‘I knew we had to make a record that was seminal…’

John Power

Cast’s new album, Love Is The Call, is the best record they’ve ever made. In an exclusive and very honest interview, frontman and songwriter, John Power, tells Say It With Garage Flowers why he feels liberated by it, gives us the lowdown on making the album in Spain with award-winning producer Youth, and reveals how he’s finally reconciled his Britpop past. “I genuinely had unfinished business – I needed to make this record. This was our final chance,” he says.

It’s been almost 30 years since Cast released their debut album, 1995’s All Change. Fronted by John Power, a former member of Liverpool indie-pop band The La’s, of There She Goes fame, Cast were formed in 1992 and they bothered the UK Top 40 with solid and anthemic Britrock songs including Alright, Walkaway and Sandstorm.

After splitting in 2001, following a poor reception and low sales for their fourth album, Beetroot, which saw them try to branch out musically, the band reformed in 2010.

Now Cast are back with a new album, Love Is The Call, touring the UK this month and, in the summer, they’re supporting Liam Gallagher for the 30th anniversary gigs celebrating Oasis’s Definitely Maybe.

Ahead of writing and recording the new album, which is Cast’s seventh and, coincidentally, their first in seven years, Power set himself a challenge – to create a body of work that possessed the zest and vibrancy of a brand-new band, but with the experience, perspective and tightly-honed musicianship that comes with years of being on the road.

He’s achieved it, too – Love Is The Call is a real return to form. In fact, it’s the best album the band have ever made. The record starts off in a low-key fashion, with the folky Bluebird, which is a short, sparse and haunting opener, just Power’s voice and an acoustic guitar.

‘Love Is The Call is a real return to form. In fact, it’s the best album Cast have ever made’

Things shift up a gear with the chugging and anthemic Forever And A Day, and Rain That Falls is trademark Cast – solid, melodic, and rousing harmony-laden Britrock-meets-Mersey-pop.

Far Away is uplifting and soaring guitar pop with a killer chorus, while Love You Like I Do is a psychedelic love song with Beatlesesque harmonies and Byrds-like guitars.

Love Is The Call isn’t short of big tunes and memorable hooks –  Starry Eyes is a great, rowdy glam rock stomp, the title track and first single is a life-affirming blast of psych-pop, I Have Been Waiting is almost punky, and the sprightly Look Around is yet more Mersey-pop but with an indie sheen.

There’s also a mystical and reflective ballad, Time Is Like a River“Time is like a river, it floats out to the sea, reaching on forever, endlessly” – which has a brilliant and totally unexpected Mariachi brass break, and the record ends with the melancholy, wistful and La’s-like epic, Tomorrow Calls My Name.

The songs were written by Power and the sound was then expanded and finely tuned by band members Liam ‘Skin’ Tyson (guitar) and Keith O’Neill (drums). Power also played bass – a nod to his time in The La’s.

Sessions for the album were overseen by Grammy Award-winning producer Youth (Killing Joke, The Verve, Embrace, James) at his Space Mountain studio in Granada, southern Spain – he’s a man known for his cosmic energy, and it sounds like some of that has rubbed off on Power.

“It’s a fantastic psychedelic pop record and I’m thrilled that people are going to hear it,” he tells us, speaking on Zoom from his home in London.

“It’s the record I wanted to make and it’s the record Cast needed to make but hadn’t, because I don’t think we were ready for it.”

Q&A

I think the new album is the best thing Cast have ever done…

John Power: I didn’t want to start repeating what everyone has been telling me, but the general consensus is what you’re saying… When we recorded it with Youth, who’s made a lot of records in his time, and Alan McGee, who has played a part in a lot of bands, they were both saying that it’s a career-defining record. As a writer and an artist, I’m like, ‘Wow’, y’know, I’ll let you say that…’

I definitely know it’s the best thing we’ve done in decades, and, as a complete record of where I am right now, in this moment, it’s been the most enjoyable record to have recorded and to have played on.

