Cassidy Paris is a dynamic Australian rock artist from Melbourne, known for her high-energy performances and powerful vocals as a singer-guitarist. Cassidy maintains a strong ongoing partnership with Frontiers Music Srl as her record label. The label continues to promote her work, with "Bittersweet" now available and a UK "Finish What We Started" tour scheduled for May 2026.
She blends '80s-inspired hard rock with modern twists, drawing from icons like Debbie Harry, Pat Benatar, Joan Jett, and Lita Ford. Her sound features catchy hooks, crunchy riffs, heartfelt ballads, and anthemic tracks, as heard on albums like "New Sensation" (2023) and "Bittersweet."
Listeners hear Cassidy discuss her early start-mentored by Paul Laine from age 11-and the challenges of her canceled UK tour amid rising buzz. She also shares insights on her latest song, reflecting personal growth and resilience in her evolving rock journey. Of course, Urosh didn't miss to mention her Macedonian origin. Enjoy the episode!
Follow Cassidy:
- website: https://cassidyparis.com/
- Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@UCqmOZ32OXqmlof28_0C85RA
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cassidyparisofficial
Read more about Cassidy on Music Nonstop Today:
- [Interview] Cassidy Paris: The New Rock Sensation
https://musicnonstop.today/2023/10/19/the-new-sensation-in-the-rock-world-interview-with-cassidy-paris/
- Listen to “Walking On Fire,” Cassidy Paris’ New Single
https://musicnonstop.today/2023/11/17/listen-to-walking-on-fire-cassidy-paris-new-single/
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0:04
Okay guys, in the new year now, uh we
0:08
are starting with this special episode
0:11
for me because uh two years ago we've
0:14
done uh we've done a written interview
0:17
with Cassidy Paris and uh now we go in
0:20
this format because almost two years now
0:22
we're doing the the podcast. This is
0:24
46th episode. So welcome and happy new
0:27
year Cassidy.
0:29
Thank you so much for having me. I'm so
0:31
glad to be on video form this time. So
0:34
much fun.
0:35
Of course. Of course. This is uh uh uh
0:37
this is kind of special for me because
0:40
because you have Macedonian roots, you
0:42
know.
0:43
Yeah. Your
0:45
Yeah, I've talked to your father quite
0:48
more. I know I know him for a few years
0:51
uh you know online and we've talked a
0:54
little bit more you know and uh got to
0:56
know him uh through through social media
1:00
and uh I know he plays with you and he
1:03
makes the songs with you together so uh
1:06
first I wanted to ask you about then
1:08
we're going to talk about the new album
1:10
but I wanted to ask you about your
1:11
beginnings
1:12
of course yeah I think my my
1:14
grandparents would be very proud me
1:16
doing a Macedonian uh interview today.
1:21
I'll have to show her and my grandmother
1:23
this video afterwards when it goes live.
1:25
She'll love it.
1:26
To Baba. To Baba. Yeah.
1:28
Yeah. To Baba. Yeah. Exactly. Exactly.
1:32
Okay. Okay. Uh so, uh how did you start?
1:35
I I know that you started writing at 11
1:38
with the with Pauline from Danger
1:40
Danger. I know that.
1:43
But how did you start before that?
1:45
Well, my first instrument was actually
1:48
playing guitar. Um, and I think
1:50
obviously that came from um for people
1:52
that don't know um my dad is um and has
1:55
been a guitarist for a very long time.
1:58
Um, ever since I remember, you know,
2:00
like we had guitars like floating around
2:02
in our house and um, I guess like, you
2:05
know, I was listening to rock music um,
2:08
literally from the womb. Um, and I was,
2:12
you know, born and bred on rock and
2:14
roll. And I guess like I kind of reached
2:16
out to my dad when I was old enough. And
2:19
I remember getting a guitar for probably
2:21
my like sixth or seventh birthday. And
2:24
funnily enough, bit of a full circle
2:26
moment. Um, I got like a Fender Squire,
2:29
I think it was. And now I'm endorsed by
2:32
Fender. So, pretty pretty cool like full
2:34
circle kind of thing to happen. Um, so I
2:38
started out on guitar. And then um I
2:41
think something that my dad really kind
2:43
of um you know he definitely laid out
2:46
the facts to me pretty early on and he
2:48
said look like even if you're going to
2:50
just do guitar like it's really um you
2:53
know quite good if you you learn how to
2:55
sing you know it's it's it's a very good
2:58
um you know quality to have as a
3:00
musician. And um it's funny because I
3:03
kind of I fell in love with singing even
3:05
more so and um I got singing lessons and
3:09
the rest is kind of history I guess.
