Thirty-seven
years is a long career for any musician, but Paul Weller is still going strong.
From his
first hit with The Jam, 1977's In The City, to 2012's solo record Sonik Kicks,
he's scored six number ones, 10 Brit nominations and sales of more than 6.5
million albums in the UK alone.
Famously
fan-focused, The Modfather put a price limit on tickets for his gigs with The
Jam and made sure they finished in time for the audience to catch the last
train home.
When
Prime Minister David Cameron named Eton Rifles as his favourite song in 2008,
the singer spluttered with anger.
"Which
part of it doesn't he get?" he asked of the song, written after Weller
watched a news report in which unemployed protestors were jeered at by a group
of young Etonians.
But as
he prepares to release his second greatest hits collection, More Modern
Classics, the 56-year-old firebrand tells the BBC he has given up on politics.
Instead,
he has been watching Toy Story with his young twin boys.
We've been watching you sound check.
Is this your natural domain - on a stage between the drums and guitars?
This is
my territory. Yeah.
How do you feel before you perform a
gig?
A
mixture, really, of nerves and excitement. Mainly nerves. I've been doing it
for a long time, as we know, but I still get the same sort of nerves
beforehand. Probably from the time I wake up on a gig day.
Why is that?
I don't
think it ever goes away. You're either like that or you're not. But it's good,
because it adds a bit of edge to what I do.
This is all to launch More Modern
Classics, which looks back over the last 15 years of your music career. How
does it make you feel?
Old! The
last 15 years are probably like the 15 before it. They've just gone so quickly.
I didn't even realise that time had elapsed. And that's one of the reasons I
wanted to put this Greatest Hits thing out. Because there was so much music
since the last Modern Classics, which came out in the late '90s. So many songs.
When you look over those 15 years
how many different Paul Wellers can you see?
Multiple
probably. My life has changed so much over the last 15 years. I've got four
more kids. I got remarried. But essentially I'm still doing the same thing,
which is writing and playing music.
What gives you that hunger to
change?
I get
bored very easily. I get bored with what I do. I couldn't do what a lot of
bands do and play the same stuff all the time, year after year.
How do you feel about Greatest Hits
albums in general?
I think
they are fine, really. When I was a kid my introduction to a lot of music was
buying a Greatest Hits. When you are young, especially. So whether it's the
Four Tops or Smokey Robinson, it was an introduction into that person's music.
Any man with children ends up
gaining knowledge about very strange subjects. What are the favourites in the
Weller household?
Bear in
mind I've got twin boys. I've watched Toy Story 300 times in the last few
months, but I like it. It's good fun.
Are you still political?
I'm not
really. Like the majority of people I'm disillusioned with it all. I can't tell
the difference between the majority of the parties.
I get
angry with what's going on in the world, like most other people hopefully would
do [but] I don't know what to do about it. I haven't a clue.
But you were very heavily involved
in the past.
Yeah I
was, back in the '80s. It was a different time with Thatcherism. Very definite
- you were either with it or against it. There were clear lines drawn. But now,
who knows? They all look the same to me and all sound the same. I've very little
interest in it.
You've played Glastonbury several
times. I was wondering what you made of this year's headliner Metallica?
Not
really my bag, but lots of people like them, so who am I to say?
What advice would you give them?
Take
your wellies. It was disgusting when we did it. Shocking.
People are saying there are a lack
of new bands who can headline...
If you
don't let them headline how will you ever know? How will they ever get the
chance or the experience? There are loads of great bands out there - people who
at least should be on the main stage. But I suppose you do have to pull in the
numbers to headline.
If you had Weller-fest, who would
you choose?
Villagers,
Syd Arthur, Erland and the Carnival. But these are just people I like. I'd be
happy to sit in a field and watch them. I'd be on my own. It would be good for
me.
When you go and watch one of your
music heroes play, how much are you hoping they do the hits?
I like
to hear the hits, but I also like to hear what they are doing at the time,
because so few people are doing that. Why is there such a boom for nostalgia? I
don't know, really. Is it something to do with recession?
In the past I've heard you describe
yourself as a bit of a technophobe. Have you warmed to it yet? Have you got a
computer?
I
haven't got a computer. I wouldn't know what to do with it, mate. I'm quite
happy with my notebook, but my wife's very young and she does all that for me.
So it's fine, you know?
What does she load the music onto,
then?
I
haven't even got that far yet. I've got to catch up with everybody and get an
iPod or whatever people do these days. I'm still carrying around bags of CDs on
tour. Before that I used to take my own record player and bags of records. It
got a little bit cumbersome.
So when you are on the tour bus are
you using a CD Walkman?
Normally
we just have a blaster on the table. Proper old school.
One story I've always wanted you to
clear up - when Band Aid performed on Top of The Pops 30 years ago, you ended up
having to sing Bono's famous line. How did that happen?
I was
hoping you were going to answer that question! I've no idea how I got roped in
on that. No idea at all. I was asked on the day, kind of pushed into the crowd,
and that was it.
You look like you are a wee bit
embarrassed by it now?
Not at
all. I was at the time, but I don't really give a monkey's now. But it was very
strange.
What do you hope to still achieve in
your career?
When you
think of a lot of the jazz greats and the blues people who carry on playing
right up to the time they literally can't play anymore. I'd like to do that if
I could. That would be enough for me.
Paul
Weller's More Modern Classics is out on 2 June.
No comments:
Post a Comment