CMAT on her love of The Nolans, TikTok subgenres and the success of 'I Wanna Be A Cowboy, Baby'
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Feb 9, 2025
CMAT wrote one of our favourite songs of 2020 – the impossibly catchy and quite hilarious 'I Wanna Be A Cowboy, Baby'. The Forty-Five's Jen Thomas goes IN DEPTH with the Irish singer-songwriter about the song's success, her love for ABBA TikTok, musical influences and why comedy in music is sometimes a difficult thing to get right. Visit https://www.thefortyfive.com for more music interviews, reviews and playlists.
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0:04
so i'm jen thomas and today i'm having a
0:06
chat with cmat for the 45
0:08
so thank you very much for your time
0:10
today and for joining us we're going to
0:12
be having a chat about you
0:13
your music and kind of everything else
0:15
in between if that was okay with you
0:17
that is perfectly fine with me i'm ready
0:20
let's do it
0:21
i saw earlier on but some of your songs
0:23
they get put on spotify playlists
0:26
and i know you were quite pleased
0:27
earlier on because one has been added on
0:28
so there's a gay country
0:30
and i saw earlier on there was another
0:32
one that was called a garden indie
0:35
which was a new genre for me
0:38
that one didn't seem quite it's i don't
0:40
know i think i don't know about
0:43
garden indy because i don't really i
0:45
don't really i don't think i've ever
0:46
really had a garden
0:48
you know i don't really know where the
0:50
garden comes from but listen if someone
0:53
wants to listen to my music in the
0:54
garden i'm more than happy to facilitate
0:56
that it's not a problem
0:58
um but yeah the other playlist was gay
1:00
country by
1:01
it's a it's a playlist by tom ospal who
1:04
i love
1:04
so i was very excited to be added to
1:06
that and so is it
1:08
is it surreal for you sometimes to see
1:10
the names of the playlists and stuff
1:11
that you're
1:12
you'll put onto um i mean
1:15
they're all i'm starting to see a
1:17
pattern now it was definitely bizarre in
1:19
the beginning because i've been
1:21
like this like i released my first song
1:25
less than a year ago so i'm still very
1:27
fresh to everything
1:28
but like i know it now basically seems
1:31
to be
1:33
something along the lines of country
1:35
music
1:36
and stuff that is
1:40
gay and stuff that is camp
1:43
and like those are usually in the name
1:46
titles of the playlist they're like is
1:48
it camp
1:49
is it over the top is it country music
1:51
is it kind of gay
1:53
then you'll get put onto that one and
1:54
it's all good i'm happy with that
1:57
that'll do that's pretty much that'll do
1:59
like that's great
2:00
because i saw there was another tweet
2:01
that you did whereas like i'll shout out
2:03
to like the 11 people who are currently
2:05
listening to
2:05
uncomfortable christmas and that was on
2:07
like the 13th of january or something
2:10
i was kind of horrified to find out that
2:12
you can see that much information
2:14
because i've never thought of it from
2:15
the listeners point of view of like how
2:17
much
2:17
an artist knows it's like thanks for
2:20
over sharing spotify
2:22
you can see a lot of details like you
2:24
don't get to see
2:25
who is listening but it'll be like if
2:27
you click onto any of your songs
2:29
it can be like 50 people are listening
2:31
right now and then as you're looking at
2:33
it it'll bleep
2:34
and it'll go like 51 49
2:37
47 and you're like no where are they
2:39
going
2:41
and you can just watch that for hours
2:43
and you'll never get tired of it
2:44
and then yeah so basically if you if one
2:47
of your songs gets put onto
2:49
a playlist i think it could be any
2:50
playlist it could be anybody's playlist
2:52
it doesn't matter who the user is if it
2:55
gets played
2:56
more than i think 25 times in a month
2:59
you will then see the name of the
3:01
playlist
3:02
and the account that the playlist
3:04
belongs to so most of it is obviously
3:07
like you know your garden indies or the
3:08
spotify editorial playlists and stuff
3:10
like that or maybe
3:12
you know a festival account you're
3:14
playing the festival you know that's
3:15
awful
3:16
but then you go down and there's just
3:18
someone who clearly
3:19
it's like it's just their personal it's
3:22
their personal playlist
3:24
and you're like oh you've listened to my
3:26
song
3:27
105 times in the last 28 days
3:31
and it's like some guy called paul and
3:33
i'm like oh paul
3:34
how are you doing how are you how are
3:36
you keeping buddy is everything okay at
3:38
home
3:38
it's usually not but uh like i really
3:42
appreciate those playlist editions more
3:45
than the other ones because i'm just
3:46
like this is this means something
3:48
like this a heartbreak track or
3:52
something it really is like is
3:54
everything okay
3:55
are you alright listening to this on
3:58
repeat and some people
4:00
there's some people as well who just
4:02
will have a playlist called cmat
4:05
and they just have my four songs on it
4:07
and again it's like a personal
4:09
it's just a personal account so so some
4:12
woman called claire
