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Colm Ó Snodaigh

Colm Ó Snodaigh (born 22 May 1966)[citation needed] is a member of the traditional Irish folk group Kíla. He is also a writer and a former footballer.[citation needed]

Personal life

Ó Snodaigh was born in Dublin and reared on the south side of Dublin near Sandymount village; he is a native Irish speaker and was educated in the language at local Gaelscoileanna: Scoil Lorcáin and Coláiste Eoin. He completed a degree in Physiotherapy (BPhysio) at University College Dublin in 1988.[citation needed]

He is the son of Irish-language publisher and author Pádraig Ó Snodaigh and artist Cliodhna Cussen. His brothers are Fergus, Aengus, Cormac, Rónán and Rossa. His great uncle Dennis Cussen ran in the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics.[relevant?]

Music

Ó Snodaigh plays the flute, tin whistle, guitar, saxophone and percussion. He plays and sings with the group Kíla and also released two solo albums titled Éist in 1990 and Giving in 2007. While Éist featured his songs in Irish and accompanied by Kíla's musicians and friends, Giving saw him branch out with songs in English, with production by Shay Fitzgerald and accompaniment by various other musicians.[citation needed]

Writing

Ó Snodaigh has written one book of short stories entitled Turasóireacht (Tripping/Touring) which was published in 1995 by Coiscéim. Subsequent stories have been published in the anthologies Scéalta ón Aer (2000) ag Cathal Póirtéir and in Lón Léitheoireacht 2 (2008). His début novella Pat the Pipe – Píobaire was published in 2007 and was turned into a radio drama for Raidió na Life by his brother Rossa. He translated Sandy Fitzgerald's children's story Céal & an Buachaill Gorm (Cale & the Blue Boy) which was published in early 2008.[citation needed]

He wrote a monthly article on music for online magazine Beo.ie from 2006 to 2011 and these articles formed the basis of a collection of essays on music in a book called Istigh sa Cheol (2013). One of the articles An Ghaoth Aneas was included in the New Island publication Sunday Miscellany – A Selection from 2006 to 2008 following its broadcast in 2008 on RTÉ Radio 1. This same article was included, along with a sister article Ag Máirseáil i dTreo na Gréine, as a tribute to Pádraig Ó Cléirigh, in a posthumous collection of Ó Cléirigh's short stories published by Coiscéím in 2010, entitled An Bhréag & Scéalta Eile.[citation needed]

For his 2017 book, Dún Chaoin - Oscail an Scoil, Ó Snodaigh researched the campaign of civil disobedience in the west Kerry Gaeltacht to keep the Dún Chaoin primary school open against the will of the then-Fianna Fáil government.[citation needed] A translation of Swiss-Scottish author Vivienne Bailie's book An File, was published by Coiscéim in 2019 and in 2022 a further book of short stories was published entitled Cnaipí & Scéalta Eile.[citation needed]

Sport

Football

After periods with other teams,[citation needed] Ó Snodaigh was a squad member of the Bray Wanderers side that won the 1989–90 FAI Cup at Lansdowne Road with a 3–0 victory against St Francis and finished runners-up in the 1990–91 League of Ireland First Division.[citation needed] That year he was also of the Bray Wanderers reserve side that finished runners-up in the League of Ireland B Division.[citation needed] He won the B team player of the year award in 1990 and was a member of the first team that lost the LFA President's Cup final 3–1 against Dundalk.[1][failed verification]

In time, he left Bray and became a member of Leinster Senior League side Pegasus where, over a seven-year period, he was a member of their FAI Intermediate Cup winning team in 1992 against Bluebell United,[2][failed verification] and was captain of the side that got relegated from the senior division in 1997 following a defeat away to Bluebell.[citation needed]

Hurling

Following retirement from soccer, due largely to a serious knee injury, Ó Snodaigh, at the behest of his brother, Rossa, joined the St Kevin's Junior C hurling team.[citation needed] In two seasons, he helped them win the Junior C Dublin Shield twice and the league once.[citation needed]

Tennis

He played tennis for twenty years at the Sandymount tennis club, Claremont and latterly Claremont/Railway Union. He played Class 2 for the senior team, in the summer league and won the U19 singles title.

References

  1. ^ "President's Day". League of Ireland History. 2 March 2014. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
  2. ^ "Ireland - FA Intermediate Cup Winners and Runners-Up". RSSSF. Retrieved 27 August 2018.

External links

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