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LAST
TIME WE TALKED ONE OF THE THINGS YOU SAID WAS HOW YOU COULDN'T GET YOUR
HEAD AROUND WHAT MIDGE URE DOES WHEN HE SPENDS HIS TIME DRIVING UP AND
DOWN THE M1 WITH A GUITAR, AND NOW IT SEEMS THAT 2010 IS GOING TO BE YOUR
YEAR OF DRIVING UP AND DOWN THE M1 WITH A GUITAR!
I said that did I? Well I meant it and I still think that. I don't know
how it's all happened really. People just kept asking me to do it. I kept
getting requests from various promoters and people all over the place.
I got one in from Dubai and I thought, well a) I quite fancy going to
Dubai, that might be a laugh, and b) it's far enough away that nobody's
going to be there to notice, it's just low-key and I can try it out and
see how it is... as it happened it was full of people from Hertford! So
I gave it a go and I did a couple of gigs over there and I just thought,
you know what I can do this, I can actually sit on the stool and people
seem to be entertained. How bizarre!
Then
I forgot all about it and the next request I got was for this country
- it was a guy that had been bugging me for years to do it - and he must
have caught me at a good moment because I went, do you know what? Yeah
I'll do it. So that was one, and then there were two and then there were
three and I did a few of them last year. It was never something I felt
confident enough to do to be honest, I couldn't imagine people wanting
to pay money just to see me sitting on a stool strumming a guitar, singing
a few songs and talking nonsense for an hour and a half...
AND
YOU'VE JUST RELEASED AN ACOUSTIC ALBUM TOO HAVEN'T YOU, 'NO FRILLS', IS
THE IDEA BEHIND THAT TO TRY AND CAPTURE A PERFECT GIG FOR POSTERITY?
Well, a) there's no such thing as a perfect gig, and that's one of the
reasons why I didn't just record a gig, and b) there's no such thing as
a perfect album! But at least this way you get several goes at the same
thing. We did try and record a couple of gigs and the problem was just
the sound really, just keeping the audience quiet because they always
seem to want a good singalong you know? It seemed a bit uncharitable to
not let them and tell them to shut up, so I decided to try to do it in
the studio, which I thought was going to be easy but which wasn't because
in the studio everything is so exposed and every little fret-buzz and
every dodgy vocal note is all there, larger than life, so it took me quite
a long time... a few months to do what ostensibly should be an hour and
a half's work!
YEAH...
GIVEN THE SPEED AT WHICH YOU SEEM TO WORK ON YOUR ALBUMS I WAS GOING TO
ASK YOU HOW LONG THIS TOOK!
Well it did, it took about three months. It was absolutely nuts. I mean
it wasn't absolutely full-on, I wasn't locked in the studio for twenty-four
hours a day until I finished it, I kept dipping in and out of it. Also
I'd think I'd got one done and then I'd do another one, then I'd listen
to the first one again and I'd think that I really hadn't got that one
at all, and I'd have to do it again. So I did keep revisiting some of
them and redoing them...
HOW
MANY TIMES DID YOU HAVE TO REDO THINGS TO GET THEM RIGHT?
Well it depends on the song, some of them I must have had fourteen or
fifteen goes at...
DO
YOU END UP HATING THE SONG AFTER THAT MANY TRIES? IS IT AN ORDEAL FOR
YOU TO GO THROUGH THAT PROCESS?
It is quite tortuous, because there's no-one there you know? I engineered
it myself so there's no-one in the studio with me and it's like some sort
of weird chinese water torture just trying to get it right. As I said,
it was a lot harder than I thought it was but it's done now so I can't
change it!
I
SUPPOSE THAT'S THE NATURE OF THE PROCESS ISN'T IT? YOU HAVE TO MAKE THE
DECISION TO STOP AT SOME POINT?
Absolutely yeah, at some point you've just got to say that's it!
AND
DO YOU THINK THAT PEOPLE WILL LISTEN TO THOSE PERFORMANCES AS CLOSELY
AND A CRITICALLY AS YOU DO?
No, of course not. No, they don't, and that's one of the things about
making any album; the love and attention you put into making it. I mean
there are a few people out there on the planet who have surprised me on
occasion, I'll get an email saying 'I love that high-hat part in the third
bar of the song, it's just brilliant' and I'll be really pleased, thanks
very much! But no, you just can't expect people to get exactly the same
out of something as you've put into it.
