Interview: Daniel Donato (Cosmic Country) Coming to Saratoga!
By Staff on September 19, 2025
Interview: Daniel Donato (Cosmic Country)
By: Rob Smittix
Photo Credit: Jason Stoltzfus
RRX: Thank you for taking the time to talk to me today. I appreciate that.
DD: Oh, likewise.
RRX: And how’s life been treating you? What’s been going on?
DD: Everything all at once.
RRX: That’s usually how it works.
DD: Yup.
RRX: Are you currently on tour now?
DD: No, I’m home for the time being, which is really a blessing.
RRX: You’ve got a few more days left I think before you hit the road, right?
DD: Yeah, but I still do something every day, you know?
RRX: Mhm. So when you’re not on the road and you get a chance to stay at home, how do you fulfill your days?
DD: I reflect. I read, And I try to create. When I reflect, I spend time with my family or I’ll spend time with my friends and I journal and when I read I try to do that on the road. But reading has always been something that I’ve always loved doing since I was about in the first grade. I try to read every day and I love doing it here at my house to start my days off. And then I try to create, I try to write songs either by myself here at the cabin or I go into town and I’ll co-write songs. There are so many great writers that are here in Nashville.
RRX: Oh for sure.
DD: And I create demos for Cosmic Country or write songs to get pitched to other artists to record on their albums. Things like that. I’m recording a song right now that’s gonna be on the new album, so all kinds of activities.
RRX: Excellent. So I was stalking you online. Were you born and raised in Atlantic City?
DD: Well, I was born in Florida. Humans will say by accident, I guess the spiritual mind will say it’s by design. And then I moved to Jersey when I was a few weeks old, back with my mom and then a few years later, my whole family moved to Spring Hill.
RRX: Got you, I love Tennessee. I got family down there but I’m in the northeast, so I hit Atlantic City way more. Atlantic City is good for musicians I think if you’re playing cover shows or you’re doing a tribute to Elvis or something.
DD: Oh yeah, absolutely. The Atlantic City culture really… It imbues my life really just through my mother, because that’s where she was raised.
RRX: But Nashville seemed like the perfect move for you and it seemed to have worked out. I know a lot of musicians whos’ careers were going just fine at home. They moved down to Nashville and were living in their cars and asking their parents for money. So, I mean… it’s probably a cutthroat city when it comes to the talent down there.
DD: Oh, it really is. If you’re in a certain field of work and you live in a hub for that field, that place becomes a reflection of what you put out.
RRX: That makes sense. It seems like you’re really living the life, man, right now. You got a lot going on. You’re still a young man and still got a lot ahead of you, but you’ve accomplished a lot. What do you think in this short lifetime so far, as far as music goes… what do you think (not necessarily accolades) is your biggest accomplishment so far?
DD: I think the biggest one is that I’ve been able to be a part in creating music that has brought truth to people’s lives and it’s brought authentic experience. It’s allowed them to find a community where they can find genuine friendship. That’s really the biggest thing. I mean… I think that’s probably the most enduring thing that I’ve had an opportunity to be a part of.
RRX: I can definitely respect that. How does one measure success? It’s not always measured in money. And I think from your answer there, you get that.
DD: Yeah, you gotta render unto Caesar that which is Caesar’s, you know? The money is definitely a real thing. You also got render unto God that which is God’s and the thing with me is… I’ve never really understood why I had such a great drive to play music but I’ve always been in the music business. I’ve never… knock on wood, I’ve never made money doing anything else. If I wanted to, I guess I could have, I did great in high school. I got into all the colleges I wanted to get into but there’s just always been the spiritual urge for what I do. Music has always been the greatest stakeholder in my decision making but I’ve always had to make money. I started busking on the street initially and I saw each dollar come in, it wasn’t unlike a direct deposit into my account.
RRX: Exactly.
DD: I’ve always had a very persistent financial discipline with what I do. Just because I’ve had to work for every single penny I’ve ever earned, you, know?
RRX: Oh, I do. I mean… it’s the same thing with what I do here, we’re not aligned with any of the corporate conglomerates. We all worked for them before, so we know how easy it is for them. But when I leave at night, I double and triple check the locks because I gotta make sure man, if we get robbed… we’re not iHeartRadio, we’re not gonna be able to just start over again tomorrow.
DD: Yeah, brother, we’ve been robbed too, several times.
RRX: Unfortunately, that’s part of the life, man. It’s a crazy world out there. But I love the whole cosmic element that you’re adding into everything, the music takes you on a journey. That means a lot.
DD: It really should mean a lot, I think that’s the idea. It’s not really up for any one person to say what that could mean to somebody else. But the thing that I find that’s really significant is that it means something to a lot of people individually, subjectively. But when we all objectively and collectively get into a room together, the relationship to the spirit imbues that word cosmic. We all have a similar unified reaction to it and that’s righteous… to be a witness to it.
RRX: Well, absolutely, we’re all connected and it’s really hard to grasp what we are, let alone why we are. I think about this stuff all the time but I think with the cosmic journey that you’re on, the music can certainly lay a soundtrack for us.
DD: Oh, there we go. Nothing better than some music to help you wander through the existential, right?
RRX: Precisely!
Sept 25th
Daniel Donato’s Cosmic Country
Putnam Place Saratoga Springs, NY
Doors: 7:00pm / Show: 8:00pm / 18+
Author
Staff
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