This Past Weekend - E528 Dermot Kennedy
Episode Date: August 29, 2024Dermot Kennedy is an Irish singer and songwriter known for his songs like “Outnumbered”, “Power Over Me”, and “Giants.” You can check out his latest album “Sonder” on all platforms. ...Dermot Kennedy joins Theo to chat about being away from his home in Ireland to write new music in Nashville, the artist he wants to collab with more than anyone else, insane Irish names, bowling with rocks in the street, and much more. Dermot Kennedy: https://www.instagram.com/dermotkennedy/ ------------------------------------------------ Tour Dates! https://theovon.com/tour New Merch: https://www.theovonstore.com ------------------------------------------------- Sponsored By: Gametime: Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code WEEKEND for $20 off your first purchase. ZocDoc: Go to http://zocdoc.com/theo to find and book a top-rated doctor today. Valor Recovery: To learn more about Valor Recovery please visit them at www.valorrecoverycoaching.com or email them at admin@valorrecoverycoaching.com ------------------------------------------------- Music: “Shine” by Bishop Gunn https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3A_coTcUek ------------------------------------------------ Submit your funny videos, TikToks, questions and topics you'd like to hear on the podcast to: tpwproducer@gmail.com Hit the Hotline: 985-664-9503 Video Hotline for Theo Upload here: https://www.theovon.com/fan-upload Send mail to: This Past Weekend 1906 Glen Echo Rd PO Box #159359 Nashville, TN 37215 ------------------------------------------------ Find Theo: Website: https://theovon.com Instagram: https://instagram.com/theovon Facebook: https://facebook.com/theovon Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/thispastweekend Twitter: https://twitter.com/theovon YouTube: https://youtube.com/theovon Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheoVonClips Shorts Channel: https://bit.ly/3ClUj8z ------------------------------------------------ Producer: Zach https://www.instagram.com/zachdpowers Producer: Nick https://www.instagram.com/realnickdavis/ Producer: Colin https://instagram.com/colin_reiner Producer: Cam https://www.instagram.com/cam__george/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Gang. Today's guest is a singer-songwriter out of Ireland and simple places all at the same time.
A wonderful time that I had there recently.
I'm really grateful to spend time with them.
I've been a fan for years and, uh, we've been in touch for years
and glad to make this happen.
Um, he has had hits like Paradise and Kiss Me amongst many others.
I got to see him play last night here in Nashville, Tennessee.
Today's guest is my friend, Dermot Kennedy. I'm off the stage.
Kiss me the way you do.
Oh man.
Sorry.
No, it's okay.
I didn't mean, I meant that for me. Oh man. Sorry. No, it's okay. I didn't mean I meant that for me.
Oh yeah.
I like that you did it.
Dude, yeah, listen, I think after like the first song last night, I was, I leaned over here,
I was like, God, I might be gay, dude.
I was like, this is really awesome, man.
It felt so serious.
Like I was saying to you afterwards,
it felt like a very serious show.
When I play a headline show,
we've got moments that are down and somber
and then moments that are fun and up.
When I do a show like that, like the Bluebird last night,
it's quite, you know, it stays serious.
And I haven't done that in a long time.
Yeah.
And I think crowds sometimes want both.
So I would worry while I'm doing it, if people are kind of like,
this is a lot of seriousness, you know?
Like it feels serious, yeah.
Yeah, which it should be.
I take it seriously, but it's just like,
I think sometimes you need relief.
But I think then as well,
I like having funny moments in between songs,
talking to people,
because I don't take life very seriously,
but I take the songs very seriously.
Oh. Yeah.
Yeah, man, when you like got into the songs, you were at Bluebird Cafe last night for our listeners, and that's
a small venue in Nashville.
And it's probably, I mean, it may seat 60.
Yeah, if even.
Yeah.
And I mean, we were sitting, I was in the second row and I was five feet from Gabe Simon,
who was playing with you, accompanying you.
And I could have done a couple notes.
I could have...
You could have, you should have.
Yeah, I could have chimed.
Literally, I could have chimed in.
Yeah, it would have been nice.
It would have been a very welcome thing, I think.
But yeah, it was captivating, man.
It was so incredible.
I was like, yeah, it felt so intense in there at moments.
You could see everybody going through like...
I mean, I was going through like the history of like relationships and like I felt bad.
Like after one song, I was like, I got to text this one gal.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, well we spend so little, you know, I think we kind of...
In daily life, we go through the motions and I think...
I would like to think moments like that maybe put you in a spot where you think about life
and just assess things a little bit, you know?
I, like that's what it does for me. I don't know who I'd be without it, you know what I mean?
I think sometimes in terms of the therapy and catharsis I get from it, I think I take it for granted 100%.
I don't know who I'd be without that outlet, you know what I mean?
And I find it difficult. Sometimes it's tricky. Like last night, start of the show, I loved it.
End of the show, I was feeling good.
In the middle of the show, I kind of went within myself
for some reason, but yeah, I think I'd be a much worse person
if I had all that emotion kind of bottled up, you know?
Are the Irish notorious for like struggling to show emotion
or something?
I think there's definitely issues in terms of,
like men in particular, I issues in terms of like men in particular
I think in terms of not opening up to people I think it's something that's
improving constantly but uh but definitely and I think I mean it's no
surprise that Ireland has a rich history in the arts because that's how it comes
out you know what I mean authors actors musicians everything. Yeah man it was it
was crazy dude it was like I went through it all.
Yeah. You know, I was sitting there, I was like, I even, I got home and I texted an ex-girlfriend,
I was like, I think I owe you a call, you know. That's a nice thing, right? No, it was good. And
yeah, I'm glad I did, you know. Yeah, there's a lot of ballads there. I know, yeah. I was thinking
where you... And it's because you don't have all the instrumental. Like I've listened to your albums where it's like you have the whole...
And some of those are upbeat songs and it's different.
Yes, indeed. Yeah.
But when you're playing them, just right there for everybody.
Totally. But even like how you frame something is so important.
Like I even laughed when you were singing Kiss Me There a minute ago because
that to me is one of the best songs I've made lyrically in terms of how it's put together.
But I would... If I could do it again, it would just be me and a guitar.
It'd be like last night, you know what I mean?
And I think you frame things in a certain way
for certain goals and stuff,
but when I play that song by itself,
I'm like, oh, it should be this way.
I think it takes courage to take everything away from a song,
and it's only recently I've kind of got that back.
It's like I said last night,
when I would play shows like that when I was younger,
I felt so confident, you know what I mean?
Cause I loved that no one knew who I was.
And I loved that I had something to bring to the table
and people might be excited.
And I felt, like I said last night,
I felt borderline kind of arrogant about it.
But now when I'm doing it,
I got quite nervous for last night.
But if it's like 10,000 people, I don't get nervous at all.
But things like last night, I do get a bit nervous. Yeah.
Just now when you said like, it used to be nice to be a surprise. Dude, that was the
best. That's one thing I miss the most about, you know, I'm grateful for having like people
come out and people get to know you and stuff, but it was awesome when only you knew you in a way.
And you got to be this like,
you were like, were always your secret
because you're you, right?
And you build up this, especially as a comedian,
you build up this sort of rapport
with how to interact with the world
and to surprise people.
Like, what, how did, what is this guy?
Like that always seemed interesting to me.
And then people get to know how your instrument works
or it's just the surprise isn't there anymore.
And it's different.
Totally. I mean, that moment, I'm sure you feel this,
like that moment where you feel like you've arrived
and people know who you are and yeah,
no longer do you surprise people.
And so you kind of feel like you have to change
or deviate from what you're doing and to try and
keep that feeling.
It's tough.
I find it difficult.
I know like, I know for myself, like I remember
seeing a thing, an interview with Drake years ago
and he was just saying that moment where people
are sharing your music and kind of say, you've
got to listen to this, you'll never get that
back again, no matter how successful you get.
Because that's the most exciting part. I don't know. I think like for what you do, get that back again, no matter how successful you get. Um, cause that's the most exciting part.
I don't know.
I think like for what you do, for what I do,
for anyone involved in the arts, I think the
work is the only thing that's exciting.
It's the only thing.
And of course you play big shows and you have
ambition and you try and grow your career and
all those things are lovely, but at the root of
it, if you're not, like I always say, you could
be miserable playing in stadiums, do you know what I mean?
Or you could be completely content playing shows
like last night, so I think it's very important to keep that.
Yeah, I noticed when I have some new stuff,
and that is the most exciting time,
when I'm ready, when I'm like, wait till I get
to this new part of the show, and it's gonna be fun for me,
and it's gonna be fun for them, you know?
Oh yeah, and I'm sure you could play to like 40,000 people,
and it can go either way, for them. You know? Oh, yeah. And I'm sure you could play to like 40,000 people and it can go either way.
It can be completely euphoric or it can kind of feel hollow either way.
But it like nothing.
The work is the only thing I think.
That's a good point.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And especially these days, there's so much like surrounding things that you have to
do to kind of manage yourself, you know, like social media and just, um, I mean,
specifically, I guess social media probably, it's such a big world of it all.
Do you get involved with that side of things? Do you run your own stuff and all that?
Yeah. Uh, no, I split it with my producers and stuff, you know, but, you know, I'm
particular kind of about what we put out and like try to be sensitive or try to think,
okay, this feels like me. Sometimes they're like, no, this is good.
And I don't have an idea.
Of course, yeah, yeah.
So trusting other people sometimes,
that's with your own voice, you know?
Totally.
I think I find it hard sometimes,
I spend way too much time worrying about how I'm perceived.
You know what I mean?
Oh yeah.
And I think things like social media
only make that more kind of inflamed.
And then, yeah, you just get closer to forgetting what you're actually truly about.
So I try and stay away.
But it's healthy sometimes.
Well, before this conversation gets any gayer, dude.
And no offense if it does, dude.
I think Irish people...
No offense to me.
Yeah, yeah, sorry.
And probably me, dude.
I mean, look, who knows what'll happen with us.
But I think, yeah, dude, the Irish are,
I couldn't believe what the Irish were.
I always had an idea.
That wasn't your first time there though, recently, was it?
It wasn't, but it was my first time really
with my eyes open, I think.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I saw you in a field with a lot of cows.
Where was that?
It was down in Court County.
Brilliant.
Oh, you'll milk anything down there, people.
Yeah, yeah.
And there's no women.
This is the thing about how people are always like,
oh, the girls are coming.
They're going to be here.
And you'll be you'll go to the next place.
And the otter are coming.
The lasses are coming.
It's a false promise.
They never come.
Who made all the men?
Who? How did they?
What did they fall out of?
Yeah, they're the ones that stuck around, I guess.
I guess.
I mean, here I am. this is some women we met.
It was like unbelievable, dude.
Actually, these are some drunken mixed fellows that we met out there, dude.
These are the blackest guys I saw in Ireland right here.
Were you invited to this field?
No, we got there and we wanted to like just drive out into the distance.
And so we stopped at a farm and a man took us and showed us all about
the dairy and gave us fresh milk or whatever. And you drank the milk straight from the cow?
We drank it straight out of me. I mean, it felt and I don't know how old the cow was.
It felt a little illegal. I'll be honest with you. I mean, the first sip. Yeah, that's normal.
