‘Had we released C’mon Kids after Giant Steps, I think we would’ve retained our indie cred…’

The Boo Radleys

 

The last time Say It With Garage Flowers spoke to Sice Rowbottom, frontman of ’90s shoegazers-turned-indie-pop-experimentalists, The Boo Radleys, who reformed in 2021, he was promoting the band’s 2023 studio album, Eight, gearing up for a UK tour to celebrate the 30th anniversary of their 1993 masterpiece, Giant Steps, and looking forward to performing a series of solo shows, which included spoken word and songs, as well as reflections on mental health – he’s a chartered psychologist when he’s not making music. 

This year, The Boos (Sice Rowbottom – guitar and vocals, Tim Brown – bass, keys, and Rob Cieka, drums and percussion) are back, and hitting the road again, but this time it’s for the C’mon Up! tour, during which they’ll be performing a mash up of songs from their 1995 number one album, Wake Up! and the follow-up, 1996’s C’mon Kids, as well as a few surprises.

In an exclusive interview, Rowbottom tells us why the music industry needs to catch up when it comes to tackling mental health issues, looks ahead to this year’s tour and shares some thoughts and memories on writing and recording Wake Up! and the oft-misunderstood C’mon Kids.

It’s time to throw out your arms for a new sound…

Q&A

 

Hi Sice. How was 2024 for you?

Sice: It was very quiet  I was mostly doing my day job. I had a busy 2023 – we had two albums out, one of which was a reissue, and I did my one-man show. I needed some reset time in 2024 and I did some planning for 2025, when we’re hoping to do quite a lot more.

How did the one-man shows go?

Sice: They were brilliant – I loved doing them, and the response was great, but the difficulty is marketing them: how do you tell people what it is? There’s psychology, a bit of singing, some comedy, talking…

Once the people were there, we had some great shows – we did a brilliant sold-out show in Liverpool, where I have a lot of contacts, but, in other places, it was more difficult. I took the show across the country to some great little venues, but I need something to hang it on – I need to write a book, if I get round to it – something that encapsulates all the elements of the shows. I’ll see…

Sice

In your one-man shows, you talk about mental health in the music industry, and we’ve discussed that topic in interviews before – particularly your work for the book, Touring and Mental Health: The Music Industry Manual.

Sadly, since we last spoke, we’ve had the high-profile case of Liam Payne, formerly of One Direction, who died in 2024. 

It’s sad that it’s taken the death of a young man to put the issue of mental health in the music industry back in the spotlight.

Some of Liam’s fans have launched a petition asking for legislation that would “safeguard” artists’ mental health as they navigate the entertainment industry. 

The Change.org petition proposes new legislation called “Liam’s Law” that would require artists to have access to mental health professionals, be given regular mental health checks and have adequate rest periods. Would you endorse that?

Sice: Completely – and I’ve spent quite a lot of 2024 doing stuff with the Music Industry Therapist Collective.

There’s lots to do in the music industry [around mental health] – there’s still a bit of a dinosaur attitude about it. A lot of people espouse that ‘if you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen’ thing…

It’s not just in the music industry – there’s a lot of it in other industries too. It’s those type A personalities who work 15 hours a day and expect everyone else to do the same because that’s what they do – not everybody can do that and not everybody wants to do it because they realise it’s not good for you. Unfortunately, until we recognise that, I don’t think it’s going to change.

Things will happen gradually – every time a tragic case happens, there’s a shift and people start taking it a bit more seriously. It happened with Kurt Cobain…

‘There’s lots to do in the music industry [around mental health] – there’s still a bit of a dinosaur attitude about it’

The thing about Liam Payne is what do young people like him do after they’ve had a huge level of fame and they’re on the other side of it?

There’s a great book called Moondust, which is about what the people who landed on the Moon did with their lives after they’d done it – what do you do when the apex of your life has happened? For a lot of the people who were in boybands, what do they do afterwards and how do they find meaning and purpose in their life?

