In Rank Your Records, we talk to members of bands who have amassed substantial discographies over the years and ask them to rate their releases in order of personal preference.
Back in February, Idlewildâvocalist Roddy Woomble, guitarist Rod Jones, drummer Colin Newton, bassist/guitarist Andrew Mitchell, and keyboard player Lucci Rossiâreleased their seventh full-length, Everything Ever Written. Having gone on hiatus in 2010, it finds the band on fine form, full of renewed energy and the same kind of fire that inspired the Scottish band when they formed in 1995. Ten years after last playing New York, Roddy and Rod are sitting in a small Greenwich Village cafĂ©, trying to come up with a definitive order for ranking their discography and failing. While the pairâs thoughts on the records are similar, thereâs nevertheless a discrepancy between how good they think they are when lined up against each other. They eventually agree to go with Roddyâs list, but the dilemma does demonstrate one thing for certainâwhile the band were never quite as successful as they deserved to be, their back catalogue is incredibly impressive, and they remain an imposing musical force to this day. Itâs clear, too, when they talk about their albums, how much their music and its legacy still means to themânot to mention the effusive crowd they play to later that night.
7. HOPE IS IMPORTANT (1998)
Noisey: Itâs surprising to see this at the bottom of your list, Roddy.
Roddy: Itâs cruel for me to say that, because I realize so many of our fans love that record. That record hit a lot of people when they were 15, 16 and we became their favorite band. And last night, loads of people said they got Hope Is Important when they were a teenager, but it was one of those records that if you were an adult it meant nothing to you. We were teens, and itâs music for teens. And thatâs why I have a problem with it now as an adult. If Iâm going to be so subjective about my own work, I canât really listen to it, because my voice⊠I sound like Iâve taken helium before recording the vocal. And musically, itâs really unsophisticated and quite raw, which is what was great about it at the time, but in retrospect I find it really difficult to listen to. So that would be my least favorite, but at the same time I completely acknowledge that itâs a fan favorite.
Do you recognize yourselves on that album?
Roddy: Not really. Only in that I know thatâs me in the photograph, and I can sort of hear a few of my ideas stillâI can recognize ideas that I would probably still have, but. By and large, itâs like looking at a photograph of when youâre on holiday when youâre 13.
But you donât agree with this ranking, Rod?
Rod: Itâs probably my second least favorite. Itâs the rushed necessity of the record, I think, and it still feel a little bit like that.
Roddy: See I feel that way much more about Post-Electric Blues. But weâre going off-tangent here, so Iâll let Rod finish.
Rod: Hope Is Important is hard to listen to, and I canât actually remember the last time that I did, I have to say. There are couple of moments on it, I suppose, and I have a fondness for it because it was a really exciting time for the bandâit was the first time we were in a studio really, and the first time hitting the road.
Roddy: Itâs got a nice album cover! I think thatâs one thing itâs still really got in its favor. The music is essentially, as I said, quite raw and unsophisticated, poppy melodic punk rock, but what sets it apart is that itâs got this really melancholy, romantic photograph on the cover, and itâs called Hope Is Important, and I still think that puts the balance slightly off. It could have been called something like Letâs Rock! with like a live picture of us on the front.
6. MAKE ANOTHER WORLD (2007)
So this is at the bottom of the list for you, Rod. Why?
Rod: Pretty much for the same reasons that Roddy just outlined, but I feel like Make Another World is a bit worse. It was made very quickly and I think because weâd taken so long with Warnings/Promises, we felt like we needed to make a band in a room record. And it is that, but I think that maybe the songs arenât that good.
Roddy: I think we made a mistake with that one, really. It was the first record that weâd made when we werenât on Parlophone, but weâd signed quite a good deal with another label, so there was a bit of budget for it. Iâd made a solo record the year before, My Secret Is My Silence. Rod was involved in that, too, but it was done very off the cuff and in a really loose way with a lot of folk musicians, and it has a really nice feel to it, and I think what we should have done was I shouldnât have released that as a solo record and we should have used some of those songs and made a much more interesting and folkier record. Because thatâs what Warnings/Promises was hinting at, but we sort of separated them and we made a sort of basic, slightly uninspired rock record instead of what we could have done, which was merge them and made a kind of opus. But we didnât do that and I think Make Another World suffers, as Rod said. Itâs got a couple of really great songs that we still play live, but as an album, thereâs just not enough there to make it a really great record.
Rod: It was a compromise. It was trying to keep those things separate and keep everybody happy and we shouldnât really do that.
Were you aware at the time that you were compromising?
