Archive for November, 2014

John Duddy

Thursday, November 20th, 2014

Derry man John Duddy has had it tough.

Having spent several decades enjoying rapturous support from thousands of fans during a career as a middleweight boxer, he now must spend his evenings sharing a stage with three gorgeous Irish women, as they bring Irish girl Laoisa Sexton’s play, ‘For Love’ to life.

Since permanently swapping the ring for the stage, John’s made a name for himself in New York’s drama circles, starring in ‘Kid Shamrock’ and then Colin Broderick’s two plays ‘Spud Munchers’ and ‘Father Who’, before going on to take his current role as the male lead in ‘For Love’.

The play had its sold-out world premier at The Drilling Company Theater in New York City before going on to be performed at an as-yet unnamed venue later in the year.

Co-starring Georgina McKevitt, Jo Kinsella and Laoisa Sexton (1st Irish Best Actress Award Winner) herself, ‘For Love’, could well be described as a dark blue comedy about a bunch of thirty (or is that dirty?) somethings, navigating their way through Dublin’s torturous dating scene.

So head along and find out if there is indeed more than a one night stand in Val’s future, whether Tina can find the right dress if she’s got the wrong man, or even if Bee should jump into bed with a married man, or just visit the zoo. Mr Duddy, welcome to the ‘Mike Stand’.

When’s the last time you laughed out loud?
The last time I laughed out loud was during rehearsals with Laoisa, Georgina and Jo for the play, ‘For Love’.

What act would you like to have seen perform live?
Elvis Presley performing at Madison Square Garden.

What period in history would you most like to have visited?
I’d loved to have been in Rome when the Gladiators where still fighting at the Coliseum.

What song would you most like to have written?
‘Fairytale of New York’, by The Pogues and Kirsty MacColl.

Who or what, would make you leave a room?
I have left a subway car when somebody has left a terrible smell behind them.

What decade rules (and why)?
The ’60s. The movies, the plays, the sports and music, when all the greats were still performing.

What movie role would you like to have played/play?
Mel Gibson’s William Wallace in ‘Braveheart’. Or Jake LaMotta (played by Robert DeNiro) in ‘Raging Bull’.

Have you ever been told you looked like somebody?
Holt McCallany from ‘Lights Out’ on FX. I had dinner with him on Thursday night and somebody at another table asked me for a photo and then said they enjoyed the TV show. Holt had a good laugh.

What’s the first album you remember buying?
‘LA Woman’ by The Doors.

Who’s your favorite Beatle?
George Harrison.

What’s your favorite Christmas song?
Dean Martin’s ‘Let It Snow’.

What artist/song/genre do you secretly enjoy listening to?
Joe Dolan.

Who would you most like to meet/have met?
Marlon Brando or Jim Morrison.

What book can you read again and again?
‘Trinity’ by Leon Uris.

What’s the greatest album ever recorded?
Pink Floyd’s ‘Dark Side of the Moon’.

What artists would you most like to have played with in the band of your dreams (supergroup)?
Kris Kristofferson, Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings.

What sitcom character can you most identify with?
Tony Danza’s character (Tony Banta) from ‘Taxi’.

What movie can you watch over and over again?
‘Cool Hand Luke’ with Paul Newman.

Who’s your favorite cartoon character?
Johnny Bravo.

What’s the greatest place you’ve visited?
The Atlantis Hotel in the Bahamas.

What’s mankind’s most wonderful invention?
Skype.

What’s mankind’s most irritating invention?
Mobile phones.

Who’s the funniest person who ever lived?
Richard Pryor.

Colm Meaney

Thursday, November 20th, 2014

Colm Meaney Is ‘Hell On Wheels’

Colm Meaney as Railroad Baron Thomas Doc Durant in AMC’s Hell on Wheels (AMC)

By Michael Fitzpatrick

Once the dust settles, the tumbleweeds have passed, the good guys ride off into the sunset, and the baddies are, well, removed from the equation, we could well be assured as to what genre AMC’s new drama series, ‘Hell on Wheels’ falls into.

A western? Possibly. A period drama? Perhaps. An intense, ambitious project detailing one of the most action-filled, eventful eras in American history? Most definitely.

The series, which debuted on AMC on Sunday, tells the story of the building of the railroads in America, right after the Civil War, and of some of the characters that made the era such an interesting, dangerous, corrupt, unusual and complex one.

Veteran Irish actor Colm Meaney (‘The Commitments’, ‘The Damned United’, ‘Layer Cake’), plays railroad magnate Thomas Doc Durant, the man for whom the railroad was not just a dream, but a way for him to become an incredibly wealthy individual, and not always by honest means.

Indeed, it is at one point in the series, where Meaney’s character is informed that it be more economical and less time-consuming, for the railroad to be built along an even stretch of land in the Midwest.

Durant explains, in an expletive-laden rant, that he is being paid by the mile, and has little interest in such practical measures.

Meaney brings his usual intensity, depth and, for this character, cunning and ferocity, to the role, and his character features alongside performances by Anson Mount, who plays a Southern farmer out to track down the Yankee soldiers who raped and murdered his wife, rapper Common, who takes on the role of former slave Elam Ferguson, and young Irish actress, Dominique McElligott, who portrays Lily Bell, a young woman who must face the challenges brought on by the death of her husband.

The story begins just as the Civil War has ended, and an eclectic group of schemers and dreamers come together to build the Union Pacific’s transcontinental railroad.

The Irish Examiner recently caught up with Colm Meaney, the Dubliner who recently said to New York’s Daily News of his part as Thomas (Doc) Durant: “I love this character. You get to do all the things you can never do in real life”, where he told us a little about ‘Hell on Wheels’.

Mike Fitzpatrick (MF): So, how would you describe ‘Hell on Wheels’, is it a western, or more a period drama?
Colm Meaney (CM): A period drama, hmm, I don’t know, I’m not sure if I could describe it as either a period drama or a western, there’s also a lot of humor in it, you know, and because of its great writing, it incorporates (a lot of other genres).

MF: With ‘Last of the Mohicans’, ‘Far and Away’ and ‘King of Texas’, you’re no stranger to American, period-style films, is it a genre you particularly enjoy, or is it the roles themselves that capture your interest?
CM: The roles definitely yes, (although), I do enjoy historical pieces as well. I recently worked on ‘Bel Ami’ and ‘The Conspirator’, one was set in Paris and one set (in the US).
I haven’t done a lot of historical work over the years, but I do enjoy doing it.
I’m interested in it, I read a lot of history, and many actors with a theatrical background, do tend towards more historical stuff.

“The Van has always been a favorite of mine, of the three (stories from Roddy Doyle’s ‘Barrytown’ trilogy), I think it was the one that got kind of lost, because people really expected something else … I think it’s a beautifully-made film and I’m very proud of it.”

MF: You play the role of Thomas ‘Doc’ Durant, who was a real character, was much of the story based upon true events?
CM: Yes, absolutely, I mean, it’s well-documented historically, and the writers have stuck to the facts, as it were.
I mean, obviously we’ve had to take liberties with certain things, in the course of making a drama.

MF: Would you say the role of Durant is anything like somebody you’ve played before?
CM: No, it was very different. I was fascinated by the character. He was a very industrious type, a businessman, a wheeler-dealer.
His business dealings weren’t always clean! He promotes the railroad, you know, it was his baby, so, he was the driving force behind it.

MF: The setting of the movie, during the building of the railroads in the 1860s around the time of the American Civil War, was that a subject you were familiar with previously?
CM: Well, the actual building of the railroad, I thought that happened later, I was surprised to discover that it occurred during the time period (in the series), but the Civil War period, I was very familiar with. I did read up a lot on it, from many many years ago, until recently.