The last time I saw The Boo Radleys play live was at The Garage in London, during summer 2023, as part of the Giant Steps 30th anniversary tour. How was it playing that album again, and airing some songs that hadn’t been performed live before?

Sice: It was amazing, and playing the songs that we’d never played live was exciting – I was very surprised at how well they worked. I don’t know why that was… maybe it’s down to maturity or whether we’re better musicians or there’s better tech these days… A lot of those songs we probably would’ve tried to play back in the day but maybe they didn’t work… As a set, it worked well – a lot of people have a huge fondness for that album and that hasn’t faded.

Back in the day, we probably only played half a dozen songs from it, and a lot of people didn’t see us doing it.

So, this year The Boos are on tour again and you’re doing a mash up of the Wake Up! album from 1995, and the follow up – 1996’s C’mon Kids. You’re calling it the C’mon Up! tour. I see what you did there… Did you ever think about calling it Wake Up, Kids?

Sice: (laughs). Well, that was the other option… We’re going to do the whole of the Wake Up! album for the show at Rough Trade in Liverpool, but for the rest of the shows it will be a mash up of the two. Looking at the setlist that we’re going to do, mashing up the two makes a brilliant album – you can see the similarities between the songs because they were actually quite close in terms of their writing period.

How will it be singing a noisy song like C’mon Kids? Will it wreck your throat?

Sice: I’m worried about that – I don’t know how it’s going to be. I always used to wreck my throat doing it, so I don’t know what it will be like singing it as an older man…

You’re not the world’s biggest fan of the Wake Up! album, are you? You’ve told me before that you think it doesn’t work as a complete record…

Sice: Martin’s [Carr – Boo Radleys guitarist and songwriter, who isn’t in the reformed band] intention was to write a 12-song pop album, and I think it would’ve been brilliant if we’d done that, but I don’t think we did. Martin’s way of working was that whatever was produced was kind of it…

To be blunt about it, I think there’s a lot of filler on the album, which I don’t think there is on any of the other albums – but there are seven shit-hot songs and five that I’m not sure about…

Wilder is a brilliant song…

Sice: It’s great – really lovely.

With the piano, it’s like The Boos doing Elton John, and then there are those wonderful, Beach Boys-like backing vocals…

Sice: Totally. We always loved the harmonies. We’ll definitely do that song – back in the day, I don’t think we had a piano player who was good enough to do it live.

Have you got a favourite song off Wake Up!?

Sice: I love Twinside.

Find The Answer Within is a good tune too…

Sice: We’ve always done that… If we’d done a pop album, those would’ve been the songs that would’ve been good for it: Find The Answer Within, Twinside, It’s Lulu... If the rest of the album had followed suit, it would’ve been what we intended it to be.

Giant Steps is seen as The Boo Radleys’ masterpiece, but you prefer C’mon Kids, don’t you? 

Sice: I do.

Is it your favourite Boos album?

Sice: I think it is – definitely. It sounds the most like us. We wanted to make it more like us, because Wake Up! had a lot of extra brass and other stuff. We wanted C’mon Kids to be just us in the studio. I like the eclecticism of it and that it’s slightly off the wall – it was a real shame that the album [wasn’t better received] … It was just timing… Had we released C’mon Kids straight after Giant Steps it would’ve been lauded.

It feels more like the natural successor to Giant Steps than Wake Up! was…

Sice: It does. Wake Up! was almost a reaction… because we’d done Giant Steps, which was sprawling and had everything and the kitchen sink, we didn’t want to do the same thing – we wanted to do a 12-song pop album… C’mon Kids was more naturally us, but the success of Wake Up Boo! kind of derailed us.

‘Had we released C’mon Kids straight after Giant Steps it would’ve been lauded’

At the time, a lot of critics thought that C’mon Kids was a deliberate attempt by you to sabotage your career, but it wasn’t, was it? You were just doing something different to Wake Up!

