Music and Songs at the 2025 Spirit of Mother Jones Festival

All events take place at the Maldron Hotel, Shandon.

Thursday 24th July 2025 at 1.00 p.m.

Choir Kalyna. 

Winners of the Lord Mayors top community prize at Cork City Hall in 2024, this choir has become a huge favourite across Cork in recent years. It comprises women and men who are now living in Cork following the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the ongoing attacks on their country.  The choir perform traditional songs from the Ukraine and their wonderful renderings of “You Raised Me Up” are inspiring for all who have been present at their performances.

Choir Kalyna should not be missed and their creative performances against a background of the assault on their homeland provide an example of hope for the human spirit to overcome adversity. We look forward to welcoming them back to perform at the opening of the Spirit of Mother Jones Festival.

Choir Kalyna with Viktoria.

The Cork Singers’ Club.

Thursday 9.30 p.m.

Established in 1993, the Cork Singers’ Club has uniquely featured in every Mother Jones festival since the opening night on 31st July 2012. Eagerly awaited each year, the Cork Singers’ Club will present an evening of songs. It has ensured that the tradition of singing remains alive in Cork, no instruments are allowed. For locals and visitors this is an opportunity to hear songs being sung in a pure manner in front of an attentive audience. Club members also gather each Sunday night at An Spailpín Fánach to hone their remarkable art. Under the Fear An Tí Jim Walsh, the Cork Singers’ Club is a gem of the singing heritage of the people of Cork. A special effort is made by the singers each year to honour Mother Jones with songs of unions, of working class people and social justice.  Go along! 

Cork Singers Club.

Friday 25th July at 1:00 p.m.

Maldron Hotel Bar.

Jimmy Crowley accompanied by Eve Telford.

Legendary Cork ballad and folk singer Jimmy Crowley accompanied by Eve Telford will perform at lunch time on Friday.  Jimmy has created and played on the folk music scene in Ireland and across the world for over 60 years now. He established one of the first folk clubs in Cork in Douglas in the late 70s and early 80s. His band Stokers Lodge was very popular for a number of years.

From his song-writing to his solo albums to his Opus Mór; Songs From a Beautiful City (The Free State Press 2014), Jimmy has made an enormous contribution to preserving Irish ballads.  He submits songs weekly to the Cork Evening Echo with a note dealing with its background and his contribution has now exceeded a thousand songs. He has appeared at the Spirit of Mother Jones festival since its very beginnings and holds the woman in very high esteem.   

Eve Telford sings traditional folk songs from Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales.  Born in Australia, her original songs are inspired by the wellsprings of world mythologies, indigenous rights, the natural world and political protest.  Their concerts now embrace a wide variety of songs, old and new, traditional and modern.

Friday 25th July at 6.30pm. At the Shandon Plaza.

The Mexican Community Choir.                                                                          

Cecila Gamez and her dancers representing the Mexican Community in Cork will perform close by the Dance Cork Firkin Crane on Friday evening. Their performance in traditional attire along with striking sombreros will add a riot of colour to the festival and will honour the connections Mother Jones made with the Mexican revolutionaries in the early 1900. Mother Jones campaigned for the release of many of the Mexican leaders who were imprisoned in the US and was honoured as Madre Juanita in Mexico in 1921.

Friday 25th July at 9.30 p.m.                                                                                                                  

Maldron Hotel Bar.  

John Nyhan and Gearoid Nyhan and friends and introducing US labour singer George Mann.

George Mann is a former union organiser and now a singer of American Labour songs. Based in Ithaca New York, he is interested in labour and working class history and sings the songs of the labour and social justice movements of the 20th Century. He has toured widely and performs at hundreds of concerts each year. In 2013 he produced the “Almanac Trail” with Rik Palieri, which is a tribute to the famous Almanac Singers. Along with Si Kahn he recently released an album of Labour Songs. He is joining us here in Cork directly from singing at the Tolpuddle Martyrs Festival in Dorset. This is George’s first visit to Ireland and we are eagerly looking forward to his performance at the festival.

See http://www.georgemann.org

Saturday 26th July at 6.15p.m. Approx. 

(At the Mother Jones Plaque on John Redmond Street)

Martin Leahy will again perform his song about homelessness “Everyone Should Have a Home” at the Plaque. He has performed this each Thursday outside Dail Eireann for the past two years and in doing so highlights the great failure of many recent Irish governments. His song “Where We Lay our Bodies Down” remains a tribute to Ann Lovett while “Snowflakes” relates to the online attacks on people.  Martin hates injustice and he has been very active in exposing the genocide in Gaza and regularly sings also on Saturdays at the Palestinian marches in Cork City and in Bandon.

Martin Leahy with Mother Jones.

Dee Power is a music and drama educator, teaching piano, vocals, speech and dramas and coaching choirs in a variety of schools in the city and county. She plays in two Cork bands, Cork Floyd and Silvertone and plays a variety of sessions in music haunts around the city. She is outspoken re inequality and social injustices and you can regularly hear her using her voice to protest social injustices. She is delighted to be singing at the Mother Jones annual celebration and is much looking forward to setting with the esteemed Martin Leahy 

Dee Power: Photo by Jota Gambuzino.

