recorded with The Blades, ‘Ghost of a Chance’, ‘Downmarket,’ and ‘The Bride Wore White’ all feature in the RTE poll of best Irish songs of all time. Crooked Town is Paul’s first solo album, and his first new release in fifteen years, and his wonderful lyrical ability and most attractive voice -’the voice of an archangel’ (Sunday Tribune), have developed beautifully over the years. Contributing to the album is ex-Bladesman master guitarist Conor Brady, who was voted Irish musician of the year in 1999.

“This man is the greatest songwriting talent ever to come out of this country (and sorry Van Morrison, but yeah, I include you in that too). And what’s more, he’s still able to do those songs justice in concert. He proved this over two great hours in Vicar Street on March 22nd, 2002, looking neat and cool and calm and perfectly happy, standing proud with the reassembled members of his previous bands, The Blades and The Partisans, after more than a decade out of the music business. But this was no pathetic lurch into glories long-gone, the kind which we’ve become inured to in the last decade through the sad frenzy of reformation which made mockeries out of so many once-great outfits. For a start, The Blades never experienced a fraction of the glories they deserved.

Anyway, Cleary is promoting ‘Crooked Town’, a new solo album, not trading on his back catalogue. It just happens that he offered the gig to his old pals and they accepted. All of them. As anyone who loves music would have. Even the Blue Brass, his erstwhile Tamlaesque brass section, are present and correct. And it just happens that nobody has any stupid neurotic hangups about playing those great great tunes from The Blades’ inspirational ouevre. So it was that we were treated to storming renditions of Downmarket, The Last Man In Europe, Ghost Of A Chance, Impossible, Pride; we grinned like kiddies through beautiful readings of Animation (solo), Some People Smile, and a progressively-more-powerful Boy One; we jived hopelessly through the soul and rock’n'roll standards that Cleary has always sprinkled his live sets with. And that’s not counting the gold he mined from the solo album: everything except the closing, symphonic Ecstasy Blues.

Cleary has the same voice and the same stage presence he did when he was twenty. He steps forward to the microphone, tilts his head back and a clear, brave tremelo fills the room, singing of love and anguish and pride and politics and a million other things you can’t understand just then, ‘cos you’re too damn excited by the sound. He sings entire songs in registers that Bonio couldn’t reach if he were castrated, filled with helium, and set on fire. Dissatisfied even then, Cleary often shifts up a half-octave for the last verse. The wall of sound coming from his and Conor Brady’s guitars could have been produced by Phil Spector. The scissor kicks he still jumps at song crescendos could be by a young Pete Townshend. The soaring soul of his voice against the band’s arrangements could only be compared to Marvin or Otis (a fitting comparison, as the luxuriant version of My Girl proved).

There’s a magical thrill in this classic pop music, written and sung by a man who knows and respects the genre’s history, backed up by consummate musicians in front of a crowd of people who still have love in their hearts for harmony, melody, intelligent chord progressions, great big chunky life-affirming riffs and booming, shimmering bass. Looking around the crowded room you could see that thrill in the delighted delirium on the faces of everyone present, from the surprised media parasites who were only there to blag tickets to Jason Byrne, to the aging Ringsend soulboys stomping to the brass in the moshpit which developed at centre front, to the drunken idiot they efficiently and justifiably knocked over when he started shouting over the quiet bits of the music.

This was truly one of Irish music’s proudest moments.”

Paul Cleary releases
Crooked Town

Crooked Town (Album)


Live Dates

  • There are currently no upcoming live dates for this artist.
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