Born of Irish lineage in Scotland late one August in the fog, Ken Mullen has been searching for well-defined form and substance most of his subsequent waking days. After a childhood prolonged by many years in boarding institutions, Mullen finally found himself at Oxford, in those halcyon days when students were still ‘paid by the Government to read books’.
Armed with two highly inappropriate English degrees, he then, for no quantifiable reason, embarked on a career as a copywriter. After thirty-odd years chipping manfully away at the advertising coal-face, he finally fell back exhausted, straight into the arms of his first love, letters, wherein he has languished, quietly undetermined, ever since.
Animal Verses Human constitutes the first signs of continuing life. But, in all his years as a copywriter (32!), Mullen harboured a secret. He was also a singer / songwriter. Kenneth Mullen in Irish is Kinnaid O’Meaillain and Kinnaid has chosen to recognize his connection to Donegal. Kinnaid’s grandfather, Hugh Gallagher, finding no work in Letterkenny, his home town, left Donegal when he was 18 to work in the coalmines just outside Glasgow.
Kinnaid’s grandmother (a Doyle) was a very good opera singer and was persuaded to leave her contract in New York to get married to Hugh Gallagher. Needless to say, it was Hugh who did the persuading, going off to the States for the express purpose of bringing her back.
And this gives you a picture of Katherine, their first child and Kinnaid’s mother, the “Darling Ma” of one of Kinnaid’s finest songs. There are currently 52 songs in the Kinnaid songbook. Most of his earlier songs are sad songs and feature on his first album, Songs of Mullencholy.
Kinnaid has spent years persuading his audience that Johnny Cash didn’t die but emigrated incognito to Kentish Town. His second album Kentish Town & Country provides some ammunition for conspiracy theorists who believe the story might just be true, particularly if you listen to The Path of Love and I Feel A Sentence Coming which re-routes Cash’s classic Folsom Prison Blues. Kinnaid’s third album, Songs In The K Of Life, are all one-offs and indicate Kinnaid’s highly original take on life as he has known it.
Kinnaid has spent years persuading his audience that Johnny Cash didn’t die but emigrated incognito to Kentish Town. His second album Kentish Town & Country provides some ammunition for conspiracy theorists who believe the story might just be true, particularly if you listen to The Path of Love and I Feel A Sentence Coming which re-routes Cash’s classic Folsom Prison Blues. Kinnaid’s third album, Songs In The K Of Life, are all one-offs and indicate Kinnaid’s highly original take on life as he has known it.
Ken is ready to deploy his considerable talents on your behalf, be it in the field of pithy, witty copywriting or vibrant and varied voice-over work. Needs must and this particular devil is more than happy being driven!