The Blindboy Podcast - Glass Fascist Gasp
Episode Date: February 27, 2019I plea for the return of a decapitated corpses head and then Robbie Williams rings me on the phone . I also talk about music, specifically Michael Jackson. Bonus content, the History of the Knights Te...mplar Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You are late to Jack Charlton's birthday party you tardy Patrick's.
He has chosen not to get a cake for his birthday party but rather a giant replica of a rich tea biscuit.
He's a Calvinist and he believes that a traditional birthday cake like a Black Forest Gatot would make everybody think about wanking. So instead, we must all eat a giant rich tea biscuit
and to use its blandness to reflect upon our mortality.
And there's no knives at Jack Charton's birthday party.
Instead, for everybody to eat this giant rich tea biscuit,
we must all behave like flies
and
use the
collective saliva in our mouths
to kind of
gently lick and spit on the rich
the giant rich tea biscuit
and then everyone together
takes little bites out of it
and that's Jack Charton's birthday party
which is also a metaphor
for the Blind Boy podcast.
Welcome.
What is the crack?
You tremendous cunts.
How are you getting on?
Did you have a gentle week?
Did you have a lovely week?
The weather's picking up.
In Limerick today it was unseasonably warm.
You know?
It's February 25. February 25. The 25th of February, and it was warm,
which, see, because of global warming now, I'm kind of doubting myself, it's this new thing,
it's this new dystopian attitude towards the weather that nobody predicted in the science fiction novels like
I can't
now
truly embrace and enjoy
a lovely sunny day
because I don't know is that just
the alarm bells
for the environmental apocalypse
do you know what I mean it's like I'm out there
today down by Yorty's couch having
a run
and i'm going fuck it the first signs of spring you know it's it's warm it's humid isn't this nice
this is the first warm day that i've experienced in limerick in about three or four months isn't
this lovely and then a voice in the back of my head going but what if it's global warming what if it's supposed to be cold so that's a new a new thing in 2019 that i believe will become a trend where you can't
truly appreciate the weather because you're wondering was it this hot when i was a child
so anyway great response to last week's podcast i fucking loved making last week's podcast i
really enjoyed it it was a a boiling hot take about culture and society and i was glad to get
it out of myself um what have we got going on this week, before, obviously last week I advertised a few gigs, I have
tons of gigs coming up, live podcasts, March the, I don't know what date it is at March,
it's at the start of March anyway, and it's in Vicar Street, that's sold out, Vicar Street
is sold out, however, there are two Vicar Street dates at the start of April
I'm gonna say 5th and 6th
ok
they're not sold out please come to them
they're
the first one the 5th I think is now
almost sold out
there's gigs in Cork
there's a gig in Belfast
just look up the Blind Boy podcast
or go to last week's podcast where
I had the list of gigs in front of me and I read them out, there's podcast gigs coming
up, and I wish I was better at promoting them, so something mad happened in Dublin this week,
and it's something that really pissed me off something that infuriated me
there's a place in dublin called saint mickens church right and it's this old protestant church
and what makes saint mickens unique first off it's like a thousand years old it was a church that was it was just built
like when the Vikings were
fucking off out of Dublin
I think it's across the way
from Wood Quay
like across the way from St Mickens across the river is Wood Quay
which was the where the first kind of
Viking settlement in Dublin was
and Dublin was a Viking city
it was founded by the Vikings
in fact
the common phrase that we use,
if you spend too much on something,
and you say to somebody,
I paid through the nose,
I paid through the nose, this was really expensive.
That's like a 1200 year old expression
that has its roots in Dublin.
What the Dublin Vikings used to do is
they used to tax the native Irish and if you didn't pay the Viking tax in Dublin
1200 years ago they would cut your nose up to your eye and you'd be left with this scar
so the people of Dublin would say that person with the scar paid through the nose.
They paid a lot more.
Instead of just giving the Vikings their money.
But anyway the Vikings.
I don't know.
The Normans maybe.
The Normans fucked their shit up.
So St. Mickens Church.
Very very old church.
In Dublin.
And I visit there.
And I have been visiting there for over 10 years,
because one of Dublin's best kept secrets,
there's a crypt at the bottom of St. Mickens Church
with loads of bodies on display.
And I'm a lover of history.
I fucking adore history, as you know,
from listening to this podcast.
And I would visit St. Mickicken's church once a year anyway specifically to go and see there's the body of
first that it's how do i explain this there's an 800 year old mummy on display in the basement of St. Mickens Church.
Now when I say mummy, you're thinking Egyptian mummy.
Mummy simply means mummified.
Mummified is a word that means when something dies, the body is somehow preserved.
So 800 years ago, a chap died and was buried in saint mickens church too big for the coffin i
believe so kind of poking out of the coffin but it's a chap of about six foot four 800 years ago
and the thing with the crypt at the bottom of saint mickens church
there's many theories but one theory is that a kind of environmental anomaly occurred,
whereby the walls are made out of limestone.
So it created this incredibly, strangely dry environment.
So the crypt in St. Mickens, I won't say perfectly preserved,
but preserved the body of this man who died 800 years ago
and it's on display now it doesn't look as cold as an egyptian mummy like you know it's not wrapped
in anything this is accidental mummification um as a result of a dry environment essentially
like a type of uh like a jerky you know know, where the meat, all the moisture is taken
out of it, so it doesn't fully decompose, so this freaky looking fucking skeleton, with kind of brown
skin on it, six foot four, is there in St. Mickens, and you can go and look at it down in the crypt,
and they've always been there on display, and some fucking prick went into St. Mickens during the week,
vandalised the crypt and stole the head of this mummy
that has lain there for fucking 800 years.
Robbed the fucking head.
