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DIARY
Throughout the making of the new Pet Shop Boys album Neil, as usual, kept
a diary. Neil and Chris recently went through the diary with Literally.
Neil consulted the diary (without letting Chris or Literally see whatever
else he has written there) and described the events relating to the album:
Chris intermittently chipped in with a recollection of his own. Midway
through this, Neil arrived at the date of August 11, 2001. "Wow,"
he exclaimed. "Something astonishing here. A day when I didn't write
in my diary."
"Very lax," chided Chris.
"I just think I didn't get round to doing it," Neil said. "That
is the one day of my life in the last 25 years I have no record of what
happened. There's a missing day. How fascinating."
August 11, 2001, being a Saturday, was however not a day when any significant
work was done on the album. Those days - with no such omissions - begin
here:
March 21,2000.
Neil: On March 21 we went to Berlin. This album had a sort of false start
because afier we finished the Nigh life tour in February 2000 it was planned
that we would put out a Greatest Hits album in the autumn of 2000. There's
that rather annoying thing that you're meant to suddenly produce a hit
single, or preferably two, to go at the end of your Greatest Hits album,
and so we set about that process. We'd actually started at the end of
the Nightlife sessions. The last track recorded for Nightlife was "Happiness
is an option" which was the first track recorded at my studio in
the north-east, and we started to write another song the same day called
"Somebody else's business". We also started, at some point around
that period, to write a song called "Positive role model" at
Pete Gleadall's studio in London. We thought that, between "Positive
role model" and "Somebody else's business ,one of them had the
potential to be a single. Maybe both of them did. But I can't for the
life of me remember why we decided to work in Berlin.
Chris: I don't know.
Neil: Maybe we just wanted to go to Berlin. And we have a friend there
who runs a dance/techno
record label, and we asked him if he knew anyone it'd be good to work
with. Re recommended Chris Zippel who is a programmer/producer. We wanted
someone who was a good programmer. We stayed in Mitte, the area in former
East Berlin where all the clubs are.
Chris: There's a record called "Berlin Mitte Boys" which is
based on "New York city boy". It was done by lots of the club
bouncers, and it's sung in German.
Neil: With new words. It's about clubbing in Berlin and being a bouncer,
I think. It's very silly. Anyway, that evening we went to Chris Zippel's
flat and talked through the tracks.
March 22.
Neil: We went back to Chris Zippel's flat in West Berlin, where his studio
is, and worked on "Positive role model".
Chris: The demo we'd done in England started off with a Barry White sample
from "You're My First, My Last, My Everything" which I took
off the Barry White Greatest Hits CD. The idea was that it was like punk
electro disco. Typically, it worked best as an instrumental. Once we started
having to make it into a song it lost something on the way.
Neil: I'd had the idea of the title lying around for ages.
Chris: The demo was just like a Tamperer record.
Neil: In fact the Tamperer was the inspiration for
it.
Chris: It didn't really have a verse and chorus.
Neil: Chris and I used to like eating bratwurst in Berlin.
Chris: We've always liked our German sausages.
March 23 and
24.
Neil: We carried on working on "Positive role model".
March 25.
Neil: Astonishingly we worked on a Saturday. We start work on "Somebody
else's business", a song which was started off from a sample from
the Isley Brothers' "Behind A Painted Smile", though we ended
up taking the sample out.
hasn't been
released yet, "Searching for the face of Jesus". After dinner
we wrote "It's just my little tribute to Caligula, darling!".
That's a day of musical contrasts, it has to be said.
September 14.
Neil: We carried on with "...Caligula..." and then we started
the "K-hole" piece of music for the musical. Chris worked on
that while I went for run.
September iSe
Neil: We worked more on "Between two islands" and then we started
a track in 7/4 time which has never been finished. It's just called "7/4"
at the moment. We went back to London that evening where, spookily enough,
I had dinner with Courtney Love.
September 18.
Neil: We went back up north - Chris, Pete
Gleadall and me - and carried on working on
"Between two islands".
September 19.
Neil: Chris put a rhythm track on "Searching for the face of Jesus"
which had started off as an acoustic-y thing.
September 20.
Neil: We worked on "E-mail" and on another new track, "Time
on my hands", which has never been finished though I think it's rather
good.
September 21.
Neil: We finished "E-mail" and did a new track, "The samurai
in autumn". Then we watched Top Ten Boy Bands on television.
