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'He was exceptionally talented and at the top of his game' - musician friends of Mic Christopher pay tribute in new documentary

The death of Mic Christopher in 2001 had a profound effect on his Irish musician friends, many of them now household names. The makers of a new documentary about the gifted troubadour, who started his career busking on Gratfon Street when he was just 15, hope their film will encourage people to investigate his music

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Near-death experience: Mic Christoper was involved in a road accident which spurred him on to give music another go (Photo: Patrick Glennon)

Near-death experience: Mic Christoper was involved in a road accident which spurred him on to give music another go (Photo: Patrick Glennon)

Bond: Christopher with Glen Hansard, one of the singer’s friends who features in the documentary (Photo: Patrick Glennon)

Bond: Christopher with Glen Hansard, one of the singer’s friends who features in the documentary (Photo: Patrick Glennon)

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Near-death experience: Mic Christoper was involved in a road accident which spurred him on to give music another go (Photo: Patrick Glennon)

Glen Hansard ponders one of the big questions. "What happens to a spirit," he wonders, "when it's so full of life?" It's something that has haunted him ever since the death of his close friend Mic Christopher, and it will haunt those who watch a forthcoming feature-length documentary on the gifted troubadour who never quite reached his potential.

Heyday: The Mic Christopher Story features heartfelt contributions from Hansard - one of several household-name Irish musicians who talk about the effect the singer from Clondalkin, Dublin, had on their music.


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