4:13
and she's got just to see matt win and
4:15
it's like the four singles are on it
4:18
and she's listened to everything at
4:19
least 50 times in the last 28 days and
4:21
i'm like girl what's going on with you
4:23
like let's have a lovely time
4:26
plenty of people are now gonna be
4:28
sitting there going what have i been
4:30
listening to
4:31
and do these artists know about it now
4:33
like i definitely had a moment where you
4:34
think oh okay
4:36
yeah but it's nice you know because the
4:39
only thing you can see
4:40
is how many times someone has listened
4:42
to something you don't get to see where
4:43
they listen to it
4:44
although i'd be very curious about that
4:46
too yeah
4:48
they could just lift the lid on that
4:50
gdpr and show me exactly where
4:52
and every single person that is exactly
4:54
listening to it i just want to know the
4:56
circumstances it would be good for my
4:57
craft
4:58
to know and you mentioned about first
5:01
releasing
5:01
your song a year ago obviously it's a
5:03
very strange time to be releasing music
5:06
with the pandemic and everything that
5:07
has then
5:08
happened uh i mean obviously it isn't
5:10
how you would have liked things to have
5:12
gone most musicians would have liked to
5:13
have been touring for
5:14
the whole of the last year kind of what
5:17
are your hopes and ambitions
5:19
for this year would you want to release
5:20
more music work on an album what would
5:22
you like to do
5:24
um i am going to be releasing more music
5:27
this year
5:27
um i'm not sure what form and i'm
5:30
actually currently
5:32
writing my album or i'm finishing off
5:34
the writing of my album at the moment
5:36
and i have absolutely no idea when it
5:38
will come out or what form
5:40
it's going to take or what shape it's
5:42
going to take it can't give you any
5:43
details
5:44
but i like i have a i pretty much know
5:46
what i'm doing for the next like
5:48
two years because i'm quite well i'm not
5:51
organized but
5:51
you know my my music organizes itself
5:55
almost
5:56
uh because i need to be done with
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certain topics and certain themes i'm
6:00
like i need to
6:01
get this particular problem that i have
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in my head
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i need to get this out of my system by
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like this time otherwise i'll go
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absolutely insane so i have to just like
6:11
write the songs and then see which of
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them are good
6:13
um but yeah so i'm writing the right in
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the first
6:16
album now but uh yeah it's exciting
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but also terrifying terrifying and where
6:22
do your country influences come from
6:25
oh um from my childhood i would say
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uh like i i i've said this before
6:33
but i think when i was a kid i think i
6:36
heard about
6:37
dolly parton before i heard of her or
6:40
heard like her music and stuff like i
6:43
think i just heard someone describe like
6:45
oh
6:46
it's like a woman she's really funny
6:48
she's really nice
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she's got really big boobs and she
6:51
writes all her own songs
6:53
and she writes lots of songs for other
6:54
people and she also wears like 75 layers
6:58
of makeup
6:58
like i think i just heard about that
7:00
when i was really young and i was like
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oh
7:03
it's like all of that
7:06
and then you know dolly is kind of just
7:09
a jumping off point then
7:10
into getting into more niche corners of
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country music
7:13
and i definitely did that you know um i
7:16
don't know if it was dolly parton
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i think dolly parton was kind of my
7:19
springboard to everything because i got
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really into her
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and then however it happened i ended up
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really getting into the white stripes
7:27
because of dolly parton
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don't ask me how it happened when i was
7:30
12. they didn't did
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kylie didn't they yes and i think that's
7:34
i think i might have
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when i was a kid i think i accidentally
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downloaded
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the white stripes cover of jolene
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off wire thinking that it was the dolly
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parton vision and then i got stuck
7:47
with it and i was like this is terrible
