Showing posts with label oasis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oasis. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 August 2013

Interview with The Beat Prophets

"I was sitting in a hospital bed and I was in bad shape, and when I was better I went to New York for a while and found Bob Dylan and his music, and I came back, got a guitar and I knew what record I wanted to make.."


Picking up traditional folk songs from Washington Square Park buskers, tuning techniques from the elusive frontman of The La’s Lee Mavers, to navigating the folk music hot spot in New York's Greenwich Village baskethouses and travelling around the UK and France on tour with other Liverpool bands is a lot for a year and a half in the life of a musician.

With tutelage from many Liverpool musicians such as Lee Mavers of The La’s, Gary Murphy of The Bandits and The Bandwagon Nights, along with Digsy and Edgar Jones as well as other prominent Liverpool music musicians, Parkes honed his skills and shaping his songs, as well as being invited as an admin on the popular Liverpool Bands page, maintaining his cult blog 'Diaries Of A Rock 'n' Dole Star', and appearing in MOJO magazine and the NME as well as being invited to New York Sound City 2012.

In late 2012, with bad health behind him, Parkes began work on a number of ‘one take demos’ many left unfinished and unmixed yet well received, but later abandoned under the title of The Beat Prophets.

With his sound described as sounding like the classic Liverpool melody and swagger with a cross of Freewheelin' era Dylan and the somber sounds of fellow Cosmic Scouser Howard Eliott Payne, we decided to catch up with 21 year old Liverpool-born singer/songwriter Chris Parkes.

Hello Chris, thanks for taking the time!

No trouble, normally it’s me doing the interviewing!

Can you give us a brief introduction to yourself and your musical history?

Course! I’m 21, I was the former frontman with a band called The Carnations from about 2010-mid 2011, then joined a band called Types of Reality on bass for a few months, they split, then I took a time out with bad health and university, as well as working with bands on European tours, being a promoter, producer, blogger, did some stuff with The La's, as well as being a band manager and on top of that writing more songs. Only in the past few months I’ve really wanted to get recording and performing, I’ve been too busy to fully commit before.

When did you begin writing songs?

I started at about 16, though I was playing bass and I only knew about two chords on guitar, so they weren’t that good, then I started The Carnations and things picked up, I was listening to things that really opened my ears like The Jam and The Libertines. Though the bulk of the songs I’m playing and recording at the moment are of course newer ones, inspired by my latest interests. The songs I wrote when I was 16 weren’t that great! I think every line had the word ‘baby’ in it!

What was some of the first songs you learned?

I learned a bunch of Johnny Cash songs at first, not too many chord changes thankfully! I didn’t know many chords but gradually got learning more and more. I learnt some songs that suit my voice as well, as someone said my vocal is very Scouse sounding. Truth is, I can't sing to save my life. Barry Sutton once told me, at about 5am along with Ged Lynn in The Living Brain's old Kif rehearsal room on Duke Street, said along the lines of "it's okay as long as you mean it" which helped me over a few hurdles some of the songs are born from a dark place, others just passing moments of something good

The Carnations were rife with trouble in it’s short history, what’s your memories of the time?

Fractured. It was all very fast, lots of comings and goings. We were only 17 – 18, so alcohol and vices were all very new to us. There was a bad crowd around us as well, that's were the 'rock 'n' dole star term was first mentioned. If we had gotten together now, I would like to think it would have been something. 

With The Carnations we were always 1 step forward and 6 steps back. We used to call it the 'good old days' but looking back all I can think is 'were the good old days really that great?' - waking up at 4pm, someone missing a rehearsal, we were thoughtless and thought it'd all work out eventually, we were kidding ourselves and this went on for months. 

Why did The Carnations split?

There was a lot of reasons. Jay and Tom got off, or gave up as I recall, and sold their gear in Cash Converters apparently. Our so called manager was getting gigs we weren't ready for. My girlfriend at the time joined on backing vocals, we split up, to think of it I don't remember asking her to join the band, it just kind of happened! after that I kind of sat down, got some sleep, calmed down a bit and looked around and no one was left standing with me and the band was a shadow of what it's ideology was, so I called it a day and the guitar got put into the back of the wardrobe for a few years.

