Tax, Drugs and Rock 'n' Roll

The years that went whoosh! Brits, hits and Ireland's cultural revolution

Damian Corless author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Reach plc

Published:2nd May '24

£14.99

Available for immediate dispatch.

Tax, Drugs and Rock 'n' Roll cover

Tax & Drugs & Rock'n'Roll is the story of how an influx of British pop stars in the early 1980s was a significant catalyst in the miraculous transformation of Ireland from poor, downtrodden and insular to rich, confident and outward looking. In the space of a dizzying decade or so, the country was turned upside down, seeing itself very differently and being seen in a new light by a bedazzled and somewhat bewildered watching world. Status Quo's Francis Rossi set the ball rolling, closely followed by Sting and Andy Summers of The Police, but it was with the arrival of a cluster of younger freshly-minted MTV superstars that Ireland got itself a new English colony, and far from attracting hostility from the natives, these settlers were warmly embraced (well, mostly). Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Spandau Ballet and Def Leppard were amongst those who landed into a crumbling wreck of a capital city. Dublin's killer smog was an international embarrassment, while the River Liffey's once majestic Georgian waterfront now gaped like rows of sooty, broken teeth. Physical isolation and the Troubles spilling from the North had choked tourism to a trickle. Ireland's top radio show opened each morning with the despairing wail of host Gay Byrne that "The country is banjaxed". The MTV stars hadn't come for the atmosphere or the creature comforts. They'd come for the tax breaks, to endure a ho-hum year of exile beyond the grasp of the UK taxman. What they found confounded their low expectations. Holly Johnson told author Damian Corless of the time Frankie Goes To Hollywood ran a village pottery shop for a day as a favour to its elderly owner Alice. The store enjoyed its best sales ever (although mostly of egg cups). Spandau Ballet judged local talent contests in tough suburban pubs. Francis Rossi and Def Leppard frontman Joe Elliot gave Corless similar reasons as to why overcast, downcast Ireland made for a much better tax haven than far-flung islands in the sun. Finding themselves thrown together in Dublin, the Frankies, Spandaus and Leppards became good buddies, making Dublin's Pink Elephant an unlikely rival to Studio 54 as the world's nightclub with the most celebrities per square metre, or so the New York Times raved anyway. When...

ISBN: 9781915306593

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

288 pages