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this isn't like dolly parton at all and
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then i ended up listening to it like 10
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times and i was like oh i actually love
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this
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so then for me as a kid it was kind of
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like trying to bridge the gap between
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like dolly park and the white stripes
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and like filling in all the blanks in
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between
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and i feel like the blanks in between
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are extremely special because you kind
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of go into like
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the like early 70s
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freak folk artists who in my opinion
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like predominantly women songwriters
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that kind of encapsulated that whole
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scene like vashti bunyan and
8:21
[Music]
8:23
linda pearhacks and um
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i mean i guess you could say like dory
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previn and stuff so there's a lot of
8:30
these
8:30
those on judy still judy cell's like my
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number one so there's all these artists
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that are kind of in the middle
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of those two as well and then you know
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all the other
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massive women country writers and
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performers from the 70s like loretta
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lynn
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and tammy wynette and tommy weiner is
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very very
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special to me um so yeah i think it's
8:53
just the honesty
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it's just very honest it's very honest
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music
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like with your talking about like dolly
9:00
obviously writing for other people and
9:02
with you with co-writing and songwriting
9:05
do you enjoy that just as much as
9:07
writing your own songs is it something
9:09
that you want to carry on doing more of
9:11
are you wanting to focus on your own
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things now
9:14
i think i need to do both to be honest i
9:16
don't think
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either is more important than the other
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like i think writing songs for myself
9:22
is very important from like um a mental
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perspective because there's there's
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topics that i have to get rid of
9:29
in my head like you know emotional
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things that i kind of have to get rid of
9:32
through songs
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but then with the co-writing it's really
9:36
important for me
9:37
to develop my craft and the only way
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that you can properly develop
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your songwriting craft i believe is by
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working with other people and learning
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to work with other people and taking
9:48
other people's expertise on
9:50
board and you know learning their tricks
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and learning
9:54
you know if you're in a co-writing
9:56
session with someone and you're like
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i love this and they're like i hate this
10:00
and you're like
10:00
why do you hate this that doesn't make
10:02
any sense and they will always
10:04
methodically explain to you why
10:05
you hate that thing and at least then
10:08
you'll either know oh
10:09
maybe i was wrong or they're completely
10:12
wrong but each of those is still a
10:13
process so i really love it i just love
10:17
color writing i love
10:18
writing with other people in mind
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because it just takes you know
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it it takes one element of songwriting
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for myself out which is like
