WATCH: Karan Casey, “Sister I Am Here for You”

Artist: Karan Casey
Hometown: Cork, Ireland
Song: “Sister I Am Here for You”
Album: Nine Apples of Gold
Release Date: February 24, 2023
Label: Crow Valley Music

In Their Words: “‘Sister I Am Here for You’ is a calling to female friendship. In singing the song with the fabulous Niamh Dunne I’m reminded of the profound beauty found in female friendship and camaraderie, how much I rely on her and how listening to her singing away beside me I try not to cry. And in writing the song with Sean Óg Graham we talked a lot about the sisterhood, about the need for a feminist song speaking to the bond that can be built through collaborating and working together, all genders, campaigning for women’s rights everywhere in the world. He has been just brilliant in helping me realise this longtime dream of mine, to write a singalong that is uplifting and joyful. I also as ever was instructed by old Irish stories and I had been reading The Book of the Cailleach by Gearóid Ó Crualaoich (a brilliant book) which is all about an Chailleach, the wise-woman healer or hag or witch or whatever you’d like to call the amazing women of the past and present who have stood their ground. In one Cailleach story she whips up the wind, brings in the wintertime and was known to have moved rocks to create mountains, moved mountains to create valleys and lakes. She is the creator of Winter who blitzes the land with ice and snow — she basically did everything!

“This song, like the rest of the new album, is a celebration of women’s stories so it seems fitting that my March US tour will coincide with Women’s History Month. Can’t wait to get out there and share these songs and ideas with everyone!” — Karan Casey


Photo Credit: Alan Doherty

In a Time of Fear, We Banjo 3 Make a Brave Statement on ‘Open the Road’

Walking through life, people learn, grow, and develop their own identities, and eventually find others who become figures in their chosen family. In a lot of ways, a band is a kind of chosen family. However, what if one’s chosen musical family is also their family of origin? Folk music in particular, being tied to so much oral and performative tradition within families, is plenty familiar with this dynamic. Still, it’s hard not to be intrigued by the overlapping bonds of band and brotherhood that shape We Banjo 3. This duality only sparks further curiosity knowing the two pairs of brothers –– David Howley, Martin Howley, Enda Scahill, and Fergal Scahill –– are celebrating 10 years together, with the Galway band’s new album, Open the Road, marking the occasion.

Several songs on Open the Road germinated from very specific ideas –– like the conceptual substance of Hans Rosling’s Factfulness prompting “Rialto” or a literal group writing exercise leading to a whole character profile for the young bird in “Long Way Down.” At the same time, a lot of unspoken dynamics infuse the music with memorable and individualized character. On the latter track, the casual camaraderie among the band is likely what gives the dense layers of background vocals their warmth and feeling of positivity.

We Banjo 3’s album encompasses all of the creative knowledge and musical proficiency that the four gentlemen have accrued over the last decade. However, and perhaps even more meaningful than those qualities, Open the Road also sheds light on the many kinds of interpersonal relationships that are forged and strengthened in a band –– particularly a band anchored by family ties. It’s these almost indescribable instincts and insights that make their music stand out.

For our BGS Cover Story this month, we caught up with Martin Howley by Zoom.

BGS: What’s the most unexpected difference between the We Banjo 3 of a decade ago and the We Banjo 3 that’s on tour right now?

Howley: We started out with [myself, Enda Scahill, and David Howley,] exploring the sounds that the Irish tenor banjo could make, and being very interested in using the banjo as sort of a nexus for being able to cross over and understand bluegrass music and old-time music. It was pretty much an exploration of old-time American music, bluegrass music, and Irish music and where they enmeshed. We were mining that rich vein of culture throughout those three musical genres and finding old songs and trying to find new corners in them that we could explore. And that was the genesis of the band.

If I look towards now, 10 years of poring over that material and celebrating it and then having these lovely interactions where we tour around the world and meet people, and they’re having these conversations musically with us each night, you end up with these deep connections that are ephemeral and they inform how we feel about the music that we’re playing, and that informs new music that we create. And over time, we started to write more in our own voice, all the while coming from this arc of exploration of these other older cultures and having had this really lucky and serendipitous journey where people have supported us and grew alongside us.

I’d say that’s the biggest change: [We Banjo 3] has gone from being maybe like a retrospective, looking at the music that had gone before and trying to celebrate it in new ways, to now having the focus firmly on the future and how we bring the past and its beauty with us into the future.

