A Chat With: Pa Sheehy

Cuan Dingle have announced three live-stream concerts from the Dingle Hub on the 30th – 31st of October. The series is an online celebration of artists based on the Dingle Peninsula and features Dréimire, Dairena Ní Chinnéide, Niamh Varian Barry, Gerry O’Beirne, Billy Mag Fhloinn, Maggie Breen, Pa Sheehy and Julie Jay over the two days. Tickets priced at €10 are on sale now from https://tvlive.ie/. Each concert will run for 1 hour, featuring one music act (45 minute live performance) and one non-music act (15 minute pre-recorded segment).

I caught up with singer-songwriter Pa Sheehy who will be performing on part three of the event on Sunday to talk about the livestream, his new EP ‘The Art Of Disappearing’, and his first solo tour. 

At 9 pm on Sunday Pa Sheehy will perform followed by one of the most exciting new voices on the Irish comedy scene, comedian Julie Jay. The performances will take place in the Dingle Hub which overlooks the beautiful Dingle Marina. The Dingle Hub has a strong creative connection to the community on the Dingle Peninsula. The concerts will highlight the incredible views of the Dingle Marina with a multi-camera production, paired with the highest professional sound and lighting. Being part of the Corca Dhuibhne Gaeltacht, Cuan Dingle will also incorporate the Irish language into the series with a number of performers fluent in Irish.

“Yeah, it’s all going to be live there on Sunday night. It looks like a great set up and it’s a good lineup so yeah it will be good craic”

After a decade fronting the Irish chart-conquering Walking On Cars, Sheehy decided last July that it was time to leave the group and has released his own music and EP called ‘The Art Of Disappearing’, which hit the Top 10 Irish Charts. We discussed how daunting it was for him to go solo and discover his sound outside of a band aesthetic

“ The first few months was all about taking a step back and re-evaluating everything. Then I spent an awful lot of time in the studio over the last 18 months trying to figure myself out a bit and just writing songs every day and sooner or later, it just kind of dropped. I was like okay, this is where we’re going. So what you are going to hear in the first EP is the end of my Walking On Cars, kind of vibe and a step into a new world. Then a second EP, that’s when you really get to know what I found when I sat on my own for a year, it’s more chilled out, a bit more acoustic. Yeah, it’s just a different step from Walking On Cars.”

“ I guess, every decision I had to make was just trust my gut, and sometimes I got it wrong sometimes I got it right. A prime example of that was the single, Róisín. That took me so long to finish because I was so undecided on what parts to put where. There was so much that I muted on the record in the last maybe month of making I just kind of threw everything that burst out of me onto the song and it became apparent that I had too many ideas in there. It was one of those things where I needed an outside head and I remember one day I showed the song to my sister, and she listened to it, she loved it. Then the following week, I changed a little bit and I took out the post-chorus because I felt there were way too many melodies on it, and I played it to her and she was like, man, that’s the best part of the tune, what are you doing. I was like, Okay, I needed to hear that and so I put it back in and obviously, that was a good move to actually talk to someone outside of me and get their two cents on it.”

“ It was a case that I knew it was a good song, but I didn’t know where I wanted it to end up for a long time in the process of making it. So it took me three times of recording it to finally say okay, this is the one. I went to London around this time last year, and I met up with a few producer buddies of mine. We recorded it and it just felt really flat and not what I had envisioned at all. I came home and I was gonna delete everything and start again and slowly but surely it started falling into place. Day after day I’d come back to it or I’d hear something else that was a little bit wrong. I just tweak it and eventually, it all just fell into place.”

‘The Art Of Disappearing’, is an utterly time stopping EP filled with heartfelt emotion and moving songwriting. It’s lyrically deep and personal and Sheehy explained how difficult it was to express these raw emotions.

“ To be honest, I avoided a lot of these songs for a long time. But every time I sat down with a guitar, the same themes would come up for me and that means that I need to write about this and get it off my chest and move on to something else. So yeah, the themes in the EP are pretty grim, pretty sad, pretty close to home. But I feel now that they’re written, I can move on to some more lighter subjects.”

Sheehy cements himself as a powerful and vivid songwriter in the Irish music scene with this EP. He uses expressive, eloquent lyrics that perfectly place you in the setting of the songs or depict the gripping emotions within, “Oh you know I still remember the day you chose to go. Mom was in the kitchen, saying, “now we’re on our own”.- ‘I Saw You At A Funeral’

“I don’t think that’s something you can look at while you’re writing. I just do my own thing and if people like it then great. If people acknowledged the skill in it along the way, sure, isn’t that kind of a bonus.”

