‘There’s a melancholy rage to this album…’

Ian Skelly, drummer with The Coral, releases his third solo album this month, Lotus and the Butterfly, a haunting record of ’60s-inspired, psychedelic sounds and freak-folk that mixes sweet melodies with a dark, raw edge, and is influenced by Love, Captain Beefheart, The Band, Charles Manson and The Beach Boys. 

Telling us about the title of the record, he says: “I was thinking of some sort of fucked-up, arthouse ballet thing, crossed with a kung fu movie!”

Welcome to the weird and wonderful world of The Coral.

It’s been a busy few years for Wirral psych-pop band and cosmic adventurers The Coral – in 2021 they released the inventive and ambitious, 24-track double concept album, Coral Island, with spoken word passages narrated by 85-year-old Ian Murray (also known as The Great Muriarty), who is the granddad of band members James and Ian Skelly.

Ian Skelly

The record was inspired by faded British seaside glamour, childhood holidays to North Wales, end-of-the pier amusements, pre-Beatles rock and roll and jukebox pop.

Musically, its list of influences included Duane Eddy, Chuck Berry, Sun Records, Joe Meek, The Kinks, The Byrds and Crosby, Stills & Nash.

Then last year saw not one but two new records from the band – their eleventh album proper, Sea of Mirrors, which was their take on a surreal, European Spaghetti Western soundtrack, and its companion piece, the pirate radio-themed murder ballads and country-flavoured Holy Joe’s Coral Island Medicine Show, which was only available on physical formats.

As if that wasn’t enough, drummer Ian Skelly is now gearing up for the release of his third solo album, Lotus and the Butterfly, a wonderful and intriguing record that’s inspired by the psychedelic sounds of Love and Captain Beefheart, the darker side of late ’60s Beach Boys  – first single, Sweet Love is Skelly’s idea of what the soundtrack to a 1969 biker movie starring Dennis Wilson would sound like – as well as freak-folk, and the country rock of The Band.

Beneath the sweet and pretty melodies, there’s a rough and raw edge – it’s like stumbling across a travelling circus or a country fair while on a road trip and uncovering weird goings-on. Something wicked this way comes?

Recorded in Parr Street Studios in Liverpool, and band HQ, the Coral Caves, it features Skelly’s bandmates Paul Molloy (guitars, bass and keyboards) and Paul Duffy (backing vocals), as well as sleeve notes by Coral keyboard player, Nick Power, who has written a mysterious journal about an explorer in the 1950s who makes field recordings while visiting unchartered territories in Spain and Mexico.

‘Beneath the sweet and pretty melodies, there’s a raw and sinister edge – it’s like stumbling across a travelling circus or a country fair while on a road trip and uncovering weird goings-on’

In an exclusive interview, Skelly tells us about writing and recording the album, capturing magic in the Coral Caves, and how him and the band are always true to their art.

 Q&A

You’ve been so busy with The Coral over the last few years – you recorded the double album, Coral Island, which came in 2021, and last year you released two albums: Sea of Mirrors and Holy Joe’s Coral Island Medicine Show on the same day. How have you found the time to make a solo record?

Ian Skelly: A lot of the songs I’ve had since my first album, Cut from a Star [2013]. I had about five of them, but they seemed a bit melancholy at the time, so I binned them, and I started working with Paul Molloy – we were doing Serpent Power stuff…

After you do something on your own, it’s quite a burden, but when I started playing with Paul, I had someone to play off and write against.  So, I put the [solo] songs to one side, but during that second lockdown period – I hate talking about lockdown – Blossoms were in the studio [Parr Street, Liverpool] and our James was working with them. He’d get me in in the morning to sort the drums for them, and then I had the rest of the day…

Me mate worked there, and there was a little room in the back… He said, ‘Do you want to do a couple of tunes? It was after I’d released my second solo album, Drifter’s Skyline [in 2020]. So, I said I had a few tunes from years ago…

The concept of the album was originally meant to be me on acoustic, ‘cos I thought nowadays trying to get a full, five-piece band together to gig, tour and travel is quite difficult, so I went in and did it almost like a Ted Lucas thing – it all went to half-inch tape, and it was all live, with just acoustic and vocal.

Paul Duffy, who plays bass for The Coral, came down and we worked on some harmonies. The album was done in two days, but then I sat on it for a couple of months and played it to people who said, ‘This is great.’ But Paul Molloy said there was something about my playing that was dead funky, and he said it would be a shame if I didn’t put drums on it. By then, there was no separation between the acoustics and the vocals, so I thought, ‘How am I going to do this and mix it?’