Some prick in Dublin has got an 800-year-old head of this mummy.
And I find that heartbreaking. I think the saint mickens mummy is
one of the best kept secrets in dublin now the head is missing um like i said like you know why
am i talking about a missing head of a fucking mummy in the podcast because i'm passionate about
it i'll give you more kind of history around it to just show you how cool and unique it is
about it i'll give you more kind of history around it to just show you how cool and unique it is like first off there's natural mummification that's incredibly rare there's a form of
mummification that happens in limerick actually when limestone like limerick has a lot of limestone
in the soil we've got hard water down here you know it's hard to if you're to wash yourself in
limerick you have to use twice as much
water to get the soap um foamy because there's so much limestone in the water and in the soil and
make shit of our kettles and things like this but an interesting thing that happens in limerick is
sometimes when bodies decompose in limerick the fat from the body when it decomposes it leaches into the soil but the fat then mixes with the limestone
and forms a type of soap cake
so you get a saponification it's called
these bodies in limerick
buried underneath the ground
that are mummified in their own soap
but in Dublin in St Mickens
a similar thing happened
but not with skin soap just
a jerkiness that occurred on this
body whose head is now
missing but what
also makes this decapitated
body interesting
he was a Templar knight
which is rare as fuck
and
the Templars I'll give you
now Templars are you know if you watch the Da Vinci Code the Templars I'll give you now Templars are
if you watch the Da Vinci Code
the Templars were present in it
and there's all types of conspiracy theories
and whatever surrounding the Templars
but the Templars are interesting cunts
the Templars came about
in about the
11th century
so here was the crack
like so in the 11th century. So here was the crack.
Like.
So in the 11th century.
Christianity is.
About a thousand years old.
You know it's a thousand years after the fucking birth of Christ.
And Christianity for the first thousand years was.
Like a hippie cult.
Do you know.
The church was established.
Especially after the fall of Rome. It was actually after the fall of Rome.
That the church started to become quite powerful. But was for a thousand years a hippie-ish harmless
cult not a million miles away from buddhism you know it wasn't about power it was about peace and
love and it was a cool religion then what happens is the crusades Now the Crusades were kind of a... I don't want to get into who
started it but it was a response to the expansion of Islam and Jerusalem and the area that we now
call Israel. Christ was born around there right so that became a very holy site. So Christendom, European Christendom, went and took Jerusalem.
So Jerusalem was being controlled by Europe, essentially.
This Middle Eastern place being controlled by Europe because it's the birthplace of Christ.
So what happens in the 11th century,
if you are a rich person in england in germany in france
in these christian western countries if you're a rich person you know being devoting yourself
to christianity is a very in vogue thing to do this is the early middle ages there's no science
i've no doubt people truly believed in religion so if you had a bit of money the most important thing you could do in your life was to
make a pilgrimage to jerusalem to the birthplace of christ and where christ was crucified so a lot
of very wealthy people in the 11th century after the first crusade would go on a trip to jerusalem but the thing is
because it was the 11th century there was no banks didn't exist you know so if you had a lot of money
to go from we'll say england to jerusalem you had to travel to Jerusalem, this would have taken six months, you know, by caravan,
with horses or whatever, you had to bring with you all your valuables, all your slaves, I suppose,
your entire household, and everybody had to travel at once, and what would happen is, as the Europeans
traveled by foot, making their way to Jerusalem it was very dangerous and bandits
would wait on the roads along the way
and go look at these stupid
British, French and German cunts
coming over here on foot
with all their money
we're going to rob the pricks
so
pilgrimaging
people
Christians on pilgrimage were robbed, blind and murdered on their way to Jerusalem.
So this organisation sets itself up called the Knights Templar.
And what the Knights Templar were, were a type of, they were monks, devout monks but they were warrior monks they were monks that were
allowed to kill and murder and christianity up to that point had been very peaceful but
some pope i can't remember who it was around the 10th century changed the rules the rules of
christianity were like you can't kill anyone this is a peaceful
religion you can't kill anyone and something happened around a thousand years ago where the
rules were changed and they said you can kill someone if they're not a christian that caused
a lot of shit so the knights templar were created as these warrior monks who would accompany
christians on a pilgrimage to protect them on their journey to Jerusalem
so they wouldn't be robbed and murdered.
And it was a very, like the coolest thing you could be in the 12th century.
The most prestige was to be a Knights Templar.
This was just unbelievable.
It would be like being a superstar, a rock star.
There was no greater honor so what happens is a lot of rich young men from wealthy families decide
to become Knights Templar but the thing with being a Knights Templar is if you look at the symbol of
what the Knights Templar were if you look at their what would you call it their insignia it's it's the insignia is two monks on a horse two monks on one horse and what this did
is that it symbolized poverty it's like the Templar Knights were so poor that they would ride
two to a horse because they couldn't even afford two horses because knights at that time you know
what the whole chivalry shit knights had fucking servants
they had big armor all of this the templars were not like that they were wealthy young men who gave
up their riches and became poor warrior monks and like guaranteed entrance to heaven or whatever
but what happens when a young man joins the temple and he's got a lot of money he then gives the
money to the fucking church so the church then start to accumulate a fucking massive amount of wealth because all these wealthy
young men are giving their money to the church so that they can become poor warrior templar monks
right and the most interesting legacy of the knights Templar is they accidentally invented international banking
so what would happen is you know 11th century you want to go to Jerusalem you're wealthy so you
leave England and then you take all your money with you all the way over to Jerusalem and the
Templars go with you and protect you the Templars figured out
a better way to do this as they got more powerful and became international you Templars in France
you Templars in fucking Germany in Spain all of this what they would say is because they would
have Templar centers in every single country they'd say to the rich person in England
instead of taking all your valuables with you to Jerusalem
right
here's a better way to do it
get all your valuables
leave them in the Templar Centre
in England
then what we'll do
is we'll give you
a note
from our Templar Centre
that says
you've left
three grand's worth of goods with us
then you take this note and
if you happen to drop by spain we'll say on your way to jerusalem go into the templar center in
spain show them this note and the templars in spain will go oh grand all your shits in england
here's the equivalent money and they did this all over Europe and essentially what they
were doing there was inventing modern banking you no longer needed like your valuables with you
what you had was a piece of paper that said the valuables existed and could be cashed in in any
Templar center around the world, so banking was invented,
in the early medieval times,
because of these Templars,
and they became incredibly wealthy,
and then because they became wealthy,
people started to borrow from them,
and how the Templars ended,
they ended in,
the 1300s at some point,
I'm eyeballing this history from memory now by the way, they, they ended in the 1300s at some point. I'm eyeballing this history from memory now by the way.
