Chords for Alex Lahey Interview | Poncho

Tempo:
91.35 bpm
Chords used:

E

F#

A

B

C#

Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
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Alex Lahey Interview | Poncho chords
Start Jamming...
I'm back in the Poncho studios with Alex Leahy.
Hello.
It's good to have you back here in front of this green screen of possibility.
You got a new album, you got your first album coming out.
Yeah, I have a new album coming out.
Yes, the album coming out.
It's called I Love You Like A Brother.
Do you have a brother?
I do.
And do [C#] you love him?
Yes.
Okay, [F#] well that makes sense.
The video for Every Day is a Weekend.
You have really great, funny, weird videos.
Oh, thank you.
In the video you work a variety of crappy jobs.
Is this based on real [C#] experience?
Is this method acting?
Have you worked in these crappy jobs before?
I haven't worked at a pickle factory before.
My two first jobs actually weren't that bad.
The first one was at a video store, which was actually really fun.
I was 15 and we'd just watch Arrested Development and eat zombie juice.
It was great.
The job I had after that was at a bookstore.
I was so at the bottom of the pecking order [G] at this place and have these vivid memories
of [E] carrying these [B] massive [F#] cardboard boxes full of hardback Jamie Oliver recipe books
[B] with Jamie Oliver staring back up at me from the box and I was like, why [E] are you doing
this to me?
A lot of your lyrics seem to be about everyday [F#] experiences and [A] regular life, if there is
such a thing.
Is there a reason you tend to zone in on quite relatable everyday experiences [E] instead of
dragons or something?
[G#] Yeah, some people do do that, which is cool. Yeah.
[E] But
No diss to the dragon.
[D#] Yeah, dragon away.
I think it's just because I just like to write [G] about what I know and how things make me [E] feel.
Really it's me not going out of my way to be relatable at all, it's just being honest
about how I [C#] feel.
Sure.
And generally, a lot of other people are going to feel the same way too.
There's an undercurrent in your lyrics as well of a sort of quarter-life crisis.
Do you think you are either going through one or have gone through one?
I actually think I'm going through one.
Okay.
Totally.
Oh my god, I was having this conversation [F#] with a friend last night.
[C#] And she said this really funny thing.
She was just like, what are you even supposed to be doing in your mid-twenties?
Are we [F#] supposed to be sitting here figuring our shit out?
Are we supposed [A] to be with the person that we were [C#] with in high school?
Are we supposed [B] to be in some relationship that's two years [F#m] old and it's already gone
stale, but [C#m] you're keeping it going for the sake of [E] it?
Are you supposed to be sleeping around?
[F#m] Are you supposed to be [C#m] just not concerned about [B] dating anyone at all?
[F#] In my EP, people were like, oh, it's this early twenties [E] uni sort of thing.
I was [G#m] kind of like, oh, then what?
Then what am I supposed to [E] do?
But now that I've entered this next part of my twenties, it's just as fucked.
How do you think you'll turn out as an older musician?
Do [F] you think you'll go through that country crooner kind of phase?
My band always jokes, they're like, I just got this jacket.
And they're like, first album denim jacket, second album weather jacket.
[G#] Like third album suede with tassels.
It's like, what's going to happen?
Do you feel you've put this together under more expectation [A] than any of your previous
work and has that, [C#m] I guess, affected [B] how you go through the process?
[A] I feel like it's still [C#m] the start, [E] you know, like I don't feel that I [F#] have to live up to anything.
I think [F#m] that if any artist was looking back on an [B] EP and being like,
shit, [E] what am I going to do next?
It's like five songs.
It's like, how many songs are you going to write in your life?
I mean, like in the grand scheme [F#] of things, like [A] I haven't really done anything yet.
If you look at [B] how big the world of music is, I'm still [A] like,
[C#m] and like, you know, most [E] people like, we're just like a little [F#] like fleck in [A] that, in that [C#] fabric.
But it's also really good [B] because it means that you can just sort of like,
[A] be that [E] fleck.
Be the fleck.
Be the fleck.
Embrace the fleck.
[F#] [A] [B] [A] [E]
[G#] [F#] [E]
Key:  
