JAMES : INTERVIEW WITH SAUL, ROCK CITY WEBSITE 8.01
James has been together for an unbelievable 16 years, and as a band and with Tims solo outings you have a reputation for working with diverse artists and producers such as Angelo Badalementi and Brian Eno. Do you think this attitude has contributed to your long career?
In some ways I dont think weve had that long a career because we dont think about it we just keep playing and we wont go away. Weve now made four records with Eno and weve become very close to him and feel very comfortable so I think were probably stuck with each other.
In the 16 years James have been together or in the 12 years you have been in the band, what have been the highlights?
Well we played at Woodstock and that was amazing just because the size of the crowd was amazing. And the first Glastonbury that we played was a really memorable event, We were on in the middle of the afternoon, and this was before Sit Down had come out, and I remember being ignored for the first 3 or 4 songs by loads of hippies and by the end of it having the whole of Glastonbury on its feet. I think at that moment we know that something good was going to happen!
How do you think James have changed over the years?
Well some people have got fat, I got thinner. It hasnt really changed that much. Weve still got pretty much the same attitude to everything we do, i.e. were probably quite rude! Its difficult when youre involved to notice any change. A lot of what we do, we arent conscious of, we just do it. Its in no way contrived or particularly planned. So I dont know if weve changed at all, or we may have changed massively! One thing that has changed is that for the last record Millionaires we came together through a very dysfunctional time for us as a band, there were lots of fighting and stuff going on, but were now all on the same pace as each other, so changes have taken place over the last couple of years so that we all get on with each other again.
Its widely believed that Millionaires is your best album to date, do the problems that you overcame have any bearing on this?
I dont know. I certainly thought it was our best record and I was very closely involved in the making of it. At the time I loved it, but I listen to any of our music very infrequently, all I can hear now are massive flaws in it. At the time I really enjoyed it and I was really proud of it, and I am still, but now I think weve moved on a lot. Its the same with this record, no doubt two years from now Ill say I thought Pleased to Meet You was the best thing wed done, but now I think its bollocks! I think thats a natural process because you become less attached to it. Everybody thinks that their newborn baby is gorgeous even though everyone knows its the ugliest thing on the planet!
Are we going to hear any of your new music previewed at City in the Park?
Yeah. Probably half of the songs well play will be from the new record. We did a tour in October last year playing smaller venues, we played what was the beginning of this record at that point, and then went into the studio and recorded the album. The songs grew and grew through being played live and then in the studio, now I cant wait to play some of these songs live, theyre perfect to be played with loads of people listening.
What is the difference playing to a large crowd at an outside event, rather than playing at a venue like Rock City?
To go back to playing smaller venues like Rock City is actually quite strange, and wonderful! Youre penned in, theres nowhere for the music to go and its a great atmosphere. Rock City is a great little venue, its such a dive its wonderful! When youre up onstage and youre having a good one, and you know youre doing a good show, it doesnt really matter where you are. Each venue has a different thing about it, you tend to play differently, if youre playing in front of 40000 people and youre outside you have to perform in a different way so that people at the back appreciate it, you have to get the audience more involved. A lot is reflected in what you actually play, in small venues people are right on top of you, they cant go anywhere, they have to listen to you so you can play loads of new songs; when you are in a big field there are lots of other distractions, at City in the Park we will have to play some of the older songs so that people recognise them and know theyre watching James. Its not ideal in a way, Id like to go and play 10 songs of the new album and let people listen to them and say Oh that was Great, theyve got some balls!, but if we did that half the crowd would leave because they didnt know what it was. In that way big festivals can be like a compromise, but if we play for an hour thats long enough to put a mixture in, maybe some dodgy old B sides nobodys heard of!
What are your experiences of being at a festival?
I live in Portugal and to be honest the festivals over here are much more exciting than the ones you have in England. Theres one festival here, it has a 60000 capacity, and theyve got Neil Young and Beck playing, with a massively eclectic bill; and its next to a river and surrounded by mountains. In England T in the Park is great, its slightly less corporate than some of the others, and its in Scotland so people are slightly more pissed and they know the weather is going to be bad, so they dont care they just go and have a great time! In Britain theres this arrogance that what we do is better, because its Britain, but its not true! We (James) are good at festivals, I think its because we just get really pissed and when we get up there something just clicks and we get really intense.
What do you think of Nottingham?
I actually know Nottingham quite well because Ive got two great friends who live just outside Nottingham, so Ive been going there for many years, its a nice city.