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making it all about me it's like
10:28
actually learning to use my skills for
10:30
the betterment of others
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you know and it's fun it's fun
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i love having fun it does sound like
10:37
songwriting is a cathartic process for
10:39
you as you say like you're wanting to
10:41
get this songwriting done to get that
10:42
out of your head so you can move on and
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do something else and
10:46
with the nature of some of your music
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there is like the themes of heartbreak
10:49
and loneliness and sadness but then
10:51
there's this veneer of
10:53
humor and the comic side of it so is
10:56
that something that you go into
10:57
intentionally or is it just how you are
11:00
as a person and that's how it comes out
11:02
in the songs
11:03
i think it's just who i am to be honest
11:06
with you like it's not
11:08
it's actually it's something that i'm
11:09
trying not to do
11:11
both in my songs and in real life and i
11:14
will eventually move away
11:16
i think from that kind of songwriting
11:19
for myself because
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it is just a defense mechanism and it is
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just like a buffer zone
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it's like ah i can't really be sad if
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i'm like telling you all these jokes and
11:29
ah
11:30
but um you know and that's something i
11:32
do in real life as well like i i'm like
11:35
like people in relationships like i
11:38
have often been described as like the
11:40
man of the relationship because i refuse
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to talk about my feelings
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like i re like point blank reviews and
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like i'll talk to my friends about it
11:48
and stuff but like
11:48
like you know when you're really close
11:50
with someone they're like how are you
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i'm like i'm
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great i'm having a great time there's
11:55
annoying rock i'm absolutely doing great
11:57
i'm trying actively to stop doing that
12:00
because it doesn't serve anybody
12:02
it's bad for everyone involved unless
12:05
you break down the walls a bit
12:06
and actually give the answer going no
12:08
they do want to know like
12:10
they just don't just want a joke or like
12:12
some quip or something instead
12:15
yeah but also irish people
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that's just us i think as well like
12:21
we're the worst first like i
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haven't met i don't think i've met a
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single
12:26
irish family that has been untouched by
12:29
like
12:30
the damages of humor and like whis
12:34
and like oh it's gonna be fine don't
12:36
worry about it let's just have a new
12:37
like listen up it doesn't matter that
12:39
everything's going wrong we'll just move
12:42
booze our waitress sing a few songs like
12:44
do dance oh sure don't even
12:45
like i don't think i've met a single
12:47
family that has not been
12:50
like badly affected by that mentality so
12:53
it is yeah i do i do like it though
12:55
because it is entertaining
12:57
and entertainment is very important so
13:00
nothing to say
13:01
sometimes uh sometimes in music comedy
13:05
can get a bad rap it can sometimes be
13:08
pigeonholed do you ever worry about that
13:10
that perhaps people won't take it
13:11
seriously and they won't listen to
13:13
the more heartfelt elements of it
13:15
because they think oh this is a fun song
13:17
about cowboys this is a song about kfc
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and they're not actually
13:20
listening to it properly yeah i like
13:23
that is that is actually a common enough
13:25
problem like
13:26
um i know like there's a couple of
13:30
journalists at the moment um
13:34
who seem to keep going for the likes of
13:36
like
13:37
phoebe bridgers and stuff for this exact
13:40
reason
13:40
and where it's like using comedy as a
13:43
buffer as a
13:44
whatever but i just i i honestly think
13:47
that if someone listens to my music
13:51
and they don't get both sides of it
13:54
where they don't see the sadness
13:56
and the humor if they're not
13:58
experiencing both things then it's
13:59
probably just not for them
14:01
and i don't really mind then it's like i
14:04
think if you didn't grow up with that
14:05
kind of a
14:06
brain or if you didn't grow up in a
14:08
situation where you really really
14:10
depended on humor to get you through it
14:12
if you didn't have like you know some
14:14
kind of
14:14
bad situation or you know
14:18
you know if you weren't bullied or if
14:20
you didn't have anything bad happen to