I think this record is something that I’m very… I don’t want to say proud, that would be silly, but I’m liberated…  It feels like it’s the best thing we’ve done in fucking ages – there’s no doubt about it.

You recorded it with Youth at his Space Mountain studio in Spain. How was that?

JP: It was fantastic. When we went there, a year ago, it was pissing down in Britain when we left – we were in the Andalusian mountains, not far from Granada. It was clear blue skies, but the wind was cold… He’s got this little kind of Moroccan courtyard that’s walled off, but it’s this amazing sun spot and it was a stunning place to record.

There was also the fact that I had a bunch of songs and demos, and I kind of knew deep down that something was going to happen there… I knew we had to make a record that was seminal…  we couldn’t just make a good record and have a bunch of good songs – that wouldn’t do it for Cast, not now. I’d been meeting with Youth and we’d found some common ground – I started to believe in what he could bring to the record.

‘We travelled light, like rock ‘n’ roll bandits,  knowing we were going to make something special’

Cast

 

The band were there and it was a feeling of excitement and expectation – the thing happened very quickly… We went over with a guitar each and some drumsticks – we didn’t take any kit, amps or gear. We travelled light, like rock ‘n’ roll bandits, knowing we were going to make something special. The whole routine of recording was invigorating and inspiring.

I would have a coffee with Youth in the morning, and we’d sit in the courtyard. The day would start with me panicking about getting the lyrics finished for the ideas I was going to play Youth. We’d sit there, go over a song and arrange it – he’d be like, ‘Is that right?’ Sometimes it was, but sometimes it needed big changes – I had to rewrite a chorus, write a middle eight, or whatever… It was a really creative feeling and environment. We’d go downstairs to the studio and Youth would tell the band what the arrangement was, and then we’d work for a good few hours getting that take right. It worked really fast after that – it was acoustic-style.

You played bass on the album, didn’t you?

JP: I played the bass – I had a run through and then we’d do a take, and that would be it. It was all happening. The reason I was playing bass is because I wanted Keith to play that jumpy rock ‘n’ roll – that punky, rockabilly beat. If I’m on the bass doing this… (he mimes playing bass and makes a bass sound) he’ll do that because it’s not really within his nature. Keith has done what I consider to be the best drumming on any Cast recording.

‘Nobody does a track a day – not unless you’re recording purely live. It just doesn’t happen. It normally takes two weeks to get the fucking drum sound!’

We were there for three weeks and we were going to do a track a day – that sounds as if that’s easily done, but, let me tell you, it wasn’t. Nobody does a track a day – not unless you’re recording purely live. It just doesn’t happen. It normally takes two weeks to get the fucking drum sound! That’s the most tedious part of being in a band – it’s just boring. We used everything that was set up there and by midnight we’d have most of a song finished, okay, it might’ve needed some shakers and some backing vocals, or an overdub on guitar, or I might redo something, but we had the idea nailed and that’s how we worked every single day. It was inspiring and uplifting, and it reaffirmed my love of the process of recording.

Youth is a dude – he’s a real character – he’s got a hell of creativity in him and he’s great at expressing it. We got him at the beginning of the year, and he was bang into our ideas – he worked brilliantly, and everyone got inspired.

I’ll give you an example… Far Away is a classic guitar pop song – do you know what I mean? On the demo, it was a pulsating, slow, acoustic track, like Across The Universe (he starts singing Far Away in a Lennon-like style), but Youth was adamant that it was wrong… So, we sped it up, and I had to write a new chorus – the middle eight was the chorus.

Anyway, what I’m trying to say is that it changed massively. I came home and played it to my wife, because she’d heard the demos when I was writing, and she was in shock because it was so different. I let Youth in with things like that and I can remember this little niggling feeling about to bite – I was about to slap his hand and say, ‘Don’t fucking touch that song!’ but, I went, ‘Now, John – don’t… Swallow that.’