MF: The cast you’ll be working alongside, are they mostly new to you, or have you worked alongside any of them before?
CM: Well, obviously I knew who Common was; Anson I didn’t know, I’d heard his name as a New York theater actor, I didn’t know Ed (Eddie Spears), Dominique (McElligott) I’d not met before. So they were all pretty much new to me!

MF: You’ve played a wide variety of roles over the years, from Don Revie the football manager in ‘The Damned United’, Jimmy/Dessie/Larry in the Barrytown trilogy films (‘The Commitments’, ‘The Snapper’ and ‘The Van’, all penned by Irish writer Roddy Doyle), Chief O’Brien in ‘Star Trek’, Gene in ‘Layer Cake’, is there any particular role that you’d enjoy returning to?
CM: Well the great thing about the Roddy Doyle parts, was that I did get a chance to return to the role.
It was almost a unique opportunity to play the same character, even though he had a different name in each film!
It was great to be able to, you know, play more or less the same character, in separate features, it was quite unusual (for me).
You know, you’re never really sure that you want to go back to something, or even read for something, it really depends on the script.
The reason they never made a second Commitments, was because they never found the right script.

Colm Meaney and Dominique McElligott in AMC’s Hell on Wheels (AMC)

MF: You’ve starred in many Irish films over the years, such as ‘Kings’, ‘The Boys from County Clare’, ‘Intermission’ and of course, the Barrytown trilogy, which ones would rank as your own personal favorites?
CM: The Van has always been a favorite of mine, of the three (stories from Roddy Doyle’s ‘Barrytown’ trilogy), I think it was the one that got kind of lost, because people really expected something else.
They’d seen ‘The Snapper’, which was very much a feel-good movie, then ‘The Commitments’, it was a comedy as well, ‘The Van’, was set in a different tone, about a guy having a mid-life crisis. And for that reason, people weren’t really sure about it. I think it’s a beautifully-made film and I’m very proud of it.
Another film I did in Ireland about ten years ago, was ‘How Harry Became A Tree’. It was a film I loved, by a wonderful (filmmaker), Goran Pascaljevic, a Serbian director, who is a bit of a genius I think.
Being released around the time of 9/11, though, it kind of got lost in the shuffle there, you know? But, it’s a lovely, lovely film.

MF: Growing up in Dublin, were there any particular actors out there that would have influenced your decision to get into the business?
CM: I loved Peter O’Toole. I was lucky enough to have caught him on stage a couple of times, when I was very young, and then of course, in films, there were Steve McQeen and Paul Newman, great great actors!

‘Hell on Wheels’, starring Colm Meaney, Dominique McElligott, Anson Mount and Common, is shown on Sunday nights on AMC.

Brendan Gleeson

Thursday, November 20th, 2014

gleesonpic

By Michael Fitzpatrick

Brendan Gleeson as an actor, is a man of extremes. A man whose talents have proven time and again, that he’s capable of taking on the most difficult role, only to follow it up with one more demanding, daring and distinguished (and in his latest film ‘The Guard’, perhaps deranged, discriminating and devious), than the one before.

He’s won awards for roles as diverse as iconic Irish political figure Michael Collins (in 1991’s acclaimed TV movie, ‘The Treaty’), legendary British statesman Winston Churchill (2009’s ‘Into The Storm’), and infamous Dublin gangster Martin Cahill (‘The General’ from 1998).

Add to those groundbreaking parts, his continued reputation at the forefront of the Irish black comedy/film noir genre, due to his starring roles and featured parts in ‘I Went Down’, ‘Perrier’s Bounty’, ‘In Bruges’, ‘The Snapper’ and ‘The Butcher Boy’, as well as his scene-stealing performances in Hollywood blockbusters such as ‘Braveheart’, ‘Gangs of New York’ and the ‘Harry Potter’ series, and well, we have on our hands, one of the greatest and most respected Irish actors, dare we say it, of all time.

Upon meeting with the affable, soft-spoken Dubliner in midtown Manhattan, there’s little time for nervousness when one thinks of his incredible curriculum vitae.

His warmth of character, passion for his craft, devotion to his wife and four sons, love of music and history, and a laugh that would make the crankiest curmudgeon display a more delightful disposition, swiftly become obvious.

An accomplished fiddle player, a noted stage actor and writer and a man fiercely proud of his heritage, background and upbringing, he’d almost make you jealous. Until the all-round good-guy persona emerges that is, and well, that’s where the acting takes an intermission.

Michael Fitzpatrick (MF): ‘The Guard’ has been well-received all round, how did you enjoy working on the film?

Brendan Gleeson (BG): I’d a fantastic time making it. It really was very bad weather, at the worst time of the year in Connemara, but to be working there, you almost become part of the place. In a way that anybody going to the place never does really, unless you’re working there.
We’d a fantastic time there, I really have to say. I love working at home anyway, and to have a script like this, and to have the likes of Don Cheadle coming over, it was great, just great fun.

MF: Your role, Sergeant Gerry Boyle, did you draw upon any personal experiences for his personality?

BG: No! I’d come across these curmudgeonly kind of guys, quite a lot, but there’s a kind of a thing, a kind of a country thing, I think it goes beyond just guards, where people pretend to be just really dumb, and so innocent, because they don’t want to give themselves away!
They always want to suss out what’s going on, on the other side. People tend to underestimate them, it’s quite an unusual trick, I think!

MF: A strong Irish cast in a successful Irish picture. Seems like a good message for the Irish film industry?

BG: Well, I think so, I mean, you know, we just passed two-million in the Irish box office, which is incredible in less than three weeks, which is pretty great. So, it looks like it has an attraction, as they say, and people are getting it, people are having a laugh.
The cast is strong, and the writing is great, and John (McDonagh), is just a fantastic writer, and he gets it. I mean, he grew up in London, as you know, then he comes back over Spiddal direction in the summers. It’s that fantastic thing, having the perception from outside and from inside, that works best in terms of just getting us, and being able to have a laugh with it.

MF: There’s Fionnuala Flanagan, Dominique McElligott, Liam Cunningham and Pat Shortt, had you worked closely with any of them before?

BG: Ah yes, I’d worked with most of them. I think I worked with Liam Cunningham way back in the ’80s with The Passion Machine. Myself and himself, he was just a little bit after me, was he? Maybe a year after me, in terms of going at it full time, or around about the same time, but I’ve worked with him a lot. I think I’ve worked with pretty much everybody at some point along the line! If we get the material, there’s plenty of talent at home, there’s no problem there.

MF: Most of the filming was done in County Galway, being a Dubliner, how familiar were you with that part of the country?

BG: From my teens I remember going up to Connemara, in fact, when I was about fifteen or sixteen I went over there to see friends of mine from school that were in the Gaeltacht. I hadn’t gone as part of (the Gaeltacht), that’s another story! But I remember going through the rain, and you could hear the pipes, the music. And over there, I gradually got into the traditional music in a big way. So, the west, I go over there all the time, I love it. And I’ve decided I’ll not allow (traditional music) be described as mere ‘diddley idley’!
It took me ages to even tell the difference between a jig and a reel, but people don’t really understand how it works. It works inwardly, instead of the way jazz improvises outwards, traditional Irish music works in.
All the stitchwork, and variations, and because people don’t understand it, they disparage it. And I was going to go along with that until recently, I was being interviewed by (Irish broadcaster) Dave Fanning, and he said, you know, I’m not going to ask you about music, sure you love all that diddley-idley music. And I said, well to be honest I am, but I also like Ry Cooder and other stuff! And someone said, sure, you didn’t stand up for us! So, I said, you know what, you’re absolutely right, so from this point on, I’ve decided I’m going to stand up for it! Particularly, when the whole country’s bust, we can do things for nothing, and we have traditional music staring at us right in the face.

MF: You’ve starred in some memorable Irish black comedies over the years, like ‘The Snapper’, ‘In Bruges’, ‘Perrier’s Bounty’ and ‘I Went Down’. Where does ‘The Guard’ rank alongside those films?