They ended in the 1300s because.
The king of France.
Borrowed a fuck load of money off the Templars.
And couldn't pay it back.
So what the king of France did.
Instead of paying off his debt.
He decided to create a rumor.
That the Templars were actually worshiping the
devil and that they were wanking onto crucifixes and doing all this crazy deprived shit so the
templars were put on trial and they were hung and murdered and all of this this happened on friday
the 13th and this is why friday i don't know what year 13 something
this is why
Friday the 13th
is unlucky
because it was the day
that the king of France
accused the Templars
of wanking on crucifixes
and worshipping the devil
and worshipping
a giant owl
called
Baphomet
and
he hung him
and burned him all at the stake
and Friday the 13th
is unlucky
since then
the Templars then
they split off
and I think they merged into
the Order of Malta
who are
if you're looking at a GAA match today
and you see that
what is it
is it the Ambulance of St. John
the Order of Malta
they're the direct descendants of the Templars now they're lads who And you see that, what is it, is it the Ambulance of St. John? Or the Order of Malta?
They're the direct descendants of the Templars now.
They're lads who come onto the pitch if someone's injured at a GAA game.
The town of Hospital in Limerick is named after the Order of Malta and the Knights Hospitalia.
The Templars also became the Knights Hospitalia, which were were I think they were monks who travelled on the battlefield
and helped the wounded or something
I'm not sure
so anyway
this fucking Knight
Templar Knight in St Mickens Church
in the basement in Dublin
his head was stolen
somebody fucking in Dublin
knows who stole the head
give it back
because it's gone now 3 or 4 days
it's perfectly mummified
it's rotting on someone's fireplace
what do you want with a fucking
800 year old head, what do you want with it
do you know
give it back, so
hand it in to some
hipster pub in Stoneybatter or
hang it off the fucking 5 lamps
or if you do know where it is
and you want to give it back and you want to anonymously give it back I don't know give my
give my twitter page at rubber bandits a direct message a private mail and if you have the head
of the templar knight give it back and I'll try and help a way whereby you can be repatriated with St. Mickens Church
and you can get away with it. I don't know. Am I going too far with making that call?
I don't know what the grave robbing is. Maybe it's an issue for the guards. I don't know
but let's get the head back. St. Mickens was also vandalised in 1996. Vandals went in there,
St. Mickens was also vandalised in 1996.
Vandals went in there,
fucked around with 40 corpses,
tried to set them on fire, and then robbed the head of a four-month-old child
that died in the 1830s
and played soccer with it in the graveyard.
And, like, I'm not superstitious,
but to the person who stole the Templar's head this week, if you're listening,
you've stolen the head, right, of a person who belonged to an organisation
that were condemned by the church for For worshipping Satan. And a giant owl.
And you know.
All this deep shadowy.
Hidden fucking knowledge.
Like dark dark shit.
And that's the head that you have.
So.
I'm not superstitious.
But if you are superstitious.
You are cursed as fuck.
That's pure cursed territory like
to be going around with that head
so
I would imagine repatriate that head
give it back to St Mickens
I wouldn't like to have that fucking
up on my mantelpiece
and I'm not even superstitious
you pricks
okay that was an
unsolicited 20 minute fucking rant that I did.
I thought I was going to wrap up the Templar thing in about 5 minutes,
but it did take 20 minutes.
And it's not even the topic of the podcast this week.
So before we do get on to this week's topic,
we'll pause for some adverts.
The ocarina is still missing.
So we're going to have another banjo
pause. We're getting a lot of
good feedback for the banjo pause. A lot of
people feel that the banjo
is a welcome
musical interlude
for the podcast and that it's a nice change
to the ocarina. So here's the banjo
pause. You might hear an advert
if not you'll just hear the banjo
and hopefully this time i won't get any
any of the notes wrong it's a queer scale like i have to play the banjo to the piano that's in
the background and it just happens to be a very a strange shape for my fingers to do. No, no, don't. The first omen, I believe, girl, is to be the mother.
Mother of what?
Is the most terrifying.
Six, six, six.
It's the mark of the devil.
Hey!
Movie of the year.
It's not real, it's not real.
What's not real?
Who said that?
The first omen, only in theaters April 5th.
Will you rise with the sun to help change mental health care forever?
Join the Sunrise Challenge to raise funds for CAMH,
the Center for Addiction and Mental Health, to support life-saving progress in mental health care. From May 27th to 31st, people across Canada will rise together and show those living with
mental illness and addiction that they're not alone. Help CAMH build a future where no one
is left behind. So, who will you rise for? Register today at sunrisechallenge.ca.
That's sunrisechallenge.ca.
Bye. Bollocks.
There you go.
That's the banjo pause.
One wrong note this week.