‘Something changed with Youth. It was like drawing back the curtains and letting the daylight come flooding in’

So, I went with it – sometimes you feel things are happening and you’ve just got to be bold enough to go with it… and it was brilliant. I let him into my songwriting…

So, by handing over more creative control to Youth, it was a different process from working with some of your previous producers, like John Leckie or Gil Norton?

JP: Most definitely – Youth is a songwriter and he’s in a band, as well as being a multi-award-winning producer. There was just something different about it. My initial thing would’ve been to close the doors and barricade myself in, because that’s the way it’s always been in the past – ‘nobody knows my songs better than me’ and all that… but something changed with Youth. It was like drawing back the curtains and letting the daylight come flooding in.

It was the right thing to do, and it was a creative thing to do. It’s all about being there in the moment, and Youth was a massive part of this album – he got Skin and Keith to perform what they needed to perform…

There’s a lot of energy on the album…

JP:  Yeah – there is. It’s flying this record – it hits a certain point, after the fourth or fifth song, and it’s like a white-knuckle ride – you’d better buckle yourself in.

You’ve said that somewhere between the end of The La’s and the beginning of Cast there was a space you wanted to explore, and that’s what you’ve done with the new record…

JP: I had a conversation with Alan McGee – he told me to away and write a fucking great record. I kind of realised what he meant. I had to find somewhere that was going to evoke and inspire… so I was thinking about debut records: ‘Why are they so fucking good and why have they got this amazing energy?’ So, I started to think how would I write a debut album now, but with all the experience?

A record that has the energy and hunger of a debut…

JP: What’s so magic about a debut album? They’ve got nothing to lose and they’re in the moment – they’ve got it all to say and they’re not trying to be anything other than what they are.

The thing about the sweet spot between The La’s album and All Change is that there’s a place that I hadn’t explored. That’s why I’m playing bass on the record – I’m leaning into that time I had in The La’s that punk rock, that rock ‘n’ roll… The acoustics are jumping, the bass is pounding and Keith’s doing his thing. It’s not a parody of All Change or The La’s album – it’s me accepting who I am and not having two separate personalities.

‘Alan McGee told me to away and write a fucking great record’

I’m hoping that this record binds the two and makes me whole – it’s a beautiful space that is inspiring, but it’s very much a Cast record. It’s the record I wanted to make and it’s the record Cast needed to make but hadn’t, because I don’t think we were ready for it. Now it feels right, and I’m happy talking about the past, the present and the future. I think this record encapsulates the journey and the transition between those two moments in my life.

It’s the seventh Cast album, and, strangely, it’s seven years since your last one…

JP: It’s numerology…

It’s cosmic…

JP: Once I made this record and I heard it, it gave me a detachment and it liberated me from being needy – I just know that it’s the best record we could’ve made. If you don’t like it, then it’s not for you and I can’t help you…

‘I feel like this is the real thing again – it’s a fantastic psychedelic pop record and I’m thrilled that people are going to hear it’

JP: All that stuff about magic and the cosmos… the universe doesn’t do desperate… I stepped back and I had a word, as you do, and I said: ‘I’m ready and I’m in the right place to make this record.’ I feel like this is the real thing again – it’s a fantastic psychedelic pop record and I’m thrilled that people are going to hear it.

Not many bands are making some of their best work this far into their career…

JP: I agree, because I’ve been there – I’ve made records that are good, but there’s a difference…You know when you’ve made something seminal that’s everything you wanted – this feels like that. The last record was good – it’s got some really good songs on it – but this is a great record… I know that and I’m happy saying it.

Let’s talk about some of the songs on the album. Time Is Like A River is one of my favourites – it has a mystical feel and an unexpected Mariachi brass arrangement. It goes a bit Spaghetti Western…

JP: Yeah – that happened because we were in Granada – Youth knew a few shepherds he could call up… The noise at the end of it is from one of the shepherds’ phones – they were herders… That song has a change of time and tempo, from 4/4 to 3/4 in the break – it was one of the last songs that I wrote for the record. It was [originally] a bit different – it was faster.