BG: Ah, it’s right up there, you know, it just is. I mean, he’s a character to die for, basically, because obviously he’s outrageous, but as well as that, he’s unpredictable.
You never quite know what he’s going to do next. So, those characters don’t come along that often.

MF: Growing up in Ireland, were there any actors that you particularly looked upon as influences in your decision to join the trade?

BG: Well, certainly in terms of my film career, Gabriel Byrne was a huge (influence). He kind of broke the mold a little bit, as far as I was concerned. He did a little bit of teaching, like I did. You know, he came here (the USA), rather than going through London and he never lost sight of himself.
I always took great inspiration from him, I felt that if he could do it, and stay true to himself, I thought it was possible to maybe forge a career in this business. That’s not exactly growing up, but it was at a particularly formative time, when I decided to concentrate on film.

Sergeant Gerry Boyle (Brendan Gleeson) and FBI agent Wendell Everett (Don Cheadle) in ‘The Guard’

MF: You were teaching for ten years before becoming a full-time actor?

BG: Yes, that’s right. I’d been working for The Passion Machine with Paul Mercier at home, so that had become semi-professional, we weren’t getting paid, towards the end, we might have gotten a few bob.
It went from putting things on at the old Saint Francis Xavier Hall, or the SFX Centre as they renamed it!
Then we started doing these runs at the Olympia, so I’d gotten to this stage where it was kind of at a professional level, and drawing professional audiences.
We packed out the Olympia, what’s that, 1.300 people?, for ten weeks on the trot, so yeah, I was teaching, while I was acting at the same time. I didn’t exactly start from scratch, I was about 34 when I made the leap.

MF: So, you were about 34 when you went full-time as an actor?

BG: I’d kind of gotten a small bit of a profile (in Dublin), it’s not fair to say that I just jumped in at that point. I’d had a bit of a track record, but the day was too short. I was trying to do a bit of writing, I put on a few plays with The Passion Machine. That was great, writing with the knowledge that it was going to be put on.

MF: So you were acting, teaching and writing simultaneously?

BG: Yeah, and then directing my own plays, and trying to put on a concert in school, you know, you do whatever you can! I mean, I was quite a conscientious teacher, I never wanted to be a clockwatcher, you know, someone just putting it in.
It’s impossible anyway, it’s a rubbish profession if you’re just doing that. I thought I’d never write again, that’s what I thought would happen, if I didn’t (quit teaching).
I think one of the reasons I didn’t do it before that, was I didn’t know if I trusted myself not to go to seed waiting for the phone to ring, and all that kind of stuff. But, once I discovered that, once I got myself writing, that I felt okay, that if there were jobs being presented, I could make my own work.
Then I thought, I can’t teach and do all this. It’s an odd thing. It’s funny though, once I got out there, I found I didn’t have any time for (anything else) for about twenty years after!

MF: How was your family, with your decision to act, were they supportive, or nervous?

BG: I was more nervous than (my wife) Mary was, she was like, I’ll go back to work, if need be. In the end she did, and we had the four lads at the time. She was like, I can’t look at you, doing your head in! Then I got my first job at The Abbey, which was great, you know, starting at such a high level. Then I was like, what am I going to do when this run finishes?
Mary let me do my own head in, as she went back to work! Then we just started working things out, balancing things. I’ve had great support.

MF: And two of your sons are in the business too?

BG: Yes, Brian and Domhnall. It’s great, you worry about the morale aspect of what’s going to happen if it doesn’t work out. I’ve no problems with their talent, I know they’re there because they should be there.
We’ve good craic working together, which is a big bonus too. Domhnall did a short there, ‘Noreen’, which was shown at Tribeca recently and won the Galway Film Fleadh award last year.
Myself and Brian played two cops, we actually shot it directly after ‘The Guard’, and I used the same uniform! It was written before The Guard, believe it or not, but I used the same uniform, and it was great craic working with them.

MF: So after The Guard, what’s next for Brendan Gleeson?

BG: Well, that’s a good question, I want to try and shoot ‘At Swim Two Birds’ in the spring.
The momentum is going that way, I think it is (going ahead) but nobody can say anything’s going to happen, unless you’re actually wrapping, because of the vagaries of this (business).
There’s also something else, that’ll happen pretty soon, but, in the same way, I don’t want to jinx it until I’m actually there! And hopefully, I’d like to do ‘Calvary’ with John McDonagh.
We had a good chat at one point, I can’t remember where the conversation took place, maybe at Sundance. About a good priest, reviled by his community, in the current climate. He’s written a phenomenal script, so hopefully that’ll (come out) next year.

Henry Cluney (Ex-Stiff Little Fingers)

Thursday, November 20th, 2014

At The Mike Stand With Henry Cluney

Lucky we’re not short of forward-slashes, for if we were, Henry Cluney, the singer/songwriter/survivor/guitarist/punk-rocking Belfast boy could well use them all up such is the variety of talents at the man’s disposal. Henry, a founding member of legendary Irish punk act Stiff Little Fingers, is a busy man these days, what with the whole singing/songwriting/surviving/punking (ahem) thing, but he still agreed to answer a few incredibly nosey questions for us ‘At The Mike Stand’.

Having played with SLF from the band’s humble beginnings in Ulster, through its glory days of the late ’70s and early ’80s until it’s split in 1983, Henry rejoined his reunited bandmates for a number of years, before his departure from the group in 1994. Known for classic tracks such as ‘Alternative Ulster’, ‘Gotta Getaway’, ‘Suspect Device’, ‘Barbed Wire Love’ and ‘Wasted Life’, Stiff Little Fingers (Henry, Jake Burns, Jim Reilly and Ali McMordie in its original lineup) were at the forefront of the punk movement in the north of Ireland in the mid to late ’70s. We could go on, but, there’re questions need answerin’. Henry, welcome to ‘At The Mike Stand’.

What would you like your own tribute act to be called?
The best name I ever heard for a tribute band was a Stiff Little Fingers tribute act, called ‘A Tribute to SeLF’.

When’s the last time you laughed out loud?
Last night I was watching a show about Scottish football, I’m always laughing out loud watching that!

What act would you like to have seen perform live?
T-Rex, that would have been my be all and end all. I never got a chance to see them live.

What team(s) do you support?
Arsenal!

What period in history would you most like to have visited?
I think somewhere around medieval times.

What song would you most like to have written?
I would say, just for financial reasons alone, something like ‘White Christmas’ or ‘Happy Birthday’!

Who or what, would make you leave a room?
Probably one of those dancing shows, I don’t even know what they’re called. I just can’t swallow it, so if someone wanted to watch that, I’d have to be on my way!

What decade rules (and why)?
The ’70s, you know, growing up with all that, the music, the glam and punk stuff, you know?

What cover version do you most enjoy performing?
Probably ‘Johnny Was’.

What movie role would you like to have played/play?
I think, Don Corleone, in The Godfather.

Have you ever been told you looked like somebody?
Oh dear, when I was about eighteen, people used to say I looked like Woody from the Bay City Rollers!

What’s the first album you remember buying?
This is controversial, but it might have been Gary Glitter’s first album! The first one I actually remember buying was T-Rex’s ‘Ride A White Swan’. Yeah, that’s the first one I actually bought, I think the Gary Glitter one was a present!

Who’s your favorite Beatle? 
I never really had one, but, because, the only post-Beatles solo album I ever had, was ‘Band on the Run’, by Wings, I suppose Paul.

What’s your favorite Christmas song?
‘Oh Holy Night’, as sung by Cartman from ‘South Park’!

Who’s the most rock and roll person who ever lived?
Lemmy. I go see Motorhead whenever they’re over here, I mean, the guy’s what, sixty-something? He’s great.

What artist/song/genre do you secretly enjoy listening to?

