Thomas Paul Burgess is an academic, novelist and musician from Belfast, Northern Ireland.
Biography
Burgess attended Oxford University, studying Ethics & Moral Education, He obtained his PhD from University College Cork. He lives in Cork, Ireland, where he is a Senior Lecturer and Director of Youth & Community Work at The School of Applied Social Studies, University College Cork.
He worked in Short Brothers Ltd (aircraft manufacture), 1978-81. Following his academic studies, he taught English Literature in schools in Belfast and Oxford. In 1990, he was Community Relations Officer for Antrim Borough Council, and in 1992 was a researcher/outreach worker for Initiative '92, Torkel Opsahl
Academic Publications
His published works include A Crisis of Conscience: - moral ambivalence and education in Northern Ireland (1993), The Reconciliation Industry: - community relations, community identity & social policy in Northern Ireland (2002), The Contested Identities of Ulster Protestants (2015) and The Contested Identities of Ulster Catholics (2018).
Novels
His first novel, ‘White Church, Black Mountain’ (Matador. 2015) was short-listed for the Impress Prize for New Writers, 2017 and The Carousel Aware Prize for Best Novel, 2016.
His second novel, ‘Through Hollow Lands’ (Urbane 2018) is a dark supernatural thriller based loosely on Dante's ‘Inferno’ and follows survivors of the 9/11 attacks, through the seeming purgatory of Las Vegas. He has described it as, 'An allegorical tale on the death of American innocence.'
Music
As a songwriter with his band Ruefrex his work met with acclaim, the group being described as "...the most important band in Britain".
He appeared on the cover of Melody Maker after they had recorded the controversial The Wild Colonial Boy denouncing Irish-Americans for sending guns and money to the IRA. The record entered the UK top 30. Their music was featured in the motion picture Good Vibrations.
His later projects include forming the musical collective Sacred Heart of Bontempi, and releasing a tribute to Pogues’ frontman, Shane MacGowan entitled, Shane MacGowan’s Smile (Burgess had previously toured with the band).
In 2021 Burgess wrote, performed and produced Vanished into Air; a song for the disappeared. The project was intended to highlight the plight of those families who lost members believed to have been abducted, murdered and secretly buried in Northern Ireland, the large majority of which occurred during the Troubles. The victim support group Wave and family members supported the initiative.
In 2024, Manchester University Press published Burgess’ memoir, Wild Colonial Boys: A Belfast Punk Story. It gave an uncompromising account of his time with his band Ruefrex and enjoyed critical acclaim from a number of sources.
Discography
Albums
- Flowers for all Occasions (8 versions), Kasper Records, 1985
Singles & EPs
- One by One (5 versions), Good Vibrations Records
- Capital Letters (7"), Kabuki Records
- Paid in Kind (2 versions), One by One
- The Wild Colonial Boy (4 versions), Kasper Records
- In the Traps (2 versions), Kasper Records
- Political Wings (12"), Flicknife Records
- Shane MacGowan’s Smile, Espresso Records
Compilations
- Capital Letters... The Best of..., (CD, Comp), Cherry Red
References
- "'Alternative Ulster': Punk in Northern Ireland", www.popular-musicology-online.com
- "Paul Burgess – Oxford Education Society". Oxford Education Society. Retrieved 28 August 2019.
- "Thinking About Unionism". Independent.ie. 16 March 2015.
- "The Contested Identities of Ulster Catholics". Dublin Review of Books. 13 February 2024.
- "Contested Identities of Ulster Catholics". Reading Religion.
- "Paul Burgess' first novel re-humanises a Belfast still hardened by past and ongoing sacrifices". Slugger O'Toole.
- "A late change of plan may have saved our lives". Irish Times.
- "Belfast Author Thomas Paul Burgess on How 9/11 Inspired New Novel". Irish News. 30 August 2018.
- "Thomas Paul Burgess takes Readers on a Neo-Noir Acid Trip". Into the Void Magazine. 5 July 2018. Archived from the original on 21 September 2019.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - "Belfast Punk Bands: Ruefrex – Once ‘The most important band in Britain.’", www.bombedoutpunk.com
- "Ruefrex", www.trakmarx.com
- "Mad Dogs and Ulstermen: the crisis of Loyalism (part one)", www.opendemocracy.net
- "Punk band Ruefrex, voice of working-class Ulster loyalists, are back – and still have something to say, writes Henry McDonald", The Guardian
- "Good Vibrations (2012) Soundtracks ", IMDb
- "Good Vibrations: The Film (2012)", nipunk.weebly.com
- "Ruefrex", discogs
- https://www.newsletter.co.uk/news/opinion/columnists/henry-mcdonald-a-moving-song-about-those-who-were-disappeared-by-the-ira-3493411
- "Ballad of the Disappeared: Belfast writer Paul Burgess and the challenge of a new conflict song". belfasttelegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 10 January 2023.
- Vanished Into Air; ...a song for the disappeared by Sacred Heart of Bontempi., retrieved 10 January 2023
- "Belfast’s forgotten punks: ‘We were seen as part of the oppressor class’"
- "Wild Colonial Boys is Hard to Beat"
- "Bono, Seamus Heaney and the Melody Maker cover ... tales from the punk era with Belfast’s mighty Ruefrex"
- "Review: ‘Wild Colonial Boys’: A Belfast Punk Story"
- "Ruefrex drummer Paul Burgess publishes tell-all memoir on Belfast's punk scene: Wild Colonial Boys"
- 1959 births
- Living people
- Academics of University College Cork
- Alumni of Ulster University
- Alumni of the University of Oxford
- Alumni of University College Cork
- Scholars and academics from Belfast
- Male novelists from Northern Ireland
- Male songwriters from Northern Ireland
- Writers from Belfast
- Musicians from Belfast
- Social scientists from Northern Ireland
- 20th-century songwriters from Northern Ireland
- 21st-century songwriters from Northern Ireland