14:21
you when you were younger
14:23
it's the kind of thing where maybe it
14:24
just isn't for you maybe this isn't your
14:26
type of copy mechanism maybe this just
14:28
isn't how you
14:29
have to see the world in order to get
14:30
through it but a lot of people
14:32
do have to see the world in that way in
14:35
order to get through it and i think my
14:36
music is for them
14:38
you know and when i don't when was it
14:41
that you first thought oh actually i can
14:43
make a go of this like i can
14:44
release the songs i can do this properly
14:47
when was that that you started taking it
14:48
seriously as a career option
14:52
well it's like i was in i was in a band
14:55
when i was
14:56
younger but when i was in that band i
14:59
had a
14:59
i had a bandmate who i would have kind
15:03
of been collaborating with sometimes
15:05
on the writing and he was really like
15:09
let's take the humor out of it like
15:11
because i can think i was always kind of
15:12
writing jokes and stuff
15:13
into the songs just because i really
15:15
like writing jokes as well
15:17
um and i was trying to kind of weave
15:19
them together
15:20
and the kind of attitude was like it's
15:23
not a joke like you have to take it
15:24
seriously and
15:26
so then when i try to do but music by
15:29
myself
15:30
um i just did what i wanted to do and i
15:33
don't think
15:34
i don't think i even now take music
15:36
seriously as a career option like i
15:38
really don't
15:39
kind of just like oh let's see what
15:41
happens like i just kind of
15:42
i just roll around i just i'm always
15:44
like yeah i'm probably gonna have no
15:46
fixed abode for like six months
15:48
and just like roam around write my
15:50
little songs and then i'll probably have
15:51
to go back to working in the bloody
15:53
super value but like it's grand like who
15:55
cares
15:56
you know i don't yeah i don't think i
15:57
take music seriously it's a career
15:59
option
16:01
now that i think of it i'm like ah this
16:02
will last about six months
16:04
just bring it we'll see what happens
16:06
anything else would be a pleasant
16:07
surprise
16:08
like you're going oh that's good people
16:09
are listening to it oh you want more
16:11
oh lovely like it is kind of always a
16:14
pleasant surprise like i was just like
16:16
oh
16:17
like someone's like i love your cowboy
16:18
song really
16:20
oh that's mad
16:25
i wrote that for me i mean it does seem
16:28
anything goes at the moment in this
16:30
pandemic in this time like with the
16:32
whole sea
16:32
shanties thing on tick tock like it
16:34
seems the more niche the better you're
16:36
like see shanties cowboys we are loving
16:39
it
16:40
i love the sea shanties i love them i
16:42
could list i could listen to it all day
16:44
that song it's so good yeah everything
16:47
will go
16:48
you know it it does feel like people i
16:51
mean obviously tick tock has kind of
16:52
taken off particularly over the panda
16:54
but loads of people were downloading it
16:56
it was huge anyway but it seems like
16:58
because people are spending so much more
16:59
time at home
17:00
uh they're using it i know that you use
17:02
it as well and you've had lots of fans
17:04
all over the world not just
17:05
the uk and an island um things like the
17:09
sea shanties there are things with like
17:11
cowboys there's lots of women riding
17:13
horses and stuff it does seem like
17:15
the niches do particularly well are you
17:18
finding that your songs are kind of
17:20
translating well on there
17:22
um i i don't really know the answer
17:25
to that i don't know if my songs are
17:27
translating well or if they're not
17:29
but i think i think the internet age
17:34
has basically made the idea of a niche
17:37
redundant if that's a bit of a funky
17:40
thing to say i don't know but it kind of
17:42
feels like
17:43
you know beforehand maybe 20 years ago
17:47
if you were into something if you were
17:48
into country and western music
17:50
you had to work very very hard and look
17:53
for a very very long time to find
17:55
other people who are into that unless
17:57
you're like in texas but if you're in
17:58
ireland or if you're in london
18:00
if you wanted to if you were really into
18:02
cowboys and country and western culture
18:04
you would take a lot to find people who
18:06
shared your interests but
18:08
now it's just like you know you have
18:11
stan twitter and you have stan tick talk
18:13
and
18:14
all these like there's like i'm obsessed
18:17
with on tick tock i follow
18:18
this group of like teenagers and like
18:22
young adults who are just obsessed with
18:25
abba like these are like 17 year old
18:27
girls
18:28
who cook their hair themselves to look
18:30
like ignata
18:32
and they're all friends with each other
18:33
and they're all pen pals and they all
18:35
talk to each other all the time and they
18:36
like collab in each other's videos even
18:38
though they've never met in real life
18:40
and because of that it's just like
18:42
growing into a full community it's a
18:44
full-blown community whereas beforehand
18:46
it would just be like oh
18:49
