other titles...

SONG OF CO-AKLAN
  1. Song Of Co-Aklan
  2. Passed-Out Dog
  3. My Child Is Alive!
  4. Crow Mother
  5. St Wellbeing Axe
  6. Owl In The Parlour
  7. Let's Flood The Fairground
  8. The Lobster's Dream
  9. The Copper Beech
  10. The Knockout Artist
  11. Falling Out North St.
  12. Unrealtime

CATHAL COUGHLAN (microdisney)

SONG OF CO-AKLAN

Dimple Discs
  • cd

    Released: 12th Mar 2021

    £11.99
    Buy
  • lp

    Released: 12th Mar 2021

    £18.99
    Buy

First new music in 10 years from Microdisney/Fatima Mansions founder and singer.

Guests include Luke Haines, Sean O’ Hagan and more Cathal Coughlan is the co-founder and singer of acclaimed 80s/90s pop-rock groups Microdisney and Fatima Mansions, and widely considered to be one of Ireland's most revered singer/songwriters, beloved by fans of caustic literate music in the vein of Wilco, Robert Forster and Mark Eitzel. He's released four acclaimed solo albums and this will be his first new music in 10 years. Features and reviews are already set for Mojo and The Wire and expect plentiful support from BBC6 Music. Enclosed in a stunning sleeve by award-winning Bruce Brand (The Darkness and White Stripes) with an eye-catching portrait by outsider artist Cristabel Christo. The new record not only has his usual backing musicians, The Necropolitan String Quartet, but also Luke Haines (Auteurs/Black Box Recorder), Sean O'Hagan (Microdisney/High Llamas), Rhodri Marsden (Scritti Politti) , Aindrías Ó Gruama (Fatima Mansions), Cory Gray (The Delines) and Dublin singer-songwriter Eileen Gogan.. Loosely conceptual, and based around the persona of Co-Aklan, the LP is melodic and inventive. Twelve fabulous new songs showcasing Cathal's signature caustic wit and smoky baritone, which has earned him comparisons to Scott Walker; three singles taken from the album will have promotional videos from Marry Waterson and Andy Golding of the Wolfhounds. "Coughlan's intelligence and passion are a rebuke to a vapid music industry, his chronicles of disaffection and disgust an inspiration." - David Peschek, The Guardian