The Starries - January 1999.

round about xmas 1998I once told The Starries that they reminded me of a cross between the Minutemen and The Soft Machine - they'd never heard of either band! So what's behind east Birmingham's finest, what drives their sonic terrorism? I met with the band at the Flapper and Firkin and persuaded them to bear their souls over a couple of beers and the pubs fine potato wedges (with barbecue sauce). So let me introduce you to Richard, Paul and Steve:

Richard - The band formed in the summer of 97. We decided that as three close friends that it would be a good idea to get together.
Paul - We first had a jam in February 97 at Richard's house. It gelled.
Steve - I just had my bongos round there at the time but it was great.
R - We'd known each other for years and had more than our share of disagreements, bouts of bullying and the like!
P - Richard and I used to hate each other's guts!
S- I've known Richard since I was five and Paul since I was eleven.
R - when we were sixteen and at college Steve and I were in a band called The Women, which is a damn fine name for a band. We've each had our musical pasts before The Starries.
P - I had a guitar when I was seven
R - I had a guitar when I was eleven but I was told that my hands were to small to play so I gave it up for a few years.
S - I had two wooden blocks and a cushion I remember playing along to Paradise City on the Freddie Mercury tribute. Mum and dad got pissed off with this and bought me a drum kit

very old picture - look at Richard's hair!S - The first rehearsal we had together was pretty dreary.
P - We tried to get a light feel to it but ended up sounding like Symposium, it was so heavy.
R - Paul had never been in a band before and I'd never played guitar or sung.
S - The rehearsal room was like a gig venue though we were still crushed up in one corner. The sound was just washing around the place.
P - Richard had a few songs and we just jammed away, it sounded awful and it just didn't work. We built our hopes up about it and thought that what we were going to do was going to sound really good. We just expected it to gel straight away, so we were a bit upset about that.
R - That's what being young and naive is all about though!

P -When we were thinking of a name we thought of Soviet at first, or The Inflatable Play People.
R - We did not want to come across as communists though!
P- ....and The Inflatable Play People just sounded comical!
R - Most band names are pretty awful and you just go with the one that is the least awful!
S - You just have to decide and then forget about it. You can argue about it forever.
R- It's a very memorable name, easily mispronounced as "The Stare-ies" or "The Stories". I had a birthday party recently and my friend's mum put star eyes on the icing guitar!

this became the single coverR - I think metal and grunge are our original influences.
S - We've always listened to heavy stuff. We used to go to Edward's (much frequented club in Birmingham) and head-bang. We've always had that heavy element but then we calmed down. Richard was never into hard metal though.
R - I like Metallica, I like pop metal!
P - I liked Slayer and Morbid Angel.
S - We went to Edward's and wrecked our necks. Then we got leather smoking jackets, grew our hair and that was grunge.
R - Nirvana happened and made our lives what they are today!
S - Richard likes quite a lot of folk stuff as well.
R - A wide smorgasbord of taste, everything and anything as long as it's not crap. I don't think we plough any particular furrough as far as influences are concerned, especially in the early days - we didn't even listen to each other!

P -We've had comparisons to Captain Beefheart before.
S - Perhaps that was more with the instrumental stuff. A lot of people say it's like dark jazz, whatever that is.
P - There's a reason for that instrumental period. We moved studios around April and didn't have a PA. We'd heard Mogwai and thought that might be a direction to go in.
R - We did an entirely instrumental gig and cleared the whole room.
S - The main band spent the night trying to get everyone back in; they didn't like us for that.

one of the many trips to LondonS - There's several bands that we're really interested in, like Jameson. I spoke to Stuart from the band when we first saw them and we just kept in touch. Calvados Beam Trio are another good band, San Lorenzo as well. It's good working with Jackie and Rob because they let us play with whom we want to, they know that we pull a decent crowd.
P -There's no scene as such in Birmingham. I've never really been into Pram and Plone, personally speaking.
R - I'd rather we didn't just fit in with that crowd; we are almost a different generation. We're more energetic.
S - We did see the Pram video on MTV last week, it was absolutely brilliant, and I really like that song Sleepy Sweet. It's good to see a Birmingham band get somewhere like that.

R - Playing with Idlewild was great. It all started last January when we came to see them bottom of the bill at the Flapper and Firkin supporting Midget and Glitterbox.
S - We'd read about them and had the Chandelier 7" single. I phoned up the venue to ask what time the bands were on and Colin, the Idlewild drummer, answered the phone! We came down and introduced ourselves to them and gave them some tapes the next time we saw them play. They found them quite funny and said maybe we should have stuck to 'krautrock', but they offered us a gig at the Flapper and Firkin with them and then ULU in London after that. That was probably the best gig we've ever done. We had a rider as well; we'd never had one before. We had trouble getting paid though.
R - We were drunk, naive and over trusting. Basically it was our holiday for the year and when you are on holiday you don't want to worry about those sorts of things.
S -They'd like us to do some more dates with them at some stage, bigger capacity venues, about 2000.
P - We could have had an Arab Strap connection but when we gave them a tape and they thought it sounded terrible.
R - They liked the drums, but the strange vocals and awful bass playing.
P - It was recorded on a little ghetto blaster. As we did not have a PA Richard had to scream down the little built in microphone!

back to those really old pictures!R - We don't really think about getting signed at the moment and I don't think that's likely given the current climate in the music industry. The whole of the country in a musical depression, Brit-pop is dead and the press over hypes everything that comes out. It will be another six months at least until things start picking up and the optimism returns.
S - Birmingham's good though. It's not getting much attention but if you are in London you have to go down a line of conformity, you've got to get in with the scene. Here you can do your own thing.
R - It's like in Coventry fifteen years ago with ska - Coventry of all places! If it could happen there it could happen anywhere!!

The conversation then degenerates into what did happen "After the (Arab) strap" gig, well as much as they can remember anyway!

 

This interview first appeared in Bearos Records Newsletter 3 (February 1999)