Classic Moments

7 October 2012

Ask The Script Anything



The Script is going to sit down and answer your questions. Get registered and submit your questions now for this exclusive event. 
 


Don't forget to visit Saturday Night Online on Saturday, October 13th @ 8pm to see if your questions get answered! 

Just fill out a short form with your name, email, city and then your question. 

Source: askanything.com

Danny: I got too p***ed with U2

THE Script frontman Danny O’Donoghue has admitted his most embarrassing moment of his career was a drunken night with rock stars U2. 



The singer, 31, revealed when he was 18 he made the mistake of skipping dinner and going straight for the booze. 

He said: “I fell face down the stairs, p***ed out of my head in front of U2. 

“They’d invited me to a greyhound race track for Christmas dinner — but I didn’t have any dinner. 

“I went straight for the wine and I got really drunk. Then we were leaving to go to a club and I fell down 12 steps right in front of them.” 

The Voice judge added due to his fame he wears a disguise in public so fans won’t recognise him. 

He said: “I wear fake wigs and hats whenever I go out now. So if you see a 6ft 4in strange-looking guy, it’s probably me.” 

Source: Irish Sun

The Script Confirmed In ChildLine Concert Line Up

The Script, Little Mix, Stooshe & More Confirmed For Cheerios ChildLine Concert


The annual Cheerios ChildLine Concert charity pop party has been confirmed to take place on November 24th later this year, and the line-up is set to get tickets selling like wildfire.

Taking place in Dublin’s O2, the massive event aims to raise money for young person charity ChildLine, and to date, it’s managed to amass a massive €2.5million in donations.

This year’s line-up sees the likes of The Script, JLS, Little Mix, Stooshe, Jedward, Lawson, and Hudson Taylor - ensuring that the event will be a sell-out and a lot of money will be raised. The event will also be hosted by Boyzone’s Keith Duffy and TV3’s Glenda Gilson.

Tickets for the Irish event go onsale next Friday (October 12th) and will cost around €45 - you can find yours through Stereoboard using the links provided below.

Click here to Compare & Buy Cheerio ChildLine Concert Tickets at Stereoboard.

November 24th - The O2, Dublin

You'll also find The Script's UK tour dates below.

The Script UK & Ireland Tour Dates

Thu February 28th 2013 - The O2 Dublin, Dublin
Fri March 1st 2013 - The O2 Dublin, Dublin
Sat March 2nd 2013 - The O2 Dublin, Dublin
Mon March 4th 2013 - Odyssey Arena, Belfast
Tue March 5th 2013 - Odyssey Arena, Belfast
Fri March 8th 2013 - Capital FM Arena Nottingham, Nottingham
Sat March 9th 2013 - Liverpool Echo Arena, Liverpool
Sun March 10th 2013 - Metro Radio Arena, Newcastle upon Tyne
Tue March 12th 2013 - SECC, Glasgow
Wed March 13th 2013 - AECC, Aberdeen
Fri March 15th 2013 - Sheffield Motorpoint Arena, Sheffield
Sat March 16th 2013 - LG Arena, Birmingham
Sun March 17th 2013 - Manchester Arena, Manchester
Tue March 19th 2013 - Cardiff Motorpoint Arena, Cardiff
Fri March 22nd 2013 - The O2 Arena, London
Sat March 23rd 2013 - The O2 Arena, London

Click here to Compare & Buy The Script Ticket

Source: stereoboard.com

5 October 2012

The Script find a voice

The reviews of his band might be dire – but so long as the fans love them, Danny O'Donoghue says he doesn't care 


The Script's ebullient frontman Danny O'Donoghue is brandishing a professional camera. He took up photography two years ago, he says, casually flicking through his pictures – arty shots of the view outside his London home, self-portraits, nature. "I love shooting graveyards", he says enthusiastically. "There's so much atmosphere." 

The 32-year-old has become used to being the figure in front of the camera as well as the one behind. In the past four years he has gone from little-recognised frontman in pop-rock band The Script to celebrity after a stint as judge on the talent show The Voice, alongside Jessie J, Will.i.Am and Tom Jones. Overnight he watched his Twitter followers rocket to thousands. 

"I had to turn off my phone. It was a constant stream of messages, marriage proposals and nonsense", he gushes, Irish-accented words spilling from him. "But I'm being mobbed for the right reasons – right now there's a big outpouring of love for The Script. It could have gone the other way. You never know what way I could have come across on television". 

He's brought his band up with him. Now celebrating their No 2 album entitled #3, their first chart-topping single, and preparing for their biggest arena tour to date this March, they can still recall the disappointment of playing to just 26 people in a 250-capacity venue, most of whom were their own family. A few years later, less than two miles down the road, they were playing to 60,000 fans. 

"Four years. That's nothing, that's the length of a relationship. Crazy", says O'Donoghue, who this summer ended a four-year relationship with a model, and is now "free and single". 