What are some ways the band’s literal brotherhood enhances the improvisatory and energy-driven nature of We Banjo 3’s music, in ways it might not if the family ties weren’t there?

We grew up 30, 40 minutes apart but with very similar upbringings, in terms of the exposure to the music that we encountered. And obviously, trad music here in Ireland is very strong. It’s got a very strong community scene. That was a big part of our social upbringing. Each set of brothers experienced that. We had this arc where we all played together casually in different ensembles in our hometown of Galway. Part of our semi-professional basis of music was just playing for tour groups that came through –– international tourists and locals –– just lots of celebration of Irish music in its various guises. And we had this rich timeline, probably before the band ever started, with 10-plus years of playing together in Vegas.

The four of us have a loose markup, a loose structural beginning to most of our pieces. Particularly the instrumental pieces, they have a very textural, overarching philosophy and a loose structural arrangement of where it’s going. And then inside of that we paint collectively, and it’s not like there’s a dominant lead and everyone else follows. It’s because we’re two sets of brothers and I think that’s where we’re different: Traditionally in jazz and different improvisational structures, you tend to have a dominant lead, or at least a lead that’s moving through time, and then other people following that direction. That’s very much commonplace in improvisation. We’re unusual because the four of us almost speak with one shared language, and there’s this collective brain power of almost a brotherly intuition of knowing where the direction is going, so we can very democratically play together on stage. And the music has been improvised in real time, collectively, and we all just trust that we know where each other is going and we can back that up and follow that and amplify it. That’s not something any of us have experienced outside of playing in these contexts.

A big part of We Banjo 3’s identity revolves around blending traditional Irish folk music and the rootsy folk music of the U.S. That said, how would you describe the way the banjo, with its distinct sonic qualities and complex history as an instrument, is perceived and received in music scenes around Ireland?

There’s evidence that the banjo was in Irish music as early as the 1900s. The Flanagan brothers in New York –– they’re one of the first Irish recording artists that featured banjo and accordion and they played incredibly virtuosic stuff. There are wax cylinder recordings of banjo in Irish music. But I think the four-string tenor banjo coming into force and becoming a real common part of the Irish traditional music would have started in the 1960s. And through youth groups like the Dubliners, you really saw the banjo become a part of the tradition. It fits in really well because Irish music has this innate rhythmic punchiness that is part of being for dancing. And the banjo really can act as you’d like it to –– it can jump subdivisions really well and in a melodic sense, it has all these bright overtones that caught on really well. And so that blends with the more legato instruments, like fiddle, and accordion and flute.

Songs like “Long Way Down” and “Garden Song,” seem crafted using an almost academic mode of thinking. How much was trying these songwriting approaches about wanting to shake things up rather than waiting for creative lightning to strike?

We all write individually and bring kernels of ideas to the band as they might apply to the band –– themes that might fit in with a loose collection of thoughts. David wrote “Garden Song” on Instagram live, with the kernel of that idea, rolling with 200 people all helping him write lyrics. I think he might have created a rough form and then started throwing lyrics together. That came to the band and we started to refine it: rewrite some things, change some things, and build arrangements around it. That’s eventually what “Garden Song” is now.

And in the case of like, “Long Way Down,” that was actually a very interesting process because that was a group write. We basically sat down with a whiteboard and went, “Let’s try writing a song together today as a creative exercise,” and we never really thought that it would end up on an album –– just more like something to do together, because the four of us were in a room. Like, “This is sort of interesting, let’s do this.”

Whereas if you look at something like “Rialto,” that song was more like a personal journey that was almost entirely written in a 10- or 15-minute sitting. That was informed more by the divisive news cycle, experiencing that as an immigrant, and thinking about being a white immigrant or a white, male immigrant and the sort of differences of perception that other people experience. It was connected back to that. It was very much written from the emotive base of “In this particular time, this is what I’m experiencing,” and writing ideas like, spitfire away, down on a sheet. Then it just came together and became a song. There’s a variety of writing processes, from one extreme to the other.

What do you see as the element that binds these songs together to make a unified statement? And what is that statement?

I think the album attempts to be brave. For us, it’s a statement of artistic exploration in a time of intense fear –– collectively for us in the music industry, and also individually. … We wish it to be very egalitarian and for it to feel like a humble but brave statement of intent towards growth collectively. And on the widest scale, that it would attempt to ask, how do we build our societies? Are there things we do as individuals in the collective that we could do better in a way to incorporate more people, and for more people to live more authentic experiences for themselves?