3:12
That's about uh when did you start? Who
3:14
who was most popular then? Was it when
3:18
Hail Storm for example were the first
3:21
album and Yeah.
3:23
Yeah. So, I reckon my first album that I
3:26
kind of like really fell in love with
3:28
and um it kind of really got me into the
3:30
rock scene in particular. Um obviously,
3:33
like I said, I grew up like Alice
3:35
Cooper. I went to like Alice Cooper
3:37
concerts and stuff and Kiss concerts as
3:39
a kid, but I remember just being
3:41
absolutely obsessed with Lizzie Hail
3:43
when I was younger. And I remember
3:45
listening to the Strange Case of album
3:48
when it came out and thinking, "Oh my
3:51
goodness, this is like the band that
3:54
like I want to be like." Like like I
3:56
wanted to be like Lizzie Hail and um and
3:58
she was just such a like a good role
4:01
model as well for young women that um
4:04
wanted to get into rock and roll. And
4:06
there wasn't a lot going around at the
4:09
time as well. Obviously, you have Joan
4:10
Jet and Lita Ford, you know, the ones
4:12
that kind of paved the way, but Lizzy
4:15
and um Taylor Momson even from the
4:17
Pretty Reckless were kind of like the
4:19
two that really stood out to me and made
4:22
a difference in getting me into that
4:24
scene in particular.
4:26
Yeah, we we we had uh for example, they
4:29
they were globally and and more American
4:32
uh you know uh metal. Uh we we we in
4:36
Europe had a lot of uh the you know the
4:39
Scandinavian bands like Nightwish and
4:41
you know
4:43
female female vocalist that we we liked
4:46
20 25 years ago. Uh
4:50
yeah, I I remember like my dad has um
4:53
has supported Nightw Wish I think in in
4:55
Australia when they did their Australian
4:57
rounds and um yeah again even like you
5:00
know Amy Lee from Evanence I was a big
5:03
fan of her as well. There are so many
5:05
different women and I think it's
5:07
exciting because coming into you know um
5:11
this scene now as well there's kind of
5:13
like a new wave of female fronted bands
5:15
which is a great great to be a part of.
5:18
Yeah. Yeah, it's u
5:21
women in rock and roll now are like a
5:23
lot of guitarists, female guitarists are
5:26
now
5:26
actually into, you know, booming and a
5:30
lot of singers as well. And I follow I
5:32
follow Hailtorm even since before they
5:35
released the first album. Uh and and
5:38
yeah, I'm a I'm a fan. I'm a big fan of
5:39
of theirs. Uh, but also growing up in
5:43
the late 80s and '9s, I I am a fan of
5:47
the old school bands also like your
5:49
father my father taught me, you know.
5:52
Yeah, exactly. Exactly right. Like it
5:54
it's pretty cool. Like in a in probably
5:57
just over two months like I get to play
5:59
on the same stages as Lita Ford on the
6:01
Monsters of Rock Cruise and I grew up,
6:03
you know, listening to the Runaways and
6:05
Leader Ford solo stuff. So it's it's a
6:07
very cool kind of you know full circle
6:10
thing that's happening right now.
6:11
Yeah. Which which Masters of Rock is
6:13
that where it's going to cruise?
6:15
So goes out of Miami. Um and I think it
6:20
has two stops on the cruise which I'm
6:22
I'm so excited like I'm over over the
6:24
moon to be able to play that cruise. Um
6:26
it's been something just even as a fan
6:28
um I've always like wanted to do and um
6:32
yeah the whole Cassie Paris team is
6:34
really excited to to be able to do that
6:36
this year. It's going to be fun.
6:37
Yeah. I had my friends uh the big deal
6:40
from Serbia played the that cruise.
6:43
Yeah.
