WE’RE big fans here in The Clare Echo of anything creative that makes the streets of our county more lively and vibrant.
Ennis gets its fair share of buskers and in recent times you’ll no doubt have noticed a well-dressed man sitting on an amp at the Height while hollering a selection of old American-style working songs.
Intrigued by the sound humming through our window, The Clare Echo went outside and introduced ourselves to the man we now know as ‘Bam Artist Artiste’.
โI’m an artist all the way from Jamaica, living in Galway 20 years or so. I go around the country and do one or two days in different villages, morning in, evening out, and it provides for me a revenue stream while I write. I write a lot and I paint from home in Galway,” he explained.
โIt has to be [acapella] because Iโm representing a time-frame that represents farmers working back in the days before the height of technology, in the fields and singing along to get their day by. So theyโre basically field hollers.”
Bam says that his style of singing “absolutely” has echoes of Sean Nรณs, adding “Sean Nรณs carries that ancient story-telling in it and the type of singing Iโm doing is very similar. Most of it is more influenced from the American cotton-picking timeframe.”
We had to ask him, why Ennis? Apparently we’re a sound bunch.
โIโve been singing for quite a while in Ennis,โ he said, explaining that he does two days a week here.
“Ennis people are fantastic man, theyโre friendly, theyโre very approachable, even the worst of them is approachable. Every so often you have the odd one say, โdo you know any good songsโ,โ he laughs.
โBut Iโm Jamaican, we take everything in strides, weโre like the black Irish of the planet.โ
We thanked him, but before we could leave, Bam added, โTรก failte romhat mo chara.”
Check out Bam singing in Ennis below.