September 22.
Neil: We finished "The samurai in autumn", I did the vocals
on "Between two islands" and we went back to London.
October 16.
Neil: We went back to Berlin on October 15 and the next day we went to
Chris Zippel's studio and made some decisions about "London"
and
"Somebody else's business", and worked more on "Positive
role model". We'd been playing "Positive role model" live
over the summer, and we decided to add a second verse and take out a whole
section of the song.
October 17.
Neil: Worked more on "Positive role model".
October 18.
Neil: We left Chris Zippel working on "Positive role model"
all day long and then we went in to his studio in the evening. Chris Zippel
played us his new version of "London" and we said:
"Right, that's it - don't work on it any more".
Chris: He ignored us, though.
Neil: He carried on working on it. He's probably still working on it now.
October 19.
Neil: We listened to a new riff sound on "Somebody else's business".
The second version of "Positive role model" was finished by
Kai and Florian. That's as far as we ever got with "Positive role
model" as a Pet Shop Boys record. It later became the final number
in the musical.
October 20.
Neil: Chris Zippel did a final mix of "London".
Chris: The first of many final mixes.
October 21.
Neil: We finished the mix and edit of "Somebody else's business",
and then flew home the next day. That was the end of the Berlin phase.
We used to like going there.
Chris: I'd still like to go back. I could go to that restaurant with the
Weiner schnitzel.
October 25
to November 1.
Neil: We went to Cuba on holiday with some friends. The song "Between
two islands" had a brass part Chris had put in which had sounded
vaguely Cuban or sort of Miami Latin, and we had discussed the idea of
recording in Cuba. Mitch, our manager, actually arranged for the musicians
of the Buena Vista Social Club to record with us, but we decided just
before we
Chris: I always
like to keep the sample in.
Neil: We didn't take it out for any sample-clearance reason - the song
just seemed to move away from it.
March 27 and
28.
Neil: We carried on working on "Somebody else's business
March 29.
Neil: We reworked the structure of "Positive role model" and
I did a vocal for "Somebody else's business". We were in Germany
for a quite a while.
March 30.Neil:
We finished "Somebody else's business". Chris Zippel had wanted
to write a song with us and we'd discussed this beforehand, and as we
were coming to the end of our time in Berlin he was very keen for us to
do something. He played us this piece of music he'd written which was
quite nice. Chris wasn't very keen on doing it so [see page 26] he went
to the cinema. I made Chris Zippel's bit of music the verse, and combined
it with a bridge and chorus I had already written for a song, "London".
I wasn't really very keen on doing it either.
March 31.
Neil: The next day we came into Chris Zippel's studio and he'd done loads
of work on "London" and it was actually quite good.
Chris: I didn't mind it at all. I just didn't want to be there in the
studio any longer.
Neil: That day "Positive role model" was also mixed by two friends
of Chris Zippel's, Kai and Florian. They mix a lot of German pop records.
We went over to their place. The next day we went back to London. We thought
we'd finished "Positive role model" and "Somebody else's
business", and I'd done the vocal for "London" which is
more or less the one on the album.
April 10 to
12.
Neil: Chris went into the studio for three days
with Pete Gleadall.
Chris: What was I doing?
Neil: I seem to remember you announced you
wanted to go into the studio with Pete Gleadall without me being there.
I think you did the music for "Nine out of ten" for the musical.
April 13 to
14.
Neil: We did the arrangement of
"Homosexuality" for the Washington concert.
Chris: We should record that as a b-side and get
Peter Rauhofer to remix it.
May 1 to 5.
Neil: We worked in New York with Peter Rauhofer and spent four-and-a-half
days trying to do a version of this song "Kitsch" by Barry Ryan
from the late Sixties.
Chris: But it wasn't going anywhere. Neil: We finally gave up.
Chris: It was rubbish. It was very, very chord-y.
Neil: It's not that complicated. It was just the wrong kind of chords.
It just didn't seem to go anywhere.
Chris: It was tim being in New York anyway. Neil: All the time Peter Rauhofer
was trying to persuade us to do a version of "Break 4 love"
and finally on the last day I gave in.
Chris: You did one of your best vocal performances for a long time on
that. I think you should win a Grammy for that.
Neil: After that we had the musical workshop and then we started our summer
tour in Tel Aviv. At some point over the summer we decided not to put
out a Greatest Hits then. We didn't feel we'd earned it and we didn't
feel enthusiastic about the whole idea.