I ended up going into the room, putting some drums on and thought, ‘Oh, yes – this has got something.’ Molloy did all this great bass playing and guitar work all over it. This album is the follow-up to Cut from a Star – it’s in the same mood.

Drifter’s Skyline had more of a country feel, whereas this album is psych-folk…

IS: Yeah.

I know there’s a concept behind the record – Nick from The Coral has written a fictitious journal for the sleeve notes – but what was the initial idea for it and how you wanted it to sound?

IS: When I make an album… Drifter’s Skyline was done in three days in Berlin – there were no rehearsals. I recorded the songs acoustically and then a mate of mine jumped on and said, ‘There’s a studio in Berlin – let’s go there, get off our cakes and make an album.’

It was more reactive – we didn’t sit down and think ‘it needs to be this or that…’ It was the same with this album, but the rest of the tracking was done in the Coral Caves – there’s a magic in that room that you can’t get anywhere else. It doesn’t feel like a studio or that there’s a clock ticking. The songs were psychedelic anyway – you could’ve put any backdrop to them….

‘The Beach Boys are my favourite band. That’s why a lot of the harmonies and the arrangements on Sweet Love have got those textures on them’

I’ve read that for Sweet Love, you wanted it to sound like something from the soundtrack to a 1969 biker movie, starring Dennis Wilson from The Beach Boys…

IS: Yeah – when I wrote the song, I thought it had that kind of Beach Boys 20/20, lost Manson kind of thing, which is my favourite side of The Beach Boys – they’re my favourite band. That’s why a lot of the harmonies and the arrangements on Sweet Love have got those textures on them.

‘I sent the album to Nick Power and he got really inspired by it – he said it sounds like it’s a guy who is doing field recordings of volcanos and making them into drum beats’

A few of the songs on the album have a dark and sinister undercurrent to them that’s lurking beneath the pretty melodies…

IS: Yeah – there’s a melancholy rage to it. If you’re in a sad, melancholy place, sometimes the only way to get out of it is rage.

It was less about influences in music, and more about painters that I like – Van Gogh and Munch. I wanted to get the idea of those melancholy paintings across. I’m not really musically trained – I don’t know what chords I’m playing half the time. I’ve just picked it up from watching the lads over the years – I think of music and mixing more in terms of painting.

Where did the idea for the journal that’s in the sleeve notes written by Nick come from?

IS: I sent the album to Nick and he got really inspired by it – he said it sounds like it’s a guy who is doing field recordings of volcanos and making them into drum beats. I said, ‘Can I use that?’ It goes nicely with the album.

I love the artwork…

IS: I was going for a sort of European artist going to New Orleans or something… It’s a bit kiddish.

The first song on on the record, You Who Brought Me, has a weird, almost waltz-time feel…

IS: It was a waltz, but then I got bored of waltzes, so I did something different. I wanted that tune to sound like Safe As Milk by Captain Beefheart, which is my favourite sounding record. I just love the murkiness of it – even years later, you’re like, ‘Ah – there’s a conga in there, making up that beat with the drums…’ I wanted it to sound like a track that’s hard to get your head around.

A few weeks ago, I interviewed John Power from Cast and The La’s – another musician from Liverpool – and he is a big fan of Captain Beefheart too. There’s been a few bands from Liverpool who’ve been influenced by him…

IS: When we first started rehearsing in Liverpool, in about ’98 or ’99, there was that sort of post-punk thing. You’d had The La’s and Julian Cope, who was a big influence on the Liverpool music scene, and there was Probe [record shop in Liverpool] – all the musicians who started hanging out with each other were into that. I got into Captain Beefheart through a John Peel documentary that I saw on the telly years ago – I can remember seeing him on the beach doing Electricity and thinking, ‘Fuck – yes!’

In the lyrics of Silver Rail, you mention a ferris wheel – The Coral seem to fascinated by fairgrounds and carnivals. Those were themes on both Coral Island and Holy Joe’s Coral Island Medicine Show

IS: Yeah – I think it’s where we’ve grown up and live… We always had these Wirral shows that would come to New Brighton, and there would be a big carny thing – they were always the magic moments when you were a kid. It just seems to be in the air round here, but I’m not sure why.

