so you would avoid the triads obviously as much as you possibly could, do you know what i mean? moya: do you think even as a rock singer that kind of with, you know, traditional music and that being part, surrounding you, that has a lot to do with who you are musically as well? sinead: oh yeah, absolutely. absolutely. i just think it's in your blood and it's in your dna and it's in your history. it's the whole history of your people, you know, those old songs: they are ghosts, those are spirits of people who lived at one point and said who they were and said their story, but nobody knows who they were, you know? francis mcpeake iv: you have to realize that irish music was on its knees, it was dying out. man: it was very little. francis: it was very, very little. because, at that point, my great grandfather was the first belfast born uilleann piper for a hundred years. up to that point. so it shows you how basically the music was non-existent. today, some irish music was the classical music of ireland. man: oh, it is. francis: which basically tells the highs and lows, the tears,