Do any Carnations songs still creep into your live set?

Haha! Well there’s one that I’ve been debating playing for some time now, it was a set favourite called 'Dream Away', I used to do it solo then the band would all come crashing in for a massive outro. I’ve re-worked a few chords for a few of my newer songs though. I used to play 'House On The Moon' in my early solo gigs and was only listening to the old Carnations demo's a few weeks ago, they were on YouTube, but I decided to take them down, I think they've been wiped for good now too.

Would you ever consider a reunion? 

I don’t think we were popular enough! Plus, I’m not in touch with any of them and something would be bound to go wrong! maybe someday, we've still got some growing up to do I think. 

No one bothered learning the songs fully so, my guitar and vocal would be set in stone and they'd play round me. Those songs are long gone. I might go back and do it on my own. Set the record straight.

Would Types of Reality ever play together again?

That won't ever happen. They're all busy, it was an important learning curve, I don't regret it for a moment. I've been asking Shaun [rhythm guitar] to join my new venture for months, we used to be confused for non identical twins and he was like my brother for a time, so I wanted him in The Beat Prophets but he said he's packed it in. He was one of my friends who made me buy a bass, and we always said we'd join The La's one day, we were half right!

How would you describe your new direction?

Folk ballads really, though I’m writing a few more rockier tunes at the moment, though it could all change with a backing group.

You’re listed as the only member of The Beat Prophets; why not play under your own name?

I haven’t really thought of it to be honest. I don’t think my name looked all too good on a poster or on the artwork, it didn’t work and I prefer to play under a moniker. It was the same when I was playing as The Carnations a few years ago. The mentality is that members can come and go, whether I’d play on my own, with a second guitarist, a percussionist or a bass player. 

It’s idea is a forever rotating line up, keeps it new as well I suppose, for some reason it’s difficult to keep a constant line up when it comes to me and bands, there’s always someone working, busy or at uni, so it’s hard to keep everyone on the same page, especially when they are essentially my songs and I’d like them to be played a certain way most of the time.

Is The Beat Prophets not a solo project then?

Err, that’s a good question that. It is and it isn’t y’know? if that makes sense. If someone can bring something to the table then they’ll be credited correctly. I’ve got a lot of musician friends so they may weigh in on recordings and for live purposes, but for now the focus is recording.

Where did the project name come from?

I’ve got this demo called ‘The Art Of A Woman’ it’s not finished but it’s in one of the verses, it was one of the first of the batch of songs I wrote in mind for a release. I’ve been sitting on it for a while now, waiting for the right time to use it like. I guess it’s something for me to hide behind.

What was the first gig with the name?

Mid-March, it was an accident actually, I hadn’t played live in 4 years, and there was a shortage of performers at my friend Marc out of The Springtime Anchorage's gig he’d put on and I was there - a bit tipsy mind – he asked me to go on, so I borrowed his guitar and got up! It was awful I reckon but there was a fair bit of applause and a hand shake from the lads out of Loose Moose, cracking Bluegrass band, some of them were in Tramp Attack, perhaps they were as drunk as me!

When can we expect a release, any plans to record?

When I’m ready I guess, once the recording is done properly, the artwork, the printing etc, so it could be any time and touring commitments also intrude though! I'm off helping backstage again and then off on a UK tour as well. I wanted to record at The Coral Caves in Hoylake, but I’ve never gotten round to asking the lads and they’ve all been busy with their own records. 

There was a really complicated time when I was going to get a few big name friends out of The La’s and The Zutons to come and guest on a few tracks which would have been something, but then I realised the focus had shifted from the songs to ‘I wonder if so-and-so would stick a guitar solo on that’ so that idea quickly passed me by.

What do you have in mind for any future releases?

I just wanted to put out maybe three to four songs, there’s two songs which work well together, one called Changing Tide, I think it’s my strongest song at the moment and it means a lot to me, it's about a girl I wanted to see again, we did for a few months but we're not together any more, so the song has kind of come full circle and anyone I’ve played it too has always praised it, so I think it’s my best bet for a release. She was my Suze Rotolo I guess!