But if you, you know, I had a couple of sips and I'm like yeah yeah yeah definitely peek around for the police after a bit yeah yeah but it was yeah it
was just unbelievable we just wanted to see the countryside we wanted to feel
something that felt normal a farmer took us into his home and sat at his table
no way yeah I'm glad you got around the country I think a lot of people go to
Dublin for two or three days and they just experienced that but Ireland's a
beautiful place and you can you can see so much of it in like a couple hours.
Do you know what I mean?
It's a small country.
So yeah.
And you have to see it.
Cause if you ask somebody something, you can't understand what they're saying.
And so you just, you have to just believe that they're going to be okay.
When you meet a lot of Irish people.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They love you too.
Did you like, you had good shows?
Yeah.
I mean, I felt a lot of love and support and it was awesome.
You know, I think, and it's just such a unique culture like they just
They have a good time. Mm-hmm. They know how to have a good time
Yeah, they're not as overly concerned with a lot of other bullshit like as we are in the States
You know, definitely not like if I go on tour in Australia, I feel a similar thing people just don't take it too. Seriously
Yeah, you've been down there. Yeah. Oh, yeah, Australia is so great man feel a similar thing. People just don't take it too seriously. You been down there, yeah?
Oh yeah, Australia's so great, man.
Yeah, similar thing.
People just, there's no bullshit.
You feel good energy from people.
But I have a comedian friend, Mark Hayes, and he's Irish.
And so he's always queuing me in on just like the shame
of the Irish and the, you know, the dark, you know.
I guess there's a lot of shame over there.
I guess there is, but also, I don't know a lot of shame over there. I guess there is but also
There's I don't know if you heard this phrase earlier there about notions this idea that when you start doing well at anything
You get notions like you kind of start feeling yourself a bit and you have to be very careful of that I think humility like you see Irish people who just won medals at the Olympics. They just kind of in the interviews
They're just like nah, I think
They're so mean to themselves. It's terrible. But yeah,
happy medium would be good.
I think sometimes you kind of are constantly downplaying what you do.
And I think it would be nice if people celebrated themselves a bit more,
but notions is a real thing. Yeah. I know, like people have said about me,
you get to a certain point and some people just don't like you for no reason.
Yeah. I could maybe see that.
Cause there's this more unity of us as a group.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I remember there was a thing years ago.
I think it was Damien Rice told the story.
They were in a restaurant and there was lobsters in it.
And who was Damien Rice?
He's a brilliant musician from Ireland.
He had a song called Cannonball and an album called,
Oh, It's Like a Classic.
And he was talking about lobsters in a tank.
I think it was him.
I don't mean to attribute this quote to him if it's not him, but he was,
apparently there was like a lobster trying to get out and, uh, and another, he
was kind of like, Oh, careful.
It's going to get out.
And someone was like, no, they're Irish lobsters.
So the other ones are like, drag it back down.
Oh yeah.
Apparently the shellfish.
I don't know.
Yeah.
I love it.
You feel massive support too.
Don't get me wrong.
Like, it's the best place in the world for doing anything.
Cause people just were so quick to celebrate our own
and I love that. Oh that's beautiful yeah yeah what's that article right there is
about an Olympian Irish rowers brilliant response to winning an Olympic gold
medal goes viral. It's all right yeah I can't complain. In a BBC interview
following the win the pair were asked Paul O'Donovan Fenton McCarthy gold
medal winning athletes how does it sound how does that sound it's alright yeah
yeah you can't complain about it really.
I wouldn't go around introducing myself. Yes, that's everything. You wouldn't talk about it.
But I love that too because we do take care of business, but don't talk about it too much. Yeah, there's a bit more humility.
Definitely. Yeah, man. There was so much like,
there was something you said last night
that I really resonated with.
It was about like wishing you could slow down time or grab on to a moment a little bit more
and just how like impossible it is and like what a fight it is.
Yeah, I'm crap at it.
What about you? I can't.
Like I, when things are good, I don't know, I feel like I'm,
sometimes I feel as if I'm
waiting for something bad to happen, you know what I mean? Like you're almost like just sort of waiting for bad news or bad phone call or something, I don't know. Instead of just enjoying
the fact that it's good right now, I feel very bad at that. And again, music puts me in a better
place, but yeah, I feel that way. I find it very difficult to settle into a good feeling
Yeah, I think it's hard. I mean the moment it's hard to have the moment you used to I've talked about this before but you used It with the mo the moment used to be like a real thing because we couldn't record it all the time
Yeah, we couldn't capture it. So the moment it was like
It had so much value. The only way you're gonna to learn about what had happened was through someone else, through a storyteller.
So it promoted so much more storytelling.
It's like cameras have taken all that away from us. Not all the time, and not all of it.
But it's definitely, it's like squashed a lot of that.
Definitely.
I mean the moment, if you got to see a girl at school, you couldn't go home and look at pictures of her. You had to imagine. Oh, so you would wait till tomorrow. What she was doing
and mostly in your mind you imagine, oh she's thinking of me, she's drawing pictures of me
in the walls and everything and then you got to school the next day and she still didn't care
about you. Yeah, yeah, or like you would see that they're online and they're not texting you. Yeah.
That type of thing. Yeah, it's squashed. Yeah, so I think like there's like stuff like that I miss
because your imagination became so much more of a,
it did its natural work.
Absolutely, I think about it, yeah, like that's,
my livelihood comes from my imagination,
you know what I mean, that's all I have.
And so, yeah, you gotta be careful.
I think what you put in is very important.
Like if I read, I can feel it sort of, I can feel ideas start to generate.
If I walk around just all day and stay just literally looking at the most boring stuff,
I can feel ideas start to come. But I got to be careful and not let it get squashed all the time.
Like what do you mean? Like by, like get squashed by what?
As in like if I look at my phone too much, it's just sludge in my brain.
Do you know what I mean? And it's just bad thoughts and stupid stuff.
And so like no good song is going to come out of that.
But also I spend so much time traveling by myself and all that kind of thing.
So it's a, yeah, to stay creative, I find it difficult.
I don't know.
Like, I know like we were in your car last week and you were kind of say,
you thought of something and you were like, oh, I need to write that down.
And it's that constantly, right?
You're constantly trying to grab that thing and that moment of inspiration
or something that can translate to part of your show.
Yeah.
Yeah, you notice especially like a phrase or a thing,
you're like, oh, I've never said that
or I never thought about that.
After a while I noticed it's like,
if it makes me laugh, then it might make somebody else laugh.
So I have to like, you know,
cause at this point you have to think
maybe you and your audience have some like,
symbiosis or whatever it's called. We're similar people, yeah. Yeah, or similar. And so yeah, if they told you a song, if they told you a, you know,
this thing you just heard or, you know, she's like, oh, this will probably, this will probably play.
Do you base songs? Like, do you kind of start with like a nugget of a line?
Definitely. Yeah, I find it hard when someone's kind of like what you want to write about is like I don't know yet. Like I have, I'll have a lyric in a song
last night, so the first song I played is called An Evening I'll Not Forget and I
know there's a lot of lyrics in that from the best days of my life and from
the worst days of my life and they just mix together. So I struggle sometimes
when someone's like what's this song about or what you want to write about it's
everything. You know like there'd be one lyric about like hanging out with my
friends and one lyric about someone passing away and difficult things all mixed in together. But
it all kind of, I think sometimes when I, and this is overly serious, but I think like
the one lasting message through my music hopefully is like a hopeful thing. You know what I mean?
So if a song seems down, it's never all the way down. There's always a hopeful moment.
And if it's up, it just, I'm trying to lift people up a little bit I would like if I could
Have a goal from people coming to my show is just they feel a bit better about where they're at and how their life is
And not in a corny way, but just that they kind of think about things and realize that life is good a little bit
I would love that
Even a down moment in Ireland is pretty good. Probably I think yeah. Yeah, like I said, I was like, oh, yeah, we'll take it
You know, definitely. Yeah, yeah like I said. The Irish are like, oh yeah we'll take it. Oh definitely, yeah people are good. We kind of, yeah like I even, I don't know, I
just, when I get too far from home I kind of miss that feeling. I don't know, there's
so many people that are happy-go-lucky, good people. I'm sure you saw tons of
them, but just yeah. So that's what I mean is between songs I don't feel
serious like we're all on in-ear monitors on stage and in between songs
when we're on tour it's relentless on stage and in between songs when we're on tour,
it's relentless, like people shouting at each other. And we're all just communicating on stage.
It's just people like taking the piss out of me while I'm doing something.
I'll be like, yeah, so I'm trying to sing through all of that.
Like everybody on stage will be slagging me in some way in my ears while I'm trying to say
something really sincere.
And then I'll laugh and the whole crowd will kind of cheer because I look happy.
But it's really because someone's like slagging me about something. sincere. And then I'll laugh and the whole crowd will kind of cheer because I look happy.
But it's really because someone's like slagging me
about something, yeah.
Yeah, you know what, there's nobody likes to laugh more,
I think, than the Irish, maybe.
Really, yeah.
Maybe that's something that I realized.
I was just so, yeah, people just love to fucking laugh there.
It's very sarcastic.
Yes, they love to rip on each other and it's okay.
They don't take things as personally.
No.
Yeah, in a way that sometimes I'll say something sarcastic over here and it doesn't necessarily
land and people think I'm quite serious about it.
So you have to be careful.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Some of the songs last night, it was like, yeah, a lot of them felt like kind of relationship based or trying to like capture a moment from
a relationship or relive a relationship or where does some of that energy come from?
Do you feel like that's been something that's been very important in your life?
I mean, it's important in a lot of people's lives.
Of course.
Yeah, I think even the relationships, you know, sometimes-
Like were you on the bachelor or something?
No, I was meant to sing on... What was I meant to sing on?
I was meant to sing on The Bachelorette years ago.
And it fell through, thank God, yeah.
I, uh, but I was...
Yeah, because after some of the songs, I'm like, Jesus, how many...
How many...
No, yeah, you think I'd like to say...
This guy's been, yeah, like this guy's been on a lot of dates.
No, that couldn't be further from the truth.
But, I think sometimes, I'll sing a song and it'll be from the truth. But I think sometimes I'll sing a
song and it'll be from the perspective of anybody, you know, like a family member.
Sometimes I'll just embody someone else in my life. I think it's an interesting
thought, right, to think that my community, say my close friends and my family at
home, we all have the same feelings and emotions. It's just I sing about it, you
know what I mean? And so sometimes I feel like a mouthpiece for them.
Oh yeah.
You know, and that puts me in a good place
because I'm not thinking about my own life all the time.
So that's where all the dates come from.
I've been on very few.
Yeah, it's, oh, were you not a big dater growing up really?
Not really, oh man.
I was like, I said these people went to school with me.
Okay, I mean.
Yeah, it was supply and demand.
Yeah, a lot of that's not your issue.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I say this, a lot of people went to school with me
who have like, if they watched this,
would hear me speak for the first time.
Wow, really.
Haterly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Would you hate like the public speaking of it or something?
Public, not even public speaking,
but just, I just felt so awkward in school, you know?
Like we used to, we used to like go to, you know, the way to have your locker at school
and you would get your books for the first half of the day and then get your books for the second
and like drop them off. I would walk around with every book for the whole day in my bag.
