Tuesday Paper Club by Brògeal

Brògeal Tuesday Paper Club

72
ChoruScore
5 reviews
Established consensus
Oct 17, 2025
Release Date
Play It Again Sam
Label
Established consensus Mostly positive consensus

Brògeal's Tuesday Paper Club plants its flag in energetic, communal folk with a clear eye for festival-sized singalongs and old-school charm. Critics point to a record that leans into Celtic instrumentation and live-bred momentum, balancing stomping anthems with moments of plaintive melody. Across professional reviews

Reviews
5 reviews
Last Updated
Mar 13, 2026
Confidence
90%
Scale
0-100 critics
Primary Praise

The title track's stomping energy and communal hooks make it an instant live favourite.

Primary Criticism

Shared criticism is still limited across the current review sample.

Who It Fits

Best for listeners looking for folk revival and live energy, starting with Apples And Leaves and Tuesday Paper Club.

Standout Tracks
Apples And Leaves Tuesday Paper Club Draw The Line

Full consensus notes

Brògeal's Tuesday Paper Club plants its flag in energetic, communal folk with a clear eye for festival-sized singalongs and old-school charm. Critics point to a record that leans into Celtic instrumentation and live-bred momentum, balancing stomping anthems with moments of plaintive melody. Across professional reviews the collection earned a 72/100 consensus score from five reviews, signaling generally favorable notice with room for refinement.

Reviewers consistently praise standout tracks such as “Apples And Leaves”, the album title track “Tuesday Paper Club” and “Draw The Line” as highlights—“Apples And Leaves” surfaces as the tender, Smiths-tinged counterpoint to the festival-ready stomp of the opener, while “Draw The Line” already reads as a crowd-rouser. Critics note the tasteful use of accordion, banjo and fiddle, and several reviews emphasize the record's live energy and folk revivalist instincts, as well as nostalgic covers and toe-tapping arrangements that map neatly onto packed-house singalongs.

While some professional reviews flag occasional rough edges in pacing and production, the critical consensus celebrates Brògeal's commitment to a natural voice and communal, venue-ready songwriting. For those searching for the best songs on Tuesday Paper Club or wondering whether the record is worth a listen, the reviews suggest its strengths lie in memorable hooks, Celtic textures and anthems built for live performance. The detailed reviews below unpack how these songs translate from the studio to the stage and what the record means for Brògeal's place in the ongoing folk revival.

Critics' Top Tracks

The standout songs that made critics take notice

1

Apples And Leaves

1 mention

"The beautiful ‘Apples And Leaves"
God Is In The TV Zine
2

Tuesday Paper Club

1 mention

"The album starts with the title track and liveliest thing on offer here"
God Is In The TV Zine
3

Draw The Line

1 mention

"the likes of ‘Draw The Line’ are already live favourites"
God Is In The TV Zine
The album starts with the title track and liveliest thing on offer here
G
God Is In The TV Zine
about "Tuesday Paper Club"
Read full review
1 mention
95% sentiment

Track Ratings

How critics rated each track, relative to this album (0-100). Only tracks that made critics feel something are rated.

View:
1

Tuesday Paper Club

1 mention
88
02:47
2

Vicar Street Days

1 mention
12
02:44
3

Friday On My Mind

1 mention
12
02:34
4

Lady Madonna

0 mentions
02:30
5

Turn And Walk Away

0 mentions
03:07
6

Scarlet Red

0 mentions
03:00
7

Dippin' n Divin'

1 mention
5
00:30
8

One For The Ditch

0 mentions
02:50
9

Draw The Line

1 mention
83
02:49
10

Racing Track

0 mentions
02:29
11

Apples And Leaves

1 mention
100
03:17
12

Stuck Inside

0 mentions
04:17
13

Go Home Tae Yer Bed

0 mentions
04:53
14

Lonesome Boatman

1 mention
63
02:55

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What Critics Are Saying

Deep insights from 5 critics who reviewed this album

Critic's Take

Brògeal's Tuesday Paper Club is a breath of fresh air, a record that plants its flag with communal, Celtic-flavoured singalongs and venue-ready stompers. The best tracks on Tuesday Paper Club are the title cut, “Apples And Leaves” and “Draw The Line” - the opener is an immediate, folk-laden stomper, “Apples And Leaves” is the album's most beautiful, Smiths-tinged moment, and “Draw The Line” already sounds festival-bound. Steven Doherty's review praises the band for sticking to their natural voice while mixing accordion, banjo and fiddle into genuinely catchy songs. The record feels like a satisfying debut that will make Brògeal many listeners' new favourite band in 2026.

Key Points

  • The title track's stomping energy and communal hooks make it an instant live favourite.
  • The album's strengths are its Celtic instrumentation, catchy fiddle-led songs, and subtle, heartfelt moments like "Apples And Leaves".

Themes

folk revival live energy Celtic instrumentation festival-ready anthems nostalgic covers