 You're very welcome to MPS Ghosts 2 here at Fantastical. I'm sitting here with the wonderful John Sbalan. John, cynnwys y taw. I mean, harb o'r ffordd y fawr yn ni'n sfer ar y rhiwf. I'n tawch, i'n tawch John. I'n sfa'r gwno hwp, you're a busy man. John, tell us about that. Oh, yeah. Yes, full on at the moment, Padra. I was gigging up in Belfast last night with Bray Oak, the only Irish language reggae band in the world with the Alabama 3, Keelah and myself. I celebrated 20 years of Bray Oak. I was done in Dublin this morning, but myrdiw mwch allan yn rhaidio, singing my song about the cherry blossom trees. I know I find myself in the middle of the most beautiful place on earth, under trumpet hill, the lovely wooded forest of Vantastavall. It's lovely here. Vantastical, magical, but unpronosable. Vantastavall. Well, that's a good way to put it. Have you been here before, John? No, I've never been here before, but I'm glad I came. I love it. I love these trees. It's beautiful. It's a special time of the year, really, in the first few days of May. That hill, that wooded forest is lovely. I could sit there all day looking at us, or any drugs. One thing actually that everybody is saying is that they love Vantastavall because it kick-starts the summer. You said that they kind of kick-starts the summer of festivals basically. Have you got any more festivals lined up for the summer after this? I haven't. I don't know, have I? Because you see they don't really do festivals normally, because what I do is such a kind of a delicate thing, really, that the bang bang bang from the tent next door doesn't suit me at all. Yeah, I know what you mean. I'm not inclined to do festivals, but last year I did a lovely festival called the Spirit of Folk in Dunderry County, Meath, and I went on a bomb. I think that I got this festival as a result. Because of that? Okay, well, that's lovely. I did a gig in the tent earlier on at the Spirit Store tent, and that went fantastic. I got some musicians with me tonight, four top-class musicians, so I think I can pull it off. You do a lot of television work, don't you? Well, I have been doing a lot. Lately I got my own series in TG Carr, Ireland's Irish language television station last year. It was called Splann en Faune, meaning Splann the Wanderer. It was me wandering around Ireland, like a rover, and travelling minstrel, a wandering bird. Actually, I got a review in a French magazine, and it called me a vagabond. So you're a vagabond, that's fantastic. The musical vagabond. So that's what I've been doing, going to small Irish towns, working behind the bar, pulling points, and meeting the locals, learning about local legends, folklor, music, and writing a song about the town. That's a lovely concept. I'm writing a lot of songs at the moment. So thanks a million, John, you've been great, and I look forward to seeing you later on. Lovely to meet you later, and lovely to meet you on the mainland. You're far from your home, you're only anishmo. I am indeed, yeah. So, thanks a million, John. This is MPS Goes to Vantastil, with John Splann. Woo, woo!