meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Off Camera with Sam Jones

Ep 61. Glen Hansard

Off Camera with Sam Jones

offcamera

Arts, Education, Off Camera, Tv & Film

4.8 • 1.6K Ratings

🗓️ 26 June 2020

⏱️ 64 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

All artists are essentially storytellers, and the Irish are legendary storytellers (if you disagree, go immerse yourself in some Oscar Wilde, Samuel Beckett, Neil Jordan, or Christy Moore, and get back to us). For three decades, musician and sometimes-actor Glen Hansard has told his tales through song: first as a street busker, then as frontman for Irish band The Frames, next as half of folk rock duo The Swell Season, and now as a solo artist. If his early family life was a bit difficult and alcohol-dampened, it was also kind of enchanted. Household gods like Dylan and Van Morrison, a tradition of gathering to sing, and the folks he met on the streets of Dublin gave him as good an education as he’d ever have received in school—if he’d stayed there. Hansard’s ear and general disposition are finely tuned to the tragi-comic, ironic side of life—the Irish seeming to have caught on earlier than most that life doesn’t really offer up an alternate side—and that sensibility helped propel The Frames to native-soil popularity. Their second album (Set List, recorded live) hit the top of Irish charts, The Sydney Morning Herald raving, “This glorious live recording shows exactly why The Frames are the darlings of Ireland’s music scene…There are moments of transcendental magic on this album, showcasing their ability to capture an audience’s interest as the crowd sings along to songs and reacts to frontman Glen Hansard’s anecdotes.” We’re not sure if one of those anecdotes was one Hansard has told about seeing an advert for the film The Commitments floating in a dirty puddle on the streets of New York. While The Frames’ popularity remained chiefly confined to Ireland, Hansard’s popularity jumped the pond along with his appearance as guitarist Outspan Foster in the wildly successful film. It read as a soggy reminder for Hansard, who didn’t enjoy the acting experience and felt it overshadowed the band. Like many of his countrymen, he displays a cocked eyebrow at fame: “I make art, and that’s great; but digging in the hole and growing potatoes is a higher calling. In Ireland, the land is pulsing.” Maybe so, but eventually the lure of a great story (or maybe just perversity) brought him back to the screen with fellow musician Markéta Irglová in Once, a film that charmed critics and virtually everyone else who saw it and went on to become a smash stage show. More music than dialogue, Once is a testament to what Hansard seems to always have known: some things are better conveyed and more profoundly understood through words that we sing than those we speak. Of the score (co-written with Irglová) The New York Times said, “What lends a special, tickling poignancy to [the] songs is their acceptance of loneliness as an existential given. These are not big ballads that complain angrily about how we could have had it all. An air of romantic resignation, streaked in minor-key undercurrents, tempers the core heartache of numbers like “Leave,” “When Your Mind’s Made Up,” and “Falling Slowly,” which earned the duo a Best Song Oscar. His ability to temper a healthy respect for the muse with the nuts and bolts of his craft is most evident on his 2015 solo album Didn’t He Ramble, a hard-won work that’s at once sad, hopeful unsentimental and beautiful. If Hansard’s music—and Hansard himself—embodies worlds of contradiction, he holds true to those contradictions. After all, they’re what make all of us human; and they’re what make the humans who can write and sing about them, artists. You’ll still find him busking out on the evening streets, albeit mostly for charity and with friends like Bono and Eddie Vedder. “It may be a little cold,” he’s said, “but it warms my heart.”

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey folks Sam Jones here. You might have heard me talk about shady rays on this show before and ever since they sent me my first pair

0:16.4

I have been loving these sunglasses and I'm loving the philosophy behind the company because shady raises an independent sunglasses company meaning they don't overcharge you for

0:26.0

sunglasses because truthfully everyone knows sunglasses are overpriced

0:29.4

and it's easy to lose or break sunglasses. So it always feels especially bad to break or lose an expensive pair of sunglasses.

0:39.0

And shady rays has solved all of that. Let me tell you how they do it. The craziest thing about

0:44.0

shady rays is the warranty. It's one of the best warranties in all of eyewear.

0:48.0

They'll replace your shades if they are lost or broken for any reason. It doesn't matter

0:52.0

what happens, whether you drop them in the ocean,

0:54.0

run over them with your car, whatever. Try that with your high-priced shades and see if they'll help you.

0:59.2

Even with that strong of a warranty, they still manage to make quality that I can tell you, holding in my hand,

1:04.5

seems as good as any expensive name-brown pair I have ever worn. They have polarized lenses

1:09.3

that look perfectly clear, and most shady rays are $48.

1:13.0

Shady rays also provides 10 meals to fight hunger in America with every order placed

1:18.0

and they have provided over 10 million meals to date.

1:22.0

They stand behind their product and they told our team

1:24.4

that if anyone has a problem they'll throw profit out the window and do what it takes

1:27.8

to get it right. They have free returns and exchanges. You either love the

1:31.7

sunglasses or shady rais will pay to ship them back.

1:34.5

That's it.

1:35.5

So here's the deal.

1:37.3

Exclusively for our listeners this summer, you can use the code camera for 50% off two or more pairs of shades at shadyrays.com.

1:45.6

You can buy one and get one free or you can get two pairs of shades for 48.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from offcamera, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of offcamera and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.