September 11.
Neil: Chris came up to my house in the northeast. The first song we wrote
was "Out of my system" for the musical. We'd re-planned the
musical and we knew that we had new songs to write.
September 12.
Neil: We started a new track, which hasn't been released, called "Between
two islands".
September 13.
Neil: We started working on another song that
went to Cuba
that it was too much like cultural tourism and that we didn't want to
do it. It would have been kind of fascinating if we had done it.
November 7.
Neil: We went to Pete Gleadall's studio and wrote the music for a new
song called "Motoring" which we don't like. We started another
song, which is really good but we haven't finished it, called "Only
love". It has a Cuban sample in it.
November 8.
Neil: We carried working on "Only love" and
Chris did a quick dance track called
"Satisfaction guaranteed".
November 9.
Neil: We wrote the basis of a new song called "Can I be the one?".
It's rubbish, really. Well, not rubbish - it's like a boy band song. The
chorus goes "can I be the one to share your love life?" We were
working on the idea: "what would it be like if we were S Club 7?".
Then we did a cover version in an Eighties style of the Billie Trix song
"Run Girl Run".
November 10.
Neil: We worked more on "Can I be the one?" and "Motoring".
November 14.
Neil: The day before, Pete Gleadall, Chris and I drove up to the North.
We started driving because there'd been that train crash so we stopped
getting the train for quite a while. On this day we finished "Between
two islands" and started a new song called "Transparent".
Very electro. There was a whole subplot we considered later that we would
do an electro dance album to go with the song-based main album, rather
like Relentless with Very, though we decided against it in the end.
November 15.
Neil: We finished "Transparent" by tea-time then
wrote "Home and dry"
Chris: So the album started at this point.
November 16.
Neil: I put vocals on "Motoring" and we went out to celebrate
my sister's birthday.
November 17.
Neil: We spent the day writing and recording a
new song "Love is a catastrophe". Chris: We were on a real roll,
this week, weren't we?
Neil: This was when the album started coming together. We did most of
"Love is a catastrophe" that day. The next day we drove back
to London.
November 28.
Neil: We'd flown to Los Angeles to discuss Wotapalava and we met Camara
Korman, who is Dr Dre's programmer, because we had the idea that the album
had a hip hop feel and we wanted to work with a hip hop producer. He's
a very interesting guy.
Chris: Classically trained. Very nice. He seemed a bit puzzled by our
demos.
Neil: He said that "Home and dry" had "a very tight chord
change". We thought he wasn't very enthusiastic but it turned out
afterwards we'd read him completely wrongly and he was quite enthusiastic.
In the New Year we thought about going to Los Angeles to record. We'd
had this plan to record an album in Los Angeles, which I'd still quite
like to do.
December 12.
Neil: We drove to the North-East again the day before, and we wrote a
new track called "Limbo"
which is a really good track but it's only half-finished.
December 13.
Neil: We wrote a new song called "Sexy
Northerner" and then after dinner we started
work on a new song called "Birthday boy".
December 14.
Neil: We continued working on "Birthday boy".
December 15.
Neil: I put the vocals on "Birthday boy" and after dinner we
finished it.
Chris: Didn't
we get some guitars during this period?
Neil: Just hold your horses. The next day we drove back to London.
Chris: I can't believe we hadn't bought the guitars yet.
Neil: The following week we found out that the musical would open in April
in the Arts Theatre and then we performed "It doesn't often snow
at Christmas" on TEI Friday. And then it was Christmas.
January 8 to
12,2001.
Neil: I spent the week in Metropolis working on remastering for the reissues,
and I think this is when I bumped into Johnny Marr and he said he'd play
on the album.
January 22.
Neil: We went to my house, back on the train again. We played through
old DATs of demos and started to work on an old song, "How lucky
I am", turning it into "The night I met Eminem".
January 23.
Neil: I put vocals on "The night I met Eminem".
After dinner we wrote music for a new song, "I
get along".
January 24.
Neil: Chris and I drove to Newcastle and I bought three guitars. We worked
more on "I get along". So my memory is a false memory - I thought
we bought the three guitars and I came back and played the start chords
of "I get along" but in fact we'd already started it the day
before.
January 25.
Neil: We finished working on "I get along". So
I'd written all the words by then. Then we started
writing a new song for the musical, "My night".
January 26.