6:44
Yeah. Yeah. I I met the big deal um at
6:46
Frontiers Fest this year. Um really she
6:49
was Yeah. She was lovely.
6:51
Yeah. I met the the blonde the blonde
6:55
girl.
6:55
Nea. Yeah. Nea. Yeah. Yeah.
6:57
Yeah. She was beautiful. Very very
6:58
lovely.
6:59
Yeah. Nea. So her husband is a friend of
7:01
mine, Sergeon Branovich. You know, he
7:03
the guitar player. The guitar player.
7:05
Yeah. Yeah.
7:06
Very cool.
7:07
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So uh uh after you
7:12
started writing music with uh uh with
7:15
Paul from Danger Danger uh at 11 years,
7:19
right?
7:20
Yeah. Yeah. Very young. So, uh, when
7:22
when was your first, uh, recorded music
7:25
and did you have any bands before
7:28
growing up?
7:28
No. So, that the solo stuff has always
7:31
kind of been the like direction I wanted
7:33
to go in. Um, but yeah, and I I've been
7:36
working at like, you know, the Cassidy
7:38
Paris stuff. Um, I think my first like
7:42
single before like I obviously put out
7:44
singles and stuff before I was signed
7:46
and put out the debut record. Um and and
7:49
that was like obviously um a journey
7:51
that like I'm I'm really really grateful
7:53
for now as well being able to play at
7:56
such a young age. It taught me a lot
7:58
about being a musician and being on the
8:00
road um and kind of primed me for this,
8:03
you know, time in my life. I think that
8:05
like, you know, I started writing when I
8:07
was really young and I um reached out to
8:10
Paul and he was here in Australia. and
8:12
my dad's band were backing him on um
8:14
some solo shows that he was doing and um
8:17
he was just so lovely. Um he took me
8:20
under his wing and I was I was just able
8:23
to start from there. But my first like
8:26
ever single that I ever put out I think
8:28
I recorded when I was 13 and released
8:30
when I was 14 and that was called Talk
8:32
About It.
8:33
Wow. Awesome. And I and I and I remember
8:36
that you had EPs before you released the
8:40
first album. I I remember that.
8:42
Uh, so you have you have two EPs and two
8:45
albums now, right?
8:47
Yes. Yes, I do. Yeah. So, I think the
8:49
EPs um a lot of people It's funny
8:52
because the EPs are like fully sold out.
8:55
Um, and it's it's like, you know, I see
8:58
an EP around and some people do bring
9:00
them to shows like they're like a
9:02
collector's item, I guess, like now. um
9:04
and I'll sign them and it's just so cool
9:06
to see like obviously the the journey
9:10
and people will bring them to shows and
9:13
um but it's rare like for me to see one
9:15
these days and um yeah so we had
9:17
brokenhearted um which was my first EP
9:20
and then we had Flirt which was my
9:21
second one and then obviously New
9:24
Sensation was my debut and Bittersweet
9:26
was my um second album.
9:28
Yeah. The new the new album that you
9:30
released like uh now right? Uh you you
9:33
released your your last single 3 months
9:35
ago. I mean the video uh that you
9:37
released, right? It was maybe the maybe
9:40
the the most professionally done video
9:43
for you. Uh the the ugly coyote video,
9:47
right?
9:48
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It it was um
9:50
it's funny because I remember trying to
9:52
think of like a theme and something with
9:54
this album that I've been really trying
9:56
to focus on is um obviously like um you
10:00
know I have all these themes that are
10:01
involved in the in the music and making
10:03
of the music but then trying to think of
10:05
something of like a way to market it as
10:08
well is a whole other you know um uh can
10:12
of fish. like it's so it's so difficult
10:14
to try and like figure out where you
10:16
want to go with things and um I feel
10:18
like the the coyote ugly thing kind of
10:21
just happened and I was speaking about
10:24
it with a lot of the times I'll discuss
10:26
it with my mom and um I'll be like oh
10:28
what do you think about this theme and
10:30
coyote ugly was something that just
10:32
stuck and I had two of my um you know
10:34
best girlfriends in the clip which was
10:36
so much fun to to film it with them and
10:39
yeah it was just a really fun um music
10:42
video and you know I might be doing a
10:44
bit of that live. You know I might get
10:46
up on a bar somewhere in Europe. We'll
10:49
see.