This podcast is sponsored by you, the listener, via the Patreon page.
You know, you can become a patron of this podcast for the price of a pint or a cup of coffee once a month.
If you like the podcast and you'd like to buy me a pint or a cup of coffee,
you can do it once a month.
Go to patreon.com forward slash the blind buy podcast
and please, yeah, give me a few quid but if you
can't afford it you don't have to it's a suggested donation it's a model that works on soundness and
everyone gets the same podcast you know um as well yeah it's it's because too i just don't get sponsors or advertisers on the podcast
and i put out a big plea there on twitter during the week you know because i sometimes
like i'm happy with the patreon but sometimes i just i get pissed off that advertisers are at
least not even coming to the podcast it just annoys me because it's so
silly it's really silly it's like there's a million listeners to this like this podcast has
more listeners than a lot of the biggest radio shows on irish radio and i was talking to a cast
a cast of the people who would get me advertisers and they're continually
trying to chase Irish companies saying here's the figures you know blind boys got a lot of
listeners do you want to advertise and a lot of them just still have cold feet some of it most
of it is because I curse all the time which is ridiculous it's like it's on the internet it's a podcast you're all adults
you don't mind the cursing it's this really silly attitude the other thing is they're kind of scared
of the mental health aspect that bit i can understand i've more understanding for that bit
the cursing bit fuck you grow up jesus. We're all adults. They're just words.
And I think as well.
Just a lot of advertisers in Ireland.
The word podcast just sounds too new.
And strange to them.
So they don't want to.
You're like.
It's like the radio.
But it's on the internet.
They just don't want to take that risk.
The territory is too new.
And I just. As well i was mentioning a couple of
weeks back the patreon is a fantastic model it's brilliant it pays my fucking bills i love it i
have a guaranteed source of income but i don't like having all my eggs in one basket like patreon
recently the shareholders of patreon the company were complaining that Patreon isn't making enough
money for them which means Patreon are now going to have to make some some changes and whenever
that happens with an online company whenever shareholders start complaining usually the
platform goes to shit like Facebook started going to shit when it became focused towards its shareholders you know
so I would at least like the option of knowing if advertisers are willing to fucking sponsor or
advertise the podcast even just to turn them down because I have had one or two companies come to
the podcast and I've just said no because I don't agree with their ethics but
surely there has to be some fucking companies
out there who are, I agree with their ethics
and I'm comfortable
letting them advertise on this
so if you are a company and you're interested
you can email
jennifer.dollard
at acast.com
and Jennifer
is
she now, she's only at acast.com and Jennifer is she
now she's only got after getting
the job in the past two weeks but she manages
all of the ACAST in Ireland
because ACAST used to be English
based but I think they're expanding
so if you're a company give her a
fucking email and sponsor the podcast
and let me say fuck and don't try and interfere with my
content
God bless you
so what is this week's podcast about this week's podcast is going to be a music podcast now it
won't be we've done a few music podcasts i fucking love doing the music podcast especially the history
of music ones we've done a few um there was one on northern seoul
uh there's two podcasts on the history of disco and house music there's a history of hip-hop
podcast there was that one a couple of weeks ago about drum machines and the influence of japan
and music podcasts are like my favorite ones to do especially the history of music and how
culture and politics influence how music sounds there's going to be more this one is a music
podcast but it's not a really in-depth look at a genre instead i want to look at just i'm going to give you a couple of examples of just weird origin stories for songs
stuff that just they're weird facts i've come across that aren't very well known that when i
say them to you you'd go fuck off you're talking out of your arse the type of fact that would make you
immediately run to google because i have to be lying because it's so ridiculous so
that's what i want to that's what i want to focus this week's podcast on and
this this takes a very crazy turn as I get through this a mad thing
fucking happens
even madder than
when the tomcat interrupted the podcast
a couple of weeks ago
so anyway
I'm gonna play you a little piece of audio
a fantastic song
that you you definitely know. So, absolute fucking banger.
Of course you know it.
That's Blame It On The Boogie
by the Jackson 5.
1978.
Fucking classic, game changing, disco song, phenomenal song writing, phenomenal pop song writing, that song is perfection, it's, you don't, you know,
you can't not love that that a newborn baby will love that
someone 90 years of age will love that that is perfect fucking pop it's amazing
and the reason i'm playing that song and the reason it's relevant to this podcast
is like i've listened to that song for years i've that's one of those songs that i would
have as what you'd call a reference track when i'm producing music you want to have tracks that
you consider perfection in terms of how they're produced or mixed or written and when you're
learning the craft of production that would be one example of a song that i would play
as a reference against something
that I'm making we'll say when I was producing horse outside blame it on the buggy would be
a song that I would switch over to and I would play horse outside alongside it and see you know
is is my song jumping out of the speakers the way that song is and if it's not you go back and change it
until it is because that song is perfection so for years and years and years I was going fuck me
that's incredible and what always struck me as well with it being amazing is I used to have that
on CD and when I'd have it on CD often what I would do in the olden days of having like an album in your hand,
you go to the liner notes, and I'd go to the liner notes of the song when I'm listening to it,
because I wouldn't be like, okay, who played saxophone, who was the drummer, who produced it,
who wrote it, you'd find all this shit in the liner notes of the song, and what used to strike me was it says song written by Michael Jackson
and that always took me back because I was like fuck me that that was the Jackson 5 so
Michael must have been 14 and he wrote Blame It On The Buggy a 14 year old wrote that song what a fucking genius
do you know
wow
and yes it is factually correct
that this song was written by
Michael Jackson
this is a fact
so now listen to this song
so Blame It On The Buggy
Michael Jackson
that I just played you there
1978 listen to this song here So, Blame It On The Buggy, Michael Jackson, that I just played you there, 1978.
