Neck
in 2023
in 2023
Background information
OriginLondon, England
GenresCeltic punk, folk punk, street punk
Years active1994 to present
LabelsGolf, Abstract/Candlelight, Paddy Plastic, Militant Entertainment, Hibernian, Bad Dog/CoreTex
Past membersLeigh Heggarty (Ruts DC), Sean Gannon & Romeo Stodart (The Magic Numbers), Jason Cook (Blaggers ITA), Kieran "Mo" O' Hagan (Shane MacGowan and The Popes), Liam Marr (Booze & Glory)
Websitewww.neck.ie

Neck are a six-piece London-Irish Celtic punk band from the North London neighborhood of Holloway whose front man was a member of Shane MacGowan and the Popes. The band takes their lead from two other London bands: The Clash and The Pogues, blending Punk rock with traditional Irish music to play a London-Irish style known as 'Psycho-Ceilídh'.

History

The band toured throughout the US, Europe, UK, and Ireland, playing international festivals. Such festivals include: Tantsy festival in Moscow Hermitage Garden; Dublin Irish Festival, Ohio – the second-largest Irish festival in the US; SXSW in Texas & their good friends' Flogging Molly's Salty Dog cruise out of Miami, also in the US; Paas Pop in Holland; The West Belfast Féile an Phobail in The North and The Waterford Spraoi in The Republic in Ireland; Berlin's Punk & Disorderly festival four times, as well as With Full Force in Germany; while, in the UK, they have played their largest festival, Glastonbury, six times, as well as The Levellers own festival Beautiful Days four, Solfest three, Boomtown Fair twice and the Rebellion Festival, ten times.

Their music reflects the life experience of the emigrant and second-generation Irish diaspora, with their front man's voice and song-writing being considered both faithful to the form,[1] and in direct lineage from his former band-leader and mentor, Shane MacGowan. Neck has released four albums to date, with their third album, Sod 'Em & Begorrah!, being picked out for particularly high praise by being judged, variously, the second[2] and third[3] greatest Celtic punk album of all time, the former above, and the latter behind only The Pogues and Flogging Molly. They have also appeared on numerous compilation albums, and their natural London inclusiveness and punk sensibilities came well to the fore on their Joe Strummer-inspired anti-racism / pro-inclusiveness anthem "Everybody's Welcome to the Hooley!", which charted in the UK Indie Chart in 2006. Famously, the song was written as an immediate reaction to Far-right Skinheads violently disrupting an ostensibly 'No Politics' festival they were playing at in Belgium. Their front man, incensed by how wrong these people were about punk rock, and inspired by the incendiary memory of seeing The Clash live in 1977, wrote the song in five minutes, taught it to the band before they went onstage, and played it at the far-right skinheads, invoking the whole crowd to chant Joe Strummer, prior to doing so. Making it clear, in the process, that being a London band, inspired by The Clash and the 1978 Rock Against Racism festival, and being an Irish band having both Catholics and Protestants in the band made them, intrinsically, political. The version of the song on the single also references and is dedicated to, Stephen Lawrence and Anthony Walker, both of them being black British teenagers murdered in racially motivated attacks. Proceeds from the single went to Love Music Hate Racism.

Their music can also be heard on various motion picture soundtracks: on the "surreal" Pirates of the White Sand[4] short (2005); The Emerald Diamond, a 2006 documentary film about the Irish National Baseball Team – contributing four songs, including the traditional "Star of the County Down" and the original "Every Day's Saint Patrick's Day"; the Boston-set Gang War Shoot-'em Up Beantown (2007); and the "Capraesque" homage to 'Small Town America Coming of Age' The Supermarket (2009).[5][6] They also appear performing two songs, the traditional "Carrickfergus" and the original "The Ferry Fare", in the 1999, Belfast-set, Film 4 romantic comedy-drama With or Without You,[7][8] directed by Michael Winterbottom.

