Discographies
15 Years On
1977 - Chyme CHLP 1025 LP
Side One
The Wild Rover
Ploughboy Lads [1]
The three Sea Captains
Bunclody [1]
Seven drunken Nights
The Belfast Hornpipe, Tim Maloney
Side Two
Black velvet Band
Carrickfergus [1]
Reels: Last Night's Fun & The Congress Reel [1]
The Banks of the Sweet Primroses [1]
Weile Waile
Four Green Fields (Tommy Makem) [1]
Side Three
The Town I Loved So Well (Phil Coulter)
Salamanca [1]
Spancil Hill [1]
McAlpine's Fusiliers (Domnic Behan)
Boulavouge [1]
The Old Triangle (Brendan Behan)
Side Four
Spanish Lady
O'Carolan's Devotion [1]
Thirty Foot Trailer (Ewan MacColl)
Down by the Glenside (Peader Kearney) [1]
Fiddlers Green (John Connolly)
Molly Malone [1]
Credits
Ronnie Drew
Luke Kelly
Barney McKenna
Ciarán Bourke
John Sheahan
Jim McCann
Produced by Earl Gill
Recorded at: Lombard Sound, Dublin
Air Studios, London
Polydor Studios, London
Sleeve design: James Cogan
Photographs: Richard Dann
Photographs: Noel Person (credited on the Intercord release)
Sleeve Design (Intercord release): Pauly-Helmut Zrocke and Charles H. Hoellering
1 previously unreleased tracks — and are all vocals by Jim McCann or instrumental tracks.
Sleeve Notes
About fifteen years ago, there was … Ronnie Drew, Ciarán Bourke, Luke Kelly & Barney McKenna
… out of work and sitting all day in a smoky back-room of O'Donoghue's in Merrion Row in Dublin. O'Donoghue's at that time was a mecca for folk singers and instrumentalists so it's not surprising that the original Dubliners first met there.The four lads formed a group known initially as the Ronnie Drew Group and it was Luke who whilst reading the James Joyce novel of the same name, suggested that the group should be named THE DUBLINERS.
Meanwhile they had been joined by the fiddle player, John Sheahan.
After appearing at the 1963 Edinburgh Festival, the group started to perform regularly in various editions of the B.B.C. television show "Hootananny". They made their first album and the English Folk Scene had never seen or heard anything like them. Clubs, Concerts and Festivals were packed to capacity.
In 1968 their record "Seven Drunken Nights" topped the English Hit Parade. The Dubliners' popularity started to spread throughout Europe. In 1971 they toured for the first time through Germany, Scandinavia, Holland and Belgium. Then followed several tours to North America.
In 1974 Ciarán Bourke suffered a brain hemorrhage and the group are still awaiting his return. In the same year Ronnie Drew decided to leave the group and follow a solo career. With two major disasters in the one year the future of the Dubliners looked dim, but then along came Jim.

Jim McCann had been recognised as Ireland's leading solo folk singer for several years, but it was through the rock musical "Jesus Christ Superstar" that Jim joined the group.
Luke Kelly had in March 1973 played King Herod whilst Jim played St. Peter in the Dublin production of this musical. The two singers struck up a friendship and when the crisis in the Dubliners came, Jim was asked to join. Over the last three year the "Rebirth" of the Dubliners has been phenomenal. Their first tour of Australia in 1976 was a sellout. The 1977 tour was even bigger and better with New Zealand added to the itinerary. Their European tour extended through Germany, Austria, Holland, Belgium Switzerland, France, Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Finland.
The groups popularity on world television has been unique with specials on the mains channels of German, Australian, French and BBC TV.
In June 1977 they gave an open air concert for 20,000 people on the Rhine, whilst in September, they gave a special concert in the London Royal Festival Hall and in November the group appear for the first time at the Paris Olympia.
All in all the fifteenth birthday looks like the greatest year yet for a group who have been labeled "Bawdy, Bold, Impossible to Resist" and whom the London Daily Telegraph said — "If ever a group made folk music popular in the contemporary sense it is the Dubliners, who have had the widest possible success with the least concession to commercial pressure."
Notes
The (above) sleeve notes are from the (below) Polydor release and are slightly longer.
Alternate Releases
Fifteen Years On: 1993 - Chyme CHCD 1025 CD
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