Listen to this song here, that was written in 1977. So there you have it
1977
Blame It On The Buggy
Written by Michael Jackson
What if I told you
It was written by a different Michael Jackson
Here's the mad thing
Michael Jackson
Like the famous, massive Michael Jackson like the famous massive Michael Jackson
from America
he didn't write Blame It On The Buggy
an English lad
called Michael Jackson
wrote Blame It On The Buggy
and he wrote it
in 1977
and then the Jackson 5
released this
and it's a kind of a really weird, strange thing.
Like I said, if you say that to someone,
I didn't fucking believe it when I first heard it,
because it's too insane, it's too weird, it's too nuts.
But I ended up looking into it further,
and it's like, yes, an English lad called Michael Jackson
wrote Blame It On The Buggy.
I found a little recording of him talking about it, how he wrote it.
When we received this album, it says all songs written by the Jacksons.
Which is not untrue, because we're called Jackson as well, of course,
but they're the sort of things that do hurt your pride a little bit.
And my brother Dave, he got this sort of look on his face
that he gets when he has his moments of genius
and starts sort of pushing his glasses like that.
I mean, he's singing...
A bad boogie, a bad, bad boogie, a bad boogie, a bad...
And they were just singing Bad, Bad Boogie.
And he's singing Bad Boogie and I'm singing...
Don't blame it on the sunshine
Don't blame it on the moonlight
Don't blame it on the sunshine don't blame it on the moonlight blame it on the good times blame it on the boogie blame it blame it we've got this blame it thing
and the bad boogie is going along and quirky little lyrics were appearing and dave was doing
one verse i was doing another and we're changing things around but he just slotted in very very
quickly the whole thing so how about that for mad um yeah so blame it on the buggy was
written by a different michael jackson and they were from the north of england and for me what
makes it interesting you know it ties in with the the northern soul thing. English Michael Jackson grew up listening to Northern Soul.
He was into soul music.
He then graduated towards disco as a songwriter
and ended up writing Blame It On The Boogie.
And how it turned into a Michael Jackson song,
an American Michael Jackson song, a Jackson 5 song,
it's a little bit dodgy in a way in that
so when English Michael Jackson wrote and recorded the
song there's this conference called Mydom that happens in France and it's like a trade conference
for musicians for music management producers so the track before it was released, English Michael Jackson's Blame It On The Boogie before it was released commercially, was being played at this Midam music conference where you'd hear music before it's released.
And it was like the hit of the conference in 1977.
Everyone was playing it over and over again.
over again but joe jackson who was the jackson fives father and manager happens to be at this conference he hears this disco track and is like fuck me that's the song that's the song that
my sons need to be fucking performing as their next single so joe jackson takes out a recorder out of his pocket and records this
song clandestinely and then because you don't you don't really have control over who covers your
song if someone wants to cover your song they can do that they're entitled to do it so long as they
credit you as the writer so the jackson five then released this song
but released it in competition
with the original
version and they're in the charts at the exact
same time and it became known in
the British press as
the Battle of the Boogie
where it was like which is your favourite one
and of course fucking you know
American Michael Jackson
the Jackson 5's version is the one that we remember
but because you know, American Michael Jackson, the Jackson 5's version is the one that we remember, but
because the writing credit was Michael Jackson, the British press at the time, they thought that,
you know, American Michael Jackson was the one who wrote it, but British Michael Jackson wasn't
fucked over, he received his royalties for writing the song but it's just
one of those ones it's it's nuts it's strange it's weird and which song is better the Jackson 5
version you know the original British version is an incredibly well-written pop song really catchy but would
it have survived in the lexicon of pop I don't know I don't think so the Jackson 5 took that song
and through what you'd call in the industry x-factor through American Michael Jackson's X Factor through his incredible performance
the timbre of his voice
the soul and funk in American Michael Jackson's voice
it took the song to another level
on top of the production, the production is brighter
it's a little bit faster
I think it's in the same key
it might be in a key up, I'm not sure
I need to go back and check, but the Jackson 5 version is, that's a stone cold classic, that has stood the test of time, that sounds fresh today, the British one, it lacks soul, it just, it lacks that extra thing, the X factor, it lacks the intangible i don't know what you'd call it it's
it's it's that thing in the music industry like i said it's called the x factor but
it's that thing that a piece of art has that you can't name it's just there it's almost spiritual
like when i walk into a gallery if i'm in London and I walk into the National Portrait Gallery
or another gallery
when I walk into a room
like you're talking about hundreds of paintings
but when there's a painting there by one of the true greats
like Renoir or Caravaggio or Gauguin
I just know
I know I'm in the presence of
and it's surrounded by paintings that are technically fucking brilliant,
but when you're in the presence of a painting of a master, it glows with an extra level of life,
that you can't, you can't put your finger on it, you can't repeat it, you can't copy it,
that is, is, true art has an extra spirit to it that can't be pinned down and that's the
difference between english michael jackson's version and the jackson five the jackson five
has got an intangible soul of brilliance that you could analyze it all day long you wouldn't pin it
down whereas i can analyze the english version and i can know this is a good song because i it's the catchy melody the chords that are used
you know what i mean you can't do that when it comes to x factor that's a different vibe
and it's rare and american michael jackson had it in fucking droves. So here's the part of the podcast that is going to go a bit strange
and a bit odd and a bit unpredictable.
What got me thinking about
this topic for this week's podcast
and what got me thinking about the Mick Jackson
because English Michael Jackson
went under the name Mick Jackson sometimes
but what got me thinking about
that specific example in music I was on Twitter during the week and I tweeted out what I was
interested I was interested in in like myths about celebrity certain stories that we hear about
celebrities that we don't know if they're true or not. And stories that you hear that you want to believe.