I’m so tempted to say Gary Glitter, but I won’t! I’ve always loved the early Beach Boys stuff. I mean it’s such great pop music. Most of the Beach Boys throughout their career made such great music, not normally the type of stuff I’d like.

Who would you most like to meet/have met?
For some reason I’ve always wanted to meet Neil Armstrong; music-wise, probably David Bowie.

What book can you read again and again?
The best book I ever read was ‘Diary of a Rock and Roll Star’ by Ian Hunter, the singer with Mott The Hoople. I’ve read that many times, it came out in about 1972. It was such a good book, not just a great rock and roll book.

What’s the greatest album ever recorded?
For me, it would be ‘The Slider’ by T-Rex, or ‘Ziggy Stardust’, by David Bowie.

What artists would be in your supergroup?
That would be Marc Bolan, John Bonham on drums, probably Johnny Ramone on guitar, then, who’d you put on bass, how about Lemmy?!

What sitcom character can you most identify with?
The one I really like, you know Chandler from ‘Friends’? I love the lines he gets, though but just because of the way I am, I’d have to say Homer Simpson!

What movie can you watch over and over again?
‘The Wizard of Oz’. Every Christmas it’s on, I recently picked up the DVD, I’ve not watched it, but I could sit through it!

Who’s your favorite cartoon character?
You know, I’ve always been in love with Daphne from ‘Scooby Doo’, then lately, of course, there’s Peter Griffin (from ‘Family Guy’), but I have to say Daphne, because she was my first love!

What’s the greatest place you’ve visited?
Tokyo. I just love the people there.

What’s mankind’s most wonderful invention?
The electric guitar of course.

What’s mankind’s most irritating invention?
Again, the electric guitar, it can be used for good or evil!

Who’s the funniest person who ever lived?
One guy who never fails to make me laugh, is Frankie Boyle. My favorite ever since I was six or seven though, is Eric Morecambe.

Who’s your favorite namesake?

Being an Arsenal fan, I’m thinking Thierry Henry! There’s not many Henrys, the poor people!

Who’s your favorite character from literature?
You know, this is going to sound so la-di-da, but one of my favorites is ‘The Merchant of Venice’. I always hated school, but I loved Shakespeare, so I’m going to go with a character from that, Shylock.

Brendan O’Shea

Thursday, November 20th, 2014

At The Mike Stand With… Brendan O’Shea

By Mike Fitzpatrick

 

Every so often, the Mike Stand (that’d be us, unless you’re being unfaithful with another chap called Mike Stand, then you’re just being rude) bumps into one of those New York City-based individuals that just oozes calmness, creativity and well, a certain aura of County Kerry-ness, that, when expertly mixed with a little East Village coolness results in a masterful blend of singing and songwriting.

See, Brendan O’Shea, a transplanted troubadour from the Kingdom of Ireland’s southwest, now based in New York City’s lower east, is one of those rare talents that has kept the image of the Big Apple’s singing/songwriting scene, so vibrant.

Continuing upon a long (and winding) road of such talents from the bygone days of Dylan, Hardin and Buckley, Brendan O’Shea, and other masterful tunesmiths of his generation have continued to pump energy, vitality and soul into a genre that every so often, produces a diamond from a stack of pearls.

With his new album ‘Songs from a Tenement’, available on November 28th through CDbaby, Brendan will be launching the recording with a special show at Arlene’s Grocery, at 95 Stanton Street (Manhattan) on the same night.

Tickets are available at The Scratcher (5th and the Bowery). Brendan, welcome to ‘The Mike Stand’.

What would you like your own tribute act to be called?

The Beatles (!).

What song would you most like to have written?

Any song by Leonard Cohen.

Who’s your favorite namesake?

Brendan Behan.

Who’s your favorite character from literature?

Jesus Christ.

What’s the greatest place you’ve visited?

Japan.

Who would you most like to meet/have met?

Thomas Jefferson.

When’s the last time you laughed out loud?

Yesterday, actually. I nearly got in a head-on collision on the Long Island Expressway, and I was in deep conversation when it happened. The whole thing went right over my head, so when we got to our destination, my friend and I literally laughed our heads off.

What act would you like to have seen perform live?

Nina Simone, yeah.

What team(s) do you support?

I don’t really support any.

What period in history would you most like to have visited?

I would say the days of the Roman Empire. I was in Italy some time ago, and I did the whole thing, so, I’ve quite an interest in it.

Who or what, would make you leave a room?

Ignorance.

What cover version do you most enjoy performing?

I would say ‘Crazy Dreams’ by Paul Brady.

Have you ever walked out on a movie?

Oh yes, and what’s the movie’s name? I couldn’t tell you. I put it out of my mind. I’m a movie snob, definitely!

What movie role would you like to have played/play?

The lead in Citizen Kane!.

Who do people say you look like?

You know, I don’t get that a whole lot.

What’s the first album you remember buying?

I think it was U2’s ‘Boy’, and the first single I bought was ‘Message In A Bottle’, by The Police.

Who’s your favorite Beatle?

That is a drawn-out question I have to say, because each of them had such a different offering to bring to the table. I’d have to say I definitely warm to Paul McCartney more, just because, I suppose, of his sanity during the whole era.

What’s your favorite Christmas song?

‘Fairytale of New York’ would be up there I’d say.

Who’s the most rock and roll person who ever lived?

Probably Jimi Hendrix.

What artist/song/genre do you secretly enjoy listening to?

I would say the whole Motown scene, or even disco. Yes, ’70s disco, big time.

What book can you read again and again?

What’s his name, I’d have to say, this one, someone gave me tonight. And knowing me, I’ll read this book ten times, ‘Franny and Zooey’, by JD Salinger, so let’s go with that. A singer friend of mine said she’d read it twenty times, and dropped it into me.

What artists would you most like to have played with in the band of your dreams?

Well let’s see, I’d have Mark Knopfler on guitar, I suppose Paul McCartney on bass, Leonard Cohen, on backing vocals of course! And we’d have to have a raffle for the drummer! That’s a good question.

What’s your tipple?

Tea, I don’t go for the booze at all.

What movie can you watch over and over again?

Ah, there’s so many. ‘Rear Window’, I’d say.

Who’s your favorite cartoon character?

Jerry, as in ‘Tom & Jerry’.

What’s mankind’s most wonderful invention?

That’s a lovely question! Transportation, the bicycle of course. I’d be lost without it!

What’s mankind’s most irritating invention?

I would say, the cellphone, for me. It’s the abuse factor.

What actor would play you in a movie about your life?

Well, who should play me, or who would do a good job of playing me, that’s a different question! I would say Daniel Day Lewis, sure why not?!

Ardal O’Hanlon

Thursday, November 20th, 2014

At The Mike Stand With… Ardal O’Hanlon

By Michael Fitzpatrick

If one were to think of the most quoted, loved and imitated characters from the Irish (or indeed ‘Oirish’) imagination, there’s no doubt that figures such as Darby O’Gill, Captain Boyle, Dorian Gray, Jimmy Rabbitte Sr. and Leopold Bloom would figure prominently.

Then of course, there’s Father Dougal Maguire, the man who brought the Travel Scrabble for when they were traveling, and the normal Scrabble, for when they arrived, though now that he thought of it, he didn’t bring either of them.

Created by Arthur Mathews and Graham Linehan, and brought to life by the then little-known stand-up comic, Ardal O’Hanlon, Father Dougal, from the incredibly popular sitcom ‘Father Ted’, will go down in comic history as a truly unforgettable individual.

Since the show’s three season run, Ardal has gone on to become one of Ireland’s greatest comic exports, starring in five seasons of British sci-fi sitcom, ‘My Hero’, taking on several roles in films such as ‘The Butcher Boy’ and ‘The Adventures of Greyfriars Bobby’ and also forging a successful writing career.

It is stand-up though, where the County Monaghan native thrives however, and we were fortunate enough to chat with Ardal before a recent show in New York at the annual Craic Comedy Festival.