Butterfly is a pretty, folky song, but it has a spookiness to it…

IS: It was a nice acoustic song, but I didn’t want to do anything to complement it in a way that I knew how to do. I wanted to do something completely different, so I distorted the bass, and tracked it with a harmony. It gives it this backdrop – it’s almost like it’s being ripped apart behind this nice thing. It has an edgier feel.

I was thinking of some sort of fucked-up, arthouse ballet thing, crossed with a kung fu movie!’

The title track, which has a trippy organ sound, is an instrumental that splits the album in half…

IS: I’ve always wanted to have an instrumental on an album. It did have lyrics, but then I thought the keyboard melody was so strong… It reminds me of Queen St. Gang by Arzachel.

Have you ever heard that? It’s like an organ-led tune, and I’ve always wanted to do a track like that. Once we got the organ on, I was like, ‘Let’s just make that the feature…’ and I just jibbed off the lyrics.

 

Where did the title, Lotus and the Butterfly, come from?

IS: It’s a bit pompous, but I was thinking of a Stravinsky record or Madame Butterfly, or a ballet or a play. Some sort of fucked-up, arthouse ballet thing, crossed with a kung fu movie! It just sounded good to me. When Nick sent back what he’d written, I said that the two characters in the story should called be called Lotus and the Butterfly.

Sugar Re is one of my favourite songs on the album, and it stands out because it has a country-rock feel. It’s more like something off Drifter’s Skyline

IS: I’ve had that song for a long time, and I could never quite get the right spin on it. When I was first doing the live stuff for Cut from a Star, it was more like a Moby Grape track… It’s now kind of got a feel like The Band – we’ve got a clavi on it. I was thinking, ‘What would The Band do on this?’

I really like Tulip Morning too – it has a haunting, ‘60s folk song vibe and sounds like something from a film. There’s almost a traditional feel to it…  

IS: I watched the film Barry Lyndon by Kubrick. I’d put it off for years, because I’ve always had a thing where I’ve hated period dramas, and it looked like one of those, but then I thought, ‘Oh, I’m going to watch it because Kubrick’s brilliant…’

It was the melancholy mood of that – he [Barry Lyndon] is a bit of a wretch, and he’s a liar and a blagger. He works his way up and he marries into wealth, but he’s getting it on with all the maids. The lady of the house falls into a deep melancholy and I wanted to capture that in a song. It kind of came out a bit sort of Syd Barrett in a way – like Jugband Blues.

You’ve covered a song by The Coral on the album – Roving Jewel, from Butterfly House, and it’s quite different. You’ve made it more psychedelic…

IS: That’s the only track on the album that I regret not doing slower and with more picking, but the album was done…  There’s a track on Sea of Mirrors called The Way You Are, which is my song. It was on Lotus and the Butterfly, and then Nick said to James, ‘Oh, we’ve got to put this on the Coral album,’ and I thought, ‘Oh, well – more people will hear it if it’s on there…’

So, I took it off my album and I was in a position where I needed another song. Roving Jewel was one that I wrote with James years ago – I used to do it when I did solo acoustic gigs. I put down the acoustic and then me and Molloy just jammed the bass and the drums. It felt good, and it’s something for Coral fans – a different version. The original’s quite layered-up and it’s got that No Other [Gene Clark] production on it, with tracked acoustics. I wanted to do a rawer, more stripped-back version of it.

I like the psychedelic guitar freak-out at the end…

IS: Yeah – it’s got that sort of Love thing, but I wanted it to be like John Wesley Harding [Bob Dylan album] too. I didn’t want too much guitar on it until that section, so you could get more drums on it.

The album finishes with Rolling In The Ocean, which is a calmer and more gentle song – it’s a sweeter and more positive note to end the record on. There’s less melancholy rage…

IS: Yeah. There’s maybe a glimmer of hope (laughs).

Are you planning on doing any solo gigs to support the album?

IS: I’ve spoken to The Dream Machine – they might jump on live with me. I’m looking at doing a one-off gig in Liverpool in April, and maybe something in London… I’ll see how it goes. It’s tricky now, as it costs so much to get out on the road.

It’s tough at the moment for acts and small to medium-sized venues, isn’t it? What’s the grassroots music scene in Liverpool like?