10:50
Yeah, you you Australians are doing
10:52
that. I saw I saw Airborne from
10:54
Australia and they're doing exactly
10:56
that. They're they're up there on the
10:58
bars and you know playing with the beer
11:00
with the beer and stuff. I saw them
11:01
live.
11:04
Yeah. Yeah. Maybe maybe Australians have
11:06
an obsession with bars. I don't know.
11:08
Getting up performing in bars.
11:11
Yeah. probably. Uh so uh uh your father
11:15
was also a huge inspiration inspiration
11:17
for you, right?
11:18
Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. He always
11:20
has been.
11:21
Does he sing or only?
11:24
You know what I think that's maybe
11:25
something that like you know when I was
11:27
saying earlier like he said for me it's
11:29
a really good quality to be able to
11:31
sing. Um, you know, I think he learned
11:34
to sing or even he learned to play
11:36
guitar a lot later than what usual
11:39
musicians would. Like he started playing
11:42
guitar when he was 16 or 17.
11:45
Um, he yeah picked it up because he was
11:48
trying to get into AFL. Um, and he
11:53
wanted to play guitar and that's kind of
11:55
how he got into it. But he learned to
11:56
sing a lot later. Like I remember him
11:59
like practicing harmonies and learning
12:01
to try and you know like match pitch and
12:03
stuff when I was a young girl. So a lot
12:06
later in his career he he he was able to
12:08
do that.
12:09
Uhhuh. Okay. Okay. So uh on the on the
12:12
new record and and on the previous one
12:14
he he not only tours but he also plays
12:17
on the records right with you.
12:19
Yes. Yes. Correct. Yeah.
12:21
Okay. Okay. So, uh u when did you when
12:24
did you when did you sign with the
12:26
Frontiers Records and how how did that
12:28
happen?
12:30
I think I believe it was in 2022
12:33
or 2023. I'm not sure of the exact year.
12:36
It could have been in I remember signing
12:38
it in 2022, but I think it was released
12:41
in 2023 because um the the first record
12:45
came out in late 2023. Um, and the way
12:49
it kind of came about is, um, I had this
12:51
single called Danger, and it's very like
12:55
I remember it. I remember.
12:57
Yeah. Yeah. Um, it's very 80s inspired,
13:00
like kind of like Vixonesesque
13:03
um, kind of single. And I I just
13:06
pitching it, you know, like kind of
13:08
shopping um the music around to a couple
13:10
of labels and Frontiers um really were
13:14
like willing and um wanted to get behind
13:18
exactly what my vision was for the Casy
13:20
Paris stuff and um yeah, working with
13:23
them has just been an absolute blast. I
13:25
love the entire team. I got to meet all
13:27
of them in Italy last year. Um and we
13:30
have so much coming up this year, which
13:32
is very, very exciting.
13:34
Wow. Awesome. Awesome. So, uh you you
13:36
you signed for a few albums more
13:40
probably. Yeah.
13:41
Yeah. So, you're going to release more
13:43
albums with them, right?
13:45
Yeah. Yeah, definitely.
13:46
That is awesome. Tell me something more
13:48
about the new uh album.
13:50
Uh Bittersweet, right?
13:53
Yes. Bittersweet. Yeah. I I guess
13:56
bittersweet. um you know the whole
13:58
Cassidy Paris thing like my dad and I um
14:00
it's never at a standstill and we're
14:02
very like um productive people. We're
14:05
always creating, always writing. Um and
14:08
I remember like literally um new
14:10
sensation had come out and the response
14:13
was wild. Like um so much better than we
14:16
could have ever predicted. and we went
14:18
on tour to the UK. Um, and we just saw
14:22
the response and we were like, well, we
14:24
need to just keep writing immediately
14:26
because we want to like keep this, you
14:28
know, keep this ball rolling. And we
14:31
went back to Australia and that's when
14:33
we kind of got to work on on
14:35
Bittersweet. was immediately um and
14:38
that's something that you know the label
14:40
and I um are really you know on the same
14:43
page with as well you know keeping
14:45
things coming out and keeping the ball
14:47
rolling always doing stuff um it as a
14:50
fan as well I think it's really nice to
14:54
just keep seeing new music coming out
14:56
there new tours you know when an artist
14:58
or a band is doing it just makes you so
15:01
excited as a fan of the music and that's
15:04
something that I really realized being a
15:06
fan of like, you know, Hail Storm, the
15:08
Pretty Reckless, any band that you can
15:10
think of, I'm like, what are they doing
15:12
next? What are they going to do next?
