*Mikey and Lee Wall performing. Photograph: Joe Buckley

WINGS festival returns what will be the third instalment of the week-long music festival in Shannon Town.

Spearheaded by Damien Oโ€™Rourke of Cuppa Tea TV, Wings has grown year on year and the 2023 run will see it welcome an international act for the first time. The festival will run from Monday (February 19th) until Sunday (February 25th).

An open session will kick off proceedings at the Shannon Springs Hotel at 7pm. Treacyโ€™s Oakwood Hotel will on Tuesday host Blaise Phelan and Stoney Wall leading an acoustic session from 8:30pm.

Youth in music will broadcast a livestream from St Caiminโ€™s Community School from 11:30am on Wednesday, this can be viewed on Cuppa Tea TVโ€™s Facebook page. Later that night at 8:30pm, Ray Fean, formerly of The Horslips is the star act alongside The Kirbyโ€™s and Sixmilebridge Folk Club at The Goalpost Bar.

Parish boundaries are crossed for the music on Thursday with The Honk in Newmarket-on-Fergus welcoming Sheila Rynn and friends for a slow session starting at 7pm.

On Friday evening all roads lead to the Shannon Springs. The Achill Lads, Cyril Oโ€™Donoghue, Blackie Oโ€™Connell, Ray Fean, Paul Oโ€™Connor, Annie Cheevers, Cein Daly, Matt Bashford, Sticky Fingers and The Roadrunners are just some of the acts on stage from 6pm.

High Fade become the first international act to play Wings Festival on Saturday night on the main stage of The Shannon Springs. Thereโ€™s multiple events across Saturday including a ukulele workshop, Buskerโ€™s Way in Shannon Town Centre plus the popular Piping Heaven Piping Hell. The wind down session will be held in the Shannon Springs on Sunday from 1pm.

Damien spoke to The Clare Echo ahead of Wingsโ€™ return, โ€œIโ€™m buzzing, planning started after the last one so weโ€™ve been planning for a year and now itโ€™s getting to the point where whatever is forgotten or is not done on time itโ€™s too late, I just canโ€™t wait to get into itโ€.

Serving as an integral part to the festival is the four star Shannon Springs Hotel which even has a Wings Music Lounge that contains wonderful photographs from the 2023 concerts.

Year one of the festival took place in June 2022 while the second edition was held last February. An early spring festival is much more amenable, he felt. โ€œFebruary is better, I followed the blueprint of the Shannonside Winterage Festival which used to be on the end of January, I thought it was a great festival, winter, cold dark evenings so everyone wants to go inside, that is the first thing, people coming inside on a dark evening as opposed to getting people on a sunny evening in June. It is more conducive to gatherings for sessions and live music when the evenings are darkโ€.

Shannon has huge potential as a location for festivals, Damien believed. โ€œI know there is great musical talent here among the youth, people of my generation and beyond that, it is a platform and I want to shine a light on Shannon musically. Weโ€™ve the infrastructure for a festival that in a few years time could go really well, weโ€™ve an Airport to bring international acts and festival goers into Shannon for the week or main weekend, weโ€™ve hotels in the area and the best musicians, it is really about shining a light on that and making the musicians that do play here feel like they have something to be proud ofโ€.

โ€œMy vision is that in 100 years when weโ€™re not all here that people are coming all over the world to Shannon for a week to play and to have a week of music. Thereโ€™s also sessions that people can get involved in so itโ€™s about inclusivity and experiencing the best of music. This year is a milestone because we have a Scottish band playing on the Saturday night, they are the first international act for Wings, weโ€™re in our third year and that is a milestone, it is one step to that visionโ€.

Previous concerts in the town have given Damien hope. โ€œI look back at the Shannon Fest that Derek Barrett and crew did for two years, it was solely to raise funds for The Venue but that stopped after two years, it is again drawing from that, it is something people could look forward to every year and Iโ€™m hoping that this will continue to be along those lines that people are looking forward to coming together through musicโ€.

Although there has been growth year by year for Wings, challenges persist in spreading the message across Shannon, Oโ€™Rourke admitted. โ€œThe hardest thing about trying to organise something in Shannon is getting people to know what is going on, you can put up posters all over the town, you can put up on social media but thereโ€™s always people after that will say โ€˜I never knew that was onโ€™. After last year, people have been talking about it so before anything has gone out people are talking about the festival which is a good sign because thereโ€™s word of mouth, Iโ€™m hoping we get more people invested in it this year and continue to grow it each yearโ€.

He added, โ€œI think the fact it is over a week, people will start talking about it during the week and it gets out, I found that last year that word got out during the week last year and people got onto it as it was happening, Iโ€™m hoping it will bring in a few more because people are talking about it as the week goes onโ€.

An involvement of Ray Fean and Cyril Oโ€™Donoghue on the festival is a big plus for Damien. โ€œThey are heroes of mine, they are world class. Ray is great, he is based in Shannon and wants to get stuck into the community helping in any way he can so weโ€™ve been working closely on the festival. Cyril has been in Shannon for my whole life, himself and Blackie are such a powerful duo, put them in a room anywhere in the world and you will have a happy room so weโ€™re lucky to have them in Shannonโ€.

Success of Wings will lie in the public interaction, Damien noted. โ€œI just want to see smiles on peopleโ€™s faces when it is happening, people closing their eyes when they are listening to music, people getting involved by playing or bringing their instruments to sessions, that for me is a sign of successโ€.

He continued, โ€œI go to festivals through the year, I go the Trad Fest in Ennis, Iโ€™ve a bit of an involvement with the Doolin Folk Festival and the Galway Folk Festival, I see what Westport is doing with the Bluegrass Festival, whatever I see that I like in all of them I try to bring it back here, it is a mixture of what I see that works and what I enjoy, I try to bring it back to the hometownโ€.

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