E
2311
F#
134211112
A
1231
B
12341112
C#
12341114
E
2311
F#
134211112
A
1231
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I'm back in the Poncho studios with Alex Leahy.
Hello.
It's good to have you back here in front of this green screen of possibility.
You got a new album, you got your first album coming out.
Yeah, I have a new album coming out.
Yes, the album coming out.
It's called I Love You Like A Brother.
Do you have a brother?
I do.
And do [C#] you love him?
Yes.
Okay, [F#] well that makes sense.
The video for Every Day is a Weekend.
You have really great, funny, weird videos.
Oh, thank you.
In the video you work a variety of crappy jobs.
Is this based on real [C#] experience?
Is this method acting?
Have you worked in these crappy jobs before?
I haven't worked at a pickle factory before.
My two first jobs actually weren't that bad.
The first one was at a video store, which was actually really fun.
I was 15 and we'd just watch Arrested Development and eat zombie juice.
It was great.
The job I had after that was at a bookstore.
I was so at the bottom of the pecking order [G] at this place and have these vivid memories
of [E] carrying these [B] massive [F#] cardboard boxes full of hardback Jamie Oliver recipe books
[B] with Jamie Oliver staring back up at me from the box and I was like, why [E] are you doing
this to me?
A lot of your lyrics seem to be about everyday [F#] experiences and [A] regular life, if there is
such a thing.
Is there a reason you tend to zone in on quite relatable everyday experiences [E] instead of
dragons or something?
[G#] Yeah, some people do do that, which is cool. Yeah.
[E] _ But_
No diss to the dragon.
[D#] Yeah, dragon away.
I think it's just because I just like to write [G] about what I know and how things make me [E] feel.
Really it's me not going out of my way to be relatable at all, it's just being honest
about how I [C#] feel.
Sure.
And generally, a lot of other people are going to feel the same way too.
There's an undercurrent in your lyrics as well of a sort of quarter-life crisis.
Do you think you are either going through one or have gone through one?
I actually think I'm going through one.
Okay.
Totally.
Oh my god, I was having this conversation [F#] with a friend last night.
[C#] And she said this really funny thing.
She was just like, what are you even supposed to be doing in your mid-twenties?
Are we [F#] supposed to be sitting here figuring our shit out?
Are we supposed [A] to be with the person that we were [C#] with in high school?
Are we supposed [B] to be in some relationship that's two years [F#m] old and it's already gone
stale, but [C#m] you're keeping it going for the sake of [E] it?
Are you supposed to be sleeping around?
[F#m] Are you supposed to be [C#m] just not concerned about [B] dating anyone at all?
[F#] In my EP, people were like, oh, it's this early twenties [E] uni sort of thing.
I was [G#m] kind of like, oh, then what?
Then what am I supposed to [E] do?
But now that I've entered this next part of my twenties, it's just as fucked.
How do you think you'll turn out as an older musician?
Do [F] you think you'll go through that country crooner kind of phase?
My band always jokes, they're like, I just got this jacket.
And they're like, first album denim jacket, second album weather jacket.
[G#] Like third album suede with tassels.
It's like, what's going to happen?
Do you feel you've put this together under more expectation [A] than any of your previous
work and has that, [C#m] I guess, affected [B] how you go through the process?
[A] I feel like it's still [C#m] the start, [E] you know, like I don't feel that I [F#] have to live up to anything.
I think [F#m] that if any artist was looking back on an [B] EP and being like,
shit, [E] what am I going to do next?
It's like five songs.
It's like, how many songs are you going to write in your life?
I mean, like in the grand scheme [F#] of things, like [A] I haven't really done anything yet.
If you look at [B] how big the world of music is, I'm still [A] like,
[C#m] and like, you know, most [E] people like, we're just like a little [F#] like fleck in [A] that, in that [C#] fabric.
But it's also really good [B] because it means that you can just sort of like,
[A] be that [E] fleck.
Be the fleck.
Be the fleck.
Embrace the fleck.
_ [F#] _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [B] _ _ _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _
_ [G#] _ _ [F#] _ _ [E] _ _ _