And what I've started doing with friends of mine is I've started making up stories that are deliberate lies.
But people believe them because we want to believe them. So what I tweeted out is that as an experiment I've been telling people that the actor who played Jesse Pinkman in Breaking Bad also played Stan in the Eminem video
and found and I found that most people would believe that it's true because it's the type of
fact that we want to believe okay so I've been telling people that that Jesse Pinkman was actually
Stan in the Eminem video most people go wow I didn't know that you google it and you find out
that I'm talking out of my hole but when I was growing up there was all these types of stories and before you could easily google things you just kind of believed
them one of them was Marilyn Manson was actually as a child was the nerdy young fella in the wonder
years that that was Marilyn Manson as a child and you didn't have google at hand so you just
believed it or that showed
different strokes
that used to be on
in the
it was from the 70s
but it used to get
rerun on television
when I was a young fella
so there was a rumour
that Willis
from different strokes
ended up doing
animal porn
and a chicken died
after he stuck his head
up his arse
I believed that
for years
I believed that
Prince got a rib removed so he could suck his own dick.
Do you know what?
These urban myths flew around the place,
and when you didn't have the internet,
you believed them because you wanted to.
And then,
you know, I started giving other examples of
shit that you could make up that you want to believe.
Said Pierce Brosnan is the reason
that packaged salad says wash before use
because he got salmonella from lettuce
as a child and made a successful claim
in court
bullshit
said that Van Morrison submitted a script
for an episode of Mr Bean
and it was broadcast and credited to a pseudonym
bullshit
not true
but then I said
here's a true one and this is an urban myth i don't know what
you call it an urban myth it's a rumor that has been going around for a long time in ireland and
there's an element of truth to it but this version that i tweeted anyway i said this
here's a true one robbie william Williams went on the lash in Dublin in 1996
he ended up at a house party the lad whose house party it was had written angels he played it on
acoustic at the party and Robbie gave him five grand to sign away all rights to it so that's a
story that gets flung around that in 1996, Robbie Williams, you know, famous international superstar, one of them.
I think he's the most, is he the most successful British solo artist of all time?
I think he might be. He's the most successful solo artist in Latin America who isn't Latin American.
Robbie Williams is a superstar. He's massive.
in Latin America who isn't Latin American Robbie Williams is a superstar
he's massive he was
throughout the late 90s and the 2000s
he was a towering
behemoth of success huge
and
a story goes
around that when Robbie
quit the band Take That
that he
went on the lash he went on a bender and this
was very much
you know the papers were following this at the time
Robbie went off the rails
he would have been about 25 maybe
and he went off the rails because
Undertake That who were a clean cut
boy band
you know they weren't allowed to have girlfriends
they weren't allowed to be seen out drinking
they had to have a very clean image
for the pop industry so when Robbie left take that he was like well fuck this I want to go out
and do a lot of coke and I want to drink and I don't know if this is true but I think once
he even held he held a pre-emptive press conference this could be another urban legend
but he held a pre-emptive press conference where he just got all the press around and says how are you getting on lads last night i drank loads and had sex with loads of girls and
did a lot of coke just letting you know and he told the press before they could even report that
as a scandal um i'd have to check that one again i think i might have heard that in a pub but anyway story goes Robbie went to Dublin in 1996 to go on an absolute bender this
is a fact this did happen and he ended up becoming pals with a lad called Ray Heffernan and Ray is
from Dublin and he's a singer-songwriter and the story goes is that Robbie Williams' biggest song, the song that really got everyone...
When Robbie quit Take That, no one thought he was going to have a solo career.
Everyone thought it would be Gary Barlow, if anyone, or maybe Mark Almond.
But no one thought Robbie was going to be the one with a solo career.
And then he comes out with
this song, Angels, which is, it's an anthem, you know, it's overplayed on the radio, and because
of that, it's very hard to listen to the song and truly appreciate it, but, you know, if you take
all that away, it's like ABBA, you know what I mean, we listen to ABBA songs, and we've heard
them so many times, you think they're shit, but like they're not they're fucking genius, ABBA are incredible
Angels is an incredible pop song
it's
it's brilliant and that's why
it's an anthem but it's overplayed
so it's hard to
give it the proper cultural respect it deserves
and when Robbie released
Angels
that changed the game, everybody who doubted him had to go, well fuck, here we go, here's Robbie Williams.
And he co-wrote the song, holy fuck, he's got talent, we all doubted him.
And Robbie became massive and Angels was the breakthrough moment.
But the myth goes that Angels was actually written by an unknown songwriter
from Dublin called Ray Heffernan
who ended up on the lash with Robbie
and that the version I've
heard over and over again, they were at a
house party, Ray played
Angels that he had written
Robbie says that's amazing
here's a bunch of cash
and then kind of ran off with the song
so I tweeted that i tweeted it
and this is where the fucking mad thing happens
so earlier on today i get a phone call and i look at the phone and it says los angeles so i pick it
up i'm going fuck me who's ringing me from Los Angeles,
and I pick up the phone,
and,
an English accent,
hi blind boy,
this is Robbie Williams,
and he sounded kind of sad,
and upset,
so,
I'm like,
freaking out,
because like,
I'm there in my kitchen,
in Limerick,
and I'm looking out the
kitchen window and at the back of my my garden like i've got my my two little stray cats there's
a few stray cats and then at the back of my garden behind the wall is is a park so i'm staring at a
horse and you know yes there is actually a horse outside my gaff
but
now here's the thing
in Limerick
there's horses everywhere
this is the weird thing
about Limerick
for anyone listening who
especially if you're
outside the country
if you're a yank
in Limerick
we have horses
the way other cities
have
like stray dogs
so
behind my gaff
there's one or two horses
that just the local young lads look after them now
some horses in limerick aren't looked after and are neglected but others are looked after the
ones behind my house are looked after and i often throw them carrots and whatever so anyway i'm
staring at the horse and i've robbie've Robbie Williams on the fucking phone to me.