With over half their members drawn from the London Irish traditional music session scene, their musicianship has earned them much respect and admiration. Staying true to those roots, they often perform acoustic 'Unplugged / Irish traditional music session' sets, alongside full electric ones, with one such performance, at 'The Irish House' during the celebrated London 2012 Olympics, enhancing their reputation (of passionate playing, 'knowing how to 'be' and their front-man 'wearing his heart on his sleeve') sufficiently that they were chosen by the Irish Cultural Centre in London to have the honor of performing such a Seisiún at the Reception for the Irish Paralympic team at the London 2012 Paralympics. Accordingly, their front-man has also been given the honor by Sinn Féin, to host such sessions for any social functions that they stage in London, including the centenary celebrations for the Easter Rising in Portcullis House.

This reputation has led to various members being invited to collaborate both live and on other band's recordings. The most well known is their front-man guesting, on banjo, with the Alabama 3 (alongside Segs of Ruts DC), and co-writing an original song "That's It, I Quit" on the Hayseed Dixie album No Covers.[9] He has also played in the folk punk group Folk Finger alongside Cush and Ricky McGuire from The Men They Couldn't Hang and his old band-mate Danny Heatley from The Popes – including touring Ireland and a New Year's Eve show in Prague; and also 'depped' for the front-man of Steampunk band The Men That Will Not Be Blamed for Nothing at the Glastonbury Festival. Collaboration can work the other way too, with their former member, Leigh Heggarty now of Ruts DC guesting live periodically.

This has all led to them being recognized as one of the leading bands on the international Celtic punk and folk punk scenes,[10] alongside their US contemporaries Dropkick Murphys and Flogging Molly, with the Boston-based website covering the Celtic punk scene, Shite 'n' Onions,[11] being named after one of their tunes,[12] and bands as far flung as in Germany and the United States now cover their songs, while their front-man even gets name-checked in songs by other bands.[13][14][15]

Discography

Albums

  • 2001: Necked (A Few Odds From the Oul' Sods)
  • 2004: Here's Mud in Yer Eye!
  • 2005: Sod 'Em & Begorrah!
  • 2009: Come Out Fighting! (UK)
  • 2010: Come Out Fighting! (US & Canada; Europe)

Singles and EPs

  • 1999: The Psycho-Ceilídh EP
  • 2002: The Fields of Athenry 'World Cup single'
  • 2006: Everybody's Welcome to the Hooley! – proceeds go to Love Music Hate Racism

Movie soundtracks

  • 1999: With or Withbout You (+ performance appearance)
  • 2005: Pirates of the White Sand
  • 2006: The Emerald Diamond
  • 2007: Beantown
  • 2009: The Supermarket

References

  1. "Neck – Come Out Fighting". Thepunksite.com. 4 June 2013. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
  2. "30492-LONDON CELTIC PUNK'S TOP TWENTY CELTIC-PUNK ALBUM's OF ALL TIME". Londoncelticpunks.wordpress.com. 4 July 2014. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
  3. "The 10 Greatest Celtic-punk CDs Ever | Shite'n'Onions". Shitenonions.com. 17 June 2010. Retrieved 13 August 2014.
  4. "Pirates of the White Sand". IMDb.com. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
  5. Norman, Timothy (12 March 2007). "Beantown". IMDb.com. Kristen Savage, Randy Paradis, Sean Fowler. Retrieved 21 October 2017.
  6. Norman, Timothy (2009). "The Supermarket". IMDb.com. Matt Jenkins, Bob Ondek, Pat Tanner. Retrieved 21 October 2017.
  7. Winterbottom, Michael (10 September 1999). "With or Without You". IMDb.com. Christopher Eccleston, Dervla Kirwan, Yvan Attal. Retrieved 21 October 2017.
  8. "With or Without You (1999)". IMDb.com. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
  9. "Hayseed Dixie – No Covers". Discogs.com. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
  10. "Modern Dance". The A-Z Music Review Magazine. p. 3. Over the last few years, London-Irish band Neck have established themselves as a leading force in the folk-punk scene with their spirited psycho-ceilidh sound.
  11. "Shite 'n' Onions". Archived from the original on 5 January 2014. Retrieved 8 September 2006.
  12. "Shite 'n' Onions Volume 1 by Various Artists". Rateyourmusic.com. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
  13. "Jakey's Gone to Germany Lyrics – Siòbhan". FlashLyrics.com. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
  14. "Jakey's Gone to Germany — Siobhan". Last.fm. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
  15. "Siobhan – Jakey's Gone To Germany Lyrics". Musixmatch.com. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
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