Louis O'Hara shares new 'Finally Stick' single - Debut Album 'A Peaceful Kind of Fun' released 7th November via Libertino
Stream 'Finally Stick' Video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLIieuyEPaY
'Finally Stick' Single
Opening in the glow of early love, the track captures the joy of losing yourself in someone else’s light. By the final verse, it drifts into a lower key reflecting on the exhaustion and fallout that come with endings.
Arranged with piano, bass, clarinet, cello, electric guitar, and even a theremin, the song also features a spoken-word bridge inspired by 1950s vocal groups like The Capris and The Ink Spots. The result is both tender and haunting a love song that lingers long after it fades.
'A Peaceful Kind of Fun' Album
West Wales songwriter Louis O’Hara has announced the release of his debut album, A Peaceful Kind of Fun, out 7th November 2025 on Libertino Records. The news arrives alongside the release of “Finally Stick”, the album’s second single, on Tuesday 23rd September.
A Peaceful Kind of Fun is a 14-track collection that distils O’Hara’s poetic lyricism, tender folk roots, and subtle chamber-pop flourishes into a deeply personal yet quietly universal debut. Recorded with his band His Burley Chassis and produced by James Trevascus (Billy Nomates, Young Fathers, Nick Cave & Warren Ellis) in Spain, the album is shaped by themes of memory, loss, joy, and the places and people that anchor a life.
Throughout the record, O’Hara draws from family history, friendships, and rural West Wales landscapes to create songs that are intimate yet resonant. “The Kid In Me” channels recurring dreams of playing football for Wales as an ode to imagination and daydreaming. “Just Grand” (the album’s first single) is a tender farewell to his grandfather. “Sunnyhill Farm” recalls childhood summers spent on his aunt and uncle’s dairy farm. “Munnelly” traces his grandfather’s memories of the corncrake bird in rural Ireland, entwined with the fragility of dementia. Other highlights include “Magpie”, a love song to his closest friend, “Married”, written in celebration of his brother’s wedding, and “Plant a Tree”, which gathers pieces of life advice into a song of gratitude.
New single “Finally Stick” embodies the duality at the heart of O’Hara’s writing - beginning with the joy and lightness of love’s early stages before descending into the exhaustion and fallout of a relationship’s end. Its arrangement layers piano, clarinet, cello, electric guitar, and theremin, with a spoken-word bridge nodding to 1950s vocal groups such as The Ink Spots and The Capris.
The album gathers together fragments of memory, relationships, and place, weaving them into songs that honour the connections which shape a life. Moving between moments of joy, loss, and reflection, A Peaceful Kind of Fun lingers on the small details that stay with us - the echoes of childhood, the presence of family, the landscapes of home.
Album Tracklisting:
1. The Kid In Me
2. Just Grand
3. Sunnyhill Farm
4. Mewn Llun
5. Munnelly
6. Magpie
7. Audrey
8. Llygaid Glas
9. Married
10. Finally Stick
11. Tŷ Ger Y Môr
12. Tears
14. Plant a Tree
About Louis O’Hara:
Louis O’Hara is a singer-songwriter from Pembroke Dock, West Wales, whose music blends tender folk sensibilities with poetic lyricism and chamber-pop textures. His songs draw from memory, place, and quiet emotional truths, often described as nostalgic, emotional, and intimate.
After years living in Bristol and London, O’Hara returned to West Wales in 2024, a move that inspired the writing of his forthcoming debut album (due late 2025). Written between a cherished nylon-string guitar and his grandmother’s piano, the record reflects on themes of loss, love, and friendship, arranged with his band His Burley Chassis and recorded in Spain with producer James Trevascus (Billy Nomates, Young Fathers, Nick Cave & Warren Ellis).
His earlier EPs Clay (2024) and Pass The Blame (2025) established him as one of Wales’ most affecting new voices, drawing comparisons to Leonard Cohen, Sparklehorse, and Paul McCartney. With “Just Grand”, Louis O’Hara offers a glimpse into the emotional honesty and lyrical clarity of his upcoming full-length record.