Sice: It surprised me that people said that. Music journalists are pretty savvy people, and they know how it works… Did they really think that we had enough control to be able to decide that? Absolutely not. We saw it as an opportunity to give all those people who loved the band something brilliant to listen to. Had we released C’mon Kids after Giant Steps, I think we would’ve retained our indie cred, which we lost with Wake Up! We gained a lot of publicity and promotional ability, but we lost our indie cred.

C’mon Kids was a noisy album at times…

Sice: It’s very noisy – it was our most ‘rock’ album. What’s In The Box? was pure Who power.

The title track is a call to arms: ‘C’mon kids, don’t do yourself down, throw out your arms for a new sound…’

Sice: That was the bizarre thing about the idea that we were somehow trying to get rid of people with that album, because the first song says: ‘C’mon kids, throw out your arms for a new sound…’ We were saying, ‘Here you go – have some of this…’

That song feels like a mantra for the album and what you were doing. You also sing: ‘Work all day, it don’t mean a thing. With the sun always outside your window. Fuck the ones who tell you that life is merely a time before dying…’

It’s an anthem to getting out there, following your dreams and living in the moment… 

Sice: Totally. It was a very energetic album. The weird thing is that because of Wake Up Boo! there’s this thing that Wake Up! is a big poppy album, but it’s actually really depressing. 4am Conversation and Reaching Out From Here are pretty miserable… Martin was at a time in his life when he was living in Preston and was quite miserable.

Wake Up Boo! has a melancholy undercurrent to it…

Sice: Yeah – absolutely. I think C’mon Kids is a really uplifting record – New Brighton Promenade is celebratory – and it’s a far more positive album.

It still has some melancholy too, though…

Sice: Yes, but that’s us…

Meltin’s Worm is bonkers. It’s the stuff of childhood nightmares – a song about a worm who eats a child and takes his place at school…

Sice: I love it! I can remember when Martin sent me the demo of it. It was one of the first songs for the album and I thought it was brilliant. No one else was writing songs like that, and it was very Beatlesesque – whimsical, weird and very English.

Both the Wake Up! and C’mon Kids albums were recorded at Rockfield. How was that?

Sice: The reason we went to Rockfield was because we were known as a party band. The problem was, if we were in London, people would’ve been dropping in all the time – it would’ve been a distraction. Everything prior to that had been made in London.

‘The weird thing is that because of Wake Up Boo! there’s this thing that Wake Up is a big poppy album, but it’s actually really depressing’

Rockfield was a solution to that, as it’s in the middle of nowhere, but I think we had too much time on our hands there. Our work rated slowed down and we got a bit bored and stir crazy. Everyone ended up disappearing at weekends, so, even though it’s a residential studio, our work rate wasn’t that great.

In London studios, you’d work for 12 hours solid and then clear off. At Rockfield, we nearly killed our engineer, Andy Wilkinson, because we’d all fall into different work patterns. Tim would want to get up in the morning and work, but Martin would practically want to be nocturnal and do something in the middle of the night. Poor old Andy had to be there the whole time… but it was a good thing to do.

You self-produced Wake Up! and C’mon Kids…

Sice: Yeah – and I wonder about the wisdom of that, but we didn’t like being hemmed in and being told we couldn’t do this or that. We enjoyed the process of experimenting and messing around, but it probably wouldn’t have done any harm to have an extra set of ears. If we’d got the right person, it might’ve been good.

So, finally, a question that’s in two parts… Firstly, what’s the first thing you do when you wake up?

Sice: I press the button on my one-cup water boiler because I’ve prepared my coffee the night before, so I can have it first thing in the morning.

And, secondly, have you ever played C’mon Kids to your kids, and, if so, what did they think of it?

Sice: It’s funny because they never used to be arsed at all, but when we went back out, they did the merch, and they suddenly realised how much we meant to people. They were like, ‘Oh my God…’

They didn’t think we were cool until they read about us and they realised we knew Oasis and Radiohead. My son said: ‘You have to understand, these people are like gods to us….’

I was like, ‘fair enough…’

The Boo Radleys C’mon Up! tour is in February: more details here.