I think it’s a beautiful song. We’d been working at some velocity – a lot of the songs are quite intense and they’ve got a lot of energy. All of a sudden, we pulled it back for one song on the album, apart from Bluebird – everything drops and it’s like a different colour or hue. It works amazingly because I think you need a breather. I don’t want to analyse it too much, but I’m glad that it’s one of your favourites. It’s a very rich song – the sentiments and the story should be able to be understood by most people. It’s about the meanderings in and out of life and where that takes us. We’re all just passing through, shifting space, shapes and movement, inhalations and time…  Y’know – it’s cosmic, that.

The album feels optimistic. The last song, Tomorrow Calls My Name, is pretty positive, as is the title track, and the record is also full of those classic Cast anthems…

JP: Tomorrow Calls My Name is the tear-jerker – it’s emotional. After the journey of the album, you get to that song… It’s quite intense but it’s beautiful – you get to the chorus [he sings it] and you think that’s it, but then it goes into the outro [he sings it] and it’s a big change: ‘You know it’s going to be alright…’

‘We’re gonna face some shit, brother, but it’s gonna be OK – we’re gonna make it to the end, where we’ve got to go’

There’s an emotional pull in that change and that dynamic – the band are playing, the words are pouring out, the caller is calling… It’s an epic track that finishes the album and leaves you hanging – it’s the journey of life and the things we’re going to have to face on the way. We’re gonna face some shit, brother, but it’s gonna be OK – we’re gonna make it to the end, where we’ve got to go. That’s the truth, whether we like it or not. It sums that all up – it’s a brilliant song to end on.

You’ve always had a ‘60s influence, especially The Who’s power rock, and there are a lot of Beatlesy harmonies on the album and some jangly, Byrdsy guitars…

JP: When I said it was going to be like a debut record, but with the wisdom and experience of a band that has been on the road for 30 years, I was setting myself up for a big fall, but I’d still want that record to sound somewhere between Revolver and Hunky Dory … that’s what I set out to do. Within the vocal lines and the shapes of the melodies, there are some Bowie-esque moves going on. I was hungry as a songwriter and the energy of the band has been so good live.

I Have Been Waiting almost has a punk feel… It’s full-on…

JP: Yeah – it’s breathless. I love it. It’s got a ‘yee-haw’, mountain roots thing – it’s like punky folk and it’s scorching. I love the energy – we were playing it in rehearsal and it’s a proper ‘wow’ moment. I love singing it.

Starry Eyes has a glam beat…

JP:  It’s like Stonesy glam. That could’ve been a single – and it has a rolling bassline. I love the chorus – I’m not going to sing it back to you, but I could do… It’s full of energy and it really lives. I gave Skin the opportunity to do some serious sonic needlework – on I Have Been Waiting and Starry Eyes, I gave him permission to let rip.

It’s primary colour guitar playing – while being authentic and original, it reminds you of all the things a guitar can do.

 

Bluebird is a low-key way to open the album – it’s a stripped-back and folky solo song, rather than kicking off the record with a big bang…

That was a song we recorded late in the session – it was originally a full-band song, but it wasn’t sounding right. Youth said to me, ‘Why don’t you go back on your own and play it as you’d play a little folk song?’ He said we’d go up to the chorus and then out…

It’s such a beautiful little song. I thought if we started the album with it, then you’re going to have to listen to the second song. It’s like turning a radio dial and you’ve captured it – a little song that’s been floating in space.

We were being bold, so we put it on first – it was heads or tails whether we were going to start with Love Is The Call, Starry Eyed, I Have Been Waiting or Look Around.

