Cian Nugent doesn't know what he wants to be, and that's OK. The Dublin-based guitarist cut his teeth as a 19-year-old pickin' on the acoustic worlds that John Fahey, Jack Rose and Bert Jansch built. But that was five years ago, and since then, Nugent has come at his instrument and his songwriting from all sides, hitting up psychedelic folk, garage pop and cosmic guitar improvisation along the way. On a short U.S. tour supporting Angel Olsen (herself a Tiny Desk alum), Nugent stopped by the NPR Music offices to play what he's called the “incoherent range of the mess that is my musical career.“ There's the acoustic “Grass Above My Head,“ a slow, somber melody that turns into a ragtime jaunt. The song once shared a 7“ with an inventive Black Flag cover and was re-recorded with his band The Cosmos for last year's excellent Born With the Caul. Nugent then switches to a cheap, no-name electric guitar — purchased just days before in a pawn shop — that only seems to stay in tune when a pencil's been in the nut. (O
Hide player controls
Hide resume playing