Ardal, welcome to ‘At The Mike Stand’.

What would you like your own tribute act to be called?
Ardal’s Folly (although that sounds more like a trad band).

When’s the last time you laughed out loud?
I howled laughing recently while reading Kevin Barry’s short stories, ‘Dark Lies the Island’.

What act would you like to have seen perform live?
James Brown. I just feel he might have loosened something in my bones (I’m a dancer trapped in the body of a tree).

What team(s) do you support?
Ireland, Leeds United and Barcelona.

What period in history would you most like to have visited?
The late 18th century – American revolution, French Revolution, United Irishmen, excitement, new ideas, opera in the evenings, horseback, duels, I mean, c’mon.

What song would you most like to have written?
‘Into My Arms’ by Nick Cave, a love song, and a prayer for the secular age.

Who or what, would make you leave a room?
Celery.

What decade rules (and why)?
Seventies of course – Led Zeppelin, Leeds United on top, ‘The Godfather’ (1 and 2), ‘The Deerhunter’, The Clash.

What movie role would you like to have played/play?
I’d like to been in any Preston Sturges movie.

Have you ever been told you looked like somebody?
I was mistaken for Willem Dafoe in a bar in LA, and for Denis Leary on a couple of occasions.

What’s the first album you remember buying?
The truth is probably ‘Abba Arrival’ but I prefer to remember ‘Germ Free Adolescents’ by X Ray Spex.

What’s your favorite Christmas song?
‘Fairytale of New York’ by Shane MacGowan.

Who’s the most rock and roll person who ever lived?
Possibly Shane MacGowan. As well as being an incredible poet of the night, he appears to be utterly indestructible.

What artist/song/genre do you secretly enjoy listening to?
Alternative country – Will Oldham, Smog etc. (but I am a happy person, honest I am).

Who would you most like to meet/have met?
I’d like to play 5 a side with Lionel Messi.

What book can you read again and again?
New York writer Don de Lillo is worth revisiting for his wit and perceptions. I also have a quirky book at home called ‘Dutch Fields’, which is simply a collection of photographs of Dutch soccer pitches by a guy called Hans Van der Meer which always brings a smile to my face.

What’s the greatest album ever recorded?
Van Morrison’s ‘Astral Weeks’.

What sitcom character can you most identify with?
Father Dougal McGuire, I suppose, as he remains a part of me although I do share the exasperation of Larry David.

What movie can you watch over and over again?
‘Apocalypse Now’, ‘Fargo’ and ‘Elf’.

Who’s your favorite cartoon character?
Peter Griffin (from ‘Family Guy’).

What’s the greatest place you’ve visited?
Beijing, for its amazing attractions (Great Wall etc) and its even better street-life.

Who’s the funniest person who ever lived?
Larry David comes close.

Who’s your favorite character from literature?
Holden Caulfield (from ‘The Catcher in the Rye’).

The Script

Thursday, November 20th, 2014

From Arthur J. To Off-Broadway

The Script in Dublin

Dublin Act The Script Arrive In New York

By Mike Fitzpatrick

Irish three-piece act, The Script, will perform a one-off show in midtown Manhattan this weekend, taking the stage at west-side venue, Terminal 5 (610 West 56th Street, Between 11th and 12th Avenues) on Sunday, December 6th.

The band, consisting of lead vocalist Danny O’Donoghue, backing vocalist/guitarist Mark Sheehan and drummer/percussionist Glen Power, hail from James’s Street in Dublin’s inner city, not far from the Guinness brewery at Saint James’s Gate (hence the lame headline accompanying this article, see Arthur J. is the first name of, oh never mind) have endured a hectic 2009, coming into the year at the top of the British album charts with their first album (‘The Script’) and finishing it off with a number of shows across the US.

In between, there was a stint supporting Sir Paul McCartney on five American dates (including the first concerts at New York’s Citi Field stadium), opening for U2 in Dublin’s Croke Park, five hit singles, an album that went four-times platinum in the UK, and eight-times platinum in Ireland, their songs being performed by unknowns on ‘talent’ show ‘X-Factor’ and by themselves on the Playstation game ‘FIFA 09’, appearances on Letterman, MTV and VH1, and now, an interview right here with, well, another bloke from Dublin.

Despite the hectic schedule (his, not mine) we were able to catch up with Mark Sheehan for a quick chat before the band’s New York show.

Mike Fitz (MF): You’ve a couple of big days coming up in New York, you’re on Letterman this week?
Mark Sheehan (MS): Yeah, can you believe that? I think it’s most shocking for us, because it’s been such a staple show for us, we all watch it, you know, we’re all fans of the show. So that’ll be a bit of a crazy one.

MF: The Script play some acoustic versions of your songs on the band’s website, is that something you regularly do?
MS: What we generally do when we write a song is, we’ll always try to do a video for it and put it online to see what people think. You know, get a bit of feedback, and that’s what’s great about the Net, we’ve been doing that from the start. We just jam a few songs, and put them up there, it’s all part of the process, we get feedback from people on the spot.

MF: Are there plans for an unplugged-style recording down the road?
MS: Well, we never really saw ourselves as an unplugged type of band. We always thought of ourselves as a live, you know, full band, but then, it’s so handy to travel with just a few pieces of equipment. We’ve been doing a lot of that in America, where we arrive at a radio station and play, we’ve been having a lot of fun with it. Then we”ve been finding ourselves at Irish bars all over the country doing it too. It’s becoming a bit of a thing for us, and we’re really enjoying it.

MF: As regards your own sound, there’s the obvious pop and rock influence, but there’s a little R’n’B flavor there too, how did that develop?
MS: I think it evolved from our early passion of wanting to move to America in the first place. With all that soul and R’n’B in mind, and hip-hop, which we were generally into. As well as that, it was a lot cheaper to make that music too, at the time, if you wrote a song back in Ireland, you’d have to get a whole band in to play on it, then the studio time was so expensive. Just to do drums alone, you were up there at 1,500 to 2,000 (euro), whereas with R’n’B and hip-hop, you were able to program it and programs were cheaper, it was just so much more accessible for young acts. We found a love for that type of music and came to the States and studied it.

MF: Following the success last year of your debut album, what does the coming twelve months hold for The Script?
MS: I don’t know, we’re just trying to stay focused on coming up with more product. We’ve been in the studio for the past three weeks, and it’s the first time in a few years, that we’ve had the chance to write again. Although, we’ve been writing on the buses, trying to get ideas down, then when we were in Paris we’d a day in the studio, and two days in Sydney, that kind of thing, but never really a proper run where we could go in, set up our gear, leave it there and come in every day and be creative. So, we’ve had that chance in the past three weeks, and it’s been great. So, the next couple of months, we’ll be doing more touring in America, and generally thinking of music for the next record as well.

MF: The next album is scheduled for release sometime late next year?
MS: Yeah, we’re looking at 2010, but who knows!

MF: You’ve been involved in the music business for a long time, do you think it’s changed a great deal since the days of MyTown?
MS: Yeah, I think it’s changed drastically. There’s a hell of a lot of changes. Record labels are a different beast today than they were years ago. There’s been huge changes in a relatively short space of time, but I guess that’s competitive business for you at the end of the day.

MF: You’ve not been without hardship though, particularly yourself and Danny. Have your own personal tragedies contributed to what makes up The Script?
MS: Yeah, I mean, I think, with The Script, it’s always been like therapy sessions for us, you know? It’s been a punch-bag that we come to, it was always, for me and Danny, to let out all our anger through music, or all our emotions through music, all our conversations were more like therapy when we were going through all our stuff. So, I suppose the band is the sum of all its parts.

“Ireland has been going through a major change in music over the past couple of years. I mean, a lot of music is now a lot more accessible for young kids, to make themselves in their bedrooms. Myself and Danny typified that in a lot of ways.”