Neil: We did more work on "My night" then
Chris and Pete went back to London.
January 29.
Neil: "The night I met Eminem" became "The
night I fell in love". I put the vocals on "I get along".
January 30.
Neil: We finished working on "I get along", then we started
working on a new song for the musical called "Mid-life crisis".
It's supposed to be sung by Vic and Flynn. Vic is talking about what a
mess he is and about having a mid-life crisis. I wrote loads of words
for it - it was like a flinny, sad song. At the time there was a feeling
we needed to know who Flynn was and who the father was.
January 31.
Neil: We finished the music to "Mid-life crisis".
Nothing happened to it.
February 1.
Neil: Chris wrote music for lyrics I'd already written: "You choose".
February 2.
Neil: We worked on finishing "My night", fitting the dialogue
over the music. We had Jonathan Harvey e-mail us all the dialogue and
I said all of the character's parts. The next day Chris and Pete went
back to London, then I went back two days later.
February 19.
Neil: We went back up to the studio on the train and I did the vocals
for "You choose". After dinner we did the slow version of "Closer
to Heaven" for the Daily Telegraph CD.
I;'ebruary
20.
Neil: We finished the slow version of"Closer to Heaven" then
started a new song for the musical called "The night is the time
to explore who you are" which we completely finished. It was meant
to be sung by Billie Trix. After dinner we started working on a new song
for the musical, "Home".
February 21.
Neil: I put the vocals on "Home" and then went for a run while
Chris worked on the backing track. Later we worked on a reprise version
of
July 30.
Neil: Chris and Pete Gleadall came up to the North, where I already was,
and we did extra work on "E-mail". This is when we were very
much aware that we were starting to finish off the songs on the album
- we'd decided we had enough songs written.
July 31.
Neil: We worked on "E-mail" and started new overdubs on "Birthday
boy".
August 1.
Neil: We finished the overdubs on "Birthday boy" then started
working on "I didn't get where I am today", adding a sample.from
an old Sixties song called "Father's Name Was Dad" off a psychedelic
compilation I had. We discovered it was in the same key, so we started
to rework the song with that in it. That day we also did some more work
on "Home and dry".
August 2.
Neil: I spoke to Johnny Marr about coming up north the following week,
and we carried on working on "Home and dry".
August 3.
Neil: We carried on working on "Home and dry" and Chris went
back to London.
August 6.
Neil: Johnny Marr arrived, then Chris and Pete
Gleadall arrived from London. Johnny played
guitar on "Home and dry".
August 7.
Neil: Johnny played on "Birthday boy" and then after dinner
Johnny played on "You choose".
August 8.
Neil: Johnny played on "E-mail" and, later on, after dinner,
"I get along". My sister was lying in bed upstairs listening
to Johnny Marr playing a guitar solo.
August 9.
Neil: Johnny played on "Searching for the face
of Jesus". After lunch he played on "Love is a
catastrophe". After dinner he played on "I didn't get where
I am today".
August 10.
Neil: Johnny left after breakfast. We carried on working on "I didn't
get where I am today" then we all went back to London.
August 13.
Neil: Chris, Pete and I met and came up north on the train, and worked
on the track "Always".
August 14.
Neil: I sang the vocals on "Always" and we finished working
on it. We then carried on working on "I didn't get where I am today",
filtering guitars, and Chris added keyboard parts.
August 15.
Neil: We finished working on "I didn't get where I am today".
We took out a whole middle section. It made much more sense without it.
After lunch we edited the guitars on "Home and dry". I doubled
the backing vocals on "Birthday boy" and Chris added the string
part to it.
August 16.
Neil: I did a new vocal on "You choose" then scrapped most of
it. We went back to London, then we went on holiday to Nice.
September 10.
Neil: We're now in finishing-the-album mode.
We went to Sony studios in London with Pete Gleadall. We did some more
work on "E-mail" and decided to put strings on it, and phoned
up Richard Niles to ask him to hear it. Johnny Marr had recommended a
percussionist called Jodie Linscott who came in and she played on "Email",
"Birthday boy", "I get along" and "Home and dry".
September 11.
Neil: Jodie played percussion on "The night I fell in love".
I went outside and spoke to Kevin Wallace on the mobile about Closer to
Heaven and came back into the studio to discover
"Something
special" - on our demo for the musical "Something special"
goes into "Home".
February 22.
