IRISH VINYL

Irish Vinyl Records

Irish vinyl records at The Kilmorna Collection

Browse Irish vinyl records at Kilmorna: folk, trad, Irish rock, songwriters, labels and live stock from the Listowel catalogue.

Irish records sit naturally on the Kilmorna shelves: folk voices, traditional players, rebel songs, Irish rock, contemporary albums, songwriters and catalogue pieces that know their way around a Listowel room.

This is not one neat category, thankfully. Lankum, Fontaines D.C., U2, Thin Lizzy, Mary Black, Clannad, The Chieftains, The Cranberries and other Irish or Ireland-connected records can all appear when the stock allows it. Ireland has never been short of opinions, songs or guitars.

Irish records, from long memory to loud guitars

Irish Artists shelf: Current stock route.

Dolphin and Claddagh: Catalogue with roots.

Folk to post-punk: No single Irish lane.

Traditional and folk records sit easily beside Listowel's literary and storytelling habits: voices, ballads, instrumental records and archive-led releases with a bit of weather in them.

Irish vinyl also means electric records: Thin Lizzy, U2, The Undertones, Fontaines D.C., The Cranberries and newer albums when they are in stock. Quiet reverence is optional. Volume helps.

Dolphin, Claddagh, Gael Linn, Rubyworks, Diatribe and Livia point to different Irish music histories, from trad and folk to contemporary songwriting and jazz. Labels are little maps if you let them be.

The page does not pretend every Irish record is always available. The live grid is the honest bit: what can be bought now, not what would look nice in a fantasy stockroom.

Trad and folk: For buyers looking for ballads, acoustic records, traditional players and long-memory Irish repertoire.

Irish rock: For shelves built around guitar records, post-punk, classic Irish bands and contemporary Irish albums.

Songwriters: For voices that travel well on LP: Mary Black, Hozier, Christy Moore, CMAT and related records when stocked.

Archive labels: For buyers who care about labels, reissues, cultural context and the small history hiding behind the pressing.

Do you stock Irish vinyl records? Yes. Kilmorna maintains an Irish Artists route and related Irish tags, with availability changing as stock changes. The shelf is alive, which is inconvenient but honest.

Are Dolphin Music Group and Claddagh records always in stock? No. They are useful Irish catalogue routes when current stock supports them, but individual product pages are the source of truth.

Can I browse Irish music by style? Yes. Use Irish Artists, Irish folk, Irish rock, labels, tags and individual artist pages to narrow the catalogue. Irish music is not a single drawer.