that girl in the village who's a weirdo
18:51
because she's absolutely absolutely lava
18:53
and has no friends as a result
18:55
like no that girl does have friends yeah
18:57
um
18:58
so i think it's actually become a thing
19:01
where niches are cool because they're
19:03
harder to come by because everyone's
19:05
into everything now because we all just
19:07
have all information from the beginning
19:09
of time to the end of time at our
19:10
fingertips
19:12
for better for worse who knows but like
19:14
yeah
19:15
so i i understand why cowboy culture is
19:18
popular
19:18
now like i do and i'm the same with the
19:21
sea shanties like anything that seems
19:23
unusual
19:24
people will just flock to it in the hope
19:25
of finding you know
19:27
a new untouched community i guess but
19:30
you know
19:31
well i think as well as the sea shanties
19:33
another one i kept saying was the um
19:35
the pirates the bisexual pirates where
19:37
they're all dressing as captains and
19:39
things and
19:40
setting it to some of the sea shanties
19:42
and it's like it's great that people are
19:44
having this freedom because i mean i'm
19:45
in my mid-30s and you look back even
19:47
20 years ago and people weren't that
19:50
accepting about different identities and
19:52
genders and sexualities and things and
19:54
now people are being able to be
19:55
completely who they want on their tick
19:57
tock if they want to be a bisexual
19:58
pirate and
19:59
dress as a captain then people are going
20:01
yeah great here are some people that are
20:02
into that
20:04
and they should because the bisexual
20:06
pirates movement
20:07
is just so gloriously beautiful in every
20:10
which way possible
20:11
like it is you're right this thing of
20:13
like
20:14
you know people wouldn't have been able
20:16
to find
20:18
a community very easily like 20 years
20:21
ago for whatever their thing is
20:22
particularly particularly
20:24
you know gay people always had to live
20:26
in the city that was just always the
20:28
thing they had to as soon as they
20:30
came of age they would just have to go
20:31
to london or new york or somewhere
20:33
big and populous in the in the hope of
20:36
just
20:36
being able to grab on to other people
20:38
who are in that community whereas now
20:40
you've got all these teenagers in the
20:42
middle of nowhere
20:43
who are like i'm bisexual and a pirate
20:46
and i'm gonna dress up as one
20:48
and i was just like yeah go for it sure
20:50
why not
20:51
nobody cares anymore like you just do
20:53
whatever you want to do
20:54
and it's i you know that is also as a
20:57
result of the internet i think the kind
20:58
of acceptance
20:59
like people are not only not only living
21:02
in their sexuality but they're just
21:04
taking the piss out of it
21:05
which i really really respond to and i
21:08
really uh really identify with like you
21:10
should just take the piss
21:11
out of sexuality because it's a joke and
21:14
let's talk about your love for the
21:15
nolans
21:16
i know you've had some messages from
21:18
them and like tweeting about them that
21:20
must be very surreal as well you're like
21:22
thank you internet for bringing me to
21:24
the nolans
21:25
if i was a 16 year old girl on tick-tock
21:28
today i would be
21:30
on nolan's tick tock like if that was
21:32
the thing
21:33
if it wasn't already a thing i would
21:34
have made it
21:36
i would have started it i might still
21:38
start it who's to say
21:39
i just i just adore them
21:43
i just absolutely adore them i think
21:45
they're so
21:46
i just think they're so wildly
21:48
underrated even now
21:49
even with the internet and even with me
21:52
like banging down people's doors to get
21:54
them to listen to the nolans and like
21:56
you know previously i actually i did an
22:00
interview with them a girl
22:03
a couple of weeks ago and when she
22:05
published the interview she was like
22:07
she did a tagline underneath where she
22:08
was like i just want to say that one of
22:10
the first times that they ever met kyra
22:12
was about seven years ago
22:14
and i don't think she remembers this but
22:16
she sat on my balcony for like two hours
22:18
and gave me an entire oral history of
22:20
the nose
22:23
and she's like so it's just so nice to
22:25
see where it's come and i was like oh my
22:27
god
22:28
like i've been doing this for years i've
22:29
been cornering people at house parties
22:31
for years and been like
22:32
would you like to talk about our lord
22:34
and savior than all and sisters because
22:35
i'm ready to do it
22:36
and so it's it's just so heartwarming
22:40
every time and they're all very active
22:42
online i should say like they're very
22:44
they're very with online and like i just
22:47
get little messages all the time like
22:48
little messages of support every time i
22:50
release something they're like listen to
22:52
this and i'm like oh i love them so much
22:55
i just love them i just want to be them
22:57
like in every way
22:58
i would be there would be to tour with
23:00
that
23:01
to do with you you can
23:05
even be in the presence of them because
23:06
i still haven't met any of them in real