I think Bluebird is a lovely way to lead into the second track, First Smile Ever, which isn’t as threatening as some of the rest of the album, but has that Velvetsy sort of rhythm – it’s chugging away with this sort of urban outlook on life, from the inner cities that are shit. We’ve been let down, but the chorus is beautiful…

Next year, it will be 30 years since All Change came out. How does it feel looking back at that time now? Was it fun?

I think it was but what you’ve got to understand what your opinion of fun is – at the time, a lot of things we were getting up to were considered fun, but now I just think, ‘Oh my God – I don’t want to die…’

I don’t know if I’m being oversensitive, but not all my memories of that successful period in my life are fond. I don’t know whether it was me putting excess pressure on myself and dealing with the pressure of writing all the songs, singing every night and maybe being slightly unsure if my voice was going to go, and being overly tired and stressed…

There were a lot of good times and great shows – we were in the charts for God’s sake, we were on Top of the Pops, we were selling loads of records and having good times, but I was struggling a bit with my own identity. I sometimes find it difficult to go back to that period. Even when I see myself performing [from that time], I’m aware of what that person was really feeling – behind the bravado… I’m a different person now to what I was then – I’ve lived and learned a lot.

I think being a young kid from Liverpool… you’ve got certain ways of dealing with things, and I could’ve been a bit looser and more easy going – I could’ve enjoyed things a bit more. I could’ve taken my foot off the accelerator… It’s difficult growing up in-front of a camera. I’m being honest now –  I could easily say to you, ‘Hey, man – it was fucking great…’ I can’t remember most of it because I was off me head most of the time. It got a bit difficult… I’m ready now and I’m feeling good – I’ve written a great album. I’d rather be here than there, put it that way.

‘At the time, a lot of things we were getting up to were considered fun, but now I just think, ‘Oh my God – I don’t want to die…’

How does it feel to have made a new Cast record almost 30 years later…

JP: With me, time just seems to be one moment that stretches – it doesn’t feel like yesterday or tomorrow. When I’m singing the classic Cast tracks, they just like feel right now – there doesn’t feel like there was a time 30 years ago when I sang Sandstorm or Walkaway.

There was a time, after the band split up, when I didn’t sing them – I couldn’t bring myself to sing them… I didn’t have the energy and I didn’t want to sing them, but that’s all changed now. It took a long time for me to find my peace with them and to welcome them home again. I fell out of love with who I was and I fell out of love with that time of my life – I didn’t want to go there and I didn’t want to talk about it. I didn’t want to regret it, but it just wasn’t the ticket that everyone tells you it is. I had to deal with that.

What music have you been listening to recently – new or old?

JP: I go downstairs, and I put a record on. I’m not going to hit you with any modern stuff. It’s going to be old jazz, Howlin’ Wolf – I’ve got a lot of real old blues records that I don’t even know the titles of – Beefheart, Bob Dylan, early Marley, Peter Tosh, The Stones’ Beggars Banquet and Exile On Main St, Astral Weeks, Love’s Forever Changes, or maybe Blondie. I put records on and I sit down and think, ‘Fucking hell – what an amazing record!’

‘I fell out of love with who I was and I fell out of love with that time of my life – I didn’t want to go there and I didn’t want to talk about it’

There’s a lot of love for Love in Liverpool…

Forever Changes is like a rite of passage for Liverpool – it’s massive there and, you’re right, it’s kind of in the folklore and a big part of Liverpool’s musical identity – as is Captain Beefheart, weirdly. It’s like it’s written in the story of Liverpool. Forever Changes is one of my favourite records – my daughter is 12, and she loves it as well. That’s because she’s heard it since she was a young girl.

Talking of Liverpool folklore, any news on that second La’s album?

JP: I wouldn’t be surprised if Lee [Mavers] was on to the fourth La’s album… The last time I was playing with Lee, which was a long time ago, the second album was already written, and it was amazing. What I know of Lee, he would be always writing – I think he’s got his kids in the band now, and he’ll have schooled them. I guess it would be phenomenal – if Lee ever released some new music, you don’t need me to tell you how amazing it would be. I wish he would.