On March 30, there will be a special event at Rough Trade Liverpool, with the band playing the Wake Up! album in full.

The Boo Radleys will also be playing the 10th Anniversary Shiiine On Weekender festival, at Butlins, Skegness (Friday March 28 – Sunday 30). 

 

Sice to see you…

This year is going to be a busy one for Simon ‘Sice’ Rowbottom, frontman/guitarist with ’90s indie-pop experimentalists, The Boo Radleys, who were signed to Alan McGee’s Creation Records, split in 1999, but reformed in 2021, albeit without chief songwriter, Martin Carr.

Following last year’s comeback album, Keep On With Falling, which Sice recorded with fellow band members, Tim Brown (bass) and Rob Cieka (drums), the Boos are back with a follow up, Eight – out in June – and in the summer will be touring the UK playing their 1993 masterpiece, Giant Steps, which turns 30 this year and is being reissued in the autumn.

Sice and Say It With Garage Flowers founder/editor, Sean Hannam – thanks to the Mad Squirrel in Amersham for the picture.

But, before all that, Sice, who is a chartered psychologist, is performing a series of solo shows in March under the banner An Appointment With Dr Sice, in which he’ll play songs from all eight of the Boos’ albums, plus his two records as Eggman and Paperlung, talk about his life and career and share some of his thoughts on psychology.

The solo tour is partly to promote a new book he has been involved with, Touring and Mental Health: The Music Industry Manual, which is published next month by Omnibus Press.

Written by health and performance professionals, the comprehensive manual will help musicians and those working in live music to identify and cope with the various physical and psychological difficulties that can occur during, or as a result of, touring.

Designed to be picked up, put down, read at length and passed around the tour bus, the book covers topics including mental health, peak performance and performance anxiety, addiction, group dynamics, relationship problems, dealing with the media, physical health, diversity and inclusion, crisis management and post-tour recovery.

To find out more about his hectic 2023, Say It With Garage Flowers spoke to Sice in an exclusive interview, which we did in a pub in the Buckinghamshire town of Amersham, near to where he lives and where Say It With Garage Flowers is based.

“I’m just about keeping on top of it and I enjoy it all,” he tells us. “It’s what keeps me motivated – I like the variety and the diversity.”

Q&A

How has the solo tour and the mental health book come about?

Sice: I’m involved with the Music Industry Therapist Collective – (MITC) we’re all therapists who’ve worked in the music industry in some capacity or other. It was started by Tamsin Embleton – she got in touch with me a couple of years ago. The big thing that she’s been building up to is the Touring and Mental Health Music Industry Manual, which is a really important book – it’s massively comprehensive. I’ve been interviewed for it.

As I’ve got older, one of the things I’ve really enjoyed on stage is talking to the audience – I never used to do it back in the ‘90s. Suddenly there’s a lot I want to say. I was also kind of inspired a bit by [former Lush member] Miki Berenyi’s book [Fingers Crossed], which is absolutely brilliant. She’s a very good writer. I wanted to do something along the same lines but I didn’t want to go down the memoir route.

You’ve written a book already, Thimblerigger, which was a novel…

Sice: Yeah – it was fiction.

But it does have elements of psychology in it…

Sice: Absolutely.

So, you’ve never fancied writing an autobiography?

Sice: No. It’s crossed my mind, but that’s what An Appointment With Dr Sice is really – in a lot of respects, it’s autobiographical.

When the new Boos album comes out, it will be the tenth album I’ve made, including my solo stuff – Eggman and Paperlung. I want to do a song from every album chronologically – we’re talking 35 years.

Have you always been interested in psychology?

Sice: Yeah – it was always an area of fascination. I had a place at the University of Liverpool to study psychology back in 1990, just before The Boos started, but we got a Wedding Present support for six weeks, so I dropped out and got on with the music. It’s turned out alright and as my kids got older, in about 2007, I really didn’t know what to do with myself. Then, because I was feeling a bit lost, I went to therapy for the first time.

