FOGGY NOTIONS PRESENTS
GOODTIME JOHN
BELLO BAR
11TH JULY
Tickets on general sale Friday 15th May at 10:00.
Malmö-based Irish auteur Goodtime John returns with a quietly expansive,
fully-realised work // Out 24.04.26 via Stéille
There is a certain kind of movement that does not declare itself. It gathers and reveals
its shape only in time. This is the sphere that Good as Gold inhabits: an album that
unfolds with a careful, tidal sense of flow, drawing the listener through its world rather
than presenting itself in parts.
J. Cowhie, aka Goodtime John, is an auteur of the “show, don’t tell” school, a songwriter whose work arrives in unbidden bursts, guided as much by instinct as intention. Quietly regarded as one of the most enduring Irish artists of his generation, Cowhie operates with a rare, grounded authority. Now, with Good as Gold, that authority deepens into something more complete: a record that feels like a single, continuous gesture.
Written, recorded and mixed by Cowhie between 2021 and 2025, the album features
contributions from Glenn Keating – a dear old friend of Cowhie’s, whose passing in early
March was deeply felt across the Irish music community and far beyond it – alongside
Andy Clark, Abigail Smith and Emil Isaksson. Across its runtime, the record moves with
a patient, unforced arc, each track self-contained, yet subtly linked, as if shaped by the
same weather system.
There is a warmth to the album’s sound that feels deliberate, not nostalgic. Rooted in a minimal, home-recorded approach, its textures are drawn out rather than layered on each instrument given space to breathe, each detail emerging in its own time. It is music that resists rigidity, embracing the possibility of the unexpected: full takes and small deviations, moments of quiet improvisation that gently alter a song’s direction without ever disturbing its centre.
Songs like upcoming single ‘Chew Up’ and ‘Forever Is’ shift as they unfold. Nothing is over-signposted; nothing rushes to explain itself. Instead, Good as Gold moves with a kind of subconscious logic, guided by feel rather than form. There is a gentle psychedelic quality to the record, too, where atmosphere is not imposed but allowed to surface through the act of recording itself.
From its opening moments of ‘Stone’ through to its sublime closing stretch in ‘Blue Eyes Down,’ the album carries a sense of cohesion that’s equal parts natural and exacting. Cowhie has long approached albums as singular works, and here that instinct is fully realised: a record that brings the listener with it, step by step, without ever needing to raise its voice.
Malmö-based but Dublin-born, Cowhie’s shadow across Irish independent music is long and quiet. Whether as Goodtime John, GOODTIME or J. Cowhie, his history is etched into a shapeshifting discography spanning two decades: from Brought Four Ways Out of Town and I’ll Sing ’til The Sun Turns Cold through to The Colours of Darkness and Veil.
His peer group is a testament to his calibre, having shared stages and recordings with
the likes of Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy (with whom he collaborated on the 2022 7″ New Life), Smog, Television, Cass McCombs, Grandaddy, and Mount Eerie.
Now, with Good as Gold, the gesture feels complete. Not fixed but released. A body of work that no longer belongs to its maker, but to whoever chooses to step inside it.
“I’ve always seen an album as one piece – not a bunch of songs stuck together,” said
Cowhie. “I like the idea that it brings the listener with it. I consider an album done once
it’s released. I love the idea that it’s not mine anymore.”
Written, Recorded & Mixed by J. Cowhie
Between 2021-2025
Additional recording by Glenn Keating at NCH
Mastered by Simon Cullen at Envelop
Strings written & arranged by Abigail Smith
Played by:
Glenn Keating
Andy Clark
Abigail Smith
Emil Isaksson
J. Cowhie
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