ARE
YOU HAPPY WITH THE FINISHED RESULT? IS IT EVEN POSSIBLE FOR YOU TO BE
HAPPY WITH IT?
Yeah, I am. Happy enough anyway. I mean that is what I sound like on a
good night with an acoustic guitar, so I think that I'm doing myself justice.
THIS
IS PROBABLY AN INEVITABLE QUESTION BUT HOW DID YOU CHOOSE THE TRACKS TO
INCLUDE ON THE ALBUM?
Basically they are the bulk of what a gig is anyway, the songs I choose
to do in a gig. The songs I choose for an acoustic gig are the ones that
it's physically possible with just an acoustic guitar, the ones that work
in that context. There were a couple I tried that worked live but didn't
work recorded for some reason. They work live because of the audience
participation, or because there's something else going on in the live
context, so there were a couple that I had a go at and decided that it
just wasn't going to happen. Basically the ones I ended up with are the
ones that did happen!
WELL,
LUCKY FOR YOU THEN THAT ALL YOUR BIG HITS TRANSLATE SO WELL INTO ACOUSTIC
VERSIONS...
Well I didn't have a choice with them really, I had to make them work!
I
PARTICULARLY LIKE THE ACOUSTIC VERSION OF 'DANCING GIRLS'...
Well that's a really good case in point, that track, because I thought
there would be no way I could do that one acoustically, and I had a go.
I tried using a loop pedal to get a groove going, to try and get the whole
'Dancing Girls' vibe going, but I just couldn't do it and I basically
gave up on it. Then I did some gigs last year and I started again, just
trying to sing the song and asking myself what I could do with just an
acoustic guitar, and I thought it would be different if I tried it as
a waltz (laughs)...
WELL
I DON'T KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT A WALTZ BUT I WANTED TO MENTION IT BECAUSE
IT JUST WORKED SO WELL FOR ME...
Yeah, it did turn out well, I'm pretty pleased with that one.
DO
YOU HAVE FAVOURITES FROM THE VERSIONS ON THIS ALBUM?
There's a couple. Some of them were originally written on an acoustic
guitar and so they already sounded like that... like the songs called
'Fiction' and 'Have A Nice Life', because that's kind of how they were
supposed to sound anyway so I'm pleased with those ones. I'm pleased with
'Dancing Girls' as I said, and I'm pleased with one of the new songs on
there which is called 'This Broken Man', which is a lovely song and which
I actually co-wrote with two other guys, and which was done on a keyboard
so I was quite pleased with the way that one transposed itself on guitar.
THERE'S
A COUPLE OF NEW SONGS ON THERE AREN'T THERE?
Yeah, there's that one and there's another song called 'Lost In You' that
I wrote with Chesney (Hawkes) ages and ages ago.
I
WAS GOING TO ASK WHERE THEY BOTH CAME FROM AND WHETHER THEY WERE WRITTEN
ESPECIALLY FOR THIS ALBUM?
No, neither of them was written for this. 'This Broken Man' was written
on a songwriting retreat in Iceland with a lyricist from New York and
a keyboard player from Norway... so it's not a very green song, it's got
quite a large carbon footprint! But that was written about two years ago
I suppose. 'Lost In You' was written way back in the nineties as part
of one of me and Chesney's - quite frequent - writing and wine-drinking
sessions!
NOT NECESSARILY IN THAT ORDER I SUPPOSE?
No, not necessarily!
DID
YOU RECORD MORE SONGS THAN ARE ON THE FINISHED ALBUM? SONGS THAT MIGHT
SEE THE LIGHT OF DAY LATER ON?
Not really, as I said earlier I recorded a couple that didn't work but
all the ones that worked are there on the album.
DOES
GOING THROUGH THIS SORT OF PROCESS WITH YOUR CATALOGUE CHANGE YOUR RELATIONSHIP
WITH THOSE SONGS AT ALL?