So I didn't have to go to the lockers for that potential interaction. I hated it, man. Yeah.
Not good.
God. And is that a kind of a general Irish thing? I don't think so. I don't know what it was in me, but I just felt quiet. I didn it, man. Yeah. Not good. God. And is that a kind of a general Irish thing?
I don't think so. I don't know what it was in me,
but I just felt quiet. I didn't...
Even nowadays, I kind of feel that way.
I think it's lovely. Like, I'll talk to you
and I know we can talk about things and get into it,
but just general socializing, I suck at it.
And I, you know, you get to an age where you don't apologize for it
and you don't care anymore, but when I was a kid, yeah, I hated it.
Oh. Yeah, I was a kid, yeah, I hated it.
Oh, yeah. I got so nervous around girls.
I just remember, well, on the school bus, I would get so like, I would get like
erections all the time, I guess, because of like the motor going.
And they would play like music that we weren't allowed to listen to at home.
It was like kind of not sexy music, but just rate pop music or whatever.
And so I would just have to like, I just would turn my whole body just like facing just and like oh there's a constant state of arousal in school you
mean that was just on the bus dude when I got to school I think there was so
much kind of like violence and stuff at our school that it was hard to stay
erect or on a lot of violence yeah You know? Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's a difficult thing.
Yeah, if there's broken glass or somebody getting beaten,
I can't get an erection, you know?
Nora showed you.
Yeah, I mean, maybe I'm old fashioned or whatever,
but it's like, yeah, I just, yeah.
So, but yeah, around girls, yeah, I was always afraid,
never could ask a girl to a dance or anything.
This one girl, man, I loved her.
I think I did anyway. I don't know,
I looked at her really hard every day and I, yeah, finally, I just, I needed to express to her how I
felt and I saved up as much saliva in my mouth as I could one day and I just spit it right into her hair.
Oh, lovely. Yeah. Like an animal, just like, you know what I'm saying? Every primal thing?
Yeah, it was all I knew. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you lost control.
Yeah, I guess I lost control.
I remember.
Dear God.
Yeah, I don't know.
I couldn't, like those situations didn't even come up for me.
I would just hide.
I remember there was a girl that used to kind of fancy me, I guess.
And it got to the point where I like stopped putting gel on my hair and stuff
because I was like I need to
Look scruffier for school. So no one pays attention. Wow weird, right? Like I gotta tone this down
Yeah, it's too good man. Yeah, I can't be like this back into the more
Yeah, just hide in the corner constantly. What is a more anyway more is like a British thing, I guess
Oh, I thought it was kind of is it in my mind. I would think of a misty more
Yeah, it's like a swamp in the middle of nowhere.
It makes me think of Jack the Ripper.
Oh, yeah.
And was that you guys' guy, Jack the Ripper?
No, no, no, no, no.
We don't claim Jack.
Who's your most famous serial killer over there?
Well.
Besides alcoholism, I'm going to say.
If you look at, there's a great podcast called West Cork.
And you could think it's fiction, but it's a true story.
Now, it's not a serial killer, it's one standalone murder.
There's very few things like that, but it's an amazing story.
And it's about this lady that was killed in Cork,
in West Cork, out by the ocean.
Horrific thing, years and years ago,
but they still haven't found the person that did it.
And you know how Ireland is,
like there's a lot of talk in the town about who did it and even up until recently the fella that they thought did it
Was like selling pizzas in the market and stuff and everyone will go just to see him and all that kind of stuff
Yeah, yeah, but no, I don't I mean I know I'm wrong, but I don't think there's many serial killers
I know here you've got classics, but yeah. Yeah, I guess yeah people. It's definitely weak
There's a lot more weak Hill over here. Yeah Who's your favorite my it's definitely, there's a lot more, we kill over here.
Yeah.
Who's your favorite?
My favorite serial killer?
That's a great question, man.
You know,
there was the BTK serial killer.
Who's that?
He was out of Wichita,
Wichita, Kansas,
and yeah, he was like an electrician.
He ran, he ran like his community church
and he was just killing people.
They're all like weirdly handsome as well, aren't they?
Not him.
Not him.
We've had some of the handsome ones.
Ted Bundy, I believe, was the handsome guy.
Dahmer was a famous one. That show was pretty great.
But, yeah, I guess, I don't know, I should think about that a little bit more.
Who my favorite one is.
Yeah, no, there's very few things like that in Ireland. It's like a small country.
Well, and you also, yeah, you'd rather, if you kill somebody, they're not going to be able to drink anymore.
Yeah, true. So true. It's like, Hey, we got to keep this guy alive.
We got to keep the pub in service.
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Yeah, so was there like,
so where does some of that influence thing come from?
Like a lot of the,
cause it's a lot of like,
you know, there's some love stories there kind of.
Definitely, but like tons of hip hop.
I'm listening to hip hop 99% of the time.
Oh you are?
Yeah, like I've been, I remember my friend
had 50 Cent's first album and that was just huge for me.
Oh so good.
And it's funny because I listen to it all the time
and I never try and let it influence my music too much
cause I'd just be pretending to be a rapper
and that would be ridiculous,
but it does influence the way I write.
Like I'll write verses in a hip hop type way and no one really knows or acknowledges it,
but to me I can feel the flow. If there's no beat around then there may be no drums or whatever,
but it's just to me that's written in a hip-hop way.
Like if I could, yeah, I would love to get certain features and stuff. That would be my favorite.
Yeah.
Definitely.
Yeah, I feel like that could easily happen, especially now because there's so many, there's a lot featuring now It feels like yeah, definitely. It's important. J. Cole to me is like number one
I that would be like an incredible thing to me. I would love that so much
Did you you're here working in Nashville right now on music? Yes. Yeah
Have you met up with other artists while you've been here a little bit? Yeah, it's funny
You know because like you said Gabe Simon and Joshua were with me at the show last night in the Bluebird
but also the idea is you kind of because like you said, Gabe Simon and Joshua were with me at the show last night in the Bluebird.
But also the idea is you kind of have your friends
with you playing songs, and it's like you go back and forth,
I'll do a song, you do a song, they do a song.
But like, I don't have friends like that,
do you know what I mean?
I kind of feel quite solitary when I go to these places.
Yeah, like sometimes, you know there's sometimes
people who have tons of features
and have tons of friends on songs.
I feel quite content in this way, but like a bit of a loner in the music biz.
I feel like I kind of go about my business in a loner-y way, which is fine.
I'm okay with that. And I love people. I think they're incredible.
I think the other artists in my genre and that are doing well, I absolutely love them.
But I oftentimes, if I'm doing the thing like last night,
I'm just like, I'll do it by myself.
It'll be fine.
Oh yeah.
Definitely.
Is it just, and it's not really a choice that you don't want to work with other people.
It's just kind of like, this has been going fine.
This is how I'm doing.
Do you feel like you don't want to bother other people ever?
Yes, definitely.
And I also, I don't want to be kind of, I don't want to seem as though I'm reaching out to
somebody for their clout or whatever, you know? I don't want to seem sweaty about it. I don't think seem as though I'm reaching out to somebody for their clout or whatever.
You know? I don't want to seem sweaty about it.
I don't think you could seem like that.
Nice one. Yeah, I appreciate it.
To be honest with you, I don't think, just, you know, I don't know you super well, but we've gotten hung out a few times.
I don't think that you could seem like that.
Okay. Yeah.
I know that doesn't help anything, but-
No, no, no, but you know when you can-
You're still not working with J. Cole, but still.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, no chance.
But I think you easily could. I mean, we went out the other night and Zach Brown saw you and he was like, I, you know,
immediately he brought you onto his show.
Yeah, thank you for that.
He said that immediately.
He didn't think at all.
It was cool.
He just asked.
He was like so excited to see you.
Yeah, we randomly ran in and we were at the Red Clay Strays and yeah, there you are now.
That's crazy, dude.
I saw that video.
It gave me chills, dude.
It was nuts.
We had, it was funny.
I lingered for so long because we, uh, he said we rehearsed it beforehand and he was
like, I'll sing the outro verse.
He said, you sing the first half of the outro verse, I'll sing the second half.
I was like, perfect.
So I sang my bit, then went and hid away with the bongo player for a while.
And then the outro verse came along and I was, I walked back out to the walkway and
I was like, all right, sweet, here we go.
And then he started singing the outro verse.
I was like, oh no, now I'm just standing here.
So into like being an awkward person, I was like, I'm just standing here in front of 70,000
people.
Yeah.
With nothing to do.
I should have been gone ages ago.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He was lovely though.
God, that's so cool looking, dude.
It's nice.
It's the best thing. I don't get nervous for that, which is weird.
Yeah. Oh, man.
That, yeah, karaoke makes me so sad.
I could not even imagine having to sing in front of people.
Yeah.
So when did you start to learn that you had singing talent?
I mean, I know that some of this will be like elementary stuff to you,
but for some audience that doesn't know you, you know?
Of course.
So, yeah, when did you start to learn that?
Because how do you go from being like this sort of like, like,
like not recluse, but sort of this like shadow lurking.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, of course.
Good guy. Yeah.
My, yeah, we don't want to make it sound like a villain, but sort of this, um,
this guy who's this patient person.
How do you go from that to like being able to like express
yourself? Cause dude, yeah, when you start, it's like,
there's a lot of levels to what you do.
Like sometimes I feel like there's like some Mac Miller.
Sometimes I feel like there's like this Dr. Seuss of like
Irish funerals going on.
There's so many, and then sometimes it's just like this,
you almost feel like you're at a opera or something.
Right, right, right.
You know?
So it's really impressive.
Nice one, man.
Thank you, yeah.
I try and do a few different things,
but I remember my sister played piano,
and she still does, when we were kids.
And classic thing, I would just sing in the back of the car,
and I remember my mom, I was just loud, you know?
I'm still loud.
And so yeah, I just started figuring out,
I played soccer quite seriously when I was a kid, seriously in my head.
And so music was like a secondary thing.
So I never worried about playing to people,
because I was thinking about playing football.
So I would always, it came quite easy to me
to play to people, because I didn't see it
as being that important the first few times, you know?
And so yeah, it just gradually became a thing.
I started realizing I wanted to write music. I'd go into town and like do open mics and stuff. Oh, you know? And so, yeah, it just gradually became a thing. I started realizing I wanted to write music.
I'd go into town and like do open mics and stuff.
Oh, you would?
Yeah, like Dublin's so supportive.
That's what I mean.
It's like, I know I was talking about notions
and all that kind of stuff, but it's just like,
it's a nice place.
I was 15, 16 playing in these pubs,
and people would do anything to help you, you know?
I don't know what it's like in the States, but it's just.
Oh, yeah, yeah, know that Irish will do anything.
Yeah, and they just, if they see some potential in you,
they'll just kind of say, I know this person, I know that
person, be careful with this and da da da.
And lots of advice and all that kind of thing.
So, um, yeah, just gradually, I mean, like I'm 32 now, so like,
I've been doing this since I was 19, I guess, you know what I mean?
So it's a long road.
And I know we were talking about the red clay strays and how they put time in.
And I think if you get to a certain level, there's very few people haven't had that journey.
