Now Reading
Readers’ Poll: Top 30 Irish songs of 2013

Readers’ Poll: Top 30 Irish songs of 2013

Avatar

Best of 2013 continues. The results of your favourite Irish songs are in. Check the list below for direct links or hit the Spotify and Soundcloud playlists below.

Artwork by Fatti Burke.

Top 30 Irish songs of 2013

  1. Hozier – ‘Take Me To Church’
  2. James Vincent McMorrow – ‘Cavalier’
  3. Villagers – ‘Nothing Arrived’
  4. Le Galaxie – ‘Lucy Is Here’
  5. Little Green Cars – ‘My Love Took Me Down To The River To Silence Me’
  6. Ghost Maps – ‘Vanilla’
  7. Daithí – ‘Chameleon Life’
  8. Villagers – ‘Earthly Pleasure’
  9. Idiot Songs – ‘Natasya’s Tears’
  10. MMOTHS – ‘All These Things’ (feat. Holly Miranda)
  11. We Cut Corners – ‘YKK’
  12. Liza Flume – ‘What We Called Love’
  13. Villagers – ‘The Waves’ (Last year’s Number #1)
  14. I Am The Cosmos – ‘Leaving/The Shift’
  15. Tieranniesaur – ‘DIYSCO’
  16. Little Green Cars – ‘Harper Lee’
  17. Biggles Flys Again – ‘Chambers’
  18. New Jackson – ‘Of A Thousand Leaves’
  19. Young Wonder feat. Sacred Animals – ‘Time’
  20. Little Green Cars – ‘The John Wayne’
  21. Daithi feat Senita – ‘Case Closed’
  22. Somadrone – ‘Reckoning’
  23. Solar Bears – ‘A Sky Darkly’
  24. Kodaline – ‘All I Want’
  25. James Vincent McMorrow – ‘Red Dust’
  26. Little Green Cars – ‘The Kitchen Floor’
  27. Harrison & The Devil – ‘Bones’
  28. Solar Bears – ‘Happiness Is A Warm Spacestation’
  29. Crayonsmith – ‘Chrysalis’
  30. Kodaline – ‘High Hopes’

Soundcloud playlist

Spotify playlist


Hey, before you go...

Nialler9 has been covering new music, new artists and gigs for the last 18 years. If you like the article you just read, and want us to publish more just like it, please consider supporting us on Patreon.

What you get as thanks in return...

  • A weekly Spotify playlist only for patrons.
  • Access to our private Nialler9 Discord community
  • Ad-free and bonus podcast episodes.
  • Guestlist & discounts to Nialler9 & Lumo Club events.
  • Themed playlists only for subscribers.

Your support enables us to continue to publish articles like this one, make podcasts and provide recommendations and news to our readers, and be a key part of the music community in Ireland and abroad.

Become a patron at Patreon!

View Comment (1)

Comments are closed

"