IS:  I’m not sure, because I’m not really in the scene any more. When I’m speaking to people, like promoters, they say that tickets aren’t selling like they used to. I don’t know if music’s getting worse or it might be the cost of living crisis…

‘I’m not prepared, and neither are The Coral, to do the gross shit that you have to do… We’re still true to the art. A lot of people I know will figure out algorithms and write a song to get on a playlist – it’s like a business’

Some people can’t afford to go out to gigs, yet you’ll get people who will buy Glastonbury tickets without knowing who is on the line-up… There’s a real polarisation… 

IS: Yeah,  it’s crazy. I think the Tory government has just fucked the country, and there are things like Spotify and the things that you have to do…. I’m not prepared, and neither are The Coral, to do the gross shit that you have to do… We’re still true to the art. A lot of people I know will figure out algorithms and write a song to get on a playlist – it’s like a business. I’m not from that school and I just don’t understand it.

So, are The Coral looking to take some time off after a hectic few years?

IS: I’m always up for working, but I think our James wants to take a little bit of downtime, after doing a double album and then the last two records, which were basically a double album and came out at the same time. He wants to get a bit of space.

The Coral are playing some festivals over the summer and you’re supporting Richard Hawley in Sheffield this August. I’ve always thought a Hawley and Coral collaboration could be good – he likes Scott Walker and Lee Hazlewood, as does James…

IS: Yeah – I’ve only met him once. He came to meet us in Sheffield, and we just talked about The Everly Brothers for about two hours.

 

Lotus and the Butterfly is released on March 29 (AV8 Records). 

www.av8recordsltd.co.uk

For live dates by The Coral, click here.

 

 

 

‘I always try to write with unflinching honesty – it’s quite therapeutic to be honest’

Matt McManamon
Matt McManamon

One of Say It With Garage Flowers’ favourite albums of the year so far is Scally Folk – the debut solo record by Matt McManamon, the former frontman of noughties Scouse ska-punkers The Dead 60s.

Don’t expect to be skanking to it, though – his first release in 13 years, it’s a strong collection of reflective and autobiographical songs that are steeped in the tradition of Irish folk music – Liverpool-born McManamon’s family are from County Mayo – as well as the jangly Scouse indie sound of The La’s, and the Wirral psych-pop of The Coral, who were former Deltasonic label mates of The Dead 60s.

McManamon’s new single, Mulranny Smile, is a haunting, folky ballad that’s shrouded in Celtic sea mist, and if Lee Mavers had had tunes like What About You?, Out Of Time and Every Time I Close My Eyes up his sleeve, that second La’s album might’ve actually come out and been another classic.

“Traditional Irish folk, Scouse power-pop, classic ‘90s indie, West Coast American pop-punk and Americana have all influenced this record greatly,” McManamon tells us, in an exclusive interview.

“I think anyone who is aware of my musical past, and the type of music I have been previously associated with, will definitely be surprised, but I’m fairly confident it will be a welcome one.”

Q&A

Where are you and how’s it going?

Matt McManamon: I divide my time between the west coast and east coast of Ireland, but today I’m currently on the east coast in County Wexford. And it’s all going mightily.

You’re just about to release your debut solo album, Scally Folk, which is your first new music since your previous band, The Dead 60s, split up in 2008. What have you been up to since then and why has it taken 13 years to put a record out? Did you give up on music?

MM: Quite soon after The Dead 60s split, I moved back to my family’s ancestral home, in Ireland, and have been here ever since. I wouldn’t say I gave up on music, but I definitely did take a somewhat unwanted hiatus. I was always chipping away behind the scenes, and attempting various musical projects and activities, but, to be honest, they never came to fruition and barely made it out of the bedroom. That was largely down to confidence issues, which stemmed from The Dead 60s being dropped. I was definitely suffering from two issues in particular: fear of failure and fear of completion.

Through lack of confidence, I was unable to get anything over the finish line. I did, however, avail of the wonderful opportunity that was presented to me a few years back, when I was asked to join The Specials, as a live touring guitarist. That proved to be the first step in me re-finding my confidence and passion for music. It was a long slow process, but I’m pleased to tell you, I’m now firing on all cylinders again.

‘I wouldn’t say I gave up on music, but I definitely did take a somewhat unwanted hiatus’

Scally Folk took 13 years to come out, but only 14 days to record. How were the recording sessions at the Transmission Rooms studio in Drumlish, County Longford, Ireland?

MM: The sessions were wonderful – extremely productive. The studio itself is a great place to work and to get creative. Confidence was high and the results were achieved effortlessly.

