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Imagine I'm Hoping
Paddy Hanna, Irelandâs best-kept indie secret, releases his fourth studio album Imagine Iâm Hoping via Strange Brew.
There are few artists who could count Burt Bacharach and Fontaines DC amongst their fans but Paddy is one of them. The Dubliner has long eschewed passing fads in favour of timeless melodies and fine songwriting, leading indie music bible The Quietus to call him âa songwriter with a propensity for wildly infectious hooks and choruses that burrow into your brain with no intention of leaving.â
Album opener âLook For Tomorrow,â with its bright strums of guitar and Paddyâs impressive falsetto, certainly embodies this sentiment of moving on from the past. The song ends on a bombastic note, buoyed by brass fanfare; itâs a watershed moment to prepare us for the rest of Imagine Iâm Hoping.
âA Dancerâ follows with indie fervour: furiously cascading piano, sleigh bells on the chorus, and an ebullience that propels you to the dancefloor. Paddyâs delivery is whisper-soft on the classic pop tune âNew York Sidewalk,â made with the help of frequent collaborator Daniel Fox (Gilla Band).
âThe whole crux of âNew York Sidewalkâ is that things in life that happen that can be bad can become funny in later life, you know,â he explains. âSo, like, going to New York and trying to make a name for yourself out there, but instead making a tit out of yourself. But then the song ends looking back in a bit of a Hemingway situation, where youâre telling the story to someone and itâs like âIt made you laugh, saw you smiling, thatâll do.â See what I mean? Itâs about not being a victim to the past anymore.â
The record as a whole is cinematic; âSay Goodbyeâ and âYellow Buffaloâ would be right at home in a modern Western, thrumming with harmonica and rattling, Americana-inspired percussion. The jazzy âSymphony Bacalaoâ is positively vaudevillian, and Paddy shows off his unexpected sense of humour here, declaring, âOh, what a shit show!â
The much-anticipated follow-up to 2020âs The Hill, this new record has already gained early acclaim with lead single âNew York Sidewalkâ proving one jangly, jovial chord at a time that it is possible to climb the radio charts with a song that as far from generic as they come. Nialler9 wrote that it âbursts with shimmering piano notes, parps of brass and gorgeous backingâ and Stereogum speculating that the âwistful, lush song, all plinking piano and cooing background vocalsâ may be signalling a new direction for Hanna.
With a new, more optimistic Paddy Hanna now in the driving seat, 2022 may well be the year that this idiosyncratic underdog rises up to take his rightful place centre-stage.
There are few artists who could count Burt Bacharach and Fontaines DC amongst their fans but Paddy is one of them. The Dubliner has long eschewed passing fads in favour of timeless melodies and fine songwriting, leading indie music bible The Quietus to call him âa songwriter with a propensity for wildly infectious hooks and choruses that burrow into your brain with no intention of leaving.â
Album opener âLook For Tomorrow,â with its bright strums of guitar and Paddyâs impressive falsetto, certainly embodies this sentiment of moving on from the past. The song ends on a bombastic note, buoyed by brass fanfare; itâs a watershed moment to prepare us for the rest of Imagine Iâm Hoping.
âA Dancerâ follows with indie fervour: furiously cascading piano, sleigh bells on the chorus, and an ebullience that propels you to the dancefloor. Paddyâs delivery is whisper-soft on the classic pop tune âNew York Sidewalk,â made with the help of frequent collaborator Daniel Fox (Gilla Band).
âThe whole crux of âNew York Sidewalkâ is that things in life that happen that can be bad can become funny in later life, you know,â he explains. âSo, like, going to New York and trying to make a name for yourself out there, but instead making a tit out of yourself. But then the song ends looking back in a bit of a Hemingway situation, where youâre telling the story to someone and itâs like âIt made you laugh, saw you smiling, thatâll do.â See what I mean? Itâs about not being a victim to the past anymore.â
The record as a whole is cinematic; âSay Goodbyeâ and âYellow Buffaloâ would be right at home in a modern Western, thrumming with harmonica and rattling, Americana-inspired percussion. The jazzy âSymphony Bacalaoâ is positively vaudevillian, and Paddy shows off his unexpected sense of humour here, declaring, âOh, what a shit show!â
The much-anticipated follow-up to 2020âs The Hill, this new record has already gained early acclaim with lead single âNew York Sidewalkâ proving one jangly, jovial chord at a time that it is possible to climb the radio charts with a song that as far from generic as they come. Nialler9 wrote that it âbursts with shimmering piano notes, parps of brass and gorgeous backingâ and Stereogum speculating that the âwistful, lush song, all plinking piano and cooing background vocalsâ may be signalling a new direction for Hanna.
With a new, more optimistic Paddy Hanna now in the driving seat, 2022 may well be the year that this idiosyncratic underdog rises up to take his rightful place centre-stage.
