‘Music is our way of coping with life’: the Mary Wallopers on bringing booze, sex and politics back to folk

On a pub crawl in County Louth the generation-bridging band, who made a name for themselves during lockdown, speak truth to power and join in a few sessions with their fellow barroom bards In a snug pub known locally as Tata’s, Charles Hendy is calling out “notions” – the distinctly Irish strain of having ideas above one’s station. “We have no problem giving guest list to a plumber,” he says, the day’s first pint of plain at hand. “In fact, I think the whole idea of being a musician should be a lot more like being a plumber. Music is an everyday trade.” Alongside his brother Andrew and Seán McKenna, Hendy helms the Mary Wallopers, the Dundalk balladeers elevating traditional Irish folk for a new era. Raised on trad giants such as the Dubliners and the Clancy Brothers, they formed in 2016 and are a rare generation-bridging proposition. Just like the Dublin folk savants Lankum, their music “speaks truth to power” while, crucially, taking power from tradition. Setting them apart is a rascality that honours the craic every bit as much as having a conscience. Continue reading...
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