A great review in Hot Press

Hot Press has been the bible for Irish music, going right back to my first time around the block, forty years ago; and Jackie Hayden is a legend in his own right, not least as the man who signed U2 to their first record deal. So, when Jackie Hayden gives An Irish Life such a great review in Hot Press, it means an immense amount to me. Read it here or below.
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TOMMY KEYES
An Irish Life
Keyes Records
8/10
Listen: ‘Smalltown Superstars’
SONG-CYCLE LIFTS THE LID ON IRELAND’S ROCK PAST
Tommy Keyes earned his place in Irish rock history as keyboardist and main songsmith with the late seventies rock outfit Sidewinder, and on An Irish Life he re-works some of the material and experiences from that era. So just as there’s a lived-in quality to Keyes’ voice there’s an appealing sense of reality about songs that, taken collectively, serve as a virtual narrative for the growing pains of the modern Irish rock scene.
Aided and abetted by such seasoned musicians as Richie Buckley (sax) and Dick Farrelly (guitars), An Irish Life delivers exactly that, tales of the trials and tribulations of life in Ireland, with lyrics that refreshingly confront reality rather than offering escape from it. The opener ‘I Was There’ sets the scene, name-checking Morans, McGonagles and other long-gone yet legendary venues, as well as such local heroes as Stagalee, the Bogey Boys and Rocky De Valera. In ‘Happy Days’ Keyes dreams of cowboys and football heroism, and football shows up again, alongside music, Radio Luxembourg and the cinema, in ‘Landscape Park’. Hot Press earns a mention in the sprightly ‘Smalltown Superstars’ in which Keyes depicts the innocent optimism of the young muso.
‘Long Distance Call’ and ‘Dust In My Eye’ remind us that emigration has been a permanent blight, while the relentlessness of work pressures inhabit and disturb ‘Sleep She Said’. Love gets a look-in too in ‘Slowdown World’, and family and local football filter into in ‘Richmond Nights’. And it’s all underpinned by Keyes’ deft keyboards and confident soft-rock arrangements.
An Irish Life is part of Keyes monumental triple-CD box set, but all are also available separately. This song-cycle lovingly explores the underbelly of Irish rock, a territory all too often ignored in our adulation of bigger names. So Keyes is to be congratulated for focusing our attention on an era that laid such firm foundations for our later successes.
OUT NOW/JACKIE HAYDEN