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Paddy Hanna, Irelandâs best-kept indie secret, releases his fourth studio album Imagine Iâm Hoping via Strange Brew.
There are few artists who could count Burt Bacharach and Fontaines DC amongst their fans but Paddy is one of them. The Dubliner has long eschewed passing fads in favour of timeless melodies and fine songwriting, leading indie music bible The Quietus to call him âa songwriter with a propensity for wildly infectious hooks and choruses that burrow into your brain with no intention of leaving.â
Album opener âLook For Tomorrow,â with its bright strums of guitar and Paddyâs impressive falsetto, certainly embodies this sentiment of moving on from the past. The song ends on a bombastic note, buoyed by brass fanfare; itâs a watershed moment to prepare us for the rest of Imagine Iâm Hoping.
âA Dancerâ follows with indie fervour: furiously cascading piano, sleigh bells on the chorus, and an ebullience that propels you to the dancefloor. Paddyâs delivery is whisper-soft on the classic pop tune âNew York Sidewalk,â made with the help of frequent collaborator Daniel Fox (Gilla Band).
âThe whole crux of âNew York Sidewalkâ is that things in life that happen that can be bad can become funny in later life, you know,â he explains. âSo, like, going to New York and trying to make a name for yourself out there, but instead making a tit out of yourself. But then the song ends looking back in a bit of a Hemingway situation, where youâre telling the story to someone and itâs like âIt made you laugh, saw you smiling, thatâll do.â See what I mean? Itâs about not being a victim to the past anymore.â
The record as a whole is cinematic; âSay Goodbyeâ and âYellow Buffaloâ would be right at home in a modern Western, thrumming with harmonica and rattling, Americana-inspired percussion. The jazzy âSymphony Bacalaoâ is positively vaudevillian, and Paddy shows off his unexpected sense of humour here, declaring, âOh, what a shit show!â
The much-anticipated follow-up to 2020âs The Hill, this new record has already gained early acclaim with lead single âNew York Sidewalkâ proving one jangly, jovial chord at a time that it is possible to climb the radio charts with a song that as far from generic as they come. Nialler9 wrote that it âbursts with shimmering piano notes, parps of brass and gorgeous backingâ and Stereogum speculating that the âwistful, lush song, all plinking piano and cooing background vocalsâ may be signalling a new direction for Hanna.
With a new, more optimistic Paddy Hanna now in the driving seat, 2022 may well be the year that this idiosyncratic underdog rises up to take his rightful place centre-stage.
There are few artists who could count Burt Bacharach and Fontaines DC amongst their fans but Paddy is one of them. The Dubliner has long eschewed passing fads in favour of timeless melodies and fine songwriting, leading indie music bible The Quietus to call him âa songwriter with a propensity for wildly infectious hooks and choruses that burrow into your brain with no intention of leaving.â
Album opener âLook For Tomorrow,â with its bright strums of guitar and Paddyâs impressive falsetto, certainly embodies this sentiment of moving on from the past. The song ends on a bombastic note, buoyed by brass fanfare; itâs a watershed moment to prepare us for the rest of Imagine Iâm Hoping.
âA Dancerâ follows with indie fervour: furiously cascading piano, sleigh bells on the chorus, and an ebullience that propels you to the dancefloor. Paddyâs delivery is whisper-soft on the classic pop tune âNew York Sidewalk,â made with the help of frequent collaborator Daniel Fox (Gilla Band).
âThe whole crux of âNew York Sidewalkâ is that things in life that happen that can be bad can become funny in later life, you know,â he explains. âSo, like, going to New York and trying to make a name for yourself out there, but instead making a tit out of yourself. But then the song ends looking back in a bit of a Hemingway situation, where youâre telling the story to someone and itâs like âIt made you laugh, saw you smiling, thatâll do.â See what I mean? Itâs about not being a victim to the past anymore.â
The record as a whole is cinematic; âSay Goodbyeâ and âYellow Buffaloâ would be right at home in a modern Western, thrumming with harmonica and rattling, Americana-inspired percussion. The jazzy âSymphony Bacalaoâ is positively vaudevillian, and Paddy shows off his unexpected sense of humour here, declaring, âOh, what a shit show!â
The much-anticipated follow-up to 2020âs The Hill, this new record has already gained early acclaim with lead single âNew York Sidewalkâ proving one jangly, jovial chord at a time that it is possible to climb the radio charts with a song that as far from generic as they come. Nialler9 wrote that it âbursts with shimmering piano notes, parps of brass and gorgeous backingâ and Stereogum speculating that the âwistful, lush song, all plinking piano and cooing background vocalsâ may be signalling a new direction for Hanna.
With a new, more optimistic Paddy Hanna now in the driving seat, 2022 may well be the year that this idiosyncratic underdog rises up to take his rightful place centre-stage.























