When Moving Hearts broke up in 1985, Lunny diversified and became a producer. He had already produced a 45 rpm single for
Skid Row (featuring 17-year-old
Gary Moore) and, in 1975, the album
A Silk Purse for electric folk band Spud, managed by
Paul McGuinness. He was closely involved in the establishment of a new Irish record label, Mulligan Records (acquired in 2008 by
Compass Records), and produced and played on many of its early releases, the first of which was from
Pumpkinhead. He played on several
Christy Moore albums and was a producer and session musician on
Kate Bush albums. He played bouzouki and bodhrán on
Shaun Davey's
Granuaile, and fiddle on
Midnight Well's
Saw you Running. He composed the soundtracks for the Turkish film,
Teardrops, and the Irish film
Eat the Peach. He also played on the soundtracks of the film
This Is My Father and the TV programme
The River of Sound. In 1989 he contributed synthesizer on
Mary Black's breakthrough album
No Frontiers. He was the producer and music director of the soundtrack of
Bringing It All Back Home, a
BBC television documentary series charting the influence of
Irish music throughout the world. He played on or produced albums for
Paul Brady,
Elvis Costello,
Indigo Girls,
Sinéad O'Connor,
Clannad, Maurice Lennon,
Baaba Maal, and Five Guys Named Moe. He played on compilation albums
The Gathering (1981) and
Common Ground (1996). In 1994 he produced Irish Australian singer/songwriter Mairéid Sullivan's first recording,
Dancer. He pushed new boundaries with his band
Coolfin (1998) which included the work of
uilleann piper John McSherry. He appeared at the 2000
Cambridge Folk Festival, and the album that commemorated it. In 2001 Lunny collaborated with
Frank Harte on the album
My Name is Napoleon Bonaparte. He produced the album
Human Child (2007) by Faeroese
Eivør Pálsdóttir, which was published in two versions, one English and one Faeroese. As an arranger, he has worked for
The Waterboys,
Fairground Attraction and
Eddi Reader.
Journey (2000) is a retrospective album. During 2003–2005, Lunny was part of the reunited Planxty concert tour. He also produced
Jimmy MacCarthy's album entitled
Hey-Ho Believe, which was released on 12 November 2010. ==Influence==