Not that the band have ever struggled for commercial appeal with their speciality blend of crowd-pleasing rap and emotive arena-soft-rock anthems such as their hit "The Man Who Can't Be Moved". Loved by their multitude of fans, critics have been less charmed, but O'Donoghue is far more concerned about his fans' opinions. And wouldn't anyone be, when their band's record sales total more than four million, and both their 2008 debut album and 2010 follow-up were No 1s? 

He tells me a sentimental story of a man who, separated from his sister since they were children, gave her their song "The Man Who Can't Be Moved" when they were finally reunited after 30 years apart. "Who cares if you don't get great reviews in newspapers? That's the shit I live for. That's what I'll be telling my kids, not 'Here's a shit review in NME'." 

That the band managed until recently to remain fairly unrecognisable while achieving chart-topping albums was intentional. "It was very much our choice", says O'Donoghue. "We didn't have ourselves on the front cover [of our albums] because we didn't want people to get the wrong idea about this band. It's very easy for a record company to package a band as extremely pop, a band that could be really easily confused with a McFly. We didn't want to be perceived in any way other than the music and creativity." 

You can see how being anonymous would be preferable to the horror of being perceived as a manufactured boy band. After all, The Script formed organically, three old friends from Dublin – O'Donoghue, guitarist Mark Sheehan, his best mate since the age of 13, and drummer Glen Power. For O'Donoghue, who grew up surrounded by music – his father was a musician who played with Tom Jones and Roy Orbison, his mother a dancer – it was a way of life. 

"Growing up I used to sleep in a place called the music room and there was a mattress on the ground and a piano in the corner. Friday, Saturday, Sunday it was party house in our house. I remember my dad told me a story about he and my mum waking up and Phil Lynott from Thin Lizzy was in the bath. They didn't know if he was dead. They'd been having a session playing." 

His two older brothers play in bands back in Ireland to this day. You might think that music was always going to be the chosen career path of O'Donoghue, the youngest of six children, but he didn't pick up the guitar until he was 14 or 15. "No, I ran the other way," he states. "My Mum always used to miss my brothers when they were away on tour so I'd say, 'I'm never going to leave you Mum'. I wanted to be an artist. I was drawing morning, noon and night." 

Family features much on The Script's third album. On Valentine's Day 2009, O'Donoghue's father died suddenly at 63 from an aneurysm. He now has a big rose tattoo on his arm, to remember him. A few months earlier, Power's mother had died from cancer. 

It took until this album for the pair to write about their grief, on the song "If You Could See Me Now". Both knocked back some whisky, then Sheehan took one end of the room while O'Donoghue took the other, and the pair wrote alternate verses. 

"It was an incredibly hard song to write… As soon as I started writing the lyrics, I started crying. We're men, we're 30 years old, and there's not a lot of people out there that would be open enough to say it in the same way as The Script. That song was more important for Mark than it was for me because I'm very open about my emotions, but he's not at all, so to hear him sum up in one verse what I've been waiting for him to say to me was an incredible moment. That really is the power of music." 

Now, of course, being able to blend in with the crowds is no longer an option for The Script. O'Donoghue remembers how when he took on the role in The Voice, his bandmates teased him that he would be harangued by fans – and chuckles at how they, too, are no longer anonymous. "It's gone up a whole other level for them." 

Aside from celebrity status, that's about all that's changed for O'Donoghue who is still wearing the quintessential rock star black skinny jeans and still living in the same London bedsit. "The boys have all moved, but I'm still in the shitty bedsit. This isn't going to be forever so why would you say, 'Oh, I've got a bit of money now, let's go live in The Hamptons'? A lot of my friends don't have money, and I would hate to lose touch with all of my friends and family." He surveys the plaques and platinum discs lining the walls of his publicist's office. Is this what his bedsit looks like? "I don't have any plaques on my wall; I'm not into it at all. When you're dead and buried, that's for other people to celebrate your life. I'm living it." 

Source: Independent

MLBFanCave.Com Concert Series: The Script - FREE Performance

The MLB Fan Cave Concert Series is pleased to welcome The Script to the Cave for a performance presented by Scotts. The Script will play an exclusive live set on Friday, October 5, beginning at 3:00pm, as part of the Scotts Take The Field Postseason Launch Event. 

The 30-minute performance is open to the public and fans are encouraged to come down to the MLB Fan Cave (corner of 4th and Broadway) for the chance to see the set. Please note that space is limited. 


When: Friday October 5, 2012
Time: 3:00pm
Where: MLB Fan Cave
692 Broadway
4th & Broadway
New York, NY 10012
Cost: Free

So much has changed for The Script since they released their first album four years ago. First they broke Britain, then the States, then everywhere from Asia to South Africa. In short, the past four years have seen The Script become one of the biggest, best-loved bands in the world - if you want to stack up the stats, the trio have so far sold four million albums and a staggering nine million singles. 

