"I try to get up as
late as possible but my wife can't sleep in, so
she gets up about 10.30 and makes me a cup of tea,
which must be Earl Grey.
Generally I don't have breakfast because I can't be
bothered. After I wake
up I wander along to a vegetarian cafe and have a
brunch. I'm not a
vegetarian but their food is very enjoyable. Depending
on what they're
serving I'll have a selection
of salads and humus. I don't bother with
morning newspapers, in fact I
make a definite point of not reading them. So
after brunch my day centres round what work I have to
get through.
Most of the time we
tend to be in the studio, and basically I'm in there
working from morning until night. We've been having
quite a lot of problems
in finishing off our first album, so we're working very
hard. I've written
pretty much all of our stuff up until now. If we do
complete songs then
they're written on the guitar, but if we're just
working on fragments of
tunes they'll be written on keyboards. One of our
keyboard players, Ian
Stanley, has a 24 track studio in his house so we like
to work there. It's
nice because we can demo and write there, and also take
a break and wander
round the rest of the house. We spend a lot of time
mucking about with
gadgets and computers.
I'm not fond of working
in the studio because the pressure is dreadful. I
like working on my own writing the songs and I
enjoy recording the songs in
like working on my own writing the songs and I
enjoy recording the songs in
demo stages, but when it comes to making the finished
article the
music industry pressure almost becomes too much to
bear. When it
gets to the mastering stage and you have three days to
finish three songs,
there's no way you can feel creative, It's entirely the
opposite, totally
destructive. When we're at Ian's there's no sense of
being trapped. That's
why we prefer to work in Bath. When I'm not touring I
like to stay at home
and go over my groundwork. I set everything up in the
living room and
experiment, which drives my wife mad. I'll play my
guitar and hope that
songs will come.
I've never ever forced
myself to
write a song, because if you do that you
find yourself repeating earlier themes. My songs are
inspired because I wait
for them to come. I wouldn't say I write a lot of songs
because I'm very
fussy, I do get a lot of ideas, but I only pursue a
few. Nor do I put my
ideas on to tape or on to paper.- What I do is sing it
over again and again
until it's firmly locked in my head and then I'll start
thinking about
lyrics.
Sometimes I can't
finish a song but I've learned to leave it alone for a
couple of weeks in such cases. For instance, for our
second single 'Pale
Shelter' I kept playing two chords for weeks and weeks,
then one morning I
woke up and sang the tune and
the words, just like that. Then another day I
was flicking through an art book and came across 'Pale
Shelter' by Henry
Wood, so that wrapped up everything nicely.
We keep TFF as a
nucleus of two because that's how it started. We do use
regular people, though. We acquired drummer Manny Elias
who's been with us
ever since and then Ian, whom
we bounce ideas off. Live we're augmented to a
five piece by Andy Davies, who's from local group Slow
Twitch Fibres. I
don't have any hobbies. I like staying in a lot with
Caroline. We don't do
anything, we don't watch televison - or not much. If I
do go out, we like
going out to eat. Eating out is one of my greatest
pleasures. There are
plenty of good restaurants in
Bath and quite a few decent clubs as well.
Mole is my favourite because it has a very relaxed
atmosphere, not at all
posey.
I don't read as a rule,
and when I do it's never fiction. I like psychology
books and things to do with science, and the physiology
of the body. I don't
like going to bed early because I find it difficult to
sleep before the
early hours of the morning. I
use every excuse to stay up late, usually by
taking baths, just for something to do."