Showing posts with label Cathy Davey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cathy Davey. Show all posts

The Cathy Davey Podcast [2010]

After releasing one of the Irish albums of the decade, no one expected Cathy Davey to be dropped by her record label. Ahead of the release of her third and most implicitly personal album ever, she spoke to Andrew Hamilton about getting over her musical embarrassment and being forced to really sing for her supper.

The gloves have finally come off. After eight years of writing very personal yet heavy veiled music, Cathy Davey has found a way to be herself. While the confidence garnered from the success of Tales of Silversleeve was certainly a help in this new awakening, more important was her new method, or even the concept, behind the making of this album. Make no mistake, Cathy Davey’s third album, The Nameless - due for release this week - is a concept album. While concept albums have often been used as a means for the artist to take an alternative look at the world, the journey of this record is one of self-discovery, of finding a way of describing what in the past has remained, well, nameless. “I think I’ve always been personal [as a songwriter] but I probably didn’t have as much experience. Interesting things happen as you get older and it would be a shame not to be as candid as you can be. With this record, I was able to get past my own censorship because of the theme of ‘The Nameless’ which I had running through it. The Nameless is the woman in these songs and she is always an exaggerated version of me. So whatever I was going through, I was able to multiply it by 10 in order to go along with her story,” she says. 

The Cathy Davey Podcast

CPI Archive 2008: Changing lanes Shy, modest and unassuming - Cathy Davey is the most unlikely of superstars. She chats to Andrew Hamilton about conquering her crowd fears, speaking from the heart and finding a brand new approach to making music.

IT’S NEVER been easy for Cathy Davey. As one of music’s most shy performers she has had to force herself every step of the way - and success, when it came, came only after a fight. Though critically praised, her 2004 debut Something Ilk, never really managed to make the cash registers ring. There were many, even in those early days, who thought that we might have heard the last of Cathy Davey. But those people were wrong, and after Tales of Silversleeve became the Irish album of 2007, there were few who could begrudge it. Mission accomplished, hard work rewarded. So, after waiting five long years to catch the public eye, why then would she choose to suddenly change lanes and take a different tack? The answer, quite simply, is that that’s what artists do. Once one challenge is overcome, the buzz is gone and the time is ripe for something new. Over the next two month Cathy Davey will be playing a number of Bare Bones gigs in tiny venues all over the country. The idea is to challenge herself in stages, to give herself no place to hide, to crank the emotional resonance up a notch or two. And so far at least, it’s working. “There is a lot of material that doesn’t really suit the bigger gigs where people expect a more raucous sort of night, so I’m very much trying to get into the performance side of gigging. I spent so many years not enjoying being on stage and now I’m starting to enjoy it and see what it is to sing these songs and especially in the small venues," she said.