I don't know how he got my number.
I don't even believe it's him.
I'm just like, okay, this is odd.
This is very fucking strange.
It turns out Robbie is a fan of the Rubber Bandits, a fan of the podcast.
Robbie is a fan of the Rubber Bandits, a fan of the podcast, and he saw the tweet on Twitter where I basically said there was a house party in Dublin and Robbie kind of stole the song and paid off Ray Heffernan.
And Robbie was very upset and hurt now I'm still kind of taken aback by it not fully believing I'm on the
phone to fucking Robbie Robbie the superstar Williams in my kitchen staring at a horse I can't
fathom it but after about a couple of minutes that shock dissipates and now I'm just simply
talking to an English lad called Robbie who seems incredibly sound and nice and he was
absolutely lovely and we spoke for about 40 minutes about several different things but mainly
what Robbie wanted to clear up was the version that gets told about that story isn't entirely
true specifically the version that I tweeted is not true
and Robbie gets quite
hurt over it because he didn't
want me, he was ringing
me because he's a fan
of the bandits and didn't want
me thinking that he was
a nasty person who steals
songs
so
it's a weird situation there's there's two sides of the story there's
ray heffernan's side of the story and there's robbie's side of the story and there's no way for
any of us really to know the full truth it it comes down to who you believe um if you want to hear ray heffernan's full version of what happened in
ray's own words of how how did this all happen it did ray heffernan write angels you can go
onto google you look up uh the irish songwriters podcast the anatomy of angels look that into
google and you've got ray heffernan talking for
an hour his side of the story so what ray's end of the story is is yes he met robbie williams in
dublin in 96 they ended up kicking it off becoming good pals and really having a kind of an intense time robbie confirmed this on the phone at me too
they are on an incredible lash of drink and drugs okay both of their stories say that
they're absolutely off their fucking tits then you know ray starts going well i'm a songwriter
and robbie goes fuck me, I'm looking for songs.
I'm writing songs too.
So they book a studio in Temple Bar and just end up jamming and recording some stuff.
Now, this is where it gets kind of hazy because there's drugs involved.
There's drink involved, all of this.
involved out of this ray heffernan maintains that ray ray had a girlfriend and the girlfriend had a miscarriage and ray's way of of dealing with the miscarriage was that the child was now an angel
it's an irish thing you know when the child dies the child becomes an angel and ray is is loving an angel
instead and ray maintains that he wrote that lyric and he brought that lyric to the project
and him and robbie sat sat down and that's ray's thing robbie maintains that that isn't the case
that robbie wrote the lyrics in his garden and also took some of the lyrics from a poem that his sister had written and
it's it's two different sides of the same story and there's no way for us to know
there's no way for us to know okay it was a long time ago there was a lot of drinking drugs involved
Ray feels that kind of
what happened to as well
so they go on the lash
and then
they ended up
I don't know
did they have a father now
Robbie left anyway
for England
and
Ray heads on over
to England
to follow Robbie
and arrives at his
hall door
and knocks on it
now Ray has said in
the podcast thing where he spoke about his story
he felt that he was on a type of spiritual journey
he was also battling addiction issues at the time
so he arrives at Robbie's door
Ray as well is annoyed
Ray doesn't like the story either
because he feels that he's been kind of defined by
you know the guy in
Dublin who actually wrote Angels
Ray doesn't like that because
Ray's a singer songwriter and he's a brilliant
singer songwriter, I've listened to his stuff
he's an incredibly talented man
em
what we do know is that
Ray was paid seven and a half
grand sterling by Robbie Williams
and Ray maintains that this was money for you know to essentially buy the song
Robbie kind of maintains that this was just kind of money for Ray to just go away, kind of, you know?
Ray feels that the story is unfinished.
He, to quote Ray in his podcast, he says,
I was raised to believe to accept a deal,
you shake on a deal and that's the deal.
So for Ray, it's like,
okay, I signed away whatever could have been mine.
That's what Ray maintains on his podcast.
Ray does feel that it's unfinished and he'd like the opportunity to sit down
and write another song with Robbie
and give the money to Cherry.
That's what Ray said on his podcast.
The money side of things from Robbie's point of view is
there was no way to take this to court.
You can't go to court, it's he said, she said. You're talking about two lads on the utter
lash and it comes down to Ray saying that he wrote you know a core central lyric
that was the theme of the song and it comes from his
personal experience and you've got
Robbie saying no this was
mine I took it from lyrics I'd
written myself and a poem my sister wrote
it's
utterly unprovable in court
so it's not the type of
thing that you take the court
so
the money that Robbie gave him was like
an out-of-court settlement to just kind of let it go here's seven and a half grand Ray said you know
at the time Ray was um in rehab I believe for issues he was having with addiction this again
this is what he said in his own podcast.
So Ray took the seven and a half grand to pay for that.
And.
I don't know.
It's.
I don't want to cast an opinion either way.
What I would just want to say is that there's two different stories out there.
And you have two people maintaining.
Agreeing on 90% of of it but a core thing they both
disagree with
what I
will say is before
Robbie rang me on the phone
what I 100%
believed was
the version
of the story that
this is a song from Aladdin Dublin and Robbie Nictus
because that's the most interesting version
that's 9-11 was an inside job
that's a conspiracy theory
that's a really interesting fact
that makes you go wow that is so interesting
I want to believe that
and that's what this podcast would have been about I would
have completely ran with that had I not gotten a phone call one thing I'll say regarding like
Robbie seemed incredibly sincere he didn't know I was going to do a podcast on it he simply rang me
up because he's a fan of the bandits or a fan of the podcast and didn't want me thinking that he was nasty.