Mick Cronin (Shane MacGowan, Kodeline) produced the record. How was it working with him? What did he bring to the process?

MM: Mick is a dear friend of mine – we’ve known each other for many years. I definitely had a firm idea and vision of how I wanted it to sound, and, in truth, we achieved it and more. It’s fair to say it eclipsed my expectations.

This was down to the invaluable input and musicianship – not only from Mick, but also from guitarist Vinny Redmond, bassist Enda Mulloy, keyboardist Dave Cox, multi-instrumentalist Kane O’Rourke, and whistle and box player, Andy Nolan. All of those people massively helped to shape the vision and sound of the songs.

Did Covid-19 affect your recording plans?

MM: We started the record on July 2 2020, which also happens to be my birthday. I took that as a great omen. In-between lockdown and travel restrictions, due to Covid-19, we did four sessions, lasting three days each, and then a final two days to put it to bed. That accumulated to 14 days’ total recording. It was all signed off, fully recorded, mixed and mastered by November 2020.

 

‘We started the record on July 2 2020, which is my birthday. I took that as a great omen’

One of my friends, singer-songwriter, John Murry, sings backing vocals on the album. How did you hook up with him?

MM: John just happened to be hanging around the studio, as he had recently completed a session there himself. We quite quickly hit it off, and we have become good friends. We regularly hang out and have some wicked conversations about music. He was highly enthusiastic and complimentary about my songs, as I am of his, so it just made sense to get him singing backing vocals on the album. I asked and he agreed – job done!

The record has Irish and Liverpudlian influences – trad folk and psych-power-pop. There’s a big nod to your roots, isn’t there?

MM: Yes – 100 per cent. I grew up in south Liverpool, in an Irish family that stems from County Mayo. I’ve always considered myself Liverpool-Irish, or Scouse-Irish, and I was very keen to get that point across on the record.

Liverpool power-pop and traditional Irish folk music, have, from an early age, been a great influence on me. I wanted to reflect that in the songs musically and lyrically, which I think I’ve managed to successfully do. I love the idea of flying the flag for Liverpool and Ireland. Hopefully that comes across.

The songs are autobiographical, aren’t they?

MM: Yes – everything I write about is something I’ve done, seen, or experienced. I always try to write with unflinching honesty and, in part, write about difficult subjects or situations that life has a habit of throwing at us. It’s quite therapeutic to be honest.

‘Liverpool power-pop and traditional Irish folk music, have, from an early age, been a great influence on me’

What’s your songwriting process?

MM: I write the songs at home on acoustic guitar, and once the general structure and blueprint is in place, I then bring it to my dear friend, guitarist and musical partner in crime, Vinny Redmond. We then set about finessing the songs by coming up with extra melodies, guitar parts and backing vocals. Lastly, they’re then brought to the wider group of musicians, before we set about recording them.

Were any of the songs old ones, or did you write them all for this album?

MM: There was a mixture of both. There are a couple of songs that were first written approximately 13 years ago, after the dissolution of The Dead 60s, yet there are also songs that were written literally a week before I commenced recording.

I tend not to ‘try’ and write songs – when they come to me, they come to me. The second album is already written and has been partially demoed. As bizarre as this may sound, I never once sat down to ‘write’ the second album. The songs just came out of me super-quick and with the utmost of ease.

What were your main influences for this album musical, or otherwise?

MM: Geographically speaking, Liverpool and Ireland are huge influences, as well as personal life experience. Musically speaking, traditional Irish folk, Scouse power-pop, classic ‘90s indie, West Coast American pop-punk and Americana have all influenced this record greatly.

‘The second album is already written.The songs just came out of me super-quick and with the utmost of ease’

Do you think the record will surprise people?

MM: I think anyone who is aware of my musical past, and the type of music I have been previously associated with, will definitely be surprised, but I’m fairly confident it will be a welcome one.

Tell me about the title of the album. It has a nice double meaning…

MM: The title came out of a conversation I had with Mick Cronin, when I started doing music professionally again. I would find myself constantly being asked, “What does it sound like?” I always struggled to give any kind of definitive answer.

One day, Mick said to me: “It’s dead easy – it sounds like scally folk”, and with that, not only did I have an album title, but quite possibly a new genre of music. I particularly liked the way it also gave a firm nod to my Liverpool-Irish roots.

Let’s talk about some of the songs on the record. What can you tell me about the first track, Gaslighting? It has some faint echoes of ska – a nod to your Dead 60s – past, doesn’t it?