MF: Then of course, in December of last year the band’s album hit number one in the UK. How was that news received?
MS: Slightly strange, for me particularly, because when it hit number one, I was after having a baby on the same day! So, I was celebrating having my child and a number one record on the same day, which was really bizarre. It took me a couple of months to get used to it. It hit the lads differently, they had to walk out on stage the same day, I couldn’t be with them that day, before 80,000 people and announce that our album was number one. So I think that feeling has been engraved in their brains for the rest of their lives!

MF: ‘The End Where I Begin’ has been used on ‘FIFA 09’, are the band big football fans?
MS: Well, Dan would be. The closest I’d get would be the playstation! It’s funny though, I’ve been playing the game, and our bloody song came on, which was strange! It’s funny that our music is finding its way into weird nooks and crannies throughout the world. We get emails telling us one person sang our song on ‘Pop Idol’ and another did on ‘X-Factor’, next we’ll hit ‘Dancing With The Stars’! Then there was ‘Sober House’, hearing an Irish band’s music on (VH1 show) ‘Sober House’, I thought that was pretty funny.

MF: What do you think of the Irish music scene. Are there many promising acts out there?
MS: There is. Ireland has been going through a major change in music over the past couple of years. I mean, a lot of music is now a lot more accessible for young kids, to make themselves in their bedrooms. Myself and Danny typified that in a lot of ways. There’s interesting things going on, there’s the Republic of Loose, for example, who don’t sound very Irish, but they’ve such a great sound, and are such a great band, then there’s The Coronas, who are very serious about their music, and their lyrics. They’re some of the bands that should do fantastic outside Ireland, then there’s The Blizzards too.

MF: What about old favorites. Do you find yourself going back to listen to music you grew up with?
MS: I find myself going back to classic albums all the time.

MF: You’re a big Bowie fan, right?
MS: Big Bowie fan, I love Bowie, I tend to listen to him a lot. The problem is, I’m a little bit starved for a hero right now in music. There was a day when music was so competitive, it was all about music and lyrics, cool ways of putting things, cool ways of writing and all. Now it all seems to be about auto-tuning a vocal and some bullshit about someone walking down the street going ‘Shawty, you got class!’ That whole thing, it doesn’t make any ****in’ sense! I think hip-hop needs a big ol’ hug at the moment! So, I feel a lot of people around me are going back to their favorite classic acts.

MF: Then, supporting U2 at Croke Park, how was that?
MS: Absolutely unbelievable. I mean, even when we found out about it, we were in the freezing cold up in Cincinnati one morning. It must have been about five o’clock in the morning. It was the only time you’d ever see The Script jumping up and down that early let me tell you. ****in’ over the moon for it. Then we did it, and we’d kind of built it up as being a big monster in our heads. You know, its U2, Croke Park, Dublin, do people give a s*** about us, do they care, you know, all that sort of stuff, going through our heads. Then we walked out there, and the Irish people just went nuts. U2 were so supportive, everybody on the day was just fantastic. I think it’ll be one memory that I’ll carry with me for the rest of my life. Even watching U2 play ‘Sunday Bloody Sunday’ at Croke Park had me choked up.

MF: Then you went on to support Paul McCartney in New York
MS: Yeah, we did five dates around America with Paul. That was another masterclass in music. The guy had so many hits, and he had no airs or graces about him. He came into our dressing room without any bodyguards, just (chatting). He was such a nice man, never once directed the conversation towards himself. He wanted to know how we were as people, going from playing small clubs to arenas with him, things like that. It was just such a breath of fresh air, then to walk out and see the man play, Jesus Christ, it was, wow, he played for about three hours, about forty tunes, and every one of them I knew!

MF: How often do you get back to Dublin?
MS: We just left Dublin a few weeks ago, where we did a tour around Ireland. We spent most of our time in Dublin. We’ll not be back until Christmas though. When we’re in England, we’d get back most weekends. Right now, we’re in the far reaches of the world, so by Christmas we’ll have been months away from our families, so it’ll be fun.

MF: When you get back now, are you treated differently, or are you still the lads from James’s Street?
MS: There’s definitely a different feeling, because we’re so big there, and it’s hard to comprehend that I’m in that band, if you know what I mean. When I go home I’ll go down the local with the lads and chill out, and you’re getting forty questions and I’ll try to keep the anecdotes kind of funny, you know yourself, how it is in Dublin, they’ll pull you down so fast! If I even walk into my local with a baseball cap now, they’ll shout ‘Woudja look at ****in’ John Wayne!’ That’s what I love about the Irish sense of humor, John Wayne’s got nothing to do with a baseball cap, but you were in America, he’s from America, you clearly bought that hat in America, so you’re ****in’ John Wayne! It’s great though, it’s a very humbling feeling though. Sometimes it can be hard to go places. Generally everybody knows us and it can get out of hand. We’d be in a bar, and you’ll always get one ***hole!

MF: As a member of the band, is it all work, or do you get to hang out every so often?
MS: We haven’t had time to (hang out) in a long while. When this album got picked up by a label, we made the choice to be extremely happy to be in this group. We’d been moaning about this for so long, trying to get out there in the world. We try to look at it as being happy that we’re employed, because any day it could be taken away from us. It’s taken us so long to get here, the rug could be ripped from under us next week, our next album could be a bunch of crap. We really enjoy it, we’ve taken on a huge workload, and we’re trying to get to every corner of the world. The past few weeks we’ve been in the studio in Los Angeles, down to the beach every day, and recording every day, it’s been brilliant.

Bell X1

Thursday, November 20th, 2014

A Thing About Teapots?

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Mike Fitzpatrick Interviews Bell X1’s Paul Noonan

Bell X1 seems to have a thing about teapots. So much so, that were one to type the band’s name, followed by the word ‘teapot’ into a Google search, approximately 400 responses would appear on screen. Not, of course, that I checked. Some bloke down the pub told me.

Fortunately, New York City seems to be developing a thing of its own about this Irish four-piece, one which hails from the neighboring towns of Celbridge and Lucan (Counties Kildare and Dublin respectively).

Returning to the US once more, following several sold-out shows last year, Bell X1 will play a sold-out show at the legendary downtown music venue, Joe’s Pub, on Wednesday, January 16th, followed by a trip to Philadelphia, for an unplugged appearance, presented by WXPN, at the World Café Live, on the 17th. And all this, after playing live on Late Night with Conan O’Brien.

The band formed as the twentieth century was taking its final curtain calls, and a popular five-piece act known as Juniper morphed into a foursome, when lead singer Damien Rice left to pursue a solo career.

Changing its name to Bell X1, the band, comprised of Paul Noonan, Brian Crosby, Dominic Phillips and Dave Geraghty, proceeded to regroup and push forward as a quartet, with Noonan moving from behind his drumkit to take over vocals.

Retaining Juniper’s fanbase, while developing a newer sound, the band was invited to support acts as diverse as the late, lamented Elliott Smith, and some guys from New Jersey called Bon Jovi.

2003 witnessed the release of the group’s second album (after 1999’s ‘Neither Am I’), ‘Music In Mouth’, which was critically well-received, and in between moaning about no teapots in recording studios, playing hurling badly before residents of County Kilkenny (which is akin to sacrilege in that part of the country) and touring with Keane, Starsailor, The Frames, Aqualung and Snow Patrol, the album went double platinum in Ireland, and produced four top forty singles.

With the band’s third album, ‘Flock’, hitting number one in Ireland, more touring was required, culminating in a sensational night at Malahide Castle before thousands of fans, on practically the only dry night of a disastrously damp Irish summer.

The guys have also experienced something of a surge of renewed interest from a curious American audience, following the appearance of ‘Eve, The Apple of My Eye’ (a track from ‘Flock’) on popular television show, ‘The O.C’ not so long ago.