Do you know what I mean? I know you had Luke Combs on here. I know everybody's got their
journey in music, but like there's so much time you spend knowing you're good and being
frustrated that you don't have a career. You know what I mean? So I think you just have to be
patient. It's so, like, it's so silly to me. It's so kind of arbitrary in a way, because it's like,
it's this thing where you're,
like you said, like you're lurking in the shadows,
knowing you're good, but no one's paying attention.
And then out of nowhere, people decide
you're just really good.
And it's like, I knew that before.
Yeah.
But it just takes time.
Yeah, it is.
That is such a fine line.
There's a...
Like what's it like for you?
You know what I mean?
Like when you knew you had this potential,
but people didn't know you were...
Yeah, I thought that I was funny. I think I was sitting on a porch one day at school, in college,
and this kid's like, you should do stand-up comedy, man.
And I was like, fuck you, dude. You're an idiot, right?
And the guy was an idiot. So I was right.
But yeah, eventually I started doing comedy, you know?
But was it that classic thing?
There were times you start to do good,
yeah, and then you're like, why?
Why, what?
You know, you see other people like, I'm doing,
but I think a lot of it's just time,
and it's like, yeah, like weathering that storm.
And then weathering that storm of like,
other people's careers have been going,
they have to have their successes.
And so that's just the way that time works.
Do you find that hard sometimes when you see people
having massive moments?
Yeah, I-
I know you are too, so it's probably made easier by that.
I definitely did earlier on, and then,
yeah, now it's like we're able to sell out a club
and able to sell out some spots.
So once you can kind of do that,
you start to feel a little bit more like in control,
that like, at least, okay, at least I'm doing my job.
I think that's part of it too.
It's like, hell, it's hard to admit to somebody
that you're a comedian.
Like, you know, cause everybody's funny
and everybody has good stories,
especially being from Louisiana.
So, like they don't even have any comedy clubs
in Louisiana because people are so funny just talking to them.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it's like I'm not gonna go pay seven dollars and go win that, you know, booze hole.
Well my friend is funnier than that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, fucking Randy out here.
Did you spend a lot of time sort of doing sets and clubs or just...
Oh yeah.
Tough ones?
Yeah, for years, man.
Yeah, I would drive and do all the sets.
Yeah, I think there was a part of me
that wanted to be good at it.
Of course.
And then I think, after a while,
I think the art chooses you
because I didn't end up getting married,
I didn't have a child,
so those things didn't kind of like
start to take up my time,
so I was still available for it, you know?
Of course, yeah, yeah.
So yeah, I think there's a moment kind of
where some of the art chooses you. I keep thinking about you spitting on that girl's head. is still available for it, you know? So yeah, I think there's a moment kind of
where some of the art chooses you.
I keep thinking about you spitting on that girl's head.
Terrible times.
God, if she only knew.
And I tried to, I think, draw a heart when I spit
or something, I tried to.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I tried to save it.
I tried to do something, you know,
I remember just doing like that a little or something.
I don't know, I wanted to be kind of artistic.
I don't fucking know. But that was the only way I could express
myself so I know what you mean about the saliva I find it even when I'm doing
this you know so I don't know man um yeah were we talking but it's been good
I've loved being here honestly yeah it's a good talking about? But it's been good. I've loved being here, honestly.
Have you?
It's a good place making music.
Yeah, it's a good place.
Definitely. I think...
Yeah, and I think if you don't...
You have to kind of like put yourself out there some here,
and if you like to do kind of your own thing.
I mean, your music does feel very, uh...
important to you, like you said, right?
Like the stuff you're, you know, you're not trying to go for like, uh,
it doesn't seem like
some pop thing or trying to like read a bunch of other people's songs that they've written. No.
It seems like you're trying to make your, your voice.
Yeah, if it was like someone else, you know, there'd be no point.
There's people I'm a fan of and there's people I'm inspired by, but you've got to take a mix of all that and make your own thing.
Yeah, otherwise it's boring.
Because that's a big part of the culture here is like all the big songwriter groups.
Yeah. And then they service the musicians, you know?
Totally. And you got to be careful because you find, like I've written songs where I'm
like, oh no, that's too like this person. There's no place in the world for that.
I think it's funny, sometimes you'll have people kind of,
see I remember we were talking about Lewis Capaldi the other day. I remember for
a long time I was kind of pushing to do just piano and
vocal and it never really worked out and then he had his massive song. I was
getting kind of used to being someone you loved and then I remember someone in
my team that I worked with was kind of like, oh I was thinking like maybe piano
and vocal and I was like this is so obvious like he did that already so like
it's so senseless that I would go and do that,
unless it felt right, but this idea of just like
copying something else that did well is weird,
and we'll never get the right results, I think.
Yeah, I think you see a lot of that with music,
you see like someone breaks out of the pack,
and then there's a lot of other people
that start to sound just like them.
Oh, totally, you see it now, like St. Noah Cannon,
like Brian having these huge moments.
I'm inspired by it, but I have to make sure I do my own thing and don't sort of, what's
the word, try and replicate it, I guess.
Because you'll just end up on your ass.
Yeah, because then you're just like, oh, he sounds like this person.
Totally. And the reason it works for them is because they are them and they're uniquely
them. And people are drawn to that, Definitely. I think even like the attitude that's contained
within your music, like you see Zach Brian,
like the recordings and everything, they're quite,
what's the word, like they're so rough and ready,
but people are drawn to that.
Everything's so perfect nowadays.
So people just like that.
If he's literally just pressing record and that take is that take.
I think it's incredible.
Again, I heard Luke Combs kind of say they'll go in
and do five songs in an evening. I think it's incredible. Again, I heard Luke Holmes kind of say they'll go in and do five songs in an evening. I think that's beautiful. I've been in situations now where
things can get quite fragmented and you're kind of like, okay, we'll do piano, then do vocal.
It's all quite polished and put together. So I want to get back to that side of things.
Yeah, that feels like a challenge. I think that's a challenge in any art. How do I stay me?
Yeah, that feels like a challenge. I think that's a challenge in any art, you know?
How do I stay me?
Yeah.
And then how do I stay me as I change?
Mm-hmm.
And then, is it okay to still be me?
This changed me at the risk of that the people
who are paying attention to me won't, will understand.
Totally, and I get to hide behind the music.
Like in your line of work, I think you are your brand, right?
So like changing's got to be a whole different thing.
Do you know what I mean? Like I can change my music all I like
and I'll still be me underneath it.
But like I find for comedians or people that do what you do,
it's tough because your name is the whole thing, right?
You know, like if you change as a person,
people will kind of, could criticize, could enjoy it, whatever.
Yeah, but to not even evolve, I think, right?
Like I think that's kind of the thing that I'm thinking of,
is like a guy told me one time, he's a manager,
he's worked at a fancy management company in Los Angeles,
and he said, you know, your audience will grow up with you,
so you have to grow up as well,
or it can get kind of stale, you know?
And I thought that was just interesting, you know?
It's just like, yeah, that's kind of true.
Like if I, you know, be afraid to change or don't grow up,
or you know, then they're gonna grow up past me.
Of course. Yeah, I got that with music too.
You know, you try and like, you try and sort of think about what age you were when people first started listening to your music
and then change with that. 50 Cent's a good example.
He always, he stopped making music sometimes because he was just like, it's not relevant to those people anymore.
It's interesting.
Hmm. Yeah, I'm trying to think. Yeah, there's some like, there's a little bit of Zach Brian. I want to hear you.
There's a little bit of James Blake, but there's, it's you.
It definitely felt like this guy at the shipyard
who's just going to fucking show you what's going on.
I hope so.
You know?
I hope so.
My voice is blown out too, as I-
And his girl, she better pay attention.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It felt like that.
Yeah, it's stories.
And if he goes out on the boat with you to fish or crab or whatever, he's going to be
a little loud sometimes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I got told I even talk too loud.
A speech therapist recently was like, you need to relax.
Really?
Constantly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They said like, cause I have trouble with my voice sometimes.
Even last night, my voice kind of went about halfway through and I don't know how to not
go full beans constantly. Yeah. You know. You must get so many dude every girl I know my
brother's wife, my ex-girlfriend, every woman is looking for you. So I don't know
if you, I'm sure you have, how many ring cameras do you have? Here we got the
cameras on the house at home. Yeah, yeah, Yeah. Nah, it's just people can connect to
Real feelings. Yeah, that's okay. I saw you you were nodding along. Oh, I was I had one song
That had rhythm in it last night, right? Oh, no, there was a couple moments you hit some rich
Yeah, I mean well, yeah when it's not like the whole band and it's just you that's a lot of pressure
I mean you had though you had the boys with you there
The poet Joshua. Yeah, he was great. Dude. He was at my show in Halifax. I'll tell you that was yet the show
Yeah, cuz he said he bumped into you on the flight. Yeah, I didn't know he's at the show
Yeah, he came to the show in half-packs in the morning. I'm on the plane brilliant
He said hey, I was at your show last night. I was like, oh you're heading to the US
He's like, yeah, I'm gonna play with Dermot Kennedy. I said, oh, I'm actually going to his show
No way, and so I'll see you there tomorrow.
Yeah, he's a nice guy.
He was so much more confident than me.
He, uh.
He was funny.
Yeah, he's 22 as well, so it's just like,
I don't know, I think that's a difficult gig
when it's just spoken, you know?
The music, you can hide behind it and stuff,
but when it's just spoken word, that's not easy.
Yeah, but it added this element of like,
because last night, so just for the listeners,
so there was Dermot, there was Gabe Simon
accompanying him on guitar and mandolin
and some different instruments.
And there was Joshua de Schutter,
and he's a poet, and he was like kind of reading lines
at certain points, yeah.
And he had sort of tailored his poetry to fit around the songs.
It was just cool.
I don't know.
Like, I was cool.
I know when I was that age, I kind of was dying to do things like that.
So I was excited to work with him.
Yeah.
Yeah, I thought that was super cool.
How'd you find him?
Instagram.
I saw him doing a poem.
He had a really cool poem.
I couldn't even point it out now, but he had a really cool poem about
two people who every night in a cemetery, they come up out of the graves
and one guy was really rich and one guy was really
poor. And, and just, it's this beautiful poem about like,
not forgetting what's important in life. So I thought it was cool.
I think there's a lot of,
I think there's a lot of bullshit poetry on Instagram and I think he's not that.
So that's why. Yeah. Yeah. I liked even just having a younger person,
it like added this element of like, um,
nervous energy and approach to the
world which was like such a dichotomy to kind of some of your music you know some
of it's like you know it's more like I don't think a young person could even
write something you know you know I think you have to have some experience
you know. I definitely think about that now even like having any degree of
success I feel better equipped now you know I used to be annoyed that I wasn't getting gigs
and stuff, but I guess I'm glad it happened the way it did
because now I, even as a person just in society,
I try not to, you know, you learn how to not take shit
from people and you learn who you are in the world
a little bit.
I'd be scared if I was 22 doing this,
do you know what I mean?
Oh yeah, having like a lot of success at that age.
Any kind of traction, yeah, and someone was, like I feel like I'm easily led
or gullible even at this age,
so I don't know what I'd be like if I was younger, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, it seems kind of risque out there.
I want to think more about Ireland, dude.
Do they have, oh, somebody said the Irish started Halloween.
Is that true?
Sound, yeah, I think so.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, because what is it?
