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>>> Track By Track - Deryck Whibley. | ||
GOLDEN STATE
Bush It would appear that there are five members of Bush today. Singer Gavin Rossdale, guitarist Nigel Pulford, drummer Robin Goodridge and bassist Dave Parsons have been joined in a very plush London hotel room by the familiarly woolly honorary fifth member Winston, Gavin's ancient, rather pungent, but beloved dog. And initially it looks as if Gavin would rather talk about the dreadlocked pooch than Bush's new album, 'Golden State'. "This is going to be good," he says sarcastically (Gavin that is, not Winston - he's happier just to sit there panting). "I never really like to talk about the songs and what they're about." Great. Happily, once he starts
talking, Gavin actually has a lot to say about the new songs he's written,
with the rest of the band chipping in to give the stories behind actually
playing and recording 'Golden State'. Apparently it's all about love, life
and human relationships. Oh, and getting yourself crucified in the name
of art...
Track By Track - Deryck Whibley 1.
Solutions
Gavin: "It's about the need for solutions and the balance of tension." Nigel: "I think it's the perfect distillation of Bush. That song is everything we do well dynamically." Robin: "We probably should have played that song 12 times really." 2.
Head Full Of Ghosts
3.
The People That We Love
Gavin: "That one is about how you can be the most destructive to the people you love. Maybe in life you send a representative of yourself in most situations, social situations and all that. Maybe with the people you love you are at your most real, and sometimes that real can turn a bit aggressive sometimes. We all do it don't we? But we take it back!" 4.
Superman
Gavin: "It's a combination of two things. At exactly that point of writing that song I was working on music for a short film this guy had shot of this artist who went to the Philippines to be crucified for real, because he wanted to paint pictures of the crucifixion. So he went to the Philippines so he would know what it felt like to be crucified on a cross, with real nails and everything. Really hardcore, he was the first Westerner to have the chance to do that. "Having done that, the music was going to be for an art gallery, it was an academic piece, so I wrote that song inspired by that - that's why it starts going crucified. I was really impressed and I totally understood why he'd gone to totally absolve himself of himself, and reinvent himself. And gone to purge himself of the stuff he'd been through. So that's what inspired the song." 5.
Fugitive
6.
Hurricane
Robin: "Dave's been in a hurricane." Dave: "I have been in a hurricane, but we all were in New York once. It rained for days." Robin: "I've been in two hurricanes. That's one more than you." Nigel: "I've been in loads of tornadoes." Robin: "Yeah, but that's a Triumph Tornado Nige! Or is it Toledo?" Gavin: I think that really speaks for itself that one. It's a little bit self-explanatory with the 'I'm out of control in a hurricane' lyric. That gives it away." 7.
Inflatable
"Through the other songs we've done different ways of doing mellower songs, and we really wanted to make sure we did a song where we all played on it, and that it was a band feel to a ballad." 8.
Reasons
9.
Land Of The Living
Gavin: "They have this thing each year called the March Of The Living. All around the world they have it on a specific date to remember the Holocaust. And I thought that was a really intense movement. So the genesis of that became 'The Land Of The Living', and the song was a celebration of life. The idea that there is a karmic return to life, and how you behave is how you get treated." 10.
My Engine Is With You
Robin: "We tend to not work too hard on songs. Once we've played them twice we don't want to ruin them." Gavin: "That was actually a poem I wrote, one of my favourite lateral love songs. It's just about really caring about someone. Although it was lateral it had a bit of sentimentality to it, so the best thing to do was play it really fast and shout it." Nigel: "When in doubt, shout." 11.
Out Of This World
Robin: "It creates a nice dynamic for the record, a good dreamy song." Gavin: "That was the only one I wrote in LA. I looked out of the window, and I'd rented this space in a weird mansion where we ended up doing some photos for the album. I went there to write but I never ended up writing that much, but that was one of the songs that was there. It started out with a kind of Fugazi guitar line. It was meant to be this dreamy orchestral guitar line. It was just meant to be a floating guitar line. It's just a good bit of atmosphere for the record, and it suits the record really nicely because it breaks it up from being straight ahead rock." 12.
Float
Interview by Emma Johnston
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