‘Lee Mavers was an inspirational character in my life and the best songwriter of his generation’

One day I’d like to think we could sit down and whatever… before we pass through. Even without it, I’m thankful for the journey – Lee was an inspirational character in my life and the best songwriter of his generation.

When you talk about time and songs from my past, it just doesn’t feel like time in a galactic way. I don’t even know if it even passes – whether it just always exists as one big, long happening. Lee – God bless him, he’s a phenomenal songwriter and anyone who writes songs like that has got to have a beautiful heart.

It’s 2024, but it feels like we’re in a ‘90s time warp – you guys are back with a new album, as are Shed Seven and Kula Shaker, Rialto have reformed, and Liam Gallagher has made an album with John Squire

JP: It’s weird – I wonder… It’s strange… The fad thing seems to have faded – now, all a sudden, you’ve got a younger generation that are looking back to that period of music in the way that I looked back to The Who and The Clash – that exotic and amazing decade or two of music. But when I was in The La’s, it was miles away from us.

‘If people come to a Cast show they want to hear Alright and Finetime, but that’s OK. If you go and see The Who, you want to hear My Generation’

I wonder whether are people are looking back at the ‘90s as this amazing period of British music? They’re feeling it and the people like yourself and me, who were there and witnessed it, are ready to champion it because maybe they’ve realised how good it was. It’s all about the music – there seems to be some sort of acceptance… I don’t think it’s about nostalgia, although we had classic, great tunes. If people come to a Cast show they want to hear Alright and Finetime, but that’s OK. If you go and see The Who, you want to hear My Generation. 

If you make something exciting or seminal, people want that – especially in a world that seems so ill at ease and at loggerheads with itself. What does rock ‘n’ roll stand for today, in the digital age? Is it that you get a corporate advert? I don’t even know what it is.

 

You’re supporting Liam Gallagher on his Definitely Maybe 30th anniversary tour this year. People who know Cast from back in the day will see you, but you’ll get new fans, too…

JP: It’s a massive thing for us – we can reconnect with people who loved the band but forget that they did, as well as new fans. It’s a big year and I do believe in time, things happening and the cosmic fucking clock – having such a good album is a blessing in itself, so to get on Liam’s tour, which, to be honest, nearly every band in the Northern hemisphere would’ve wanted to get on, is something aligning… That’s two very big things that are happening four us. They say things happen for a reason and I’ve always been a big believer in following my instincts. Things are feeling good for Cast.

‘I genuinely had unfinished business – I needed to make this record. This was our final chance’

We’re going to do what we do and give this record as much support as we can. I think people – music lovers – will pass it on through word of mouth. People who were into the band will love it, but if you’re into guitars and psychedelic punk rock ‘n’ roll, it could do something for you.

I genuinely had unfinished business – I needed to make this record. This was our final chance – I said to the band, ‘Treat it is as the last record we’re ever going to make.’ I’m happy to complete the circle – where it leads, I don’t know, but it is going to lead to a phenomenal year. The shows are going to be exciting – I know that because I’ve been in rehearsals. The band are playing the new songs great and couple that with all the classic tracks, and it’s gonna be great. I’m happy – I’m not happy content, but I feel good and I’ve made a good record. That’s a good feeling because it’s so fucking tough to write a great record, and it’s even fucking tougher to record it, and then get the whole vibe. I’ve got to detach myself and enjoy the moment.

The most important thing is that it’s being released and that it’s received well, and that I’m happy and the band is happy, and that people like yourself have been listening to it and saying, ‘This is interesting – I fucking like this.’ That to me is worth everything.

Love Is The Call is out now on Cast Recordings. Cast are on tour this month, and supporting Liam Gallagher on his Definitely Maybe 30th anniversary UK tour this summer. 

For more information, visit www.castband.co.uk.

‘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/