It sort of translates like the night of the lost souls or something like that, I think so. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Cause what is it? It sort of translates like the, the night of the
lost souls or something like that.
I'm not sure, but yeah, Irish people, yeah,
Ireland's very pagan and sort of a lot of things
like that.
The dead are very important.
The dead are very important.
You know the way in like Coco, like, uh, in those
movies, like it's like.
That's the Mexican dead, right?
Yeah.
It feels like there's similarities in that sense.
There's like the Celtic sound festival.
Yeah.
Wow. My, actually, I was talking about it last night at the gig,
the island my auntie lives on.
Halloween's really important and it's all the lost souls.
What is it called?
Inishmore. Inishmore.
I thought her name's Deirdre.
I thought you were about to say her name.
I was like, you know my auntie Deirdre.
But they have these traditions, you know,
where there's very few people live on the island.
It's like, I'd be bulshin', maybe a few hundred people kind of thing.
And there's this tradition where someone, someone you know will knock on your door and they're kind of allowed
walk around your house in silence and open drawers and closed drawers and then leave.
And then later on, everyone's in the pub and you don't know who is in your house.
So it's this kind of, there's all these creepy traditions.
Yeah.
Oh, that's fun.
But Ireland started Halloween.
Yeah.
Oh, that's guessing.
Yeah. Halloween was invented in Ireland.
The roots of Halloween can be traced back 2000 years to the Celtic Samhain.
Samhain.
Samhain.
Yeah. I think those things are important in Ireland,
like ghosts and all that kind of thing.
Do you believe in ghosts?
Yeah. Yeah, for sure, dude. Yeah. from Louisiana. We got fucking ghosts over there. Oh true. Yeah, everybody's yeah, everybody's eating
Trout or something, you know even you'll hear a ghost eating something. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, like a lot of we have fat ghosts down there
Hospital like yeah, there's a ghost in the other the other ward. Yeah
and be like, yeah, there's a ghost in the other. In the other ward?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He broke his legs.
New Orleans is Louisiana, right?
Yeah.
Ghosts are like, that's a ghost town, right?
It's a ghost town.
Yeah, there's ghost tours.
You can do tours about, yeah.
Yeah, and the crazy thing, you'll be on a ghost tour.
Somebody will get murdered because it's so dangerous there.
Then another ghost will show up.
You're like, oh, damn, that's Reginald.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I knew him.
Yeah, they just, he just got here. Reginald. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I knew him. Yeah. They just, he just got here.
He's fresh.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Uh, but yeah, there's a lot of like that, that sort of energy there.
There's tons of ghost tours and stuff like that.
We had a dude in our town who got, um, busted by the cops being, for being a ghost, dude.
We had, um, so this family owned, they bought like a Ramada and it was like a small, it's a small motel.
Oh, okay.
And it used to be nice and now it's still nice
but it's not like, it's not like swanky.
And they were trying to make it on the,
get on the ghost tour.
So when people came to America to go learn about ghosts
and everything, it would show up on like the ghosts,
like, oh, you gotta stop here, right?
So they wanted to make it
Haunted okay, so they did like some like like
Low-key haunty shit like the wiring and stuff and it was getting a little bit of a buzz
But then they're like oh, we're not getting enough people that love ghosts
you know and so they would have somebody would dress up upstairs and
They had hotel room doors that were across the hallway from each other.
Yep.
So they would open a door on each side and when you walked up the stairs, the person would just walk across.
Yeah.
So you'd see something like just what was that, you know?
Uh-huh.
And yeah, and so it was getting some heat and people were like, holy shit, there's ghosts.
And people were outside fucking hanging out and drinking Dr. Pepper and fucking sometimes even people
because there people get real excited and um
And then they busted the guy the guy forgot to take off his ghost sheet or whatever he was driving home
It was like the owner's son and they fucking busted him dude
Yeah, yeah, yeah, have you had any like encounters properly with ghosts?
Oh, yeah, a friend of mine died and like I was laying in his living room
The day after and I felt him he was right outside. Wow no way. And I just it felt as if he was right there I mean it just I don't know
I never felt like he was standing around me before or since. Mm-hmm. But it just
felt real and I just started like crying it was like just super intense you know.
Wow. I've never had I believe in all that stuff so strongly but never anything
like that. Yeah Ireland you guys have like the Giants causeway causeway. Yeah, and it's supposedly made by Giants. Yeah
Did you go there? Um, did we go to John's cause we didn't know I haven't been there
But is that good is that helpful?
But it's but it's like but the story is that
There was a giant from there a giant from Scotland and they weren't getting along. Is that right?
I feel like you know more about it than I do. Yeah, I think so.
Oh, Finn McCool. That was one of the giants. And there was another giant. Legend has it that an Irish giant named Finn McCool created, and everybody's going to think this is extremely gay.
Exciting. Yeah.
An Irish giant, Finn McCool.
Yeah.
To cross the Irish sea and fight his rival, the Scottish giant, Ben and Donna.
Yeah.
So they like, and so it just looks like these like, those these big square stones heading
out into the water from each side.
Yeah.
Beautiful thing.
So there's one of them in Scotland as well?
That's a good question.
Hopefully there is. If not not you made it up. Yeah
The Scotland giant cosmic we'll say that there is
Let's keep the lore alive. But yeah, there's a lot of stuff like that in Ireland like a lot of like well
There's leprechauns. There's mystery, you know ancient things. Yeah a lot of that. There's a lot of like
mystery, you know. Ancient things.
Yeah.
A lot of that.
There's a lot of like, lore.
Definitely.
Possibility.
There's a lot of myths and stuff.
It's kind of, it's romantic in a way.
Yeah, I think like I loved Lord of the Rings,
The Hobbit and all that stuff,
purely because I think being Irish,
you kind of grow up loving those things.
Yeah.
Definitely.
I would hate to be without that.
I think to be honest, like I, in my songs,
like I had a song last night
cause it called The Killer Was a Coward, and it's just a made up story.
I love it.
It's just about a king and a person that finds his way through this castle and kills him.
To me, I was just like, fuck it, why not make a song like that?
What has the songwriting experience been like in Nashville?
Has it been inspired by any country vibes, or is it just, this is a place that you feel
is good to write and be?
I think it's a good place.
You know, I think you can't downplay
how talented people are.
Sometimes if I'm writing somewhere else,
I can get stuck and kind of come away with half a verse
or half a chorus or something,
whereas here you come away with full songs,
because people do not stop.
It's like Gabe, who was there last night,
he just, he's relentless.
You know what I mean? He can kind of just, he never runs out of ideas. So people here are just so
talented. Plus it's just a better place to write. Yeah. I don't know. I like being here. It feels
like it's not the be all and end all, the music business, even though it's here and it's based
here. And there's so many people here that are working on music. It doesn't feel like
people are writing to try and be successful.
It feels like people are trying to just make music and see what happens.
Yeah, I agree. There's a nice sense of like just being alive here.
Definitely. And you just take time and people are nice and you'll be playing a song
and someone will kind of invite their friend over and play guitar,
whereas in LA they'll be kind of like, what's in for me? Why would I do that?
You know what I mean? Whereas here it's just supportive.
Yeah, I think that's really true, man. I mean, we went out and saw some great music and then you met up with Zach Brown and you're playing with...
Yeah, I think it's definitely people...
It's more of a sharing culture here.
For sure. And it feels like it's its own place outside of just the possibility of making music.
Totally. I think sometimes when I write, I question how important it is.
Do you know what I mean?
That's why, like I've had moments in the past
where I struggle with getting music over the line
because I'm just like, who cares?
And I completely forget about the fact
that people will listen to it.
You know what I mean?
I kind of, I have dismissed that.
And I don't mean who cares.
Like it's always important to me,
but also in the past I've kind of been like,
oh, I don't know. you get so caught up in it,
you're just like, does it really matter, really?
Like, and I don't know, yeah, so it's nice to be back
at a place where music is the most important thing.
It's lovely.
I think when you kind of go chasing a career,
it can be a tricky thing and it can get in the way
of doing the right stuff creatively, so I'm glad to be here.
Oh yeah, that's a good point.
Well do you feel, I mean, you've had such a great career already, do you feel like, yeah does a new
like desire arise in you once you're already
doing well kind of?
Is it like a maintaining desire, is it?
No I think it's a returning, for me it's returning
to who I was before doing any of it.
You know what I mean?
Like you being funny on the porch because it just makes you feel good.
You know what I mean?
Me playing music at home just because it's the thing I love.
I have yet to play a show where I come away being like, oh wow, that was perfect.
I'm so happy now.
Do you know what I mean?
Like when I'm on the tour bus after a gig, like I keep an even keel constantly.
I don't come off stage wired or I don't come off stage really sad.
I just kind of like, yeah, it was good.
And if it was good, I'm happy with it.
And if it was bad, it's okay, because I'll do it again tomorrow.
But yeah, like getting back, I said that last night, like I want to be able to
play music like I don't care.
Do you know what I mean?
I just, there's no thought about like whether it's good or bad.
I'm just doing it because it feels right.
And it's fun.
Yeah, like I blow my voice out
because I'm just trying so fucking hard all the time.
Do you know what I mean?
I need to get to a place where
I don't feel very confident doing it.
You know what I mean?
Not at all.
Doing what?
Just performing for people.
Like I self-analyze constantly
to the point that it's detrimental.
But then I think a lot of musicians do that, right?
Like you're hard on yourself, you're hard on yourself.
Yeah, you're hard on yourself.
You want to do your best.
Totally.
Yeah, that's something I got out of your stuff too.
It's like, I felt like,
I felt like I want to give everything that I'm capable of
while I'm here.
Yes.
Yeah, of course.
Yeah, it's only last night.
Like you talked about...
While I exist even. While I exist, I want to get everything that is possible out of me.
Definitely. You know, like having played sport for such a long time when I was a kid,
that felt like such a powerful feeling.
And I think sometimes I'm trying to get that feeling from music.
And so, yeah, I just, I think like if you play well in a match or a game or whatever,
the reason you feel like you leave nothing out there, and I take that into music, I think.
And I think it's important to not be competitive as a musician, but sometimes I can take the gigs
in a competitive way, you know, and just make sure you have nothing left.
I think that kind of feels important.
What happened with sports, with football?
I just wasn't good enough.
Really?
Yeah. Damn.
I was all right, don't get me wrong, I wasn't,
but like, I'm always conscious of,
if I was on here being like, oh yeah,
I had to decide between soccer and music,
there'd be someone in Dublin who'd be like,
arsehole, not true.
You know what I mean?
I was all right, but I wasn't doing that.
Yeah, yeah, no way.
And that's like the biggest sport over there.
Oh wait, have you seen that road bowling?
Yes, yeah.
I don't know what it is.
I like-
Really?
Well, I know what it is, but-
I follow them on TikTok.
Do you really?
Have you seen the stone lifting?
No, I haven't, but I know this is people,
and these are adults, most of them it looks like.
Yeah. And they get up
in Shannon Vale
And they throw a ball and this is a real thing that happens this isn't like a
prank they throw a ball down a street and
Try to get it as far as they can and they want to get to a certain finish line in the least amount of tries
So it's kind of like golf just with your hand. Yeah, yeah, and it's an iron ball
It's a steel ball. You should look up the stone lifting the stone lifting seems to be back in a major way
Really? Yeah one more of those. I want to see
We got a cuz here's Huff Wayne Parks here going turn it up Bob
He runs so far It's the best thing that I've ever seen.
