Paddy O Brian May 2026
Paddy was a storyteller, but not the theatrical kind. He didn’t raise his voice or slap the table for effect. He’d lean in just slightly, the way a priest might before a confession, and say something like, “Ah, now there’s a thing I should not know.” And suddenly you were leaning in too, caught in the quiet undertow of his voice.
What made Paddy extraordinary wasn’t his luck. It was his philosophy. He believed that most people went through life looking for the point of things, when they should be looking for the gaps . The gaps, he said, were where the music snuck in. The five minutes between rain showers. The pause before a laugh. The silent half-second when a lie turns back into a truth. Paddy O Brian
He’d been a sailor, a bricklayer, a horse trainer, and for two strange years in the 1980s, a DJ on a pirate radio station off the coast of Cork. None of it had made him rich. All of it had made him interesting . He claimed to have once talked a customs officer out of searching his van by reciting the first three verses of “The Ragman’s Ball” — and the officer had ended up buying him breakfast. Paddy was a storyteller, but not the theatrical kind