Galway Girl (Steve Earle song)

"Galway Girl" is a song written by American singer-songwriter Steve Earle[1] and recorded with Irish musician Sharon Shannon; the title was originally "The Galway Girl". It was featured on Earle's 2000 album Transcendental Blues.[2] "The Galway Girl" tells the semi-autobiographical story of the songwriter's reaction to a beautiful black-haired blue-eyed girl he meets in Galway, Ireland.[1] Local references include Salthill and The Long Walk.

"The Galway Girl"
Song by Steve Earle and Sharon Shannon
from the album Transcendental Blues
Released2000
Recorded2000
GenreFolk, Celtic
Length3:05
Songwriter(s)Steve Earle
Producer(s)Jamie Bedford, Ray Kennedy

A cover version of the song by Mundy and Sharon Shannon reached number one and became the most downloaded song of 2008 in Ireland; it has gone on to become the eighth highest selling single in Irish chart history.[3] The song has been the subject of numerous covers and live interpretations.

Background

The song was written about Joyce Redmond; Redmond plays the bodhrán on Steve Earle's version of the song. Earle met Redmond in Galway. Redmond is from Howth, County Dublin.[4]

Certifications

Region CertificationCertified units/sales
United Kingdom (BPI)[5] Silver 200,000

Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Cover versions

Mundy version

"The Galway Girl"
Single by Mundy and Sharon Shannon
ReleasedApril 2008
GenreFolk, Celtic
Songwriter(s)Steve Earle

The Irish artist Mundy collaborated with Sharon Shannon on a cover of "Galway Girl", a track she had previously performed with Steve Earle. A studio version of the track reached number one on the Irish Singles Chart in April 2008 and remained there for five weeks.[6] It was the biggest-selling download in Ireland in 2008 and was a winning nominee at the 2008 Meteor Awards.[7] The song was the highest-selling single in Ireland for 2008.[8]

Mundy also recorded an Irish language version of the track entitled "Cailín na Gaillimhe", for Ceol '08, an Irish language compilation record, which was released in 2008 to raise money for several Irish charities.

Other versions

(Year of release – artist / group – album)

The comedian Stewart Lee references and performs the song in his 2009 Edinburgh Fringe show and also on his live DVD If You Prefer a Milder Comedian Please Ask for One, released on October 11, 2010.

The song appears in the 2007 film P.S. I Love You; Gerard Butler's character sings the song for Hilary Swank's character. Jeffrey Dean Morgan's character also sings the song to Swank.

The song is featured in the TV series Treme (in episode 9 of "What is New Orleans?", from season 2). It was performed by Steve Earle (in the role of Harley, a street musician) with Lucia Micarelli and Spider Stacy, of the Pogues, accompanying him on violin and pennywhistle.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.