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In a divided society, like Ireland, and specifically the north of Ireland, music can be a consoling, bridge-building force, bringing practitioners and followers together in joint appreciation and celebration. But music, which often springs from the same well, can be divisive, and a source of negative reinforcement. “The Bright Orange Heros of Comber: As we walked up and down, on the road to Portadown, Our drums we did rattle like the thunder, And as the day drew near, filled each Fenian heart with fear,, Ah we're the bright Orange heroes of Comber.” To the same melody, a different set of territorial sentiments is attached; Come out ye Black ‘n Tans, Come out and fight me like a man, Show your wife how you won medals down in Flanders, Show them how the IRA, made you run like hell away! From the green and grassy lanes of Killashandra.” #irishtravellers #orangemusic #protestanttraditionalmusic #flutemusic #flute #johnnydoran #felixdoran #finbarfurey #irishtraditionalmusic #sessions #Irishmusicsessions #uilleannpipes #fiddlemusic #tedfurey #tinwhistle Studio Guest Danny Diamond, Fiddle player / composer / recording engineer / researcher with a background in Irish traditional music, with strong north of Ireland roots, currently based between Minneapolis, USA and Dublin, Brian Mullen, singer, BBC radio presenter, , Caschlár” on BBC Radio Ulster. In 2007, he sang at the Library of Congress in Washington DC as part of Rediscover Northern Ireland along with his old friend Gary Hastings. Desi Wilkinson, MA, Ethnomusicology, flute player, steeped in a long line of northern flute players, inc Charlie O’Neill, Tommy Gunn, major influences on his very northern style of playing. and has toured extensively with many of Ireland's leading traditional artists. Quincy Duggan, Markethill, Armagh,is a freelance journalist, and filmmaker and is heavily involved in the marching band scene in Northern Ireland. He is the marching band correspondent for the Orange Standard. Dougan has immersed himself in the history and heritage of his community and is a member of LOL 788 in Redrock Orange Hall, the Red Rock Purple Heroes. Martin Dowling is a fiddle player and historian. He performs and teaches Irish traditional music regularly in Europe and the United States. He is currently a Lecturer in Irish Traditional Music at Queen’s University of Belfast. Martin was the Traditional Arts Officer of the Arts Council of Northern Ireland, and his academic interests evolved to the cultural and historical contexts of the performance of Irish traditional music. Fintan Vallely, Flute player and ethnomusicologist and author of many publications inc Companion to Irish Traditional Music (since 1999) and many more relevant books, plays, appropriately, a version of the Shanghai March, from the Cobblestone Bar in Dublin. His book, Tuned Out, explores this theme is a highly researched, articulate exploration of this episode’s theme.