With all the stuff that’s happened in recent days with Supreme Court rulings and such, more than ever, we feel like our mission as artists and musicians is to be really cognizant of the oppressed or those who have a less visible or audible voice and to try and create art that brings us all together and connects us in a really humanistic and holistic way.


Photo Credit: Acacia Evans

WATCH: The Foreign Landers, “Traveler”

Artist: The Foreign Landers
Hometown: Travelers Rest, South Carolina
Song: “Traveler”
Album: Travelers Rest
Release Date: Late 2022

In Their Words: “Having grown up on opposite sides of the Atlantic and having toured full-time in traveling bands for many years, the two of us have had to spend a lot of time in foreign lands and unfamiliar places far from home. Even since we got married three years ago, we’ve only recently been able to find a place of our own for the first time here in Travelers Rest, South Carolina. Now that idea of ‘Travelers Rest’ has become very dear to us — having a place to call home and a respite from the road, even though we inevitably feel pulled back to our far-off roots and former transient lives. We wrote this song to try and capture some of those bittersweet ideas. Narrated from the point of view of Tabitha’s parents back in Northern Ireland, ‘Traveler’ deals with the wistful feelings of growing older and being away from loved ones. And for this video we filmed some beautiful shots both in our new hometown in South Carolina as well as the North Shore of Northern Ireland near where Tabitha grew up. This song will be featured on our debut full-length album, Travelers Rest, to be released later this year.” — David Benedict, The Foreign Landers


Photo and Video Credits: The Foreign Landers

WATCH: Danny Burns & Steve Earle, “Mercenary Song”

Artists: Danny Burns & Steve Earle
Song: “Mercenary Song”
Album: Hurricane EP
Label: Bonfire Music Group

In Their Words: “We cut ‘Mercenary Song’ before the pandemic, and I had reached out to Steve and he really dug our arrangement. I had my pal Colin Farrell (of Lunasa, not the actor) add a fiddle tune into the middle parts and then thought it would be cool to add some Tex-Mex vibes on accordion. So we asked Michael Guerra from The Mavericks to add some accordion and he blew the doors off it. Then, Chris Masterson of The Mastersons and The Dukes added bari Tele and it all came together nicely. We also added Josh Day on drums, Byron House on upright bass, and Matt Menefee on banjo, mando and dobro. Finally, Steve added his bouzouki in the mix in a bajo sexto vibe.

“We thought it would be cool to shoot a video in NYC at the Dead Rabbit Irish pub. Sean Muldoon, one of the owners who’s from Belfast, was a great host. I recruited director Jim Wright into the project. We had been threatening to work together for few years now, and Steve was up for it and lives pretty close. So we just hung out, talked music and guitars, Ireland, and Irish breakfasts for a day and shot it upstairs at the Rabbit.” — Danny Burns


Photo Credit: Jim Wright

BGS 5+5: Lisa Lambe

Artist name: Lisa Lambe
Hometown: Dublin, Ireland
Latest Album: Wild Red

Which artist has influenced you the most … and how?

I always say Joni Mitchell taught me how to sing! Since I was 15 years old, I have listened to Joni Mitchell. She is a true poet with a golden voice and she is a true artist. Her songwriting is a huge inspiration. I remember being 15 years old and hearing Blue for the first time. I think that was a really defining moment for me — hearing an artist with a voice like Joni’s and a songwriting canvas beyond anything I had ever heard.

What was the first moment that you knew you wanted to be a musician?

When I was 3 years old, I stepped on the stage of the old Victorian theatre in Dublin to be in my first theatre show. I think since that moment really I knew what I wanted to do! I think in my teenage years listening to Joni, Stevie Nicks, Lucinda Williams, Jean Ritchie, Kate Bush and Emmylou Harris, it was a real time of music discovery for me. Coming to Nashville to make my first solo album, Hiding Away, in 2015 was a special defining time — and although at this point I was an established musician for many years then, it seemed like all the roads were leading to Nashville and a place that musically was so important and inspiring to me for a long time.

 

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What’s your favorite memory from being on stage?

I love the intimacy of small shows, but equally I think one of the great memories was performing at Red Rocks in Colorado. At one point in the show to hear the wave of sound of the crowd singing back to me on stage in that natural amphitheatre in the balmy summer air was something kind of magical. One of the nicest shows ever!

Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with and how do those impact your work?

Nature is a huge element in my songwriting, mostly because I tend to write my albums in quiet rural places where the landscape is a huge part of the vista and the feeling. This current album, Wild Red, was written in the wilds of West Cork, Ireland, on the edge of the southernmost part of the country, looking out to the wild Atlantic. The songs are inspired by being immersed in the landscape and nature. Local folklore and old stories are also part of the tapestry of this current album, and if you listen closely, you can hear the crackling fire in the background of some of the songs!

What other art forms — literature, film, dance, painting, etc. — inform your music?

I studied acting and drama in Trinity College Dublin so theatre and dance are a huge part of who I am as an artist and performer. Telling stories is something really important to me and especially telling a story through song. It’s always about the story! Wild Red is inspired by a lot of local folklore and old stories, and for me, that was just a real gift to be able to take inspiration from things around me and craft new ideas from the lore that is so steeped in the fabric of the West Cork landscape.


Photo Credit: Dora Kazmierak

WATCH: Sukhmani, Ajeet, and Aisling Urwin, “Ash + Bone”

Artist: Sukhmani, Ajeet, and Aisling Urwin
Hometowns: Washington, D.C.(Sukhmani); Dublin, Ireland (Ajeet, Aisling Urwin)
Song: “Ash + Bone”
Release Date: July 16, 2021
Label: Spirit Voyage Records

In Their Words: “Working on ‘Ash + Bone’ was such a deep, immersive experience, and it remains one of the most special songs I’ve had the pleasure to work on. When Ajeet approached me to sing and play percussion on the song, it felt right to build the groove organically, in a way that would allow me to perform the lyrics and percussion simultaneously in a live environment. The calabash seemed like the perfect choice, and when paired with the harp, guitar and bass, a fun, rich, unique soundscape was formed!

“The song is inspired by the types of friendships that empower and embolden you to live your truth, and I feel as though the music reflects this so perfectly. The three-part harmony in the verses feels like a beautiful nod to the mutual support of these relationships, and the way our voices weave together in the canon of the chorus makes the lyrics feel like an affirmation, echoing on. I feel so honoured to have been a part of this project, and am in total awe of Ajeet’s production, and the magic brought by everyone else involved in its creation.” — Sukhmani

(Read more from the band below the video.)

“This was an incredibly special song for us to record, as it was born from friendship in a time of isolation and reflection for us all. We made a video performance for social media, spliced together with the three of us separated by oceans and many miles. I think we mostly made it to keep our own spirits up, and to have some fun playing music with our friends…something we’ll never take for granted again!! We were delighted to find that the song caught on, and other people had as much fun listening to it as we had making it. It’s celebratory, free, raw and organic. We left the live feeling in the recording, and I just love the feeling it gets across. I’d love to see all musical projects I’m part of carry such a feeling of fun and exploration like this one did.” — Ajeet

“‘Ash + Bone’ was a really fun one for me from an instrumental perspective. I wanted to experiment with the harp and try to create some new sounds and textures. I took inspiration from the sounds of the kora and had a lot of fun layering polyphonic riffs. And then to combine this with Sukhmani’s beats was a real treat. This biggest treat of all is to make music and sing with these amazing women. There’s nothing like collaboration to broaden the realms of your own creativity.” — Aisling Urwin


Photo Credit: Spirit Voyage

LISTEN: Pat Byrne, “I Woulda Done It for You”

Artist: Pat Byrne
Hometown: Borris, County Carlow, Ireland
Song: “I Woulda Done It for You”
Album: Into the Light
Release Date: July 9, 2021

In Their Words: “‘I Woulda Done It for You’ is fun, quirky and upbeat, belying the tragic lyrics. The central character is dealing with the immediate aftermath of a breakup, listing all the crazy things he would have done for his recently estranged partner — and a final plea for one more chance. This song is a co-write with Miles Zuniga of the band Fastball. We met shortly after I moved to Austin and immediately hit it off. Like most songwriters, I was guarded about my work and tended to think none of it was good enough. I had written like ten or eleven verses, too many. After having the song in my notebook for years, it took Miles five minutes to hone the verses and gift me with a chorus. I learned a lot from the experience and am so lucky to have mentors like Miles.” — Pat Byrne