The Irish Examiner caught up with Paul Noonan last week, where the affable frontman was more than pleased to chat to us, prior to the band’s excursion to New York.

MF: You’ve come a long way from your Sunday night residency at the Kildrought Lounge, in Celbridge, County Kildare. Can you tell me about some of the highs you’ve experienced along the way?
PN: That was a long time ago! We did a tour of the Eastern European states a few years ago, and played in Poland, The Czech Republic and Slovakia as ambassadors for Ireland. Ireland held the presidency of the EU at the time. It was our first time in cities such as Prague, and we were playing in places where they’d rarely get bands. We were looked after incredibly well. There was absolutely none of the jaded industry cynicism evident. Another highlight, was playing at Malahide Castle last summer. In front of over 20,000 people, on the one dry night of the summer. It was such a great sense of occasion, it crowned the ‘Flock’ era, and was a perfect end to that period.

MF: You’ve toured or performed with acts such as The Frames, Elliott Smith, Keane and even Bon Jovi in the past, do you feel the band benefited greatly from such experiences?
PN: Yes, definitely. A few years back, we toured in Europe a lot with Keane and Starsailor, and that was a major challenge. There was no sense of winning people over, as we were already established in Ireland, but as a support act, people would be getting their pints in (during our performance), so it could be pretty rowdy at times.

MF: Are there any acts out there today, with whom you’d enjoy working alongside?
PN: We welcome all-comers, especially in the States. Though we have to balance (performing) with meeting our heroes. Collectively speaking, Radiohead would be our favorite band. I saw this thing they did, ‘Meeting People Is Easy’ (the 1998 Grammy-nominated documentary Radiohead produced detailing their practical burnout while relentlessly touring in the late 1990s). It completely painted their lives on the road as being really miserable, and it really shouldn’t be like that.

MF: How healthy do you feel is the current Irish music scene?
PN: It’s great, There’s always been great things happening here. Things are emerging onto bigger world stages, but not always necessarily out of merit. Lots of acts are making great things though. There’s one girl, called Cathy Davey, she’s just released a fantastic record (‘Tales of Silversleeve’), in the UK and Europe, so hopefully it’ll happen for her. In the past, there was a certain ‘Irishness’ about artists, but that seems to have gone.

MF: So, three albums down the line, what’s next for Bell X1?
PN: Well, we’re always writing, and we’ve a gig at the Bowery Ballroom, and a show in Boston on Saint Patrick’s Day. I’m a big fan of (HBO show) ‘The Wire’, but every time a cop dies, there’s a wake at an Irish bar, and the cop is lying on a pool table. It’s not like that really, is it?

MF: I should hope not. It must have been satisfying to hear that the Joe’s Pub gig had sold out so quickly, so much so, that an additional gig at The Bowery Ballroom, just in time for Saint Patrick’s Day, had to be added?
PN: It was amazing. The power of the Internet is responsible for that. We’ve (great memories of the US). We’ve played the Mercury Lounge in New York, and the Viper Room in Los Angeles before. Also, Sin-E in the East Village, where people knew the songs.

MF: We read of so many young acts who tell us that they first picked up an instrument, after hearing Bowie, or Lennon, or Springsteen for the first time, was there a moment in your youth when you thought, hang on, I could do this?
PN: As a youngster, I was infatuated with David Byrne. Even when I was just eight or nine, I remember seeing the video for ‘Once in a Lifetime’, where he was running in an odd-mannered fashion. I’ve only recently gone back to the Talking Heads records, but (as a child) I was drawn to the wacky nature of their imagery.

MF: So, what are you listening to at the moment?
PN: I’ve come late to it, but I’m listening to The Shins and Modest Mouse.

Paul Noonan (Bell X1)

Thursday, November 20th, 2014

Bell X1’s Singer/Songwriter, Paul Noonan

Mike Fitzpatrick Interviews Bell X1’s Singer/Songwriter Paul Noonan

You’ll not see Bell X1’s singer/songwriter Paul Noonan on ‘American Idol’, performing an a cappella version of ‘Like A Virgin’, for the amusement of three insanely wealthy ‘talent’ spotters and an audience starved for entertainment.

Nor will you witness the band’s rhythm section, Dominic Philips and Tim O’Donovan, parade their newly toned physiques, as they stroll in full view along the celebrity-filled beaches of Saint Tropez, desperately avoiding the paparazzi.

As for guitarists David Geraghty and Brian Crosby, well, there are relatively few opportunities to catch a glimpse of either of these two particular axemen falling out of a Hollywood nightclub, with Lindsay, Paris, Britney, or even Dame Judi in tow. It’s not that the Bell X1 boys don’t want to, it’s just, well, they’re a tad busy these days.

The old rock star lifestyle is so much more than just throwing televisions from hotel rooms, driving cars into swimming pools and wearing enormous trousers you see.

Were it not for the usual band business to attend to, such as North American tours, writing, rehearsing and recording new material, dealing with music industry types, interacting with their loyal legions of fans and escaping with their lives as their tour bus goes up in flames (seriously), well, it’s possible that that this act from eastern Ireland (that’s right), would misbehave with the best of them.

With the band having recently embarked upon another successful tour of the US, following a brief jaunt stateside earlier this year, things continue looking up for the guys. Appearances on ‘The Late Show with David Letterman’, ‘Late Night with Conan O’Brien’, ‘The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson’, as well as several radio slots and a live performance on MTV Canada added to their embryonic Stateside fame, and within days of the Letterman show in particular, US gigs started to sell out.

Their songs have been featured on hit shows such as ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ and ‘The O.C.’, and such were the audience reactions towards their guest appearances, that it’ll not be so surprising to witness Bell X1 appearing on a late night chat show near you in the coming weeks.

Having suffered several teething problems last time around, the airline misplacing their luggage and instruments, the tour bus going up in flames outside a hotel in Boston, while Noonan and Geraghty were nearby (thankfully the guys escaped unscathed), this time around, things have gone so much smoother.

With three albums; 2000’s ‘Neither Am I’, ‘Music in Mouth’ (2003) and the chart-topping ‘Flock’ (2005), behind them, the guys continue to develop their ever widening fanbase, all the while wowing the critics with their versatility.

We caught up with the band’s lead singer Paul Noonan recently, as he and the band were on their way to another sold out show in Boston.

Mike Fitzpatrick (MF): It’s been quite an eventful year for Bell X1 in the US, with appearances on Letterman, Craig Ferguson, and now an extensive tour, how’s the American adventure been going this time around?
Paul Noonan (PN): It’s taken off in a great way. Especially in New York. Back in January we played in Joe’s Pub, then in March we played the Bowery. Now we’re playing in Irving Plaza. Just how we’ve been embraced, we’ve wanted to tour the US since we started out, and the reason we’ve come back so soon is, we still have that hunger. We’re touring all over this time around. People sometimes say that the record’s over two years old in Ireland, but it’s still fresh here, people are still coming to the album, things are just starting off for us here in the US.

“Touring has given us such a good chance to see the world, especially places like Nashville, a city where so much good music has come from.”

MF: You’ve quite a following in the US, particularly in cities with strong Irish connections, such as New York and Boston. This tour, you’ll be taking in Maryland, West Virginia and Nashville, Tennessee, what does that hold in store for the band?
PN: We’re really looking forward to it. Hopefully, there’ll be plenty of people there to see us. Touring has given us such a good chance to see the world, especially places like Nashville, a city where so much good music has come from.

MF: When Bell X1 started out, as all bands do, you performed many cover versions. Is there ever a time on stage where you just launch into a favorite track from your youth?
PN: Yes definitely, and we do regularly! I have a tendency to break into something, occasionally in the middle of another song. (Tracks such as) ‘Enjoy the Silence’ by Depeche Mode, ‘Boys of Summer’ by Don Henley, and sometimes Talking Heads, I really enjoy their approach to music.