I don’t dig the whole studio thing though, I never have, if a song is good enough it’ll come through regardless, same as The La’s and The Kitchen Tape, the quality is average but the songs are perfect. Maybe a four or five track EP when I get the money together.

Any future live dates?

Confirmed two today actually, Liverpool International Music festival at Head Of Steam, formerly Mathew Street weekend on 25th August, with a warm up date on Allerton Road a week before. 

There's also some charity gigs to confirm next week.

Are there any bands you’ve been listening to of late?

A local band my mate was in a few months ago called Sensorites. I’ve just bought their single ‘Fool’, great track. Looking forward to my mates The Wicked Whispers and The Sundowners releases as well, and I’ve been listening to a lot of Howie Payne’s stuff who has had a big influence on me, and he’s on his way back as well, he was great to meet as well and I've learnt a lot from his live gigs as well. Also been listening to The Merrylees, check them out. Recently with Babyshambles coming back I've dug out The Libertines albums, what a band!

You’re best known for your connections with various members of The La’s, has it helped at all?

Errr, I wouldn’t say that was fair to be honest, it has and it hasn’t, it’s certainly gets me recognized but I don’t talk about it all that much any more, at the time you couldn't shut me up. I’ve written songs and been in bands before I liked The La’s and I’ll long continue after them. 

Though I’ll credit Lee with re-igniting my love of music and playing live and for opening my mind to a lot of things. These batch of songs at the moment I think merit to stand on their own, I’m not a Lee Mavers junior or anything, though I used his tuning for a bit when recording and playing live, but you have to be very strict when it comes to it.

I see Barry Sutton a lot, Lee on occasion and recently met Neil Mavers and Cammy, they've still got the chops!

These songs I'm gearing up for an EP or an album are more influenced by the likes of Simon & Garfunkel, Johnny Cash, Howie Payne and The Stands, The Dubliners and Bob Dylan – though there was the odd marching drum on a demo or two! I’ve recently heard a few new happenings with Lee, so keep your ears peeled. I'm happy he's got it together. He knows I'm on call if need be.
  
Where did you draw inspiration from for these songs?

It can come from anywhere. You can't force it most of the time. Love, life, art - anything like can all form a song. Some came from a dark place when I was in the hospital, I had lyrics like 'the needle is stealing my soul' and 'my scars are my stripes', but the light at the end of the tunnel always perseveres. 

The big inspiration spark all started when I had been hanging around Washington Square Park, and Greenwich Village in New York, I first heard Woody Guthrie in the Cafe Wha, the home of the American Folk scene pretty much. It's amazing. Buskers were playing The Beatles and Bob Dylan. On the other side of the world pretty much and they were singing 'Let It Be'. 

In the space of a few moments we had been offered weed, brown bagged wine and a game of chess. It was a special place. It had a vibe, a sense of it being like the centre of the Earth or something like that. 

I was even more made up when I heard Howie Payne first started busking in the same place at the age of 15 when he lived there. I came home and knew what kind of songs I wanted to write and perform.

Digsy of The Sums and 'Digsy's Dinner' Oasis fame gave me a Bob Dylan book in exchange for a La's rarities album and sent me on my way down the Dylan path, Dylan fascinated me from the off and his music changed everything and suddenly everything clicked into place. Not seen Digsy since but I owe him big time! hopefully he doesn't want his book back!

The Dylan book was talking about all these places we found while over there, what was left of The Gaslight, Bleecker Street and MacDougall Street. Places that Dylan, Dave Van Ronk and Ramblin' Jack Elliot, all those songs and places immortalised in songs. To be a 60's folk singer in the Village must have been something else. 

France was the same, wandering Paris after soundcheck, it was sublime. We met some proper characters along the way. I was looking to move there lately. Whenever I hit a rough spot, some time away helps for me to get my act together. I think me and Paris agree with each other, as New York did. 