Neil: We did a seven-inch version of "My night" and a new version
of "For all of us" with revised lyrics then went back to London
on the train. The next day we went to Moscow to see Marilyn Manson.
Chris: That's a weird one, isn't it?
Neil: We get around. The following week, on February 28, I had dinner
with a friend and Wolfgang Tulmans, which is when I first met Wolfgang
Tillmans. The next day he came to my house to photograph me for a French
magazine Purple.
March 26.
Neil: Pete Gleadall and I went up to the studio and I did backing vocals
on "Home".
March 27.
Neil: Chris arrived from London. I had to do another set of lyrics for
"For all of us", as requested by the director, and Chris worked
flirther on the ballad version of "Closer to Heaven". After
dinner we worked on a new song, which unusually I can't remember, called
"Tomorrow". I have no recollection of that whatsoever. Oh! I
know what it is! It's "Always".
March 28.
Neil: I did backing vocals on the ballad version of "Closer to Heaven"
and after lunch did the lead vocals. Then I went for a run while Chris
worked on the cut-up version.
Chris: There was that track on Daft Punk's album that sounded like they'd
cut up "I'm Not In Love" by lOcc - I don't know if they had
or not
- and I thought, "Oh, that's what I'll do to 'Closer to Heaven"',
so I just randomly cut it up and reassembled it into something else. So
that's how that came about. It's quite good, cutting up chords.
Neil: It's an interesting idea.
Chris: You get some really good chord changes. It's a bit like David Bowie
and William Burrough's cut-ups.
March 29.
Neil: Chris worked on a new version of "Shameless" for the musical.
March 39.
Neil: We carried on working on the new version of "Shameless"
and worked on "Tomorrow", then we started a new track called
"Diddly squat". "Diddly squat" turns into a new song
called "All or nothing" which has now been recorded by a young
Japanese singer called Miu. We were on a whole new thing here - we'd lost
interest in the guitar thing and had started doing very electronic stuff.
After dinner Chris played this outrageous keyboard solo on the demo of
"Diddly squat" because he was showing off in front of Janet
Street-Porter. The next day we went back to London.
April 4 and
5.
Neil: We went into Sarm and Goetz mixed "Friendly fire" and
the long slow version of "Closer to Heaven" for the Telegraph
CD.
April 23.
Neil: We started recording the musical album -on the first day Paul Keating
put vocals on "Positive role model". We were now concentrating
on the musical. The first preview was on May 15; it opened on May31. For
all of June the musical album was being recorded and mixed at RAK studios
with Stephen Hague and Bob Kraushaar.
July 3 and
4.
Neil: We went to Pete Gleadall's studio to work
on the 1971 version of Biflie Trix's "Run Girl
Run".
July 23 to
24.
Neil: We went to RAK studios and worked with a different programmer, Chuck,
on a new song "I didn't get where I am today", a sort of Sixties-ish
sounding song that was sort of inspired by seeing The Strokes at Heaven.
I thought of some of it actually while I was watching them. On the second
day we gave up because we didn't think it was working very well.
Gleadal] -
he'd played with George Michael before.
September 26.
Neil: We worked on "Home and dry", taking stuff off the master
to make it simpler, interestingly. Steve Walters came back in and played
on "I get along", "I didn't get where I am today"
and "The night I fell in love".
September 27.
Neil: We worked on "The night I fell in love". I changed the
words right at the end of the song [see page 32].
September 28.
Neil: I re-sang the middle section of "London", changing one
word of the lyrics. I changed the word "died" to "fought".
October 1.
Neil: This is the final week at Sony studios. We made small changes to
"I get along", "Love is a catastrophe" and "Birthday
boy"
October 2.
Neil: Johnny Marr came in all day, corrected the guitar arpeggio part
on "Love is a catastrophe" and played on "Between two islands".
October 3.
Neil: We worked on "Between two islands" and edited in a new
instrumental section.
October 4.
Neil: Chris's birthday. We did a quick mix of "The samurai in autumn"
and "You choose". I changed one line in the vocal of "I
didn't get where I am today". Recording of the album finished. The
studio bought in a birthday cake.
October 15
to November 3.
Neil: We started mixing the album at Olympic studios with Michael Brauer.
We'd go in every day while he gradually mixed them. He was going to do
it in New York but because of September 11 and then the anthrax thing,
we persuaded him to come here.
November 5.