So like his incentive for ringing me up there is kind of, it's personal and pure, I suppose.
And I asked Robbie's permission as well.
I said, look, can I tell people that you rang me up because this is too fucking nuts.
So he said, yeah, work away.
So all I'm going to say to you is you can make
your own mind up
Robbie spoke to me he gave me his side of the
story
Ray's side of the story is there online
look it up
the Irish songwriters podcast
the anatomy of angels
it's just nuts
madness
it's like that
the time fucking
Conor McGregor
mailed me on Twitter
fucking telling me
to stop talking shit about him
just weird bizarre shit
em
then of course
I get off the phone
my ma had been over earlier
and I rang my ma
and I said
Robbie Williams is after ringing me my ma had been over earlier and i rang my ma and i said robbie williams is after
ringing me my ma then doesn't believe me she gets it into her head that uh she says no that's someone
playing a trick on you that's oliver callan she thought it was oliver callan the irish comedian
who's incredible at doing impressions she got it into her head that oliver callan was ringing me
as a form of sabotage to make a fool out of me and i was like calm down man so it's just one of these
things ray accepts that a deal was made um it comes down to whose side of the story that you
you truly believe you know and it's it's messy as fuck it's messy as fuck you're talking
about
1996 in the middle
of a drinking drug binge
and
who
fucking you know
Robbie says it was his version
and then he took it to his songwriting
partner Guy Chambers
and that then turned into what we now know as the song Angels.
That's 100% we do know that.
I'm going to leave it with G.
I don't want to cast aspersions either way.
And it's an interesting thing because.
The way songwriting has changed over the years
like
nowadays the way songs are written
like after
in 1996
that's when like real money was being made
in the music industry
from songwriting and radio plays and CD sales
there was real money there
since the early 2000s
the money end has disappeared out of the
music industry it's unless you're massive you're not making money from plays you know like we get
millions of plays on spotify or youtube you don't really make a lot of money from it you know and
you see now it's it's hard to today, with music being released today, are artists actually writing their own songs.
You go to, I'm not going to name names, but anything that's in the charts now, anything that's on the Billboard 100 or a really popular song by popular singers.
If you look up the songwriting credits
you don't get a situation anymore
like in the 60s
you would have
a pop singer
would sing a song
and it's quite clear that they did not write the song
they're merely just performing it
and the songwriters names are there
and the pop singer is performing the song
and this was grand in the 60s and 70s
because there was so much money to be made like the way royalties break down is that there's
publishing now that's the most lucrative publishing is if you actually wrote the song
and then there's performance and mechanical royalties and that's a smaller portion of the
pie but that's what you get if you perform the song so in the 60s you'd
often find that like you know usually like someone like bob dylan would write a song and you could
have five or six cover versions of a bob dylan song in the charts because the people doing the
cover versions like dylan yes is cashing in on the publishing money the big chunk of it but so
many copies are being bought that the person doing the cover version
the mechanical royalties are enough to make them wealthy that's not the case anymore there's so
much there's so little money being made now that if your name is not on a record as a songwriter
you are not earning money not today forget about it mechanical royalties are we're talking about a small percentage of very little money um so larger artists now what they started doing since about 2003
the artist will make sure that they are contributing to the songwriting somehow
and this mightn't necessarily even be in a in a hugely creative
or constructive way they might simply make sure that they're present in the room while the song
is being written and contribute two or three words you know songwriting is a very specific skill and it's it's a unique gift you can't learn songwriting
you can learn how to play instruments you can learn how to perform but when it comes to
songwriting that that ability to create a song from nothing from your imagination that's that's
a unique and rare talent and a lot of the artists today
their names are on the songwriting credits but you don't know you know did they actually
meaningfully help write this song or are they business savvy and they just made sure they were
present in the room and they maybe contributed a couple of top line melodies or a couple of words
and now their names are on the songwriting credits
so they can earn from the publishing
and you see that across the board now
nobody, no big artist nowadays is simply saying
oh someone else wrote this song
they're getting stuck into the songwriting
because the pool of money is disappearing
but one thing that Robbie did say to me he's incredibly proud of
angels that for him he said he's written many many songs since but for him angels is the most
important thing and the thing that he's most proud of so for him and his legacy i guess he really wants people to know that
angels is his song i'll leave it i'll leave it up to you because i don't want to take any sides in
this i don't want it to get messy like that you can listen to both sides and you can make your own
your own minds up so that was a that was a mad podcast there wasn't really any hot takes
I suppose there was
they just weren't my hot takes
I was
farming other hot takes
quite a diverse podcast
I did enjoy making it
I hope you enjoyed it
I think
yeah it's only
I felt like I covered an awful lot
in 65 minutes
I was very enthused about this week's podcast, so I spoke quite fast.
God bless.
Have a good time.
And come to some of my live podcasts if they're in your town.
There's loads of them and I'm going to get killed for not having the list in front of me.
And reading them out this week.
Because I'm shit at promoting myself.
Okay, yart. I'll talk to you next week Thank you. rock city you're the best fans in the league bar none tickets are on sale now for fan appreciation
night on saturday april 13th when the toronto rock hosts the rochester nighthawks at first
ontario center in hamilton at 7 30 p.m. You can
also lock in your playoff pack right now to guarantee the same seats for every postseason
game and you'll only pay as we play. Come along for the ride and punch your ticket to Rock City
at torontorock.com.