How much do they get?
They say 13,800.
No, really all 13,800 aside and Wayne Parks is on fire.
Good man, Wayne Park.
Wow.
And now certain things are back.
There's like, there's people lifting stones
at like 300 kilos and stuff.
It's probably on TikTok.
I feel like it's a big thing again.
Lifting stones.
Yeah, like, and they're awkward, you know,
it's like random.
It's not like those big round ones.
It's like a proper, like awkward stone in the field.
There we go. Let's see it.
Yes.
Holy.
Let's go.
Holy.
Come on.
Pull it John, that's it. Come on John. Holy. John. Yes
So strong oh
Now how high do you have to get up? I guess you have to get it above your waistline, it looks like.
I feel like it needs to be on your chest, yeah.
Play one more of those.
That's unbelievable.
I mean, that is a huge...
Strong people, yeah.
That was a huge stone.
Play that top one.
Just play the top one.
Oh, and this is a more rounded stone.
Yeah.
Wow.
This guy wants to make an omelet.
Yeah, dude.
And there's his brother who can't lift him.
Talking shit all day probably.
Oh yeah, this is crazy.
This is, yeah, there's something so Irish
about all this, I think.
I don't know what it is.
I feel like I've seen him.
Told you he's a strong one.
Yeah what's that guy's name?
The awkward ones.
Tom Saltman.
Tom Saltman official.
Oh wow.
Where's that England?
Strongest Brothers is in his t-shirt.
Oh they're both strong then.
It does seem one sided.
My bad boys.
Please don't all the work.
Yeah but yeah I will say this.
One of them is doing a doing all the work. Yeah, but yeah, I will say this.
One of them is doing a lot of the work, lads.
Yeah, that road boiling.
Play one more of those.
I just couldn't see if you can find a Paf.
I'm trying to think Paf.
There we go.
Play that one in.
Gary Daly there.
Oh, he's an off-duty police officer
And everybody knew this well, I knew it was a thing but I didn't know people throw it into a crowd of people That's the crazy part and some of them move and sometimes they don't move. Yeah. Yeah, look at that one
3.2 million views Wow 50 grand
Wow, it's a massive amount of money. What is that 50 pounds? Yeah?
50,000 euro find the one with somebody right there. Who is this lady? That's just constant
That's Michelle Smith a pop flood right there see what she says about him go up
So just let you know you know you've been keeping track of this year
approximately 20 past 3 on road bowls in Ireland on Facebook, so
Who's gonna win and it's a qualifier to take part in the King and Queen of the roads festival?
2024 happening in September that's Paul flood risk home Rafferty column Rafferty huge big thrower from County Arma and
Pathload needs no introduction here. So tune in in about 20 minutes.
You should have gone to this one.
I tried.
Did you really?
Yeah, they were out of Cork.
They were far away or they were in Europe.
Somewhere.
There was one that actually made a little message to me.
There you go, shortest bowl in history.
Shortest bowl in history, let's see it.
That's Paflod right there.
That's him? That's him, yeah. Oh, shit.
Oh, boy.
Oh, bollocks, Paul.
That was best work.
Gosh, my flood, huh?
Just joking, Paul.
That guy will throw one of those through my house.
Oh, imagine that though, Lord.
You're just.
In your shins.
Oh, yeah, that's Michelle Smith official.
How many people have you seen in the last year?
I've seen a couple of them.
I've seen a couple of them.
I've seen a couple of them.
I've seen a couple of them.
I've seen a couple of them.
I've seen a couple of them.
I've seen a couple of them.
I've seen a couple of them.
I've seen a couple of them. I've seen a couple of them. I've seen a couple of them. I've seen a couple of them. I've seen a couple of them. Oh, imagine that though, lad. You're just. In your shins? Oh.
Yeah, that's Michelle Smith official.
How much is that 50,000 pound for the winner?
50,000 euro, yes.
So I don't know, 55,000 dollars probably.
Wow. In and around.
And look up the rules for road bowling real quick.
I just want to read it so I can.
60,573.
Wow.
To throw a damn ball down a road.
Yeah, I don't know where that money comes from.
Now that's a great question, brother.
That's an IOU.
Road bowling is an Irish sport in which competitors attempt to take the fewest throws to propel a metal ball along a predetermined course of country roads.
The sport originated in Ireland and is mainly played in counties.
Arma.
Arma and Cork.
Road bowling in Ireland is governed by the
Voluntary Irish Road Bowling Association.
Arma won the All Ireland this year in the football.
Oh they did?
The bullet or bowl is a solid iron cannonball,
seven inches circumference and it weighs 28 ounces.
There are two or more players or teams in a match.
The one with the fewest shots to the finish line wins.
If two players or teams approach the finish line
with equal shots, the winner is decided
by which throw goes farther past the finish line.
Wow.
You should have played this.
God, I'd love to.
You could play this.
Well, you gotta, I guess you really have to have
the shoulders for it, you know?
Are you lefty or righty? gotta, I guess you really have to have the shoulders for it, you know? Are you lefty?
Or righty?
Righty.
Yeah, I'm pretty much righty.
Normie.
I'll do it, but, you know.
Remember when I was younger, I used to like,
I'll try to like eat with my left hand for like,
I'll be like, I'm gonna change things up,
I'm gonna be different, and I'll do it for like two bites,
and like, fuck that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So like fork in your left hand.
So you would now eat with a fork in your right hand?
No, now I go fork in my left hand.
You have knife in the right hand.
But every now and then I try to change it up.
Yeah, yeah, I remember at home, if you were lefty,
this probably happened here too, if you were writing
with your left hand, they would slap you
and put the pen in your right hand.
I remember my dad, my dad's lefty too,
and they would make him write with his right hand
when he was younger
Yeah, why they don't like it over there. No, yeah, I mean it's not to stay on Google the whole time
But I bet it's like an old Irish thing. There was some weirdness about being lefty. Yeah. Wow
Yeah, it is don't you to be different 100% Yeah
Yeah, yeah, you get like slapped on the back of the hand. It says right here. It was all due
It was believed to an unloving refrigerator mother even as late as the 1900 some schools in Ireland
We're still forcing Southpaw children to write with their right hands
Nowadays we know that nine out of ten people are right-handed and that left-handedness is likely to be genetic
What's a refrigerator mother yeah
Is that like a latchkey kid in Ireland the term refrigerator mother was coined by Austrian physicist Leo Kanner in the 1940s to describe a mother
Who's cold uncaring style so traumatized her child that they were treated
into autism.
Wow.
So they thought maybe if he was left-handed he was autistic.
We had a fellow with Down syndrome in our town and his mom just thought he was Irish
his whole life.
I can't remember if you said that before.
And it was just crazy, man.
Yeah, and he might have been actually.
She would dress him up in all these Boston Celtics shit
Oh, hey, oh, it's crazy. Yeah, we're gone things. Yeah, just different. Yeah different just joyful outfits that poet yesterday
The guy we were doing the show with I had green shoes on and he called me a leprechaun within five minutes
I had never met him before and yeah, call me a leprechaun. It's terrible. Yeah, he was kind of outgoing like that
Yeah, you want is he hey, he was. He had a couple of pops.
Do people get married young in Ireland? What's that like?
Not so much. I don't know. What's it like here? I feel like it used to be, but not anymore.
Yeah?
Yeah, like I would say 30s, early 30s maybe. Nowadays. I know my parents got married when they were like 23, so I was just gradually growing up.
Yeah, I guess I just gradually growing up.
Yeah. I guess I just wonder like how the cultures
are super different.
Oh yeah.
In a lot of ways I'd imagine.
I mean, that guy, Joshua the poet, last night
he couldn't drink, he was 20 years old.
I mean in Ireland, that is not the case.
People can drink that early, eh?
Well, 18, but you know.
Will they let him in the pubs as well, some?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Especially down the country, like after the road bowling.
Yeah, everyone's getting in.
I'd imagine that.
Yeah, dude.
Yeah, cork was something else.
I couldn't even believe when we got there.
I was like, this is so wild.
You played the marquee too.
That's great.
Yeah, in the tent there.
I played there one time.
Yeah, it was.
It was totally different.
The acoustics were a little bit different in there.
Do you have to change your set on in a cultural way?
Probably not, right?
Oh, I tell I learned stuff about like Belfast
when I first got there.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And like the NRA.
The IRA?
Yeah, and the IRA, yeah.
Yes.
And we learned about the IRA and like,
yeah, like ooh, ah, up the raw, we learned about that.
Yeah, yeah.
And then we learned fuck England was the big thing we learned.
You were saying you could just lean on that
whenever you wanted to do it. Oh, if things got bad, yeah, you just yell it out. Yes. People are going learned fuck England was the big thing. We learned. You were saying you could just lean on that whenever you wanted.
Oh, things got bad. Yeah.
You just yell it out.
Yes.
People are going, some guy pulled out a sword.
I'm like, who has a sword?
And I think he worked there.
Yeah.
You're like, well, that seems.
It's just security.
Yeah. That seems a bit out of sorts, but yeah.
Yeah.
Who's Beetlejuice?
Don't ever say that name.
Beetlejuice.
I'm serious. If you say that name three times, really bad stuff is gonna happen. Beetlejuice. Beetlejuice? Don't ever say that name. Beetlejuice. I'm serious, if you say that name three times, really bad stuff is gonna happen.
Beetlejuice.
Beetlejuice!
Beetlejuice!
The juice is loose.
On September 6th,
We doing this?
the wait
Let's go, honey.
is over.
Thank you all for coming to this very special occasion.
I felt a little tingle.
Ew.
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, September 6th.
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And again, there's no commitment when you reach out to them.
But I promise you, only something positive will come
from you reaching out and figuring out if what type of help, if any, could
benefit you. Thank you. What are some musicians that you really admire? I know
that's kind of like... No, no, no. Hosey is a big one for me, you know? Oh yeah. Yeah.
He's playing here coming up at the Pilgrimage Festival. Oh I saw that, yeah.
I was sad, because I'll be gone.
But he, yeah, he just, he's Irish and he.
Oh wow.
Yeah, I think sometimes people don't know that.
I think, I remember someone, I was talking to someone recently
they thought it was from here, but he, it's just cool.
He kind of blew up way before me.
And it's just a nice to see,
it's kind of a cool role model to have.
He just carries himself very well, I think.
Will you keep in touch or hit him up
if you have any thoughts or something?
Yeah, definitely.
Not even thoughts, but just to talk.
I think artists don't talk to each other enough.
Like I find it hard to talk to other artists sometimes
because I feel like it's very,
we're all quite selfish and we're all so locked
into our own existence that it's tricky sometimes.
I find it much easier to connect with people who are involved in
sports. I think that's easier sometimes but he's, I don't know, it's just cool for
me to see him. He's got this huge career where he's got so many followers and
supporters of his music but it's all always just about the music, you know what
I mean? It's just he's inherently him and I think that's a pretty cool thing and
it's good for me to kind of like just see that follow it. Yeah. Yeah, definitely. Yeah
I'm trying to think of some other Irish musicians
You too are obviously probably the biggest ever but oh, yeah, of course
Dude one time I went to like the MTV Movie Awards or something might have been music awards
If I think it was music awards actually. So I got dropped off there, I'm walking up
and all these people start cheering, right?