When the Boos made it big and got a Top 10 pop hit with Wake Up Boo! in 1995, you were 25. Was it hard for you to deal with the fame?

Sice: Oh God, yeah. I hated fame.

But, in the early days, didn’t you and Martin dream of being pop stars?

Sice: We did – we wanted it but when we got it, we didn’t enjoy it. It’s like when you see a photo shoot – you think it looks great and that the photographer just walks past you and takes a snap, but then you realise you’re spending two and a half hours in a freezing cold warehouse in the East End of London. It isn’t that much fun and I just realised that there was stuff I’d rather be doing with my time. It was great to do it the first time, but I didn’t want to continue doing it.

‘I hated fame. We wanted it but when we got it, we didn’t enjoy it’

Do you think a book like the Touring and Mental Health Music Industry Manual would’ve been useful for you back in the day? I guess the Boos couldn’t take a therapist on the road, as Creation’s budget didn’t stretch to that…

Sice: [Laughs]. It didn’t. Now, it’s OK for young people in the music industry to talk about mental health – that’s why it’s brilliant that the MITC has been set up. That’s what we deal with – people who come into the music industry and recognise that it’s difficult.

And now we have social media, which puts even more pressure on people…

Sice: There are lots of reasons. Everybody on Twitter can be aiming at you and saying stuff – it’s very difficult, but, that said, it’s also easier in a way, because it’s easier to communicate, with mobile phones. When we went away on tour, we were quite isolated.

When we were touring America, it was a fucking nightmare to phone home and it was really expensive, and when we were in Europe, it was the era of phone cards – you had to find somewhere that sold them.

Did you enjoy touring?

Sice: When I read Miki’s book, she said one thing that I’ve been saying for years – ‘I wish I had a door in my front room that allowed me to step onto the stage, play the gig and come back’. That’s exactly it. Being on stage is everything it’s about and I love the creativity bits – the recording and the singing. I love being on stage – everything else I can take it or leave it. Well, leave it, really.

Touring can be gruelling…

Sice: The gruelling nature of it is difficult. Part of the problem is that you start off with good intentions, like reading books, then something happens and you end up blankly staring out of the window for three or four hours. It just becomes unnatural. One of the things that I’m always interested in in psychology is what’s natural to us as humans – us as homo sapiens, who are 250,000 years old. The way that we live our lives now – musicians especially – is so unnatural to us. All we’re made for is three or four hours of hunter-gathering and the rest of the time sitting round the campfire.

So, what can we expect from An Appointment With Dr Sice? A few stories, some songs…

Sice: Yeah – basically that, but I’m also going to thread  some psychology through it. It’s a tale of where I came from, what I went through with the Boos – a few anecdotes – and then segueing into psychology. I guess it’s about what I consider to be important in psychology. The show will be about two hours – with an interval. It’s essentially a kind of theatre show – it builds and there’s a kind of narrative.

There are lots of threads – Catholicism, family and psychology. How our contextual influences and our experiences influence what we do. And there’s some stuff about male mental health. People say ‘men should talk more’ but men don’t know how. We don’t know what to say, we need to be given permission and we need to be taught about how to talk about emotions or name them. Nobody teaches us it – it’s believed to be inherent, but it isn’t. That’s what I’m doing – but it’s hopefully going to be fun too.

And there are some pop tunes, too… Will you be playing Wake Up Boo!?

Sice: Do you know what? I haven’t decided yet. I’ve got to do one off the Wake Up! album.

You don’t like that record, do you?

Sice: It’s not that I dislike it, but it’s the one I wouldn’t choose to listen to. We set out to write a 12-song pop album, but I don’t think it does that. There are two or three tracks that maybe do…but for it to work, it needed to be a 12-song pop album. It’s okay in its own right, but the second side is really quite melancholy and odd. It never really fitted together in the way in which Giant Steps, C’mon Kids and Kingsize did.

Let’s talk about the new Boos album, Eight. When we last spoke, in November 2021, ahead of the release of the last record, Keep On With Falling, which was released in March last year, you said you were more excited about the follow up, which was already written, and that you were already halfway through writing the album after that.

