The first song I remember hearing
Mary Black â âNo Frontiersâ
âThere was this CD of Irish music that was always on in the car that my parents loved and it would just be on rotation when weâd be driving up north to see my granny in Newcastle or driving around Sligo or Cavan [in Ireland]. That song I really remember [from that], itâs the one I feel like I latched onto as a kid. I just loved ballads and being dramatic as a kid.â
The first album I ever bought
Celine Dion â âFalling Into Youâ
âWe had a piano in my house so I was really drawn to the piano [in this song]. I loved the drama in her songs â I went from ballads to power ballads, it was like a step up. I sort of remember going to [buy it]. It would have been at Virgin and I remember I had this really cool dark blue, almost purple, clear plastic CD stacker and it was one of my first CDs in that.â
The first gig I went to
Steps at Wembley Arena, 1998
âIâm pretty sure the first live music I saw was Irish traditional music in a pub, but the first gig that we went to was at Wembley and it was Steps. My sister and I had a little group of some of my sister’s friends [who we went with]. I remember walking in to find our seats and being inside the arena and seeing how big it was. My parents were in Harrow, [northwest London], so we were quite close to Wembley and we saw a lot of gigs there. I saw Ronan Keating, All Saints, Blue, Alicia Keys, Destinyâs Child; quite a lot of massive pop shows there.â
The song that reminds me of home
Melanie â âLook What Theyâve Done To My Song, Maâ
âI remember the line âWell, they picked it like chicken boneâ. I really liked the fact that she was singing about her own song too, cos I wanted to be a singer and she was singing about that and what the audience had done to her song. It was really imaginative and descriptive.â
The song I wish Iâd written
Kate Bush â âThis Womanâs Workâ
âEvery time I hear that song it just does something to me. Sometimes you hear a song and youâre like, âOh my god, Iâm so inspired by this â I want to write a song like thisâ. But when you hear âThis Womanâs Workâ, youâre like, âThis song is done and no one ever needs to write a song like this againâ. I donât even know how you write a song like this. Itâs so beautiful and so meaningful as a woman to hear âThis womanâs work, this womanâs worthâ.â
The song I do at karaoke
Tammy Wynette â âStand By Your Manâ
âI havenât been to karaoke since before COVID, but I would do that one. Itâs such a good crooner song and youâve got to have something that everybody knows the words to. Itâs really fun and really satisfying, and kind of a little bit whiny too. So Iâd do that or I would go in the other direction and I would do âThe Real Slim Shadyâ.â
The song I canât get out of my head
Baby Dave â âWashing Machineâ
âI actually just got into Isaac [Holman, aka Baby Dave]âs music at the end of last year. I get so excited now when Iâm into an album because I feel like it happens rarely that I digest a full record now in a modern way that reminds me of when I was a kid, where I would get obsessed with an album and only listen to that for ages. I just started messaging Isaac about it cos he has OCD and he talks about it and I have OCD as well. We actually collaborated on something recently that is coming out soon. But I just love that record cos itâs so funny and so British and so sincere at the same time. I love how playful he is, but also genuine. Itâs just really catchy, that song. Heâs got really, really good melodies and I love that itâs about lots of kitchen sink, everyday stuff and whatâs going on in his life.â
The song I can no longer listen to
Any songs by my ex-boyfriends
âThatâs a hard one. What songs canât I listen to anymore? You could just put âsongs by my ex-boyfriendsâ.â
The song that makes me cry
Brigitte Aphrodite â âCreshendoriousâ
âShe is one of my favourite artists ever. Sheâs just an incredible poet and sheâs this really fucking raw force of a human and artist. Her art and her words just cut straight to the core. She made this show called My Beautiful Black Dog, which is about depression â Brie says depression becomes like a frenemy. [This song] is about how to describe being in love with someone, but also hurting them and yourself. Every time I listen to her music it makes me emotional because I feel like itâs so evocative and so honest.â
The song that makes me want to dance
Architects ft. Nay Nay â âBody Grooveâ
âBasically any UK garage song, I would get on the dancefloor. Thereâs so many songs where Iâm quick on the dancefloor but if I heard [sings opening notes of âBody Grooveâ], Iâd be straight on there. My older sister got into UK garage, and I just got into everything that she did. Sheâd always have garage blasting out of her room and she listened to pirate radio stations. The thing with sisters is, if someone gets something, you donât get it as well â you just, by proxy, share it with them and latch onto it and I just totally latched onto UK garage.â
The song I want played at my funeral
Queen â âSomebody To Loveâ
âIt would have to be a Queen song â âDonât Stop Me Nowâ would be really funny, but I think âSomebody To Loveâ would be the perfect song for my funeral. Itâs gonna make people happy and thereâs no one better than Freddie. It makes everyone feel the same way as well, so I feel like it would be this really celebratory, emotional song about love and I think thatâs a beautiful thing to have at a funeral.â
Kate Nash stars in vegan impact comedy ‘Coffee Wars’, out now on VOD in the UKÂ
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