15:15
Um, so that's kind of how Bittersweet
15:17
came about. And I got to work with a
15:19
bunch of like heavyweights in the
15:21
industry on this on this record. So, I'm
15:23
I'm really excited about that. That um
15:27
you know, the collaborations are are
15:29
really really cool. Like I got um uh
15:31
Pete Learance from Haram Scarum Plays on
15:34
you know the the second single Stronger
15:37
which was awesome because I got to tour
15:39
with them in um April of last year and
15:42
that was really really cool.
15:46
I remember that uh that you also u I
15:49
mean I I heard on the album uh that uh
15:52
that you also wrote with with Steve
15:55
Brown from Trickster.
15:57
Yeah. Yeah.
15:58
and and from he he also wrote on wrote
16:01
the last album of Ace Freely. So I am
16:04
I'm I'm actually doing an interview with
16:06
with Steve Brown later on in this month
16:08
uh uh for the for this podcast. Yeah, it
16:12
was
16:12
Oh yeah. No, Steve is just like a ball
16:14
of energy and like you know everything
16:17
you see online of the man is like
16:19
exactly true to his you know personality
16:22
and character and he's just such a nice
16:24
person. Um I I remember reaching out to
16:28
him and um he was just like absolutely
16:31
like what what are you thinking? Um was
16:33
so on board with like my vision for
16:36
everything? Um and then when Nothing
16:38
Left to Lose came about, I remember just
16:41
like, you know, singing on that track
16:43
and thinking to myself like, "Wow, this
16:45
is like got to be a single because it's
16:48
one of the my favorite songs I've ever
16:50
ever released or put out." And um it's
16:53
funny because I think the fans as well
16:55
really liked it too. Like I was reading
16:58
um comments and messages and you know
17:01
all these DMs saying like I really love
17:03
that like heavier edge with nothing to
17:05
lose because I'd never kind of
17:08
experimented going down that route at
17:11
all. Um and with Nothing Left to Lose I
17:13
was able to do that. So it was pretty
17:15
cool.
17:15
Yeah. I I love it. I love it. It's like
17:17
the hardest the heaviest song you did.
17:19
Yeah. Uh probably it's it's it's it's
17:23
close to on the borderline between heavy
17:26
metal and uh and you know hard and a
17:30
little bit of punk rock you know.
17:32
That's it. That's it. Yeah. Yeah. It was
17:34
it was very cool. And I think um you
17:36
know even like the new stuff that I do
17:38
after it's given me a really good
17:40
indication of where people want me to go
17:42
with things next as well.
17:44
Yeah. Yeah. Uh you you also do have punk
17:48
rock uh influence in in your songs. I I
17:52
I can hear that. I can hear maybe uh
17:55
early Aloin and I can I I can hear some
17:59
' 90s pop punk maybe. I don't know.
18:02
Yes. Yeah. Yeah, definitely.
18:06
I think that like you know um when you
18:08
listen to a Cassy Paris record um like a
18:13
band that I would say kind of do a
18:15
similar thing sometimes is extreme. When
18:17
you listen to an extreme record you can
18:19
get lots of different things and um
18:23
that's kind of how I set up the first
18:25
record to be. you know, you listen to a
18:28
song like Midnight Desire that um you
18:31
know, it's very like AO and then um you
18:34
listen to a song like Addicted on that
18:36
album. Very very different. And I think
18:39
that's something that I really like
18:41
because then you're not pigeonholed to a
18:44
a certain select style. Um and you can
18:47
kind of go any which way with things.
18:50
Yeah. Yeah. You're not stick to the to
18:52
one genre only. But uh but but the sound
18:55
of the guitars and your voice makes it
18:58
uh complete, you know. It's uh it's not
19:00
like it's a different style, you know.