So, Eight’s coming out in June – you’ve already released the first single, Seeker, and the next song from it is called The Unconscious

Sice: The Unconscious is a story about my psychoanalysis – it details that. I did full-on psychoanalysis for two years when I was in training. It was interesting, but not a great experience. It was very messy. It’s not the sort of counselling where you’re sitting and chatting – it’s almost like you’re talking into the ether and someone’s whispering in your ear. You’re on the couch and they’re sat behind you – you’re trying to iron out what comes up from the unconscious to be spoken about and they interpret it. It was a bit weird and cult-like – it brings up lots of fears and early childhood stuff that’s slightly out of memory. I would be driving home from it sometimes and I’d burst into tears but have no idea why. It’s powerful, but it’s hard work.

That’s heavy, but you got a song out of it…

Sice: Every cloud…

Seeker is a brassy pop song and it’s about love – finding someone who can be with you and support you…

Sice: Totally.

‘I did full-on psychoanalysis for two years. It was very messy – a bit weird and cult-like’

Last year’s comeback single, A Full Syringe and Memories of You, was about euthanasia, so this one’s much lighter…

Sice: [Laughs] It’s bright and breezy. Lyrically, it’s Tim’s.

So, you’ve both written songs for this album?

Sice: It’s pretty much 50:50, but there are 13 songs on it, so there’s one extra of mine. Lyrically, Tim’s songs are about relationships whereas I tend to write about the self – the individual.

The Boo Radleys in 2023 – Left to right: Tim Brown, Simon ‘Sice’ Rowbottom and Rob Cieka.

Does Rob write?

Sice: We’re trying to encourage him to – he does pitch in with ideas. He has written a set of lyrics and I’ve written something to go along with them, so that will probably appear. We’ve decided we’re going to shove out everything we’ve got and for the next album start again by being in the same room – we’ve never ever done that.

So, what does Eight sound like? The album before was pretty pop, so is the new one more left-field?

Sice: I think it is. There’s a lot more electronica on there and we’ve embraced the trumpet again a lot more. But we are still quite poppy. I was thinking about this – what’s the difference with the writing and with Martin not being here? I think it’s clean versus dirty – me and Tim prefer clean. We’ve always liked a bit of cleanliness about stuff, whereas Martin was always about the dirtiness and the griminess.

‘There’s a lot more electronica on the new album and we’ve embraced the trumpet again’

This year, Giant Steps, turns 30. How do you feel about that?

Sice: It seems bizarre – I can remember that with Martin we did a mini-website for the 10-year anniversary and that didn’t seem like long ago…

So, Giant Steps is being reissued later this year?

Sice: Yeah there’s a vinyl reissue.

What are your memories of making the album? The band self-produced it at Protocol Studios in Holloway Road, London, and it was a conscious decision to move away from the shoegaze sound of your earlier records, wasn’t it?

Sice: Yeah – totally. My memories of making it are really good. It was an enjoyable process. It’s really strange – looking back, we didn’t really realise how precarious our position with Creation was. We assumed everything was going to be okay – we were always fairly optimistic, so we didn’t know that the pressure was on for us to have a successful record.

‘When we were recording Giant Steps, we could do what we wanted – we had a sense of freedom and the choice of not having a producer was because it allowed us to do bonkers things’

The strange thing with Creation was we thought that we were joining the label of The Jesus and Mary Chain, My Bloody Valentine – completely underground bands – and then it shifted. I think Ride probably started it, when they started to get Top 10 singles – that was the expectation for every other band on the label.

When we were recording Giant Steps, we could do what we wanted – we had a sense of freedom and the choice of not having a producer was because it allowed us to do bonkers things.

Alan McGee wasn’t a big fan of Giant Steps, was he? 

Sice: McGee didn’t understand us  – he never got us as a band. I think we were too complex for him. He disappeared not long after Wake Up! came out  – he was shocked by the success of Giant Steps

So, this summer you’re doing some 30th anniversary live shows for the reissue of Giant Steps. Will you be playing the whole record?