Yet on the eve of releasing their third album, ‘#3’, what is most striking about The Script is how little they’ve changed. In a South London studio, fizzing with excitement about their new songs, the three best friends have lost none of their passion for making music. They’re still a self-sufficient unit who write, play and produce every song themselves. “There’s a synergy to Three,” says singer Danny O’Donoghue. “If you delve in to it – which we tend to do with everything – it’s a lucky number, in the past a religious number. But the title is mostly about us. As any geek fan of the band could tell you, we’re all extremely different people, but magic happens when you mix us together.” 

Source: livingfreenyc.com

Crossing genres

Danny O'Donoghue is lying in bed. He figures if he has to talk to the Australian press at an un-rock'n'roll hour well before lunchtime, that's the most comfortable place to do it.

The singer for Irish rock trio the Script is, funnily enough, discussing the hard work ethic which has brought the band to their third album, called #3.

O'Donoghue says this one was all about fun mingled with liberal lashings of hard work. Plus given all the songs the 31-year-old says he's actually written this should be about album number 13.

After making waves with their 2008 self-titled album and 2010's Science & Faith, the Script outing is a mix of music for the head, heart and feet. Across a compact 10 tracks the award-winning trio has crafted meaningful songs brimming with thoughtful messages set to melodies and beats which straddle a number of genres, from pop to hip-hop.

"The Script has been heartbroken for a long time and you can hear that from the records," O'Donoghue says. "This one allowed us to experiment with different styles and genres and push the envelope.

"This has more of our hip-hop roots in it, which is sometimes difficult to see being an Irish band who love hip-hop, rap and R&B. We also decided to go a little more rocky, which goes back to one of our original intentions."

O'Donoghue insists he is far happier than he was four years ago, despite the fact that the album features the break-up song Six Degrees of Separation and If You Could See Me Now, which deals with the deaths of O'Donoghue's father and guitarist Mark Sheehan's parents. The latter contains the haunting line: "Music was the home for your pain."

"It's about the fact that our parents would be happy with what we are doing, even if they were going to tell us we probably drink too much," the singer says. "It's the first time we've been able to say it and we've needed to do it for a long time."

During the recording of #3, O'Donoghue appeared as a coach on The Voice UK. He says it was very much a group decision for him to go on the music talent show which more than anything stemmed from wanting to make a difference, rather than being a grab for increased publicity.

That said, the natural increase in profile appearing on the show alongside Tom Jones, will.i.am and Jessie J, helped more people put a face to the Script frontman.

"People know our songs but they didn't really know me so that was a great way to show that people in bands, not just solo singers, can be part of a show like this," O'Donoghue says.

"If it wasn't me, I would have suggested they put on someone like Kelly Jones from Stereophonics to represent this part of the music industry. As a band we felt it was important to be up there."#3 is out now. The Script play Perth Arena on April 3. Tickets from Ticketek.

Source: au.news

4 October 2012

Danny Out Enjoying His Birthday

Massive thanks for all the birthday messages out there guys D I'm having a drink for yez all now x D


Source: @thescript 

3 October 2012

Stars Reveal Their Favourite James Bond

To coincide with the 50 year anniversary a variety of stars were asked who their favourite James Bond actor was. Dannys' answer is on at approximately 1.10 seconds.


Source: Associated Press / Text: DannyODonoghue.net

Happy Birthday Danny


Source: DannyODonoghue.Net

2 October 2012

Another Day Another Time Zone


After recovering from their jet lag in Australia, The Script have arrived into another time zone. New York city is 10 hours behind Sydney, so another case of jet lag will no doubt be looming. New York has long been known by the affectionate name "The Big Apple" The Script obviously have their own name for it...


the script ‏@thescript
Back in NYC or as we like to call it 'The Big Orange'. Cant wait for Radio City Music Hall show. ;-

Source: Twitter / Text: DannyODonoghue.Net

1 October 2012

Glamour Magazine Top 100 Sexiest Men

Robert Pattinson has been voted Glamour's Sexiest Man for 2012 - His forth year in a row.

For the first year Danny O'Donoghue from The Script has entered the chart in 16th place. This is no doubt due to The Voice where people first saw the Irishman. We knew his sultry Irish voice but no idea what 'Man Who Can't Be Moved' singer looked like. Now we do and it looks like the UK have sat up and taken notice.



One Direction surprisingly didn't make the top 20 - with Harry Styles at 21, Zayn Malik at 27, Niall Horan at 34, Louis Tomlinson at 48 and Liam Payne at 77.

Source: Glamour Magazine

The Script Perform At NRL Grand Final

September 30, 2012: Irish band The Script perform their hit single 'Hall of Fame' as a tribute to this season's retiring NRL stars at the Grand Final.


Source: msn.com au / Edited: DannyODonoghue.Net
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