Love, travel and politics seem to have been the abiding themes of your songs since the early days in Ireland. What are the key themes in your current work?
'Boy 40' was the 2003 album, about innocence & experience, being 40 still feeling like a teenager, war and peace, 12th July, the war on terrorism and .... Italian girls on mopeds. Weird growing up in Belfast in the middle of full-on terrorism - the real variety not the imagined one - and thinking we had left that all behind.
The new album is called 'Garageband'. I started it in June 2005. I had co-written many songs over the past 10 years. Dealing with and appreciating and sympathizing and empathizing with other people and ... I came home to my place in Australia. Sat down with my guitar and opened the Garageband programme on my little white computer.
Hours flew by. In what seemed like the blink of an eye, I had written a song and done a whole arrangement. Next day I did the same thing, third day was the third song. It became for me an art project to write a song a day - I wrote ten songs in ten days and then four in four more days after a break, later in the year.
I went by 'first thought, best thought' on lyrics and music. The opposite of the collaboration thing I had been doing for a couple of years. It set me free, felt like when I was first writing music - except now with experience. As I said earlier, I think poets and artists are often trying to recapture the innocence & naivety present in childhood.
Weird growing up in Belfast in the middle of full-on terrorism - the real variety not the imagined one - and thinking we had left that all behind.
Rad and I played Peter Gabriel's WOMAD Festival in the UK last year. After the festival the two of us plus Liam Bradley - Van Morrison's drummer - booked into Real World Studios to play my Garageband songs.
I took the tapes back to Australia and worked on them over last summer from December to February. In March John Leckie mixed the album at Zoo Studio in Correggio, Italy. John has produced an album in everyone's record collection - maybe something by Pink Floyd or his two biggest UK albums, 'The Bends' by Radiohead or the 'Stone Roses' album. We finished everything a year to the day since I opened up my computer and started writing. |