Sice: Yeah – we’re going to do it all but there will be certain songs that we’ll put together in a bit of a medley. We’re going to be doing two sets – one will be a ‘greatest hits’ – so there’s a lot of work… 

Are you looking forward to it?

Sice: It’s going to be brilliant. There are people who discovered it after we split up, so they get the opportunity to see us do it live. I’m really looking forward to it.

‘McGee didn’t understand us  – he never got us. I think we were too complex for him. He was shocked by the success of Giant Steps’

Giant Steps is a classic ’90s album, isn’t it?

Sice: It stands the test of time. There’s a huge sense of originality about it. It’s all the influences that we had from an early age – The Byrds, jazz, The Beatles, The Beach Boys… Before that, we were influenced by what was around then – My Bloody Valentine, Dinosaur Jr., Spacemen 3, all those bands. With Giant Steps, it was, ‘Do you know what? We love all these ’60s bands and other stuff…’

Do you think it’s your masterpiece?

Sice: I prefer C’mon Kids – I think it’s that cleanliness and that it’s sticking up for the underdog. I think C’mon Kids is just as good an album – songs like Four Saints are very good and really intelligent…

Was C’mon Kids a deliberate reaction against the album before, which was Wake Up!?

Sice: It was seen as that but it’s so weird that anyone would think we would do that. It was a reaction only in the sense that we didn’t want to do the same thing again.

And you never did. Kingsize is a very different album to C’mon Kids. I think Kingsize is an underrated album.

Sice: It is. I’ve always said Kingsize was Tim’s record. He was the only one with any enthusiasm at that point, which was a shame. Looking back, what we should’ve done is what bands do now – take a break.

What’s your favourite song on Giant Steps?

Sice: That’s a good question. I really like Best Lose The Fear and The White Noise Revisited and Lazarus is special – it always will be.

So, 2023 is going to a busy year for you – there’s the solo tour, the Boos, the day job and MITC…

Sice: I’m madly busy. I’ve got my finger in four pies. I’m just about keeping on top of it and I enjoy it all. It’s what keeps me motivated – I like the variety and the diversity.

Final question. On I’ve Lost The Reason, from Giant Steps, you sing: ‘I’m only 23my hair is thin, my size is large, what have I done to me?’  How will you feel singing that as a 53-year-old man?

Sice: I don’t know… It’s really weird because that’s the one song that I didn’t want to do, ‘cos I know it’s a very personal song to Martin. It was always weird singing that song but we’ll do it out of completeness. For a lot of people, that’s one of their favourites.

Tour dates for An Appointment With Doctor Sice:

Eight, the new album by The Boo Radleys, will be released on June 9 (Boostr)

You can preorder it here.

A remastered Giant Steps will be released on September 1 – vinyl, CD and digital.

The first Giant Steps Tour 2023 dates are as follows:

  • Tue June 13 – Reading, South Street Arts Centre
  • Wed June 14 – London, The Garage
  • Thu June 15 – Tunbridge Wells, The Forum
  • Fri June 16 – Birkenhead, Future Yard
  • Thu June 22 – Dublin, The Grand Social
  • Fri  June 23 – Belfast, The Limelight
  • Sun June 25 – Glasgow, Hug and Pint

Other dates

  • Sat October 28 – Manchester, Bread Shed w/Cud
  • Sun October 29 – Liverpool, O2 Academy 2 w/Cud
  • Mon October 30 – Sheffield, O2 Academy 2 w/Cud
  • Tue October 31 – Birmingham, O2 Institute 2 w/Cud
  • Thu  November 2 – Bristol, The Fleece w/Cud
  • Fri November 3 – Oxford, O2 Academy 2 w/Cud
  • Sat  November 4 – London, O2 Academy Islington w/Cud

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Touring and Mental Health: The Music Industry Manual, is published on March 24 by Omnibus Press.