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Patrick Street
Patrick Street
band
1
Planxty
Planxty
band
2
Johnny Moynihan
Johnny Moynihan
Irish singer
3
Dónal Lunny
Dónal Lunny
Irish musician and record producer
4
Bill Whelan
Bill Whelan
Irish composer
5
The Bothy Band
The Bothy Band
band
6
Declan Masterson
Declan Masterson
Irish composer
7
De Dannan
De Dannan
band
8
Kevin Burke
Kevin Burke
British-Irish fiddler
9
Liam O'Flynn
Liam O'Flynn
Irish musician
10
Moving Hearts
Moving Hearts
band
11
Paul Brady
Paul Brady
Irish singer
12
Frank Harte
Frank Harte
Irish singer
13
Christy Moore
Christy Moore
Irish folk singer, songwriter, and guitarist
14
Ronnie Drew
Ronnie Drew
Irish musician (1934-2008)
15
Susan McKeown
Susan McKeown
Irish songwriter, folk singer and producer
16
Andy M. Stewart
Andy M. Stewart
Scottish singer
17
Séamus Ennis
Séamus Ennis
Irish singer and piper
18
Woody Guthrie
Woody Guthrie
American singer-songwriter and folk musician
19
Paddy Glackin
Paddy Glackin
Irish musician
20
Jimmy MacCarthy
Jimmy MacCarthy
Irish singer-songwriter
Andy Irvine
Irish folk musician and singer-songwriter

Andy Irvine

Intro
Irish folk musician and singer-songwriter

Andrew Kennedy Irvine (born 14 June 1942) is an Irish folk musician, singer-songwriter, and a founding member of Sweeney's Men, Planxty, Patrick Street, Mozaik, LAPD and Usher's Island. He also featured in duos, with Dónal Lunny, Paul Brady, Mick Hanly, Dick Gaughan, Rens van der Zalm, and Luke Plumb. Irvine plays the mandolin, mandola, bouzouki, harmonica, and hurdy-gurdy.

He has been influential in folk music for over five decades, during which he recorded a large repertoire of songs and tunes he assembled from books, old recordings and folk-song collectors rooted in the Irish, English, Scottish, Eastern European, Australian and American old-time and folk traditions.

As a child actor, Irvine honed his performing talent from an early age and learned the classical guitar. He switched to folk music after discovering Woody Guthrie, also adopting the latter's other instruments: harmonica and mandolin. While extending Guthrie's guitar picking technique to the mandolin, he further developed his playing of this instrument—and, later, of the mandola and the bouzouki—into a decorative, harmonic style, and embraced the modes and rhythms of Bulgarian folk music.

Along with Johnny Moynihan and Dónal Lunny, Irvine is one of the pioneers who adapted the Greek bouzouki—with a new tuning—into an Irish instrument. He contributed to advancing the design of his instruments in co-operation with English luthier Stefan Sobell, and he sometimes plays a hurdy-gurdy made for him in 1972 by Peter Abnett, another English luthier.

Although touring mainly as a soloist, Irvine has also enjoyed great success in pursuing collaborations through many projects that have influenced contemporary folk music. He continues to tour and perform extensively in Ireland, Great Britain, Europe, North and South America, Japan, Australia and New Zealand. In October 2018, he received the first Lifetime Achievement Award bestowed at RTÉ Radio 1's inaugural Folk Music Awards.