Yeah it does, totally. I mean it started doing that when I started doing
acoustic gigs... it became more about the voice, and actually singing
them and thinking about what you're singing if you see what I mean? When
you stand on a stage with a band, with all the smoke and mirrors, it's
a much more visceral kind of experience, much more about the gig and being
there. But when you're sitting on a stool, just you and your voice and
a guitar, then you do make friends with those songs again in a very real
way.
DO
YOU GET NERVOUS BEFORE PLAYING IN THAT KIND OF STRIPPED DOWN ENVIRONMENT?
I get nervous about performing full-stop. The thing that's most terrifying
about this is that on one had it's all very close, and on the other there's
nowhere to hide, absolutely nowhere, so if you're going to screw up then
people are going to notice. So yeah, I do get especially nervous about
the acoustic ones.
HOW
ABOUT AFTER A LIVE SHOW, ARE YOU AS CRITICAL OF YOUR PERFORMANCE AS YOU
ARE OF YOUR RECORDS?
Not so much because they're there and then they're gone, and - touch wood
- I haven't really had a bad acoustic one. I mean the good thing about
acoustic shows is that, technically speaking, there's much less to go
wrong! No, I'm not too critical because I know I can do it, and I know
that if for some reason I cocked up a certain thing then I can just say
what the hell and try to get it right tomorrow.
ARE
YOU LIKELY TO EXTEND THIS TOUR AT ALL? MORE SHOWS IN THE UK? SHOWS AROUND
THE WORLD?
Well, I don't think we're really going to extend this little run... I've
got a few gigs in Italy and Ireland, and there's talk of shows in Denmark
and Norway in the Spring to Summer time, but that's it for the time being.
In the summer there will, hopefully, be festivals with the band and then
I really need to lock myself in the studio to get another album out...
WHICH
LEADS ME NICELY INTO ASKING ABOUT YOUR NEXT ALBUM!
Well I'm absolutely useless at multi-tasking, even though a gig - especially
an acoustic gig - is just jumping in a car, driving down the M1, doing
the gig, and coming home again, it kind of takes up a big space in my
psyche. At the point when I'm gigging then that's all I'll be doing, I
can't write or do anything else. It just doesn't seem to work like that
for some reason. I'll have to really concentrate and tell myself that
I'm in the right space to start writing and recording the new album.
HAVE
YOU STARTED WORKING ON IT AT ALL YET?
I've started. I have started two or three tracks and there's one on the
way and I've go ideas for other tracks so it's coming... although I did
tell people I'd started it a year ago!
ARE
YOU PREPARED TO PUT ANY SORT OF TIMESCALE ON THE RELEASE OF THE NEW MATERIAL?
Well... no. Hopefully this time next year... probably!
WHAT'S
YOUR MOTIVATION THESE DAYS? LAST TIME WE SPOKE YOU SAID THAT YOU HADN'T
REACHED THE HIGHLIGHT OF YOUR CAREER AND THAT YOU STILL WANTED TO ACHIEVE
IT, HAS THAT CHANGED AT ALL?
Not really, I mean that's always going to be the answer isn't it? You
can ask me that on my death bed and I'll still say the same thing... it's
never enough. I think you always want to achieve more.
ARE
THERE THINGS YOU'D STILL LIKE TO EXPLORE? MUSIC FOR FILMS, TV OR SOUNDTRACKS
FOR EXAMPLE?
Well that's the holy grail really. I would love to get into that and I
have been doing bits and pieces of media work for a friend's company called
Audio Network who do stuff for television and things. I have been doing
some bits and pieces for that, and that's quite interesting. But the film
thing is a real closed shop, I think that all the producers and directors
have their pet composers and also, when there's a lot of money involved,
they don't want to take any risks with someone new so it's a really difficult
thing to get into, but it would be a great thing to do.
AT
THIS STAGE IN YOUR CAREER THEN, WHAT WOULD BE YOUR DEFINITION OF SUCCESS?
That's a really good question... it's not an easy thing to measure is
it? In some respects I've got it now, I'm making records when I want to
make them, I'm playing gigs and people are coming to them and I don't
know what more I want really. I certainly don't want the kind of success
I had back in the eighties. I'm not prepared to pay the price for that,
not for my private life and not to have to do what you have to do to maintain
that kind of public profile. So I've kind of already got it. Lucky me!
FEBRUARY
2010
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