23:08
life because this has all obviously
23:09
happened through lockdown
23:11
so the goal is um whenever we're allowed
23:14
go to hairdressers again
23:15
i'm just going to bring in a picture of
23:17
linda nolan and be like just do this to
23:19
me
23:20
i actually before lockdown happened i
23:22
had an appointment scheduled with a
23:23
hairdresser where i literally just
23:24
showed her loads of pictures of the
23:25
nolans
23:26
and i was like i want this and then by
23:28
the time the appointment came
23:31
the hairdresser's closed down so i've
23:32
been like attempting it myself but i
23:34
can't get it all the way around at the
23:35
back
23:36
so i'm like waiting i'm getting my hair
23:38
cut exactly like the nolan's like i
23:40
can't even stress how much i want to be
23:42
them and get my hair couldn't exactly
23:43
like them
23:44
i'm gonna get an outfit tailored that's
23:46
like taken from one of their music
23:47
videos i've already been speaking to a
23:49
dressmaker about this this is very real
23:52
and then i'm just gonna just walk around
23:53
like that i guess for the rest of my
23:55
life because i just want to view them so
23:56
badly that sounds good to me
23:58
that sounds like a plan that's something
24:00
to aim for so we can manifest this now
24:02
that by the time lockdown is over gonna
24:05
meet up with the nolans have your
24:06
haircut
24:07
have the outfit i'm sure they would love
24:08
it i'm gonna turn up in nolan's cosplay
24:13
like move over cowboys it's all about
24:16
the nolans now we're gonna be dressed
24:17
like that and yeah they'd love it i'm
24:19
sure they'd be thrilled
24:20
they would they're wait they're
24:22
expecting it at this point i think
24:24
they'd be disappointed if you don't now
24:26
that you've said it yeah and we've got
24:27
it recorded you're gonna have to do it
24:29
now there's no backing out of it
24:31
pretty much pretty much now your song
24:34
was featured on
24:35
the 45s tracks of the year list was it a
24:37
surprise to see it get picked up by so
24:39
many places
24:40
and is that a pleasant surprise for you
24:44
it was actually lovely uh for the 45
24:47
list i remember specifically
24:48
because it was a very definitive list of
24:51
like
24:52
these are our favorite songs of the year
24:54
and it wasn't just like
24:56
you know because it's one thing not to
24:59
not to discredit
25:00
kind of um any irish blogs or anything i
25:04
think they're all amazing
25:05
but you know a lot of the time i was
25:07
just kind of getting put onto
25:09
the best irish songs of the year like
25:11
beth irish songs of the year which is
25:12
great because there's so much amazing
25:14
music coming out of ireland don't get me
25:15
wrong but it's still a smaller pool
25:17
whereas the 45 was such a diverse list
25:20
and it was all over the place and i was
25:21
still on it and i was really chuffed
25:23
with it i was really really touched by
25:25
it
25:25
so like it you know there was no reason
25:27
for them to put me on other than they
25:29
just really liked the song
25:30
basically so that was really that was
25:31
really nice um
25:33
but it is kind of wild to see the legs
25:37
that cowboy in particular has grown um
25:40
because that was in my mind when we were
25:42
releasing it that was like my dodgy song
25:45
i was like i don't know i was like i
25:47
don't know how anyone's gonna
25:48
deal with this you know because it was
25:52
really
25:52
it was my most on the nose like country
25:55
song
25:56
not just not obviously just lyrically
25:57
but actually musically i kind of was
26:00
like i want this to sound like
26:01
a glenn campbell song with just you know
26:04
a lot of the real on the nose country
26:05
elements
26:07
kind of paired back a little bit but i'm
26:09
still going to have all these mad
26:10
layered vocals that are really
26:11
reminiscent of like wrecking crew stuff
26:14
um and people just really loved it and
26:17
it still boggles my mind
26:21
i just i don't really understand i do
26:24
understand but also i don't like i'm
26:27
like i know why i wrote the song and i
26:29
know why i think the song is good but i
26:30
just didn't think other people were
26:31
gonna feel like that about it
26:33
so it's really nice i don't really know
26:35
how to react to stuff like that because
26:36
i'm always just like what's going on
26:39
just going to be pleased i'm just going
26:40
to roll with it and see what happens
26:43
yeah yeah it's amazing though it's
26:46
amazing
26:47
so chuffed well thank you very much for
26:49
your time today good luck with writing
26:50
the rest of the album
26:52
and fingers crossed more's going to
26:53
happen this year and you get to meet the
26:54
nolans and get your haircut
26:57
that's my only priority is getting a
26:59
haircut and meeting the nolans and it
27:01
has to happen in that order because if i
27:03
turn up
27:04
and meet the nolans and my hair is not
27:06
looking good
27:07
then they will probably harass me over
27:09
it and they'll be right too
27:11
so yeah thank you so much
27:21
you
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