TONY WADSWORTH (MD of Parlophone
records)
I've learned not to expect
anything with RH, and that way you are constantly surprised. They had been
playing a lot of the songs live over the previous year, so we were starting
to get an idea of the sort of album it could be, but a lot of the songs
they played live they didn't put on the album. So we left them to it, and
checked in now and again to make sure they were going the right way.
JONNY:
We wanted to make OKC by
ourselves. We did Lucky as a try-out, we used this engineer Nigel Godrich
and got on great with him.
THOM:
Nigel is a very positive
and emotionally engaging person, and thats what we needed. We needed someone
who was passionate and shared our taste in music. He also works incredibly
fast and is our best mate; it's that simple. We rang him and said, "We
want to build a studio so write a wish list", so he went away and bought
all this dream gear he would want to record with.
NIGEL GODRICH:
They hadn't really enjoyed
recording previously, so they figured if we could make an environment where
everybody feels comfortable, it would be a real bonus. I had a free rein
in what equipment I wanted to buy, and apparently I was imposing more spending
limits than I had to. They have a rehearsal space in the countryside in
Oxfordshire, and we set it up there and did about half the album. Thom
is always writing; he's very prolific. He has countless little bit and
bobs up his sleeve. Then we felt we deserved a treat and should go somewhere
nice, so we went to Jane Seymour's house near Bath, which was an amazing
experience.
PHIL
For us to work on our own
in these various locations was like coming full circle, back to before
we signed a deal and we were just making demos. It would just be the five
of us and a little recorder, and it was a very unselfconscious way of working.
There's a lot of direct emotion in OKC which maybe we haven't captured
before. I feel far more comfortable listening to this album than I do to
Pablo Honey or the Bends. For me they sound quite wooden; quite emotionless.
ED
When we go into the studio
it's about finding a soundscape for the song. When you rehearse you think
it sounds great but when you consign it to tape it's like "Oh God this
sounds awful". So we spent quite a lot of time trying to find the right
sounds. On Pablo Honey and the Bends we ummed and ahhed: it was a lot more
vague. This time we knew fairly early wheter it was right or not. The stuff
we were vague about didn't make it onto the album. We're coming up to our
12th year together as a band, and we're playing much better.
CHRIS HUFFORD (RH's manager)
There's a strange kind of
emotional honesty which is always there in their shows. Thom cannot stand
going through the motions, and when he catches himself doing it he gets
furious with himself. Thom is a highly strung, emotional person. He's also
incredibly shy, and he can go off one when he feels something's been put
the wrong way, so people immediately say he's a manic depressive. That's
understandable because they only see him in his public role when he's highly
stressed, but he's not like that at all.
THOM
I spent a lot of time trying
not to do voices like mine. The voices on Karma Police, Paranoid Android
and Climbing up the Walls are all different personas. I think Lucky, the
lyric and the way it's sung, is really positive, really exciting. No Surprises
is someone who's trying hard to keep it together but can't. Electioneering
is a preacher ranting in front of a bank of microphones.
ED
The vocal is the most important
thing. It's more important than any guitar textures or rhythms or anything.
The vocal is the thing that pulls you into the song.
(Dull bit edited out...)
JONNY
I did the string parts for
this album. I got very excited at the prospect of doing string parts that
didn't sound like Eleanor Rigby, which is what all string parts have sounded
like for the past 30 years. We stole a lot of ideas from film music, and
composers like Penderecki, and some of them worked and some of them didn't.
We used violins to make frightening white noise stuff, like the last chord
of climbing up the walls.
NIGEL
They are well educated boys
and they know about classical music. The way they do it, the classical
undertones are probably very attractive to people who probably wouldn't
like classical music. You have to sit through the whole album because it's
a whole piece.
JONNY
We did use a mellotron (steam
age sampler/synthesiser much used in the 70's) quite a lot, but the others
won't let me take it on tour because it's too fragile. When it was used
in the 70's people used to find dead mice inside it and it would stop working,
it's that kind of level of technology, so when we went on the road we have
to reproduce it with a sampler..
ED
We spent two weeks track-listing
the album. The context of each song is really important. There was a time
when Let Down wasn't going to make the album, but it really fitted in well
after Exit Music. Paranoid Android is an entity in itself, but the other
tracks are very much part of the whole thing. It's not a concept album
(argue amongst yourselves !!) but there is a continuity there. We learned
the importance of track-sequencing from Pablo Honey, because that's one
of the most dreadfully sequenced records ever.
KEITH WOZENCROFT (Parlophone
AR man who signed them)
People say RH are just a
prog-rock band like Genesis or Pink Floyd, but both those bands were amazing
in their time (Hmmm...Genesis ?!?). I feel RH draw on more influences than
they ever did, and I feel that they have songs that the Floyd certainly
didn't in the same way, although I love Pink Floyd. If people say RH play
prog-rock thats good because it means they're moving forward.
NIGEL
All the bands RH liked when
they were kids were like Joy Division, and people who couldn't necessarily
play their instruments very well. I've learned that you don't have to be
a good player to be a musical person, and some of the most musical people
I know have been crap at their instruments, but they've always produced
something really good. Then you have someone who's a shit-hot session musician
but is soulless and boring to listen to.
ED
I don't think we're individually
amazing musicians, but what we do collectively is pretty good.
THOM
I think we're much better
at shouting at each other now, which is good. There used to be a lot of
serious infighting under the guise of reasonable discussion, and now it's
lots of shouting and eventually we decide, so that's kind of cool. It's
sort of like a marriage where you learn to shout at somebody and that's
a good thing.
And the inevitable quote from Colin at the end...
COLIN
If you thought there were
no singles on The Bends, you should hear this one !!