And I got like a pass, like through the artist pass,
whatever, and I'm walking, all these people were cheering.
And I just like, in my head, I was like,
these people are cheering for me.
And I was like, what?
And then I looked next to me and it was Bono.
Bono.
Were you talking to him?
I said, nice glasses, that's what I said.
Because I didn't know who he was.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
At the time, I was just kind of like, I was 19,
and I was like, I didn't have a clue.
He's the best.
You know, sometimes when you're talking to somebody that's
so famous and has been for such a long time,
you kind of feel like you're not getting it.
There's nothing beneath the surface.
With him, it's the complete opposite. you can tell like if you were talking to
me it's just full undivided attention oh it's give us feedback and we'll pay
attention to you and stuff it's great oh I've met some of these guys Nile
Lauren yep neat guy who else oh the cranberries yep Van Morrison oh
Thinly's are the best have you listened to Thinly's? uh-uh oh man I gotta get in it
you like rock and roll you like the red playstrays yeah oh man Thin Lizzy are the best. Have you listened to Thin Lizzy? Uh-uh. Oh, man. I gotta get in it. You like rock and roll? You like the right place to raise?
Yeah.
Oh, man. Thin Lizzy is...
That's up your strata.
I'll have to get into that. Thin Lizzy.
Oh, the best. He passed away a long time ago, but he, uh...
The music's incredible.
Wow.
The Boys Are Back in Town. You know that song.
The boys are back... Where were they?
What do you mean?
Like, why were they, where were they?
Oh.
Does he ever say that?
I actually do know, yeah.
They're hanging down at Dino's is the lyric.
Dino's is here too, but there's a Dino's Lake restaurant
in Dublin.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
And that's where they're hanging out.
And where did they come back in town from?
Yeah, I don't know.
But I think about that all the time.
And I always think about them.
Going on tour back then, it must have just been like, see you soon.
Yeah.
Imagine in the 70s and no one knows where you are. No one knows how it's going. You're not on social media.
It must be insane and you just come back and kind of hopefully it went well.
Yeah, and I don't even know if you knew how well it went really.
No, never. You just get feedback every night.
And then a lot of drugs and drinking though, so.
God, that must have been fucking funny.
Did you ever struggle with any of the gear or whatever they call it over there?
No, man, I find it like, I don't know.
I again, like not to harp on about it, but I think sport was crucial for me.
It was just kind of I always like a tour when I tour.
I'll often do kind of I feel like it's not sustainable nowadays in music.
It was different back then.
I don't know how heavily they toured and stuff
But nowadays touring is so key like you'll just I don't know personally
I wouldn't be able to sustain it at all. No, I think even drinking. Yeah, I gotta be careful
Yeah, I just think it just be impossible like to be hung and then to the response what he's getting to the next place
I just seems like it's not worth it. Yeah. Yeah, I don't know how people do it. No, I know. Yeah, sometimes, like, I don't know. I don't know how some artists do it, but I wouldn't be able.
Even last night, like I'm tired today from just playing an acoustic set in a cafe last night. I'm very pedestrian.
What about the love life, man? How does that look for you?
It's solid and always has been. Not always has been, but for a long time.
Oh, really? You've always been good with the ladies then?
No.
No, no, no, no, no.
Yeah, cause that's kinda.
I've always been good with one lady, yeah.
Oh you have?
Not in a corny way, that's the corniest thing
I've ever said.
Do people know that that you have a girlfriend?
That's my experience, yeah, kind of.
I don't talk about it much, but I think
if people wanted to know, they would know, yeah.
Oh, so you had a lady then?
For a long time.
Wow.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't see, like, I'm happy to talk about it,
but I don't see it as like a relevant part of my career. Do you yeah. I don't see, like, I'm happy to talk about it, but I don't see it as, like, a relevant part of my career.
Do you know what I mean?
I don't see it as something to promote.
She definitely doesn't.
So it's just our existence outside of my career.
Does it feel, does that inspire some of your music
with some of the, like, the emo stuff or no?
What do you mean the emo stuff?
Like some of the loving type stuff.
Definitely, all of it.
All of it. All of it.
That's where it all comes from. And yeah, yeah.
I never talk about it, but it's all good.
What about you?
I don't know, dude.
I think.
Yeah, I got to get a wife.
I would like to get a wife.
I will say that.
I got to get some of my affairs in order.
I gotta get some of my affairs in order.
This feels like a follow on from the serial killer chat.
This feels like, yeah.
Yeah, dude, I've had it like,
yeah, I mean, I date, you know, it's just hard.
You're in town, you're gone,
and then you're supposed to be like date, you know.
Yeah, of course. You're like come back three weeks later. and then you're supposed to be like date, you know. Yeah, of course.
You're like come back three weeks later.
But I think that's one of the reasons
why I stayed in comedy because I was like,
oh well, I had so much trouble
like staying in relationships
and being committed in relationships.
I was like, this always gives me an excuse to leave.
Mm.
You know? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it was like, I gotta go, you know?
And then you come back
and they might've found someone else.
Of course. You hope they found somebody else. Oh really? A lot of times, yeah. So you can detach from it and just. Oh yeah. Yeah, so it's like I gotta go, you know, and then you come back and they might have found someone else You hope they found somebody else. Oh, really a lot of times so you can detach from it. Yeah
Yeah, you're like, oh gosh. Good luck with Stanley or whatever. Yeah, I'm glad you found him. Yeah, so things like that
I think uh
I'm trying to think of yeah. I just been I just had like I
Don't know. It's just always hard for me to
Like Trust somebody mmm Like, I don't know. It's just always hard for me to like, trust somebody.
I think that was just like the hardest thing. I just had no idea of how to do it.
Yeah, it was like a foreign practice.
Trusting somebody.
Yeah.
Really, anybody?
Only romantically, friends, anything?
Oh no, it even goes over into work
and everything a lot of times.
Right, yeah.
I think I have to really...
Yeah, I don't know.
Does it like take time?
Yeah, I think it takes time. As long as you can tell with people, kind of easy.
But it's been...
It's just been a tough thing for me over the years.
Sure.
And I don't even know why sometimes.
It's a crazy line of work to be in too, right?
Yeah.
For that situation.
Yeah, and then you're leaving her all the time
or something, it's like, so many of my friends
have been divorced that are in comedy and stuff like that.
I think it's just a tough go of it.
Yeah, of course.
Do you own any animals, Dermot?
I have a dog called Tom.
That's it.
I miss him dearly.
He's a puppy.
Does he write? Does he write? Yeah, Tom the writing dog. Yeah, he is the best. It's the best
thing in the world. I always took the piss out of the emotional support thing,
but I believe in it now. You know what I mean? Like emotional support dogs flying
with them and stuff. Oh, you take them on planes and all? I haven't yet, but I will.
Oh, you're looking forward to it? Yeah, yeah. You think like, no I can't. He was in Dublin with his big German shepherd.
And I was like, if he can do that, I've got to be able to get my little puppy on the plane.
Wow.
He took a German shepherd with him?
Yeah.
Now it's a nice dog.
It's like well behaved.
I think it sleeps under his legs while he's on the flight.
Oh my God.
Yeah, it's badass.
That's beautiful.
Yeah.
It's the best thing.
I don't know.
Here's a Dublin zoo and let's help a breastfeeding mother to encourage female orangutan bond with her newborn.
So this is happening over by you guys.
Oh no way. Brilliant. Well not brilliant.
What app did this monkey or this woman off of?
Because this seems like, and if those are Irish breasts, brother, they're full cream, I'll tell you that.
They have, I, dude I saw some breasts over there.
You did?
Oh my God.
You're, it's like, just like,
I'm coming home, tell the world I'm coming home.
It just feels like the root of time started in them.
Right, right, right, lovely.
I mean, God, they just like the fucking, just beautiful, just like the eyes of the moon. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Just those
fucking front hammers, baby. You'd see some goddamn, I mean, you'd see, they
literally look like they were sculpted out of like, you know, just a fine fucking
thick yogurt. It's wild. You thought there was no women.
Oh, but when you saw them,
there was one.
They would break, yeah, they'd see, yeah,
you'd see a fucking shadow coming over you
and it'd be a big tit.
A woman would have leaned out of a window
to look for something.
You had your eyes peeled constantly.
Make sure a man was still at the pub, you know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because the pubs, yeah, I mean, I went into a pub, no furniture, bunch of guys holding
each other up, fucking just yelling and drinking.
Yeah.
No furniture.
You would go into a pet store, no pets, seven people drinking in there, talking about animals.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Everything there is just people having a beer, man.
It's funny though, you know, know like do you ever see the way?
Italians like live to be really really old because they all just hang out constantly
I like to think Irish people are kind of like that too. We just need each other
There's all these like small communities and stuff. They need somewhere to gather
Musics part of that and I grew up in New Orleans and there people were drunk vomiting
You didn't see it in Ireland man, you can yeah, I didn't see a lot of it. Oh, there's plenty of puke.
Oh, there is.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, and they do it all at once or something?
I would say it's just like you maybe missed it.
There's plenty of it, though.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's the worst feeling in the world.
It's crazy.
I would say that nearly keeps me away from drinking too much
is the puke.
I fucking hate it.
Well, the first part of puke, and I don't like,
you start to get this little sweat out of the like the middle of your neck or
Yeah, yeah, yeah, or the saliva. It's like the saliva all over again. Yeah, it's like your saliva starts to be like hey guess what?
Yeah, you're in trouble. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, you're in trouble
Yeah, that's pretty hellish
So I like how you take moments to think. Oh, just scan your mind.
I don't have a choice. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I wish I could just call upon it.
Yeah, man. My brain retired years ago. Years ago. Um,
yeah. And some of the names in our life,
I feel like people are trying to be have the most Irish name.
You'll meet like somebody a oh, I fe if a ifa yeah, and that's doesn't really spell that we were talking to someone
Yes, they called Neve. It's NIA MH. Yeah, and that's not anything
So it's like you have to have real names if you're even gonna you should guess some these are very run-of-the-mill
All right, you got some spicier names.
It's very hard to spell Irish names, but without the answers.
Alright.
Count.
Count.
Count me.
Count me.
Count.
Quiva.
Alright. Nope.
Siobhan.
That's nice, but it's Siobhan.
Siobhan, okay.
I didn't know they had black people there.
All right.
Ru-re-re.
Ru-re.
That's nice, yeah, Rory.
Oh, Rory.
That would be like Rory.
D-H-R-A, like it's like silent.
Okay, they spelled it so you know at home.
R-U-A-I-D-H-R-I.
Okay. So they don't so you know at home. R-U-A-I-D-H-R-I. Okay.
So they don't spell it like Rory.
The next one, T-A-D-G-H, ta-da.
Or.
Taig.
Taig.
Taig.
Taig.
Okay.
And the next one, N-I-A-M-H.
Noah.
No, Neve. Neve, okay. Neve, just N-E-E-M-H. Noah. No, Neve.
Neve, okay.