MF: You mentioned the last time we spoke, that Radiohead were one of your favorite acts. How did you feel about their recent decision to allow fans to name their price for their latest album?
PN: I really loved the idea. It’s something that generated a great debate. It really questioned the whole value of music. The fact that you can still get stuff for free, it hasn’t devalued music. I admire so much what they do.

MF: Speaking of all things online, you’re quite the blogger. Is that something you enjoy doing, or is it merely part of the job?
PN: It’s something I enjoy, I enjoy writing, and knowing that there’s an audience for it. It makes me feel as if I’ve enjoyed a tour, writing about it afterwards.

MF: After you’ve completed a tour, or a series of recording sessions, what happens when you return home to Dublin?
PN: Well, we never really switch off. It’s great in a way, it’s not that type of job. We’re always writing or recording. It’s what we want to do, what we’ve always wanted to do.

MF: How is the Irish music scene these days, is it an exciting time for new artists?
PN: It’s always been good, there are great things happening (there). Lots of bands are creating great music. There’s Cathy Davey (for example), who’s got a fantastic record out, so hopefully it’ll happen for her. In New York City, we have Gemma Hayes supporting us, she played with us as far back as 1999 in Dublin, and I play drums for her on occasion.

Phil Coulter

Thursday, November 20th, 2014

Tranquility Before The Thunder Arrives

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Phil Coulter’s not prepared to simply sit on his laurels

An Exclusive Interview With Derry-Born Singer/Songwriter Phil Coulter

By Mike Fitzpatrick

Phil Coulter, the County Derry-born songwriter and musician, is something of a busy individual these days. For a man who has witnessed his songs recorded by Elvis Presley and Sinead O’Connor, produced material by Van Morrison, and written dozens of chart-topping singles and albums in Ireland and the UK, one would think that he’d done enough to perhaps, sit back and rest upon his achievements for a time.

Seemingly not, for Mr. Coulter, the man who wrote classic songs such as his ode to Derry, ‘The Town I Loved So Well’, the tear-jerking ballad about a son with Down’s Syndrome, ‘Scorn Not His Simplicity’, and the Irish rugby team’s anthem, ‘Ireland’s Call’, 2008 could well be one of his biggest years to date.

With the release of a new CD (‘Timeless Tranquility’) and DVD (‘Tranquility Classics’), both on Shanachie Entertainment, Coulter is also to embark upon his first US tour in seven years, as well as star as the music director for the eagerly-anticipated PBS special, ‘Celtic Thunder’, the all-male follow-up to the hugely successful ‘Celtic Woman’ extravaganza, which is to tour the US later this year.

Despite this seemingly hectic schedule, Mr. Coulter took a little time out to chat with The Irish Examiner prior to his trip to the US.

Mike Fitz (MF): You grew up in a house filled with music, was there any one point where you decided that music was where your future would lie?
Phil Coulter (PC): Well, neither of my folks were professional. My dad played the fiddle, jigs and reels, and mum played the piano, normally in a different key, both of them enjoyed it though! Whenever there was a big night in Derry as kids, it was normally at our house!

MF: Can you remember the first time you heard somebody else perform a song which you’d written?
PC: I can, but I can also remember hearing a truck driver singing one of my songs! The Capital Showband, the lead singer was Butch Moore. For rag week at university, someone wanted to write a student song. I was the man, and wrote it, a pal recorded it in our little makeshift studio, it was a great time. Butch then went on to sing ‘Foolin’ Time’, and I thought things couldn’t get any better. Then when I wrote ‘Puppet On A String’, I was driving in London, and got stuck in traffic. The song had been number one in the charts and when I heard a truck driver whistling it, I wanted to jump out of the car and shout ‘I wrote that!’ You never forget that.

MF: How do you feel about the current Irish music scene?
PC: There are fads and fashions, but good songs always sustain. If there are no good songs coming through, then the music business is in bad shape. There are enough good people in the Irish scene, a new breed of songwriter, some of whom are particularly good. I hope that they can extend their appeal outside Ireland.
You can do the circuit in Ireland, but Irish acts need to find success in the UK, US and Europe, outside the comfort zone. I think Ireland has always come up with songwriters. Real songs, with longevity. If a song stays important for forty years, then it’s a real song. Songwriters such as Jimmy Kennedy (Omagh-born writer of dozens of popular hits) and Van Morrison, Phil Lynnott, the U2 boys, and a handful of (the most recent generation of singers) such as Damien Rice, and David Gray, even though he’s not Irish, we discovered him first! A lot of people inherited a talent, it’s in our genes. Ireland is full of talented people, if you’ve got talent, that’s an obligation to work at it.
Talent itself isn’t going to buy you success, learn your craft, some Irish people fall down, because of the hard work.

MF: You wrote, ‘Ireland’s Call’, the now famous Irish rugby anthem, can you tell me what goes through your mind when hearing that sung by sixty thousand fans at a match?
PC: It’s one of those things you can’t qualify in dollars and cents. Some songs were successful, and I’d my fair share of high-selling songs. Others though, can’t really compare. Like ‘The Town I Loved So Well’, hearing it at protest marches, or other highly charged songs. You get it that this is more than just a pop song. When Bill Clinton came to Derry, who would have thought that he’d specifically ask me to perform (that song). It was just one of those moments, you’d never have thought of it growing up. ‘Ireland’s Call’ was never at any stage meant to replace ‘Amhrain na bhFiann’. It was thought that (the rugby team) needed a sporting song, a song in a rugby context, which could be sung by supporters and players from both sides of the border. I was flattered to be asked to write it. After I finished the song, there was opposition, there always will be. In the early days, there was opposition, conspiracy theorists who felt we wanted ‘Amhrain na bhFiann’ out. On the day we beat Ireland at Croker (Croke Park), there was a respectful silence during the English anthem, then for ‘Ireland’s Call’, the place erupted. The begrudgers were put in their place that day.

MF: You’ve a TV special to be aired on American screens coming up, can you tell me something about that?
PC: Well, it was a pretty massive undertaking, particularly creatively. It took most of last year, and most my energies, to create. It came about when Sharon Browne, the creator of ‘Celtic Woman’, contacted me. We’d been friends for a long time, and have worked together before. She talked with me about getting involved with ‘Celtic Woman’, and I had no interest in that. It really wasn’t my cup of tea, I’d thought that the whole Celtic thing was all over, but that goes to show how much I know! She talked to me about a PBS project, one that would involve guys, something of a male special. I thought it’d be like a ‘Celtic Woman’ in trousers, so I said count me out! But (I told her that) if it were to be a really masculine and dynamic (idea) with five real guys, real men, singing a range of dramatic, authentic, powerful, irresistible songs about all the things a Celtic man should be, then I’m your man.

MF: Tell us about how you decided upon who to cast for ‘Celtic Thunder’.
PC: We searched for unknown people. We had open auditions, which is a really tough way of casting, and held them in Dublin. They seemed to attract every headbanger and lounge lizard, I often felt like we should have been calling the Gardai! We wound up with some very strong personalities. We’ve Damien McGinty, a 14-year-old from Derry, Keith Harkan, a 21-year-old from Donegal. He looks like a movie star, the camera loves this kid, he’s also a very good singer and guitarist. Then there’s Ryan Kelly, from Tyrone, he’s a Queens University graduate, and is passionate about his music. There’s Dubliner Paul Byrom, an exciting young tenor, and George Donaldson (40), he’s a big guy, looks like a security type, he’s been singing for many years. We’ve a 50-city tour of the US starting in October, and we’ll include many old songs and some new material, there’ll be something for everyone.

MF: What about your own US tour, your first such venture in several years?
PC: Yes, it’s my first in six years. I’ve been talking about it for eighteen months or more. I’m really looking forward to it. It wasn’t a conscious decision to avoid America, it’s just that with other writing, television work etc, a year became two years, and so on.