How did you spend your lockdown? It was probably a bit different to Ocean Tisdall, who moved back to his native Ireland from London.
Instead of Zoom quizzes and working from home, however, he shacked up in his great uncle's abandoned old house in the hills of Wicklow, and started to compose an EPs worth of emotionally vulnerable alt-pop tracks, inspired by the likes of Troye Sivan, Lana Del Rey and Frank Ocean. "We stayed there for two weeks," Ocean tells Irish Charts. "We wrote White Lies and a few songs on the EP there, I think being that creepy, weird house.
that's where the creepy vibes [of White Lies' video] came from." White Lies' macabre music video, which sees Ocean dig his own grave (of course), was also filmed at this same house, something of a "full circle moment [...] and people may now think I'm insane, but I don't mind that." Ocean also had plenty to celebrate after White Lies' release - it debuted straight in the Top 20 of the Irish Homegrown Singles Chart, Ocean's first-ever chart entry in his native country. "What I love most about Ireland is it's always changing, but we keep the same cultural identity and we always stick together," Ocean says. "We have so many artists just coming out and being themselves - there are so many different characters, personalities and people.
It's a really exciting time to be Irish and an artist right now." White Lies is a succinct taste of what's the come next for Ocean and what fans can expect of his upcoming EP, his first since signing with Universal Ireland last year.
Read more on officialcharts.com