Neve, just N-E-E-V, Neve.
And then the next one, another one that's not real.
S-A-O-I-R-S-E.
Siri.
S-A-O-I-R-S-E.
S-A-O-I-R-S-E.
S-A-O-I-R-S-E.
S-A-O-I-R-S-E.
S-A-O-I-R-S-E.
S-A-O-I-R-S-E.
S-A-O-I-R-S-E.
S-A-O-I-R-S-E.
S-A-O-I-R-S-E.
S-A-O-I-R-S-E.
S-A-O-I-R-S-E.
S-A-O-I-R-S-E. S-A-O-I-R-S-E. S-A-O-I-R-S-E. S-A-O-I-R-S-E. S-A-O-I-R-S-E. S-A-O-I-R-S-E. And then I'll do this last one because I've seen this one before these are good now word. Okay here we go to
G are a
In in e yeah granny Granya Granya as close as you've been oh, that's beautiful actually
Yeah, and this one right here is not anything, but I'll read it
Blath in a ID mm-hmm
Blot Blot, blottenide, blot, blottenide.
Blottenide.
Blottenide.
Yeah, you're doing all right.
All right, here's one right here.
C-A-O-I-L-F-H-I-O-N-N.
K-O?
Kevin.
I, that one is even weird for me. I would say, I would say Quailin. Quailin. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
There's just, everybody you meet over there, you're like, I'm Quailin Madonna Gargay, you know. Yeah,
yeah, but I see that here too. Oh, yes. You know what I mean? Everyone, I was in the Boot Barn last
weekend and there was a guy called Loughlin. Yeah. Yeah, and he was like, I'm Irish. You know, he just claims it, but you're like, no shit. Yeah. Um, what about the new album? So are you working on a new
album? What is it like for you right now? Uh, yes, I am. I have written, I would say
25 to 30 songs and yeah, but it goes crazy. It's kind of like, you can do as many as you
want. You can do hundreds. And like, I know know do you remember that song that Rihanna had I
want you to stay not really sure how I feel about it that's on no I was with
the fella that featured on that song mm-hmm and huge success and then a second
album he wrote 250 songs so it's just like at what point do you kind of call
it you know what I mean?
And then I've heard Billie Eilish do interviews where she says,
if the album is 12 songs, I've written 12 songs and that's it.
So I'd rather be like that.
It's crazy to me, the idea of throwing songs out, you know,
I don't know why I would do that.
So I've got a bunch now and I feel good about them.
I never know.
That's what I'm saying is like, I analyze myself too much and I think
sometimes I lose perspective and I could have the best song in the world, but I
can't see it.
And is there certain people you go to to get really clear perspective?
No.
I don't play music to anyone. Anybody. Yeah, because if it's good feedback, I'll be like, yeah, I know. And if it's bad, then I'll be aggressive.
Wow. So what about a management or an agent or anything? Yeah, some of that, but then that's hard too, right?
Because you kind of question like,
what are people's criteria?
To me, I only care that it's good,
but then they might be like,
oh, this song could be successful.
And I was like, what does that mean?
Right.
It could stink, but it could,
it could send me down the wrong path musically,
but it could make money on the radio.
I don't know.
So you got to do the right thing. And do do you will you choose a certain number out of those
yeah I like ten I know like I've seen like Morgan Wallen's album with like 37
songs and stuff I don't know if I'm able for that kind of thing yeah I mean yeah
I mean different people have different stuff definitely Definitely. Yeah, I wonder like, yeah, would I be scared?
God, it's just gotta be so scary putting an album out.
Mm.
Yeah, I mean, it's gonna define your life
for two or three years, you know?
It's almost like throwing a stick of dynamite
into a room or something.
Definitely.
And then what if you don't hear anything?
It may not go off, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, definitely.
Yeah, you never know.
I think like, yeah, that definitely scares me sometimes and it might not happen.
You know what's almost even worse is that middle of the road. Kind of just like some people like it boring.
Yeah.
For me what's funny is like I've never had a song go crazy. Do you know what I mean? Like I've never had a song.
Like I play big venues in most places, but like I can walk around all day and no one knows who I am.
So I think I kind of exist in a sweet spot to some degree. You know what I mean?
Yeah.
I think for me, it's like a careful what I wish for scenario sometimes,
because my life is still very normal, but then I get to go on stage and do very abnormal things.
You know, like if I had to stay in my hotel room all day,
because I can't, that would make me sad. Definitely.
Yeah. You're almost like Clark Kent kind of you know or Claire yeah Quillen yeah
Quillen kinship yeah I just because you have some anonymity still definitely
there was one time you do have a chip on your shoulder sometimes though I do like
I was playing for a football team in New York,
and we were at training one night,
and one guy was like, are you playing shows or whatever?
And I was like, yeah, I'm playing a show at the Garden.
And he was like, oh cool, are you part of a bigger bill?
Are you supporting somebody?
I'm constantly just like, no, it's my show.
People will be there, hopefully.
So I think people are constantly surprised
how big the shows are,
because I don't feel like a very famous person, which is lovely, honestly.
That's the way it is.
Yeah, I think you keep like a...
You seem like a pretty regular demeanor.
Nicer, man.
Which I think is probably one of the best compliments you can get.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But then to go and have that many people show up for something,
yeah, that's pretty freaking unbelievable.
It's nuts.
It's the only...
I think like if I feel lucky in the sense that
before I did all this, if I had a checklist of what I wanted,
I feel quite lucky.
I feel like I've ticked most boxes, which is nice.
You know, my life hasn't changed.
I get to play to lots of people.
I get to decide what music I put out.
That feels good to me.
Yeah, yeah.
How long do you think your album will come out?
Or do you have a plan on it?
Does it matter?
I don't, I'm trying not to care. It matters, but I don't know how it works to people.
Do you feel a pressure?
Yeah, definitely.
Oh, you do?
Yeah, like will people stick around?
You know what I mean?
Like I think music, you kind of have to stay relevant
and stay present and release music all the time.
You know, I think it's, I think you have to kind of do stuff constantly and
constantly bring stuff out, but you got to be careful too because if people just
get bored, you know what I mean? I would love to, I'd love to bring out an album
definitely in less than a year, but I'm not in a hurry to do it either. I would
rather have a good one, you know what I mean? I don't think it needs to be just
constantly doing it.
And the tour off of it, yeah.
Like we've been doing touring very slow,
we'll do like chunks.
Yeah, I see some.
It's taken three years now to do the tour.
Oh man.
But it's fine.
Yeah, people don't care.
As long as you show up, people don't care.
Yeah, it's like, and it's been good
and I couldn't handle doing like a seven month tour
or something.
Yeah, I've seen like, who did I see?
I saw Matt McCusker's tour
and it was just every weekend like couple shows
I was just that must be so sweet to do shows and go home
Yeah music you can't do that because you got like a band and crew on the road and you're paying everyone every day
So you just you'd be bankrupt immediately. Yeah, that's true. Yeah, do it all. Yeah, definitely when you have such a squad how much
Do you have a big band supporting you when you go out? There's
What is it? There's like six of us on stage.
All Irish?
No, two of us Irish.
And then, uh, everyone else is from Australia,
Switzerland and the UK.
Yeah.
Pretty diverse.
Yes, indeed.
But, uh, it's important.
Like you, you kind of, even though it's a solo
project, I think it has to feel like, I hate
when a songwriter, it looks like it's them and
their employees. I think that's crap. Yeah. I think it's makes feel like, I hate when a songwriter, it looks like it's them and their employees.
I think that's crap.
I think it makes for a bad musical connection.
I think you want to feel like a band.
What makes that happen?
I think, I mean, bottom line, the way you treat people,
and you give people creative freedom,
you let them play the way they want to play.
I think if you stifle it and sort of restrict
people too much, it stops being fun. I think people come to see my show to see that musical
interaction. It's not just me playing. I think it's weird sometimes when you see a solo artist
and their band is just kind of in the background and not really part of the show. That's weird to me. Mmm. Yeah. What, um, where'd you meet your gal at? Like, what, 25 years ago, probably at home.
No. Yeah, yeah. At home? Well, was she going door to door?
No, she wasn't, but we were, we were- It's not your sister, is it?
No, we grew up in the same area. And yeah, it's a very like, it's a very sort of high school sweethearts thing.
Oh, that's...
So there is some romance right there then.
Definitely.
There's something romantic about that.
And is that...
Yeah, I guess Ireland makes me just think everything seems like...
Fairytale over there a bit.
Yeah.
Sometimes too much.
Certain movies and stuff, you know?
Yeah. What was the one?
Oh, I know if you're talking about Gangs of New York. That one's kind of cool though.
There was like this movie recently, The Irish Wish or P.S. I Love You, those types of things.
Oh, terrible. Yeah. Good. Fucked. Yeah. If your wife, yeah, if you found your wife in
a wishing well or something, you're out of your fucking mind, dude. Could happen. You
could do it. Hey, look. That's true true man. You need to go back. Oh yeah.
Oh I want to go back so bad I want to do a couple more spots there. Yeah. And maybe
do one more I think I owe a little bit better of a show to maybe Belfast. It was
good but I think I want to you know you just want to do it better. Yeah I like
the way you say I tried my best at the end of your shows. I think that's good. Yeah, thanks, man
I think I usually I definitely
99% of the time I feel that way that I tried my best now the outcome sometimes
Yeah, but then that sentiment stands above everything right like even if it doesn't go the way you want to do
Yeah, try my best
You know yeah people appreciate it too. Yeah, I think people appreciate it. I think so. That's probably a good point.
What will you do when you get back to Ireland? Like what's something you look forward to doing? I will like
to write music every day and to be like in the studio every single day. I know it's a very privileged thing to say,
but it's a very taxing thing. I got tired of it. So like I'll go just
where I live is in the middle of nowhere. So I'll just be in the forest every day with the dog.
Do you have a dog?
No, I would like to get a dog as soon as I quit touring.
Yeah.
In like seven months, I'm gonna try to get some kind of dog.
It's the best thing I've done.
Yeah.
Oh man.
Yeah.
It's just like a companion.
It kind of it's a nice injection of real life as well.
And amongst all the weirdness, it's just nice.
Like, and it's this thing that would die
if you didn't look after it, so it's kind of,
it's a powerful feeling.
You guys got a, is it a staffie over there,
what you got?
No, teeny little scruffy terrier.
Oh.
Yeah.
He's a rescue.
Oh yeah.
Everything is in Ireland, huh?
Everything, I'm a rescue, yeah.
Yeah, if he's a male, is he?
He is male, yeah.
Oh yeah, good.
He's still got his cajones.
Well, he won't be using them.
There's no girls out there.
That's true.
There's nothing.
Yeah.
I'll have to bring them to America.
Dermot Kennedy, thanks so much, man.
Thank you very much.
Thank you for having me.
I appreciate it.
Thank you for all the awesome music, man.
Thanks for just kind of sharing whatever you can to the best of your ability.
Yes, sir.
That's kind of how I feel when I listen to your stuff and yeah
I had a great time. Thanks for inviting me last night. And yeah, thanks for the ticket dude. It was awesome. No, no, thanks for going
Thank you. Yeah, cheers on your bro cornerstone But when I reach that ground I'll share this piece of my life out I can feel it in my bones