MM: Yes it does, but that came about by accident. I’d initially intended that song to have a more straight-ish ‘indie’ feel to it, but once we started laying it down in the studio, Vinny came up with the idea of setting off a counter offbeat rhythm to my rhythm guitar, and it just worked fabulously.

I think that throughout the record there are some subconscious nods to The Dead 60s. That was never my intention, but The Dead 60s was a big part of me and who I am, so it stands to reason that hints of the past would invariably seep through.

What about the new single, Mulranny Smile? What can you tell me about that? It has a traditional Irish folk feel. What inspired it?

MM: Mulranny Smile is a dreamy, pure Celtic soul tribute to my grandfather, which also gives a firm nod to a place I came to call home – the picturesque coastal village of Mulranny. Anyone who knows me will tell you of my love for the west coast of Ireland and County Mayo, so the goal was also to immortalise the place in a song.

The song Liberty Shore is in a similar folky vein, isn’t it?

MM: Yes – it has a similar vibe. That song is actually about leaving London for a better future. It’s definitely inspired by some of the great Irish emigrant folk songs that I would’ve heard constantly as a youngster.

One of my favourite songs on the record is Out Of Time. It has a power-pop feel and a big, infectious chorus. I think there’s a La’s and Coral sound to it too. Jumpin’ The Gun comes from a similar place, doesn’t it, as does Every Time I Close My Eyes. I really like the sound of those songs – they’re great, melodic, jangly guitar pop.

MM: Out Of Time was one of the first songs to really spring into life while recording Scally Folk. It was originally intended to sound like a gypsy-esque folk song, but it took on a new lease of life – especially once we cranked up the guitars. It organically morphed into a Liverpool power-pop monster, as did Jumpin’ The Gun.

 

Every Time I Close My Eyes came out exactly how I envisaged it. Being likened to The Coral or The La’s is definitely no bad thing – it’s something I welcome. And, of course, The Coral were my old label mates.

Here Comes The Fear could be a prequel to There Goes The Fear by Doves, couldn’t it?

MM: That song was actually my attempt to sound like Simon & Garfunkel – again it just organically grew during the recording process. It actually did play on my mind that the title was similar to the Doves song, but musically it isn’t, so I quickly put that out of mind.

I’m a big fan of Doves – they’re a great band. I really wanna catch then live soon, or, better still, I’d love to support them. If any members of Doves happen to read this, I’d just like to let you know that I’m here and I’m available. Ha-ha.

Any plans to play live this year? 

MM: Yes, there’s going to be a small UK tour in November – details to come very soon, I’m just in the process of getting it all signed off.

There may well be something a little sooner this year, but it’s still too early for me to book anything with confidence, especially as Covid and Brexit seems to have worked a number on the live music scene.

What music – new and old – are you enjoying at the moment?

MM: Fontaines D.C., DMA’s, John Murry, Jagged Baptist Club, Paul Westerberg, and John McGlone and The Souls Of Emotion.

Can you recommend some other ‘scally folk’ to me? Music and/ or people?

MM: There’s nobody, to my knowledge, doing ‘scally folk’. It’s something that my crew and me have invented. I am the original and best scally folker. Ha-ha-ha.

‘One memory that springs to mind is meeting and hanging out with Paul McCartney in the studio, in New York, while we were recording our second album. That was pretty surreal’

A lot of bands from the era of The Dead 60s are reforming? Were you not tempted?

MM: At this moment in time, I’m too busy doing my solo stuff. I always say ‘never say never’ but, in all honesty, I can’t see it ever happening. The past is the past. Onwards & upwards – the future is scally folk.

Finally, any memories – good or bad – from your time in The Dead 60s that you can share?

MM: I have absolutely tons of good memories. One that springs to mind is meeting and hanging out with Paul McCartney in the studio, in New York, while we were recording our second album. That was pretty surreal. But, honestly, there are so many. I’d have to put them down in a book

‘A book?’ you say. Funny that!  I’ve been writing my memoirs and it’s very close to completion. It’s called: Giz A Gig… A Personal Journey Through The Liverpool Music Scene & Beyond. I’m hoping to get it published in the very near future. Watch this space.

Matt McManamon’s new single, Mulranny Smile, is out now on Fretsore Records. The album, Scally Folk, will be released on May 28.

https://mattmcmanamon.bandcamp.com/album/scally-folk

https://www.fretsorerecords.com/