Can you talk us through some of your songs?

My first new one's were 'Irish Wayfarer' it isn't a boat by the way, which some fella remarked when he saw my setlist. It's about a girl I know who went away to Ireland for a bit and I decided to write her a song for when she came back, she still hasn't heard it! she's the same girl in the song 'Mamie'. 

My favourite of my own are 'Changing Tide' and 'The Darling Stranger' about the same girl. I've got a song called 'La Belle Dame', a short French influenced ballad from when I was on tour in France and the day we got back I went to a 21st birthday party, and was kind of on a lack of sleep after a thirteen hour drive from Strasbourg and still had Parisian wine in my belly and sat down and wrote it as a birthday present. It's a great song to play in the house but not sure if it fits into my live set.

Another one that's a lot of fun to play is 'Dustbowl Blues', not the Woody Guthrie song by the way! I'm excited about some of my newer material, called 'A Season To Hold', 'A Song Of Hope', 'Leave Your Sorrow Behind' and 'New York City Blues', which I'm excited to perform as there's always been a strict setlist with me, so it'll make a nice change to have some setlist competition!

Like everyone I guess, I was nervous about performing live at first, but Barry Sutton once told me, at 5am along with Ged Lynn in The Living Brain's rehearsal room on Duke Street, along the lines of "it's okay as long as you mean it" which helped me over a few hurdles. I owe a fair few people for their help!

Finally - do you have a desert island disc?

At the moment it'd have to be Bob Dylan's Blonde on Blonde or The La's Callin' All.

Thanks for your responses from all at Muso:Mania!

Nice one! 

Contact:
Facebook: The Beat Prophets
Twitter: @rocknrollparksy
Blog: rockndolestar.blogspot.co.uk

Monday, 15 April 2013

Coming Down Easy: in conversation with Howie Payne


"We all met our girlfriends here like, Sean (Payne, Howie's brother) met Abi (Harding) here, I met my girlfriend here. All of the bands were formed here like..."



The scene was set at the Bold Street Coffee shop where I had interviewed Edgar Jones two years earlier, former Coral guitarist Bill Ryder-Jones had just left as I was entering, and a version of 'You Ain't Goin' Nowhere' playing over the sound system as the sun cracked the Bold Street flags. 

I'm sat with Howie Payne, former frontman of The Stands, playing alongide Jet and Paul Weller and slots at Glastonbury, as well as forging himself a solo career under his full name of Howard Eliott Payne, supporting the likes of Oasis. 

In case anyone missed it, I did a part one some months ago, available here: 'A Little Payne Never Hurt Anyone': The Musical Guide to Howard Eliott Payne http://rockndolestar.blogspot.co.uk/2012/09/a-little-payne-never-hurt-anyone.html

Howie explains that the coffee shop was once called Coffee Union some years ago, and it was the centre of Liverpool music.

"Everything happened here, literally this is where everything happens, I met my girlfriend here, when it was the coffee union, or the Onion as Edgar used to call it, it all started here like.." 

And with that, we begin...

CP: Did you always want to be a musician? was there a turning point? Was it always the guitar?
HP: I guess there was, when I was little I wanted to be a long distance lorry driver, and I wanted to be a farmer. Down the line it's always been something independent like. 

We had a guitar in our house when I was little, I was about seven, I think me Dad or someone who worked with me Dad had a guitar that he’d made himself and a little amplifier that he’d made himself and it was the weight of a van and me and me mate used to tug it around when were about eight and saying we were gonna start a band. So he got me that but I never learned it and I totally went off it and we were back and forth to America a lot like.

When I was 14, I started playing the drums on pots and pans and that and we had a snare drum in our house, don’t know how we came about it, I think we found it in a skip and someone had left or we’d found some sticks and were playing on pots and pans and that’s around the same time Sean started playing the drums, I think I put him onto the drums as I went onto the guitar so I’d always have a drummer! And there was like a cheap guitar in a shop window so like when I got my giro like I bought it like an impulse purchase kind of thing.

I think of the melody and the drums first, I play the guitar like a drum like.


