LOUIS Walsh says he would have managed WB Yeats,  "if he had been big enough".
Westlife  manager  Louis, who will be at their show in Lissadell House near Sligo  next  Friday, said that he "would have gladly looked after the career of   Yeats if he gave me 20 per cent of his earnings. And he would have been   my first poet!"
He said he was  "absolutely delighted" that his  former partner John Reynolds,  co-manager with Louis back in the early  days of Boyzone, had sold out  the gig.
Louis added that he  would  have liked to have managed Leonard Cohen, who plays next  Saturday and  Sunday in Lissadell House and, unlike Cohen's previous  manager, he  wouldn't have allegedly stolen all his money. "And Ireland  is tax-free  for artists!" he added.
Meanwhile, Reynolds  said: "It is an honour  to be putting these shows on, but equally  important is the venue. It's a  magical place."
The last time Cohen  played Ireland all the  members of U2 and their manager, Paul  McGuinness, attended, as did Enya,  the Honourable Garech de Brun,  Daniel Day-Lewis and Rebecca Miller, Jim  Sheridan, Neil Jordan and  Bertie Ahern and Michael McDowell. Don't be  surprised, then, who you  might see in the west next weekend.
For  those not up  on their history -- ie Westlife fans -- the Lissadell  estate in Co  Sligo is a former home of the Countess Constance Markievicz  and was a  regular place of quiet contemplation for Ireland's most  famous poet,  William Butler Yeats.
Isobel Cassidy --  who runs the  estate and whose sister Constance Cassidy owns Lissadell  House with  husband Edward Walsh -- said: "The excitement in Sligo at  the moment is  almost tangible; the last two or three years have been a  real challenge  for people and  these concerts mean a lot to Sligo and  the north-west."
What  has tarnished  this jewel in the crown is a very public court case. Last  year,  proceedings against Sligo County Council were brought by  barristers  Constance Cassidy and Edward Walsh over  the public rights of  way along  certain routes at Lissadell.
"It's just finished  after  58 days at hearing in the High Court," said Isobel Cassidy. "We  are all  just very happy that Lissadell is alive. When John put it to us  that it  was Leonard Cohen [who was going to play the venue] and how  inspired he  is by Yeats and that it would be Westlife coming home to  Sligo, it was  something we just couldn't not do. And we're so glad now  that we are  doing it because the area of Sligo and the west is alive  with positivity  about Leonard Cohen coming here."
The stage for Cohen  and  Westlife is set in a natural amphitheatre right beside Lissadell  House,  with the massive  Ben Bulben mountain as the backdrop to the  stage, and   the shining Atlantic in Sligo Bay to the right.
Local lad Shane   Filan is almost embarrassingly excited about his band Westlife's  show.   It is a homecoming show for him (and two of the other members of   Westlife -- Kian Egan and Mark Feehily -- who hail from Sligo).
"In  2003, when it  came up for sale, Louis came over one day with the Irish  Independent  property supplement with Lissadell House on the front. 'You  should buy  that,' he said -- typical Louis. I went and had a look at it  just out  of curiosity but it would have been a huge undertaking. It was  also  €3m," said Filan.
"Apparently, Bono had flown down in a helicopter to have a look at it, because he is a big Yeats fan.
"But  I was never  interested because I had already started work on my dream  house in  Sligo, the house I'm living in very happily with my wife and  kids now.  Life is good."
The year started  with Shane and his  wife, Gillian, having their first son, Patrick, a  brother for their  four-year-old daughter Nicole.
"So that was great  to be at home  with the new baby," said Filan. "It was a big family year  for me. But  then Kian's dad got sick and he was dealing with that the  whole time. It  was hard to see that. Then he died and then Stephen  [Gately] died and  then Nicky [Byrne's] dad. There was so much sorrow  and sadness in the  year."
"All those deaths  brought us together, made us stronger. It  was a terrible shock. The  mood of the band wasn't good  during that  period. It was a horrendous  time, but we pulled through."
Westlife,  July 30;  Leonard Cohen, July 31 and August 1 at Lissadell House.  Tickets, from  €80 including booking fee on sale at Ticketmaster and  usual outlets
Fuente: http://www.independent.ie

 
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