Neil: We did a recall of "Home and dry" because we were never
pleased with the mix of "Home and dry" so we listened to the
demo and worked out what was wrong with it. We did the running order of
the album - originally 11 tracks - then Miles from Parlophone came in
and we played him the completed album, which was very exciting. At that
point we considered the album to be finished. Four songs we'd finished
were left off: "Between two islands", "Searching for the
face of Jesus", "Always" and a piano version of "London".
"Home" was now called "Here" because at this stage
we were thinking of calling the album Home. And then we decided we preferred
the title "Here" for the song anyway.
November 8.
Neil: At Sony studios we had a playback of the
album with various people, including Wolfgang
Tillmans.
November 14.
Neil: Chris and I went to Parlophone to discuss the album with Miles Leonard,
and he, Keith Wozencroft, who runs the label, and Tony Wadsworth who's
the chairman of EMI, all thought that "I didn't get where I am today"
didn't fit on the album. We'd been listening to it over the weekend and
sort of thought it belonged to a different album as well. And also we
liked the idea of having ten tracks, so we took it off. And that, quite
frankly, was that. We felt a real sense of achievement with this album.
Chris: We had a feeling of accomplishment. Satisfaction.
everyone watching
CNN: two planes had crashed into the World Trade Center in New York and
another one into the Pentagon. We stopped recording and watched TV as
the events unfolded. I walked home. There was a breast cancer benefit
show of Closer to Heaven at the Arts Theatre which we didn't go to, and
the party afterwards was cancelled. I went over to Chris's flat for dinner
and to watch TV with friends.
September 12.
Neil: We decided to carry on. Jodie came in and played percussion on "I
didn't get where I am today", "Love is a catastrophe",
"You choose", "Searching for the face of Jesus", "Always"
and "Home".
September 13.
Neil: Richard Niles came in to discuss the string arrangement of "E-mail",
we finished "I get along", I sang some harmonies on it and that
was the last overdub on that.
September 14.
Neil: Kevin Wallace told us that Closer to Heaven would close on October
13.1 sang the vocals on "I didn't get where I am today". I was
always changing the lyrics on that. It took ages to write.
September 17.
Neil: Back at Sony studios I did more vocals on "I didn't get where
I am today".
September 18.
Neil: Finished work on "I didn't get where I am today".
September 19.
Neil: We worked on "The night I fell in love". Mitch came down
with Miles Leonard who was the A&R at Parlophone and who during the
course of all of this had been listening to the songs and had actually
advised us to produce it ourselves, which we'd decided to do. He had also
recommended Michael Brauer to mix it because he'd done Coldplay's album
and some stuff with Neil Finn.
September 20.
Neil: I put harmonies on "Searching for the face of Jesus",
and we finished work on it. We also worked on "Home" and took
off some of the backing vocals then we worked on "The samurai in
autumn" and made it shorter. We edited it right down.
September 21.
Neil: Johnny Marr came to Sony studios and corrected the guitar part on
"Love is a catastrophe" and replayed the guitar on "You
choose" because I think the tuning was slightly out. In the evening
Richard Niles conducted the string session for "E-mail" which,
interestingly, was attended by Uri Geller who is a friend of Richard Niles.
On my mantelpiece at home I have a teaspoon bent by Un Geller and signed
by him. He was very pleasant.
Chris: He claimed he could only bend one spoon
- it's too draining.
Neil: It was interesting watching him bend the spoon. He goes like that
[mimes stroking] and the spoon bends.
Chris: It keeps on bending once he's let go of it.
Neil: Weirdly, when you see it happening, you can sort of weirdly understand
why it happens. And when he says if you put it down on metal it bends
much more, there's some weird thing that you can vaguely understand. It's
very interesting. I didn't think he was a con man in the slightest.
September 24.
Neil: We worked on "E-mail" and "Between two islands".
September 25.
Neil: Jodie came in and played congas on "Between two islands".
A bass player called Steve Walters came in and played bass on "Birthday
boy" and "Home and dry". I think we didn't keep him on
"Home and dry" in the end.
We'd never used a bass player before but we thought it'd be quite interesting
to see what he did on the more guitar-based tracks. Sometimes we just
used bits of what he played, like on "I didn't get where I am today"
we used those bass swoops. He was recommended to us by Pete
Copyright
Areagraphy Ltd 2002: All Articles have been
Taken From Literally 2001 Issue 25
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