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Top ten Irish songs for St. Patrick’s Day - SEE VIDEOS

Our pick of the tunes to get the celebrations going this St. Patrick's Day




SEE VIDEOS  of the top Irish songs for St. Patrick's Day click here

Click here to visit our special St. Patrick's Day section -

Irish Central has come up the top 10 Irish songs you should be singing this St. Patrick’s Day!

10. “There’s No One As Irish As Barack Obama”

A song created by an Co. Limerick based group, The Hardy Drew and the Nancy Boys, when it was discovered that Obama has Irish roots in Moneygall, Co. Offaly. Their song was a huge hit on YouTube and continues to be sung around the word.

Sing along now:

“From Kerry and Cork to old Donegal
Let’s hear it for Barack from old Moneygall
From the lakes if Killarney to old Connemara
There’s no one as Irish as Barack O’Bama
O'Leary, O'Reilly, O'Hare and O'Hara
There's no one as Irish as Barack O'Bama…..”

9. “The Irish Rover”

A traditional Irish song about a magnificent, though improbable, sailing ship that reaches an unfortunate end. One that is only sung after many a beer is consumed and Irish people get nostalgic and some end up in tears.

Sing along now:

“On the fourth of July eighteen hundred and six,
We set sail from the sweet cove of Cork,
We were sailing away with a cargo of bricks,
For the grand city hall in New York,
'Twas a wonderful craft, she was rigged fore-and-aft,
And oh, how the wild winds drove her.
She'd got several blasts, she'd 27 masts,
And we called her the Irish Rover…”

8. "A Nation Once Again"

This is a song, written in the early to mid-1840s by Thomas Osborne Davis (1814–1845). Davis was a founder of an Irish movement whose aim was the independence of Ireland.

The song is a prime example of the "Irish rebel music" sub-genre (though it does not celebrate fallen Irish freedom fighters by name, or cast aspersions on the British government as so many rebel songs do).

Sing along now:

“When boyhood's fire was in my blood,
I read of ancient freemen,
For Greece and Rome who bravely stood,
Three hundred men and three men;
And then I prayed I yet might see,
Our fetters rent in twain,
And Ireland, long a province, be?A Nation once again…!”

7. “The Boys of the Old Brigade”

An Irish Republican folk song about the Irish Republican Army of the Irish War of Independence 1919-1921. The title is borrowed from the older (but different) military song, a slow march that is always played at the annual Festival of Remembrance when the Chelsea Pensioners file in. ("Then steadily shoulder to shoulder, steadily blade by blade, marching along, hearty and strong, like the boys of the old brigade").




23 Comments

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"A Nation Once Again" The nation of which the Protestant patriot Thomas Davis speaks in this song is Ireland, the whole country(an tír uile agus gach roinn di). Davis, the son of a Welch father and Irish mother, was the chief organizer of the Young Irelanders, whose leaders included Wm. Smith O'Brien M.P. (also Protestant) and John Mitchell, a Unitarian. Davis was also a staunch supporter of an Ghaeilge and lamented its decline. But in the modern, politically correct Ireland of today, Gaeilgeoirí who espouse an Irish nation with full sovereignty over the whole country are few and far between.
DITTO chriswalsh............The blacks always go black no matter what, even if the white gene gives them blues eyes and fair skin. Obama is nothing but a common Chicago Thug and the bit of Irish blood in him, trust me, he could care less about.
Hail Glorious St Patrick (should be in the no 1 spot!) Hail glorious St Patrick, Dear saint of our isle. On us thy poor children, Bestow a sweet smile. And now thou art high in the mansions above On Erin's green valleys look down in thy love.
I love reading all of them.I wasn't familiar with some.This is a great web site.
Interesting that there are no songs about St. Patrick himself?
I love these songs, some of them tend to "get my blood up" - there's no way i can escape my father's and grandfather's tempraments. Did you forget An Poc Ar Buile and oro se de bheatha bhaile?
again why is there ira songs in any st. patrick day songs
Re Irish Rover: It's ".... we set sail from the Coal Quay of Cork...."
Wow! This list is very similar to the list of Ten Irish songs to AVOID this St. Patrick's Day. Hmmmm.
Darn! Goodbye "Danny Boy". A song for the man in the White house? Hello "Danny Boy".
Your right avoid Danny Boy,if this video of Danny Boy by the Celtic Women doen't bring tears to your eyes you are not Irish.
My song as always for St Patricks Day is " A Nation Once Again "
REMITROMJR, if so called Americans checked not to deeply into their family tree, you might find that a lot are as you put it " mongrals "
What's the scoop here? Songs #1,2,3,&8 are also on the top 10 to avoid on St. Patrick's Day. Are we supposed to sing them or not? As for me, I love them all.
Defiantely the Obama song could be dropped out and replaced by "N17" by the SawDoctors. Tells of a persons desire to be back home, while been forced to emigrate due to a bad economy (PRe-Celtic Tiger, and before this mess).




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