Photo credit: Samantha Della Fave

MIXTAPE: The Foreign Landers’ Transatlantic Story

Each of us having grown up on either side of the Atlantic, our common interests and musical influences could not have been more similar. All of these tracks hold sweet memories in our years of being a couple, and each artist has definitely influenced our sound as The Foreign Landers. David and I thought we’d share some of our transatlantic story together through a few of our favorite songs. — Tabitha Benedict, The Foreign Landers

Paul Brady – “The Lakes of Pontchartrain”

This is one of our favorite tracks of all time. This version of the popular ballad is from Paul’s album Nobody Knows: The Best of Paul Brady rereleased in 2002. With Paul’s flawless storytelling ability and tasteful guitar playing, it makes it a joy to come back for a re-listen.

Crooked Still – “It’ll End Too Soon”

David and I have been big Crooked Still fans for a long time and they will often be our first choice of car music on any long journeys. Here’s a beautiful song written by banjoist Greg Liszt for Aoife O’Donovan that is just so sweet to the ears. This was one of the last songs they recorded before the band stopped touring in 2012 and it appears on their EP Friends of Fall.

Tatiana Hargreaves – “Foreign Lander”

This is where the inspiration for our band name “The Foreign Landers” was drawn from. Aside from having more of a story behind our name than just that, we both love this old song and especially love this version from Tatiana Hargreaves debut album Started to Ramble released back in 2009.

Alison Brown – “Fair Weather”

This title track of Alison Brown’s album Fair Weather released back in 2000 is a common favorite of ours. Vince Gill features on lead vocals and guitar, Alison on banjo, Stuart Duncan on fiddle, mandolin, and vocals and Gene Libbea on Bass and vocals.

Ron Block – “Ivy”

Well, we knew we had to involve some of Ron’s writing and performing in this mixtape. We love this track, “Ivy,” off his album Walking Song. This is a perfect album for all year round, with guest appearances from a host of our favorite players.

The Weepies – “I Was Made for Sunny Days”

I first was introduced to The Weepies through hearing them on the radio back in Northern Ireland many years ago. My family instantly fell in love with their songs and sound, so I was so delighted to introduce David to their catalog when we were dating. Another favorite for long drives and singing along in the car. Here’s a real feel good song of theirs called “I Was Made for Sunny Days” from their album Be My Thrill released back in 2010.

The Boxcars – “You Took All the Ramblin’ Out of Me”

We just had to stick some good bluegrass in this mix of songs, and we’re so glad we chose this one. When David and I started dating, we would sing this to each other, and it has to be one of our favorites from the Boxcars album It’s Just a Road released in 2013.

Hot Rize – “You Were on My Mind This Morning”

At one of our first-ever performances about three years ago at the well-loved Cantab Lounge in Cambridge, Massachussetts, David sang lead vocals on this track written by Hot Rize. They recorded this on their 2014 release When I’m Free.

Dori Freeman – “If I Could Make You My Own”

We are big fans of Virginia-based singer-songwriter Dori Freeman, and especially love this track of hers from her 2017 release Letters Never Read. We recorded a cover of this song on our honeymoon on the Isle of Skye about two years ago now, so it holds a sweet spot in our relationship!

John Reischman – “Little Pine Siskin”

One of our favorite tunes off John’s album Walk Along John! John had been touring with the wonderful Greg Blake in Ireland back in January/February 2018, right when David took his first visit to Northern Ireland, and right when we started dating. We went to see them at a wonderful show at the Red Room in Cookstown. It was just a couple of days prior to making things “official.” I remember David playing this tune on that visit and it brings back happy memories!

The Foreign Landers – “I’m Not Sayin’”

We discovered this Gordon Lightfoot song from the late great Tony Rice on his album Tony Rice Sings Gordon Lightfoot. We have both loved this song for many years, and knew that when he would start a duo we would definitely be covering this one. We recorded this version on our EP Put All Your Troubles Away that we released in May 2021. We’re so thankful we did and hope you enjoy it!

David Benedict – “Colonna & Smalls”

David released this tune on his solo project The Golden Angle in 2018, named after the specialty coffee shop in Bath, England, back when we were dating. He has the amazing David Grier and Mike Barnett playing on this track with him.

Cup O’Joe – “Till I Met You”

David and I also tour and record with my two brothers in Cup O’Joe, our band based out of Northern Ireland. I wrote this song back in 2018, and recorded it on Cup O’Joe’s most recent album, In the Parting. I wrote this one with David in mind, not thinking that he would be playing mandolin on it a few months later!