CP: What was your first ever gig, any fond memories?
HP: The first one! that was with a band called the Magic Clock. I had been playing the guitar for about three months and came back from America and I knew about three chords and met a few lads who wanted to start band like. 


When I came back I found that The Farm who were like #1 at the time in the charts, I found their rehearsal rooms and just went and knocked on the door like with ‘how do you get a gig?’ ‘cause I didn't know how bands were formed and stuff, I think they thought I was a bit cheeky like as I was young but I was a bit forward and that, I guess I was - but we got a gig at the Cosmos just down the road, I think it was supporting The Stairs if memory serves and we went and did that and The Farm came down and we ended up getting the support slot for their Spartacus tour, so like my third ever gig was playing places like The Warrington Parr Hall and The Royal Court and stuff and then with another band who were like the Southern Happy Mondays and Stone Roses, that was a mad tour, I was on that as a youngster. Google it!



CP: Do you have a proudest moment as a musician?
HP: I’m proud of the first gig I did, but with that first one there’s a bit of arrogance about you cause your young and it's a gig but glad I got up and did it and you think everyone should shut up and listen like haha!

There’s some like, going on infront of an Oasis crowd with an acoustic guitar was a big ask like, but they took it well, y’know they are into music like, and they are into tunes, and all I can do is put my tune over, but it doesn't mean that they’ll stand there in silence – cause they don’t! (laughs)


CP: Is there any part of your past body of work you still look back on and are still pleased with it so to speak?
HP: all of them like, it’s like, ‘I’m glad I got out of bed on that day’ there’s songs that you write that are connected in some ways, some on like a crest of waves and a swelling pool, some are just if’s and and’s...that makes no sense does it? haha!

CP: Do you have a specific sound in mind for a record before you start recording or play it as it comes?
HP: Both really, there’s an idea of how you want something to sound and as it goes on it’s like trying to remember a dream and trying to explain it to someone, and the more distorted it becomes, you start with a sound and it grows from there and then you get into the studio and the songs take over on it’s own, music’s like a living thing to me, you only own it while it’s inside you, and when you let it out and play it to people, you've got to let it go where it goes and that’s the purpose of it.


CP: Are you currently working with anyone? (producer etc)
HP: I’m kind of mainly working on my own at the moment, there’s some things that are gonna be amazing lined up though. I’ve had a year of like working with Ren Harvieu and Jake Bugg and I did a year of playing other people’s music, and so decided I wanted to start playing my own like.

CP: Have you ever wanted to get a band back together or do you prefer playing solo?
HP: Playing with a band always is better, cause y’know there’s things you can’t do on your own and a song and stuff will run away and you can bring it back and I’ve always liked that and there's only so much control you can have when playing.


I’ve always seen myself as a lead guitarist in the band, I wasn’t out to be the frontman, same with Telefone and The Windmills years ago, I always fancied myself as Jeff Beck, and ended up being the guy at the front, I should have tried being the bass player and I’d have ended up as the lead guitarist!


CP: You released your solo album, Bright Light Ballads, on your own label, Move City Records, would you do it again for future releases?
HP: I haven’t really thought about it, probably though, with Bright Light Ballads, Move City Records was just a name for facilitating releasing the album like. There were people saying that they couldn’t play this or that track because it had a banjo on it as it was unheard of!


If it had come out a year later it would have had the recognition it deserved, don't get me wrong - people loved the record at the radio and stuff but they thought it was country and too American and maybe it is, but it was more about “it’s got a banjo on it and a pedal steel guitar on it so we can’t play it”. 

Then a few years down the line it’s all the range and with the digital world and stuff and like I tried getting the record into HMV and they want money for that and now it’s a completely different playing field this time around.