Saturday 26th July: Events at the Spirit of Mother Jones Festival and Summer School.

Nearly all events at the Maldron Hotel.

9:30 a.m.

Peter Foynes

Peter Foynes will conduct a heritage stroll in the Shandon Historical Quarter. Peter has lived and worked in Shandon for many years and is very familiar with this historic area with its ancient streetscape, its proud history and its resilient and diverse community. He offers a unique insight into the economic, social and political area and his Saturday morning festival walks around the community are essential to an understanding of the heritage which includes its famous daughter Mary Harris.

Meet outside the Maldron.

Peter Foynes.

11.00 a.m.

Joe Noonan

“Environmental Law & Environmental Justice – are they allies or enemies?’

Joe Noonan is a Solicitor in practice in Cork for 45 years.  Carbon dioxide in 1979 was 336 ppm. It is 426 ppm now. His legal work has included some of Cork and Ireland’s most controversial environmental issues, from how we licence and regulate hazardous industrial activities, the assessment of proposals to build a waste incinerator in Cork Harbour, and assisting people driven from their homes by intolerable noise from badly planned wind turbines. Has the law helped or hindered the public on the front line?  What is its place in the critically-urgent global and local response to climate change?

Three hundred years ago Jonathan Swift wrote that laws are like cobwebs.  They may catch small flies, but let wasps and hornets through.

How true is that of an area of law that concerns everyone – the law relating to the environment we depend on for our existence?

Joe Noonan.

12:00 a.m.

Jennie C Stephens

“Climate Justice Here and Now”

Jennie C. Stephens is a feminist climate justice scholar-activist based in Dublin. Her coalition-building work focuses on societal transformation and envisioning a hopeful future for all. She challenges the powerful actors and institutions who have been obstructing transformative climate action for decades and is a member of the Climate Justice Universities Union, a collective leveraging the transformative potential of higher education institutions to accelerate change toward a more just and healthy future.  She is the author of Climate Justice and the University (Hopkins University Press, 2024) and Diversifying Power: Why We Need Feminist, Antiracist Leadership on Climate and Energy (Island Press, 2020). 

Jennie C. Stephens.

2:00 p.m

Mike Allen

“Housing, Homelessness and the Struggle for Social Justice: A bed for the night.”

Over the last decade, the number of people who are homeless has quadrupled, with people from a far wider range of social background and circumstances becoming homeless, or at risk of losing their homes. Why has this happened? What impact does this have on the men, women and children who experience it? And what are the effects on our wider society? The talk will also set out some of the proposals about what can be done to solve the problem, and look at the various social movements which emerged over time to demand solutions.”

3:00 p.m.

Jack Lane

“Roger Casement-The Real and The Imagined”

Roger Casement remains a compelling figure in Irish history. This year is the 60th anniversary of his re-internment. He has become an icon for many causes. But icons are lifeless things and are deprived of context and thus any real historical meaning.  Jack Lane argues that Casement remains highly relevant.  After 49 of his 52 years as an active participant and onetime poster boy for the British Empire he became the most dangerous Irishman that the Empire ever faced. That is why he was hanged and that is why there has been a consistent attempt for over 100 years since to traduce his moral significance.  Jack will seek to put the record straight.

Jack Lane with Anne Piggott.

4:00 p.m.

Anne Twomey

Making Their Mark: Remarkable Cork Women and the contribution they made to Cork and Irish Society.

Anne Twomey will discuss the ground breaking role of four Cork women. Anna Haslam, suffragette leader, feminist and campaigner for political rights for women. Suzanne Rouviere Day, suffragette, writer and novelist who was among the first women to stand for election. Jennie Dowdall the first woman elected Lord Mayor of Cork (1959) and Eileen Desmond, the first female Minister of the senior Government Departments of Health and Social Welfare. 

Anne Twomey

5:00 p.m.

Luke Dineen

“Big Jim Larkin: His Life, Times and Ideology”

Big Jim Larkin lived in a tumultuous world during turbulent times. Like so many other radicals in the early years of the twentieth century, he believed that the dawn of a new age of the people was imminent, one in which the working classes, and not the captains of industry, would control the destinies of nations, including a free and independent Irish Republic.

Central to this vision was his belief in the ideology of syndicalism, the most popular brand of revolutionary socialism until the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. This talk will examine the various components of Larkin’s ideology until the 1913 Dublin Lockout, especially the impact that syndicalism had on him.

Note: This talk may take place using Zoom at the venue.

Luke Dineen.

6:15 p.m.

Plaque events and the annual toast

With singers Martin Leahy and Dee Power.

Hear Martin’s new song “Mother Jones” just released.

Followed by the traditional whiskey toast to Mother Jones at her plaque. 

Martin Leahy with Mother Jones.
Dee Power: Photo by Jota Gambuzino.