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The Fureys

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The Fureys
Finbar & Eddie Furey, Musikhalle, Hamburg, in October 1974
Finbar & Eddie Furey, Musikhalle, Hamburg, in October 1974
Background information
Also known asThe Fureys and Davey Arthur, The Furey Brothers, The Furey Family
OriginDublin, Ireland
GenresFolk music
Years active1974–present
MembersEddie Furey
George Furey
Adam Kelly
Camillus Hiney
Tony Murray
Past membersFinbar Furey
Paul Furey (deceased)
Dominic Leech
WebsiteThe Fureys.com

The Fureys are an Irish folk band originally formed in 1974. The group consisted initially of four brothers who grew up in Ballyfermot, Dublin.

Brothers Eddie, Finbar, Paul and George Furey are of Irish Traveller heritage.[1] Two of the band's singles have been number one hits in Ireland, and two of their albums charted in the United Kingdom. In collaborations with Davey Arthur, they have also been credited as The Fureys and Davey Arthur.

History

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Background

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Prior to the band's formation, two of the brothers toured as a duo, known simply by their names as Eddie and Finbar Furey.[2] For a while in 1969–1970, the duo performed with The Clancy Brothers and appeared on two of the Irish folk group's albums.[2] The second of these albums contained two songs composed by the Fureys, "Flowers in the Valley" and "Jennifer Gentle". In the meanwhile, their youngest brother Paul Furey had, together with Davey Arthur and Brendan Leeson, formed a band called The Buskers.[2] Eddie and Finbar and the Buskers appeared together in Germany at the "Irish Folk Festival" in 1974, where they performed as The Furey Brothers. The Buskers, now with the addition of George Furey, appeared there again a year later as The Furey Family, when they were joined by their father Ted, a renowned traditional fiddler, who was 73 at that time. Ted Furey had recorded a solo fiddle album Toss the Feathers released by the Outlet label in 1967.[3]

Band

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Finbar, Eddie, and Paul Furey formed a folk group called Tam Linn in 1976 with Davey Arthur.[2] When their brother George joined them later that year, the band changed its name to The Furey Brothers and Davey Arthur.[2] They eventually simplified their name to The Fureys and Davey Arthur (and just The Fureys when Arthur did not perform with them).[2]

The band started out playing traditional Irish folk music, but quickly changed their sound, leaving the folk music behind, and turned to mainstream easy-listening songs and ballads.

In 1981, The Fureys released their most successful single "When You Were Sweet Sixteen", which became a worldwide hit, reaching No. 14 on the UK Singles Chart,[4] No. 1 on the Irish Singles Chart and No. 9 on the Australian Singles Chart.[5] "The Green Fields of France" (a title commonly but incorrectly given to Eric Bogle's "No Man's Land") also gave them an Irish No. 1, remaining in the single charts for twenty-eight weeks. They also had two Top 40 British albums called Golden Days and At the End of the Day.[2]

Other notable songs include "Gallipoli", "The Red Rose Cafe", and "Steal Away". As of October 24, 2019 the band was still recording and touring. In 2018, the band celebrated their 40th anniversary.

Finbar left the band to begin his own solo career in 1996, with Eddie, George, and Davey Arthur continuing some touring in Ireland, the UK and the European continent. Paul Furey died suddenly in June 2002.[6]

All four of the brothers married and had children. Finbar's son, Martin Furey, is a folk singer and musician with The High Kings. George's son Anthony is the singer with the Young Folk. Eddie's daughter Sarah-Jane is a streamer in the video gaming industry.[citation needed]

Discography

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Ted Furey and Brendan Byrne

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  • Toss The Feathers, Outlet, 1967

Eddie and Finbar Furey

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  • Finbar and Eddie Furey, Transatlantic, 1968
  • The Lonesome Boatman, Transatlantic, 1969
  • The Dawning of the Day, Dawn, 1972
  • Four Green Fields, Pläne, 1972
  • A Dream in My Hand, Intercord, 1974
  • I Live Not Where I Love, Intercord, 1975
  • The Farewell Album, Intercord, 1976
  • I Know Where I'm Going, 1976, (with Paddie Bell)
  • The Town Is Not Their Own, HPE, 1981
  • Finbar and Eddie Furey, Harp, 1982

The Clancy Brothers (with Finbar and Eddie Furey)

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  • Christmas, Columbia, 1969
  • Flowers in the Valley, Columbia, 1970

Finbar Furey

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  • Traditional Irish Pipe Music, Transatlantic, 1969
  • The Irish Pipes of Finbar Furey, Nonesuch, 1972
  • Peace & Enjoyment, Love & Pleasure (with Brian McNeill)
  • Prince of Pipers, Intercord, 1974
  • Sweetest Summer Rain
  • The Finbar Furey Songbook
  • Love Letters, BMG, 1990
  • The Wind and the Rain, Nora, 1997
  • Chasing Moonlight, Hybrid, 2003
  • New York Girls, Rough Diamond, 2003, (EP)
  • The Last Great Lovesong, Pinorekk, 2014

Ted Furey

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  • Irish Folk Music, Arfolk, 1972

The Buskers

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  • Life of a Man, Rubber Records, 1973
  • The Buskers, Hawk, 1974

The Fureys and Bob Stewart

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  • Tomorrow We Part, Crescent, 1976
  • Aran: Celtic Gypsy Music, 1999

The Furey Family

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  • The Furey Family, Intercord, 1977

The Fureys and Davey Arthur

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  • Emigrant, Polydor, 1977
  • Morning on a Distant Shore, Polydor, 1977
  • Banshee, Dolby, 1978
  • The Green Fields of France, Banshee, 1979
  • The Sound of the Fureys and Davey Arthur, Polydor, 1980
  • When You Were Sweet Sixteen, Banshee, 1982
  • Steal Away, Banshee, 1983
  • In Concert, RTÉ, 1983
  • Golden Days, K-Tel, 1984
  • At The End of the Day, K-Tel, 1985
  • The First Leaves of Autumn, 1986
  • Red Rose Café/Irish Eyes/Sitting Alone, 1987,(EP)
  • Dublin Songs, 1988
  • Poor Man's Dream, 1988
  • The Scattering, 1988
  • Alcoholidays
  • The Best of the Fureys and Davey Arthur, 1993

The Fureys

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  • Wind of Change, Shanachie, 1992
  • Claddagh Road, 1994
  • May We All Someday Meet Again, 1996
  • Twenty One Years On, 1999
  • The Essential Fureys, 2001
  • The Fureys Sing Chaplin, 2001
  • My Father's House, 2003
  • I Will Love You, 2003
  • 25th Anniversary Collection, 2003
  • My Father's House, 2005
  • The Times They Are a Changing, 2014
  • 40 Years.....to be continued, 2018

References

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  1. ^ O'Callaghan, Miriam (18 March 2010). "Miriam Meets......Finbar and Martin Furey" (podcast). Raidió Teilifís Éireann. pp. 11:40 – 11:50. Retrieved 29 December 2012. [M O'C]..and they [parents] were originally Travellers? [FF] Oh yeah...that's our background, yeah...
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Colin Larkin, ed. (1992). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music (First ed.). Guinness Publishing. pp. 930/1. ISBN 0-85112-939-0.
  3. ^ OCLC record 31905018 viewed on 27 July 2010.
  4. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 217. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
  5. ^ Steffen Hung. "Forum - One Hit Wonders (General: Music/Charts related)". Australian-charts.com. Retrieved 14 May 2012.
  6. ^ "Fureys & Davey Arthur for Ballinasloe show". Galway City Tribune. 1 July 2011. Retrieved 29 December 2012.
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