“I’m not sure. I feel I’ve so much yet to prove because, obviously I left the band and it’s just only my first outing. I feel I’ve got so much work to do and so much more to prove to myself, to be honest.”

And that’s so exciting. I can’t wait for the next round of songs. I have a tour planned for next March. A couple of dates in Ireland, a couple of dates around Europe. So yeah, like you say, I get to do my own thing and there’s a magic and a freedom that I really enjoy.”

There is a cinematic quality to the EP. A fine example of this is within ‘Drop Me In The Ocean’. Sheehy creates a beautiful and mesmerising backdrop through the use of soft piano and echoed backing vocals that contrasts the tracks powerful and evocative melody. It’s quite the remarkable tune.

“ I love that song. I wrote it with a guy called Jamie Norton. He’s a UK based songwriter and he is an amazing piano player. So basically in the last year, the whole writing scene, when I got bored of myself, I was like, Okay, I need to write with some new people. Basically, everything was on Zoom. So I had a Zoom call with Jamie Norton, who I had written with before so I knew we vibed and I had this vision in my head. I’d been listening to a lot of Radiohead at the time, so I was really into, loose acoustic guitar sounds, lazy drums, really organic sounding.”

“We wrote a song and I sang it and I recorded it. I recorded the drums, the bass, the electric guitars. I had this vision for it and I was like, this is great, this is exactly what I’m going for. I sent the song to Jamie and I was like, what do you think of this?, add a few bits if you want but I think we’re on the right track. What he sent me – he took the drums out, he took the bass out, took the guitars out and he just laid down this piano for the chords that we were playing and it just gave everything the song was about a deeper meaning and a deeper feeling.”

“I was just knocked out when he sent it back, a part of me was sickened because my vision of the song was destroyed but what he had created, what he turned the song into was incredible. When he sent the piano track to me, I just started putting subtle kick drums and subtle strings on it just to move it along but it didn’t need a whole lot once the vocal and the piano were sat nicely. Then from the piano, the ‘ooh’s’ jumped out at me and I sent them back to him and he was like, ‘Yes, man, we’ve done it!’. So it was just one of those things that grew and grew and took a few turns on the way.”

A track that stands out in the EP is the nostalgic ‘The Years Never Waited’. The harmonies and sweet arrangement create a perfect hazy atmosphere. Sheehy aptly captures feelings of the sweet memories we all have that make you smile through pulsing beats and sun-speckled guitar causing the listener to reminisce on their own youth while enjoying the refined musicianship and captivating soundscapes within the track.

“I suppose it defines where I was at that time. I’m in my early 30s and as you grow up, you just lose touch with friends and you don’t hang out as much. People go off and do their own things, people move away and have families, people have busy jobs and you just don’t keep in touch as much as you’d like. This song captures that in a nostalgic way rather than a super sad way. I didn’t want the vocal to be too harsh. So what you’re hearing on the record is three different vocal styles blended into one. The harmony is very prevalent in it so yeah, I wanted it to be a smooth soft vocal and I didn’t want to go to chesty on it. I was just looking for a new style to use my voice in.”

The EP is penned in a very emotive indie, singer-songwriter style yet Sheehy slips into a soft country rock-esque tone for closing track ‘Through The Fields’. It’s a beautiful end to the EP.

“To be honest, that song was in my pocket for about five years. It was never a Walking On Cars song. So when I left, I looked at the batch of tunes that I did have that weren’t in Walking On Cars world and that was one of them and I really wanted to bring it to life. The last lyric in the song is “goodbye from me”. That’s just to say thanks for listening to EP, I’ll see you on the next one kind of thing. It just felt nice as the last tune”

Sheehy has embarked on his first tour as a solo artist playing to a sold-out Whelan’s, Dublin on the 27th October and sold out Roisin Dubh, Galway on the 28th October 2021 as well as a sold-out show at St. James Church, Dingle on the 30th October.

“Yeah, I’m loving it. We did Cork, Cyprus Avenue on Monday, and that was incredible. That was a full room it was a really nice moment. People were singing along with the EP tracks and people were really enjoying the new music. I played an hour set and all new music so I think people are just interested to see what I’ve been up to for the last 18 months. ”

‘The Art Of Disappearing’ is a heartfelt collection of tracks filled with themes of loss, nostalgia and love. The EP is a sublime and passionate display from Sheehy and boasts the artist’s melodic mastery and meaningful songwriting. His performance on the Cuan Dingle live-stream is sure to be a timeless display. Cuan Dingle have selected a diverse and entertaining lineup for this live stream event and it is one not to miss. 

Tickets for the livestream are priced at €10 and are on sale now from https://tvlive.ie/.

Stream ‘The Art Of Disappearing’ below 


Author: Danu