19:02
It's not like different music.
19:04
Thank you so much. Yeah. Yeah. It's um I
19:07
think it's something that I'm I'm
19:09
really, you know, proud of and I feel
19:11
like with Bittersweet and I think um you
19:14
know, people listening to it as well, I
19:15
hope see that, you know, Bittersweet was
19:18
really me coming into myself as an
19:20
artist on this record. um you know with
19:23
the first record you don't know how it's
19:25
going to be received and obviously new
19:27
sensation was really wellreceived and
19:29
I'm so grateful for that um so when we
19:32
did Bittersweet I had like a very good
19:34
idea of what I wanted to be um as an
19:37
artist and who I wanted to become um
19:39
going into that record and I just feel
19:42
like I know myself better than than I
19:43
ever have. Yeah, I I I I followed your
19:46
uh your transition from the first to the
19:49
second because uh
19:53
a little bit of unhappy moment happened
19:55
in in while you were on tour like half
19:58
of half of the band left the tour,
20:00
right?
20:00
Yeah,
20:01
it was it was in UK. Why why did that
20:03
happen? And and that probably that
20:05
transformed you and made the new record,
20:07
right? Yeah, I think it was a very um
20:10
you know disappointing thing for to
20:12
happen and um you know like I I don't
20:15
like to obviously like speak on it too
20:17
much, but um I I was just very saddened
20:21
because you know it was very much like
20:23
the rug was pulled out from under me and
20:25
my father. Um, and you know when a lot
20:28
of musicians that have something like
20:30
that happen will understand that you
20:32
know there is nothing better than being
20:35
able to see the crowds and you know
20:38
interact with them live. And I was just
20:40
I was not only heartbroken for like what
20:43
happened but I was heartbroken for
20:45
everyone that we were supposed to see.
20:47
Um it was you know
20:50
like I will say it was very
20:51
unprofessional what happened. Um, and
20:54
you know, I think that it's something
20:55
that in the future I've really, um, made
21:00
sure that there is no possibility of
21:02
that ever happening again. Um, and I
21:05
just, you know, I'm looking forward with
21:07
things. Um, I released the song Stronger
21:10
as well. But um yeah, it is very
21:13
difficult as especially a young musician
21:15
and a young female in the scene going
21:18
through that the day before a tour is
21:21
supposed to happen. You know, I think
21:23
people could read between the lines with
21:25
what was what was going on there. And um
21:28
yeah, to to have the rug pulled out from
21:31
you like financially um professionally
21:34
and personally was it just heartbreaking
21:37
to me and it took me a lot of time to
21:40
get over that as well. Um, but I feel
21:43
like, you know, Bittersweet is kind of a
21:46
bit of a prophecy because that album was
21:48
obviously written before all that stuff
21:50
happened, but it was very much a
21:53
reflection of, you know, um, you stand
21:56
with power and, you know, you keep
21:58
moving and don't let anyone try and, you
22:02
know, um, make you become someone that
22:05
you're not. Um, I felt very silenced as
22:08
not only a musician but as a woman for a
22:10
very long time. So, it was a very
22:12
difficult thing for me to kind of
22:13
combat, but I feel stronger than ever
22:16
now. So, I'm ready.
22:18
Yeah, it's kind of like uh transformed
22:21
you and you you are pretty well uh now
22:25
you you look pretty much stronger than
22:28
than before and and the album is
22:29
stronger than than before and
22:31
everything, you know, it looks like
22:33
I really appreciate that. I really
22:34
really appreciate that. I've done a lot
22:36
of um work behind the scenes um and I've
22:40
had not like this is not only on the
22:42
part of me or my father but there have
22:45
been so many people um that are working
22:48
behind the scenes on the whole Cassidy
22:50
Paris project at the moment and this
22:53
year like I think it's the beginning of
22:55
something really special. Um I can't
22:58
wait to reveal what we're doing. We're
23:00
doing so many things worldwide and
23:02
places that I've never been to in my
23:04
life and never thought I would ever
23:06
venture to. So, um it's just a very
23:09
exciting time. Um you know, I think
23:12
incidents like that really do make you
23:15
stronger and um you know, I think it's
23:18
it's going to be really fun to see where
23:20
things go from here because there are so
23:22
many different people that have their
23:24
hand in the pie with this project. So,
23:27
that's uh that's amazing. Uh so uh uh
23:31
what is what are your future steps if
23:35
you can reveal something like short-term
23:37
and long-term maybe?
