Music / Review

Review: The Haar, Downend Folk & Roots – ‘More than a little intense’

By Gavin McNamara  Tuesday Mar 21, 2023

There’s a story that, on March 8th 1890, Bram Stoker, Dublin-born author of Dracula, contracted food poisoning from a dressed crab in a fashionable London restaurant.

The ensuing vivid nightmare about blood-sucking creatures was direct inspiration for his Goth Count. If that dream had had a soundtrack, then it could have been provided by The Haar.

An Anglo-Irish four piece in Bristol to celebrate St Patrick’s Day.

Independent journalism
is needed now More than ever
Keep our city's journalism independent. Become a supporter member today.

It is entirely fitting that their new album is called Where the Old Ghosts Meet because this evening, in this packed church, ghosts are all around us.

The Haar take traditional Irish songs, songs that we all know, and paint them in different, darker, scarier colours. This is not a dyed-green-Guinness-and-a-bit-o’-craic Ireland, this is the coast of Connemara Ireland, this is watching the fog roll in around The Skellig Islands Ireland.

This is devastatingly beautiful and more than a little intense.

Part of that intensity comes from Molly Donnery and her extraordinarily evocative voice. Where so many of the songs feature a heavy death toll, Donnery provides both a pin-drop vulnerability and the quiet fury of the wronged.

There are moments, particularly on Craigie Hill and Two Sisters, where she sounds a tiny bit like Cara Dillon but with all of the emotion and rough edges still, very much, intact.

It’s also quite something to cover a Mary Black song – Anachie Gordon in this case – and utterly do it justice.

The other provider of intensity is Cormac Byrne. It’s not that often you watch a band and can’t drag yourself away from the Bodhràn player but Byrne is remarkable. He literally provides the heartbeat around which everything else can work.

It’s the sound that you can hear pulsing through you at 3 o’clock on a panicked morning. You notice it most on She Moved Through the Fair where this song stops being all All About Eve wafty-ness and, instead, it’s a hypnotic swirl.

Donnery’s voice and Byrne’s Bodhràn overwhelming the senses, creating a Fair with too many people, too many sensations, too much to see.

It seems almost clichèd to expect to hear The Wild Rover on St Patrick’s Day and, surely, it was played a million times up and down the country tonight. One thing’s for sure though, none of those versions sound like The Haar’s.

Theirs is slowed to a lament and is as dark as Dracula’s cape. The horror of the song is amped up with a new verse where the young man is murdered by the landlady. It is terrifying. In a very good way.

Equally disconcerting is Whisky in the Jar. Anyone expecting a rousing romp in the Thin Lizzy mold might have to have a bit of a re-think because this one is very sinister indeed.

Adam Summerhayes, on fiddle, has been adding scarily brilliant textures all night and it is here that those textures take on a blood-red hue. At turns sustaining a solitary high note, then plunging into a breakneck pace, as though being chased by the very devil himself.

All the while he is ably assisted by Murray Grainger (from The Ciderhouse Rebellion) on accordion, the two of them stretching the canvas for the band to paint upon.

There were no painful, Oirish stereotypes tonight, instead this was a St Patrick’s night to remember. It was thinking-person’s music, not drinking-person’s music.

Main photo: Barry Savell

Read next:

Listen to the latest Bristol24/7 Behind the Headlines podcast:

Our top newsletters emailed directly to you
I want to receive (tick as many as you want):
I'm interested in (for future reference):
Marketing Permissions

Bristol24/7 will use the information you provide on this form to be in touch with you and to provide updates and marketing. Please let us know all the ways you would like to hear from us:

We will only use your information in accordance with our privacy policy, which can be viewed here - www.bristol247.com/privacy-policy/ - you can change your mind at any time by clicking the unsubscribe link in the footer of any email you receive from us, or by contacting us at meg@bristol247.com. We will treat your information with respect.


We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By clicking below to subscribe, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing. Learn more about Mailchimp's privacy practices here.

Related articles

You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
Independent journalism
is needed now More than ever
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
Join the Better
Business initiative
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
* prices do not include VAT
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
Enjoy delicious local
exclusive deals
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
Wake up to the latest
Get the breaking news, events and culture in your inbox every morning