When Jordan O’Keefe stepped onto the stage at the Britain’s Got Talent Grand Final in 2018 – having duetted with Ed Sheeran - it looked like the moment his life would change forever.
But behind the lights, the applause, and incoming record deal, he was carrying something far darker.
At six years old, O’Keefe had been sexually abused - a trauma he kept hidden as his profile rose, the spotlight grew stronger lighting up all that he was. In that light the only way he could forget what had happened was to turn to drink and drugs and this cost him 10 years of his life as he spiralled downward into a world of self-destruction and addiction.
At Dublin’s Pepper Canister Church, O’Keefe stood in stark contrast to that past. Now almost three years sober, with a wife and three children, he returned not just as a performer - but like a boxer who has just gotten up after taking a pounding – fist in the air as he took to the stage – a man ready to share his truth with the world.
In front of an audience of 200, including fans and music industry figures, he launched a new body of work drawn directly from his lived experience - raw, unfiltered, and deeply human.

Jordan O'Keefe and his wife Myllena O'Keefe pictured at his album launch at the Pepper Canister Church in Mount Street, Dublin.
In his own words, O’Keefe addresses the crowd…“My Whole life, I’ve been told who I am – judged, pushed aside, made to feel I’d never be enough”. This show, this album, is the journey through all of that. Even though I’m telling my story, it isn’t just about me – it’s about you, too. It’s about anyone who’s ever felt boxed in or defined by someone else. I want this to inspire you to step into who you truly are. And I’ll fight for that…..always.”
Among the standout tracks was “Why Are You Always With Me?” - a haunting reflection on the lingering presence of abuse, capturing the way past trauma follows long after the moment has passed.
“History” shifted the tone, telling the story of meeting his wife - a moment of light in the darkness - captured in the lyric: “I was in the dark, and you were all alone, you turned on the light and I walked you home.”
In “Three Hearts,” O’Keefe offered an unflinching portrait of addiction - “the devil’s juice” and “white lines on the table” - set against the quiet resilience of his wife, who held their family together and carried their three children through the chaos – their 3 hearts in her hand.
The performance built toward “Better Parts of Me,” a powerful closing statement of recovery - a song about confronting addiction, reclaiming identity, and choosing a different path forward.

Megan Maguire and Caoimhe Kenny pictured at Jordan O'Keefe’s album launch.
More than a live show, the night marked a defining moment - the arrival of an artist who had fought his way through darkness and was now ready to stand in the light, on his own terms.
The project will now unfold over the next 12 months, with O’Keefe set to release the body of work track by track - allowing audiences to follow the journey in real time.
The first single, “If You Know,” goes on general release this Friday and is now available for pre-save. The track offers a stark and honest insight into O’Keefe’s relationship with alcohol - a time when drinking became both his escape and his identity, the only way he knew how to feel alive, and the only way to forget the dark secret he carried.
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