Photo courtesy of The Foreign Landers

In a Hypnotic Video, Rhiannon Giddens & Francesco Turrisi Add Life to “O Death”

Upon the release of their new record, They’re Calling Me Home, Rhiannon Giddens and Francesco Turrisi delivered a beautiful music video for their rendition of the old American tune, “O Death.” The video features a series of scrolling paintings done by Maeve Clancy, an Irish artist who specializes in these “crankie rolls.” It’s a suitable vehicle for illustrating Giddens’ performance, as the images match not only the drama of the story but also the pacing of the lyrics and rhythms. In this hypnotic, pre-electricity style, “O Death” comes to life with its own magnetism. It’s the latest installment in the North Carolina native’s ongoing collaborations with Turrisi, a gifted Italian multi-instrumentalist.

During the pandemic, Giddens and Turrisi stayed at home for more than a year in Ireland, and They’re Calling Me Home echoes the many ways that a tumultuous 2020 had many of us yearning for the comforts of home, of the past, or of those that were called home from this world. NPR’s Here and Now raved about They’re Calling Me Home, saying “Rhiannon Giddens’ newest album goes back in time to soothe the soul of listeners today.” In a Q&A with Garden & Gun, Giddens says, “I love the idea of old technology plus new technology. Maeve is cranking one long piece of paper from one side to the other. I hope people realize that! She’s responding to what’s going on in the song. And she found a certain style and then had to draw it so it has the same tempo as the song. I love getting inside another artist’s world for a bit.”

Watch the beautiful visual representation of “O Death” below.


Photo credit: Karen Cox

BGS 5+5: Declan O’Rourke

Artist: Declan O’Rourke
Hometown: Kinvara, Co. Galway, Ireland
Latest Album: Arrivals

Which artist has influenced you the most … and how?

Joni Mitchell. She taught me to sing. When I was a kid I could sing well, but then my voice broke as a teenager and fell into my boots. I didn’t know what to do with it. I was already playing guitar and loved it, so I concentrated on just that for a while, but I started writing songs along the way, and presumed they’d be for someone else. Unbeknownst to me I kept singing along with my favourite records and somehow learned to use what I had. Joni was my biggest teacher. It was accidental and surprised me, as of course I was singing in another register and didn’t realize it was happening. Then one day I started singing my songs. I owe her a lot!

What rituals do you have, either in the studio or before a show?

Breathe. Remember that my parents always told me to make every show count. That whatever happens it doesn’t matter. Life will be over before we know it and you’ll be happier you did it than if you didn’t. Say whatever you feel. Enjoy it. And oh yeah, where are my fisherman’s friends? I always have a couple in my pocket going on. In case my mouth gets dry. And they remind me of my Grandad — and that all my ancestors and relatives are with me, and inside me.

What’s your favorite memory from being on stage?

I was in the middle of a gig with a 50-piece orchestra on Valentine’s Day in a concert hall in Dublin. While introducing a song some lady about 20 rows back shouted up some alluring funny comment, it made us all laugh so I shouted something back and had this little dialogue for a moment or two. It was fun. Unusually for me there was this wireless microphone and when the song started I walked down into the auditorium, went and sat on her knee, sang a few lines to her, then made it back to the stage just in time to finish the song. The atmosphere was electric and fun, so spontaneous. Just for giggles, I said on the mic, “I hope that was the right person.” The conductor who was barely holding it together told me to turn around, and pointed down to the lady I’d sang to. I had to squint to see her, and he said, “You see the woman in the green dress about five rows in front of her? That’s the woman you were talking to!” Well I almost died laughing. I finished that part of the show by saying, “I should have gone to Specsavers.” You couldn’t make it up.

Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with, and how do those impact your work?

I live by the sea on the west coast of Ireland. There’s just a couple of fields between me and it. It absolutely zens me out. I love it. It makes it into a lot of my songs, and did long long before I — reared as a city boy — got to live so close to it. In fact singing about it helped me to get there. Manifested in a way.

If you had to write a mission statement for your career, what would it be?

Move people. Remind them of what’s the important thing in their life at any given moment. Help to ground yourself first, and if you can do it, and share a thought or an emotion that’s pure, and felt very significant to you then there’s a good chance it will resonate with other people too. We’re all more similar than we think we are.


Photo credit: Lawrence Watson