The Wolfe Tones lyrics
Artist · 408 692 listeners per month
Artist's albums
A Song for Liberty
2022 · single
55
2019 · album
8 in a Row Treble Treble Celtic Symphony
2019 · single
Child of Destiny
2017 · album
Into the Light (1916 Commemoration Concert)
2016 · album
Joe MC Donnell
2014 · single
50th Anniversary Concert
2014 · album
50th Anniversary Concert Deluxe Edition
2014 · album
At Their Very Best Live
2010 · album
Belt of the Celts
2010 · album
Irish To the Core
2010 · album
Celtic Symphony
2010 · album
Rebels and Heroes
2010 · album
The Greatest Hits
2010 · compilation
Live Alive-Oh
2010 · album
Let The People Sing
2010 · album
The Legendary Wolfe Tones, Vol. 2:
2010 · album
The Legendary Wolfe Tones, Vol. 1
2009 · album
The Anthology of Irish Song
2008 · album
Download your St. Patrick's Day party
2006 · album
1916 Remembered. The Easter Rising.
2006 · album
A Sense of Freedom
2005 · album
The Troubles
2004 · album
Millennium Celebration Album
2003 · album
Till Ireland a Nation
2003 · album
Similar artists
Ronnie Drew
Artist
Charlie and the Bhoys
Artist
The Blarney Lads
Artist
The Irish Rovers
Artist
Johnny McEvoy
Artist
The Fureys
Artist
Paddy Reilly
Artist
Liam Clancy
Artist
The Irish Brigade
Artist
The Barleycorn
Artist
Shane MacGowan & The Popes
Artist
Jim McCann
Artist
Luke Kelly
Artist
Christy Moore
Artist
The Clancy Brothers
Artist
Gaelic Storm
Artist
Athenrye
Artist
The Dublin City Ramblers
Artist
The High Kings
Artist
The Dubliners
Artist
Biography
Very few bands manage to stay together for several decades. Even fewer are able to do it when their prime focus is politics. But then again, there aren't many around like the Wolfe Tones. Taking their name from Wolfe Tone, one of the leaders of the 1798 Irish Rebellion, they've remained unabashedly loud and proud of their politics since they began in 1963, even when the Irish government was banning their records (which it did in the late '60s). Formed by Derek Warfield and his brother Brian, who recruited piper Noel Nagle, they added singer/guitarist Tommy Byrne a year later, and took the huge step of turning professional, establishing themselves first of all as traditional ballad singers, working at home and in England, then venturing on their first U.S. tour in 1966. They worked steadily, releasing records, but not afraid to walk the line -- they had their first record band in 1966. By the end of the decade their material was routinely banned at home, even as Los Angeles was handing them the keys to the City. Brian Warfield has proved to be as prolific and committed composer of songs, largely from an Irish Republican point of view (although the band has always denied any sectarian bias), but mixed with traditional and contemporary material -- a sort of more conscious version of the Dubliners. As time has passed, their music has changed little, but to their fans -- who've tended to love them as much for what they write about as the manner in which they perform -- that's hardly a handicap. And while the baton has been passed to a younger generation, leaving the Wolfe Tones as something of a nostalgia act, their core audience has remained faithful, allowing them to continue releasing records like 25th Anniversary, which is a virtual greatest hits collection, and tour frequently, including annual jaunts to America, where they continued to pack the house. ~ Chris Nickson, Rovi