CP: have you ever considered putting a band together consisting of siblings Sean and Candie?
HP: No, haha! Me and Candie do a lot of work together, me and Sean do as well, seperately. I think with me being the eldest I’d be the de facto in charge and they won’t have that without a fight like! I really do want to do a record with Candie, and Sean would probably play on it like but we’ve never thought of putting a band together and touring, I think we all have different music tastes and we’re all into our own thing like, I’ve got a gig in London soon, maybe Candie will get up like, maybe Sean too! Haha! but they've got their own things going on. (Sean Payne recently drummed on Miles Kane's new album)


CP: Are there any newer tracks you're particularly excited about playing and releasing?
HP: All of them yeah, can’t wait to play them with a band, with everyone bringing their own sensibilities to them. I will get a band together for this record and there’s some songs I’m looking forward to playing a lot of The Stands stuff I haven’t played in years like ‘The Way She Does’ and ‘All Years Leaving’ with a full band as well as the stuff off of Bright Light Ballads ‘cause I’ve only ever played them on my own and I’m looking forward to a band getting on it.

CP: Is it true that The Stairs were going to reform - and you and Sean we’re going to be 2/3rds of it?
HP: Nah that's true, I was never in The Stairs, neither was Sean. Though he was in The Isrites. When The Stairs split they kind of became The Isrites and then I think Russell (Pritchard, Zutons bassist) joined and then that formed into The Big Kids. 


I think The Big Kids was just a continuation of The Stairs, as were The Joneses, we played some Stairs and Isrites songs, y’know but that’s Edgar’s thing and it’s the same with me and The Stands and Bright Light Ballads, it’s all one continuation, just different sensibilities amongst players with the material under a different moniker or with a different label on it, that’s how I see it...

CP: A few people wanted me to ask - have you still got the Gretsch Country Gent? (used in promo videos for 'I Need You' & 'Here She Comes Again')
HP: Yeah I still have it! it's been for sale for about six years haha! Jake Bugg came closest to buying it like! It's a great guitar and it's expensive and hasn't come out the case for two years but I'll probably use it when I go on tour with the band, I want to get a few Gibson's as well.


The question leads off into a story. 

"Y'know people have asked me if I'm ever going to get The Stands back together, and like it's hard 'cause there was that many people in The Stands, I just became the frontman of that 'cause that I needed to put a group together. 

Stevie (Pilgrim, Stands drummer) was only in the band for a year to the day, it was in his contract and he said he'd do it for a year and he did. He plays on Horse Fabulous because he'd left by then and we needed a session drummer so we just hired Stevie back to to play the parts, so he's on Horse Fabulous and he's off doing whatever he wants to be with whoever like (Pilgrim is currently Paul Weller's live drummer)

I don't know what Luke (Thomson, Stands guitarist) is up to these day, I know Deano (Ravera, Stands bassist) is in a Jazz band called Marley Chingus which is what he wanted to do originally after his rock n' roll years and he did it for a year and a half, then there's Graeme (Robinson, 2nd Stands drummer) who everyone forgets about haha! then there's Paul Molloy and Martyn Campbell who could have been in The Stands, but he was playing bass with Richard Ashcroft at the time and to be honest he was the only one who ever really contributed to The Stands like, with 'why not try it this way?' to be honest, the closest I've come to a band making an album was Bright Light Ballads, 'cause Deano was coming up with his own basslines on the stand up bass and I'm not gonna tell a steel lap guitarist how to play it!" 

With that concluded, I tell him that when I first set out interviewing people, my main three were Lee Mavers, Edgar Jones and Howie himself, and that now I'd done all three and I joke about now being able to retire at 21.

"pick another three man!"

We pack up and head down Bold Street as Howie is off to meet sister Candie and says to catch him at his next gigs and to keep in touch as I was off home with 'Horse Fabulous' in my ears.

Nice one, Howie.

@rocknrollparksy

Part One: 'A Little Payne Never Hurt Anyone': The Musical Guide to Howard Eliott Payne http://rockndolestar.blogspot.co.uk/2012/09/a-little-payne-never-hurt-anyone.html

You can keep up with Howie online on sites below:

Twitter: https://twitter.com/HowiePayneMusic
Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/user/HowiePayneMusic 
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/howiepaynemusic
Soundcloud: http://soundcloud.com/howiepayne

Thanks for reading! 
@rocknrollparksy