Other artists to have recorded versions include
Foster & Allen,
Mary Duff,
Máiréad Carlin,
Paddy Reilly,
Daniel O'Donnell,
Frank Patterson,
Ronan Tynan,
Brush Shiels,
James Galway,
The Dubliners,
Charlie Haden with daughter
Petra Haden, Seanchai & The Unity Squad, Scottish band North Sea Gas, English folk singer Felix Slander, English band Kelda with vocalist Jack Routledge, US group Shilelagh Law, US punk band
No Use for a Name, New Zealanders
Hollie Smith and
Steve McDonald,
Dropkick Murphys, London-Irish band
Neck,
The Durutti Column,
The High Kings,
The Irish Tenors,
Off Kilter and
Kieran Moriarty. It was also recorded by Serbian bands
Orthodox Celts and
Tir na n'Og, and US Celtic/folk band
Scythian. In 2013, it was released by
Neil Byrne and
Ryan Kelly of
Celtic Thunder for their album
Acoustically Irish. A
reggae version of this song was recorded by the
Century Steel Band in the early 1980s. Irish-
Londoners,
Neck, released a "Psycho-
Ceilidh" version of the song as a single in support of the
Republic of Ireland national football team during the
2002 FIFA World Cup.
Dropkick Murphys recorded two versions of the song: the first, an uptempo rock arrangement, appeared on their 2003 album
Blackout; the second was a softer version they recorded specially for the family of Sergeant Andrew Farrar, a United States Marine from the 2nd Military Police Battalion killed January 28, 2005 (his 31st birthday) in
Fallujah,
Iraq. Farrar was a fan of Dropkick Murphys, and requested that their version of the song be played at his funeral if he were to die in combat.
Blaggards blended the song with
Johnny Cash's "
Folsom Prison Blues" in a medley called
Prison Love Songs. Other punk versions of the song have been recorded by the bands
No Use for a Name,
The Tossers, and the Broken O'Briens. The
Greenland Whalefishers, a Celtic-punk band from Norway, also recorded a version on their
Streets Of Salvation CD. The song was also recorded by Canadian Celtic rock band the
Mudmen on their album
Another Day released in 2010. In 2003, then Cape Town based Tom Purcell recorded a haunting a cappella version, that still stands the test of time.
Johnny Logan covered the song on his album,
The Irish Connection (2007). The song appears on the 2012
Bob Brolly album
Till We Meet Again. Welsh folk singer
Dafydd Iwan used the tune for his song "Esgair Llyn", a lament on the depopulation of rural Wales. He first recorded it in 1991 and continues to perform it in concert. The song has been translated to
Scottish Gaelic, entitled "Raointean Ath an Rìgh," and was sung by the Scottish singer Iain "Costello" MacIver, from the
Isle of Lewis in the
Outer Hebrides. ==In film==