In Conversation With Declan O'Rourke

Published: April 18, 2021, 1 p.m.

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From his debut album, Since Kyabram (2004), the County Galway-based artist has been praised by songwriting and media figures such as John Prine (\\u201ca great songwriter\\u201d), Edith Bowman (\\u201cSince Kyabram is an album I will listen to for the rest of my life\\u201d) and Paul Weller (\\u201che writes the sort of classic songs that people don\\u2019t write anymore, songs that sound like they\\u2019ve been around forever\\u201d). His work, meanwhile, has been covered by an array of world-class artists, including Christy Moore, Camille O\\u2019Sullivan, Eddi Reader, and Josh Groban.

O\\u2019Rourke has been crafting songs from his mid-teens, his attention snagged from the age of 13 when he was given a guitar by a priest whilst visiting Kyabram, north-central Victoria, Australia. By the time he was 24, he had returned to Ireland, landing in the middle of \\u2013 and settling comfortably into \\u2013 a fiercely creative music scene in Dublin that was the fertile breeding ground for the likes of Glen Hansard/The Frames, Paddy Casey, Gemma Hayes, Damien Rice, Lisa Hannigan, and many more.A turning point, however, was with the release of Since Kyabram, the success of which secured him a record contract with the major UK label, V2. His follow-up album, Big Bad Beautiful World (2007), effortlessly confirmed his appeal in Ireland as well as with an increasing list of well-connected advocates.

Arrivals is the new album from Declan O'Rourke. Released in April 2021, Arrivals is yet another departure. Produced by no less a figure than Paul Weller, O\\u2019Rourke remarks that the music icon \\u201cwas there every moment, before, during and long after, discussing ideas about this and that, even down to the artwork. It was hugely impressive.\\u201dIn several important ways, O\\u2019Rourke\\u2019s new, emotionally potent songs hark back to when he started out during the glory days (and nights) of Dublin\\u2019s singer-songwriter scene. The truth is he doesn\\u2019t like walking the same path over and over again. A deeper truth is that while artists need to secure themselves to their own identity, they also have to explore outside it.\\u201cIf you had a palette of different colours as a painter,\\u201d says O\\u2019Rourke, \\u201cwhy would you limit yourself to red and white?\\u201d

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