23:39
Yeah, there is like literally something
23:42
happening basically like every month of
23:44
this year which is um you know going to
23:46
be like instrumental to the next like
23:49
season of the Cassidy Paris project.
23:52
Like I think that um you know it's it's
23:55
so um exciting for me because I've been
23:58
waiting you know to speak on a lot of
24:01
these things but um I have something
24:03
that's like coming up that's quite a new
24:06
venture for me um that's coming up
24:08
really soon with um my record label
24:11
Frontiers. I have um you know I'm
24:14
touring I'm doing the UK tour which is
24:16
called the Finish What We Started tour.
24:18
Um I and I'm touring in a lot of
24:21
different places too. Some that I'm not
24:23
allowed to speak on yet. Um but I'm
24:26
basically like, you know, out of the
24:28
country for majority of this year. Um
24:31
which, you know, is just so so exciting
24:35
for me. I can't wait to like show people
24:37
what I've got on these next show dates.
24:40
Yeah. I I love the the name of your UK
24:43
tour next in uh I think April, May,
24:46
right?
24:47
Yeah. Correct.
24:49
What was the What was the name again?
24:50
Finish what we started, right?
24:52
Finish what we started. Yeah.
24:54
Great name. Great.
24:55
Yeah, it is. Um, thank you. I um It's
24:59
funny because it was a song obviously on
25:01
the new record. Um, bittersweet, but
25:04
like I said, everything kind of feels
25:06
like a bit of a prophecy. Um, and you
25:09
know, I I remember like kind of trying
25:12
to think of like what am I going to call
25:13
it? You know, a big one was like, do I
25:16
call it the stronger tour um or do I
25:19
call it the finish what we started tour?
25:20
And finish what we started just seem to
25:23
stick a little bit better um considering
25:25
what happened. So, you know, like I'm
25:28
I'm very um grateful to to the fan base
25:32
and to the community online that has
25:34
stood by me through this. Like, I know
25:36
it's been, you know, difficult for them
25:38
to see, you know, an artist go through
25:41
that as well. Um, but I'm so so grateful
25:44
and I just can't wait to give people um,
25:47
you know, everything I've got on this
25:49
tour and, you know, make sure that I
25:52
they know that I really value them as a
25:53
fan base.
25:55
Awesome. Awesome. Awesome. By the way, I
25:57
had many guests in this past year and a
26:00
half from Frontiers uh, bands. I had I
26:03
don't know Ronnie Romero, I had Joel
26:06
Hogstra, I had Jimmy Bell from Autograph
26:08
and a lot a lot of them. So you're now
26:11
in in that family, you know, of of
26:13
guests from from Frontiers. Yeah. Yeah.
26:16
It's funny because all those people I
26:18
just admire so much, but a lot of them
26:20
as well like I've spoken to now um via
26:23
the label and everything and it's um
26:25
it's just it's awesome as a fan of the
26:28
music for so long to be able to know
26:31
those people as well.
26:33
Okay. Uh okay, we should maybe finish
26:36
up. Uh what's the I mean what's the time
26:39
there?
26:41
The the the time um it's 9:30 a.m. So
26:46
right
26:48
you're you're
26:50
starting the day. Yeah, I'm finishing
26:52
the day.
26:56
Yeah. No, it's been really fun. Thank
26:58
you so much for having me on.
26:59
Yeah, of course. We'll do it next time
27:01
again when you have a big thing to to to
27:03
to say, you know, next album or maybe
27:06
next tour or something else. We'll we'll
27:08
stay in touch and say hi to your to your
27:10
father.
27:11
Uh, thank you so much. I will I will do.
27:15
And we'll uh hope to see you on tour
27:17
this uh this year.
27:19
Yeah, thank you so much. You definitely
27:21
will. I definitely will say that.
27:22
I will try. Yes. Thank you.
27:25
Thank you so much. See you later.
27:27
Bye-bye.
#Rock Music