Both: Yeah.
Roddy: I knew Allan Stewart, who was playing in the band at the time, and Colin, and Rod to an extent, werenât keen on following that path of country.
Rod: I thought that when we actually went that way with the band we had at the time, it didnât really work. It felt like a bunch of people who couldnât really play that style of music convincingly. So I didnât really feel like doing that. I didnât feel like that incarnation of Idlewild was ever going to be good at that kind of music.
Roddy: Whereas right now, we could do that if we wanted to.
Rod: Easily!
Roddy: And we do!
But that then begs the question why did you decide to release it if you werenât happy with it?
Roddy: Well, the label we were on, Sanctuary â they were really pumped about. They thought âNo Emotionâ was a hitâand it went Top 20âbut they thought they could really work with this record and they loved the fact it was a rock record and were using these phrases like âback to their rootsâ and all this kind stuff. And again, itâs not knocked off. There is a lot of consideration that went into the artwork and the feel about it, but I wouldnât rate it highly if weâre comparing it.
5. POST-ELECTRIC BLUES (2009)
You both agree that this is number five. Why?
Roddy: For many of the same reasons as Make Another World. The only reason Iâm rating this above that is that I think the first three songs of Post-Electric Blues are three of our best tunes. I think it starts so well and then just goes like that a wee bit [motions a downhill movement with his hand]. But thatâs partly to do with the timescale that we had to do it in. Quite often, with a lot of records, when youâve written a really good song, it takes the pressure off a little bit and you think âOkay, weâve still got four or five to writeâ and theyâre never as good. And Post-Electric Blues is very much like that.
Were you aware when you were writing this that you were going to take a break afterwards?Rod: No. To be honest, when we were actually making it â and we did it mainly in one chunk, which we hadnât done in a while â it was good fun. At the time, I remember thinking âThis has got an energy that weâve been missing a bit.â Even though Make Another World had been a rock record, I felt like it kind of lacked the intent or the urgency of the earlier records. This one, we start to sound like weâre enjoying ourselves. We werenât worrying so much about what other people would think and we were trying a few different things out. So at the time I felt quite fondly about it and I thought âThis is going to be good!â but itâs just one of those things that the songs didnât really stand the test of time. As Roddy said, the first three â and thereâs a couple of other moments on the record â but there were a few songs that were ideas weâd had from previous records and we thought, âActually, maybe that is good, weâll put it on.â And the danger of that is sometimes thereâs a reason you didnât put it on the previous record!
Roddy: Thereâs some great ingredients there. And weâre at that stage in our career, when we have a lot of music and records weâve written, and we can take bits out and put them in other songs live. And we do that with a few bits from Post-Electric Blues that we play in other songs. I think it was a bit more inspired than Make Another World, and I think it would have been more so if weâd had more time. But it is a real product of the fact that we needed, as a working band, to tour every year pretty much, and if you have a record out, then you go on tour. That was another reason why we decided to step off that treadmill. When I listen to Post-Electric Blues, I do hear that thereâs a really good band with a lot of ideas but itâs a band that needed to take a step away from it. But I do like it!
Rod: I certainly donât think weâve ever gone into a record and not enjoyed doing it when we were doing it, but certainly after the fact you realize thatâŠwell, weâve made mistakes on every record. Listening back to the ones that are higher up the list, there are still things that I would have done differently, but at the time youâre a different person. You go with whatâs happening at the time and that youthful exuberance that was in some of the earlier records thatâll be higher up the list â wisdom kind of overtakes that as you get older. And cynicism, which is a Scottish disease. But you donât know that at the time. Weâve certainly never gone into the studio and thought âWe just need to make a record â fuck this, letâs just get it over with.â I mean there were moments, actually, on Warnings/Promises â and this is where Roddy and I will disagree â there were moments towards the end of record where I just wanted to finish that record, because it was a hard record to make. And it probably is better than I give it credit for, but it was a very difficult process and I find it hard to look at objectively.
4. CAPTAIN (1998)
Hereâs another youâre in agreement withâyour very first record. Technically a mini-album.
Rod: Yeah. Weâd had those songs since we first formed the band. Theyâre songs that I recorded the guitar part on a cassette tape and posted through his letterbox and then heâd write some words. Itâs so raw. It was our first real proper time in a studio. We were on Deceptive Records and they gave us some money and we came down to a really crap studio in London and shared a hotel â all four of us in the same room â and spent five days recording as many songs as we had.
Roddy: And it was done very live. Iâm really happy that that exists â itâs like a portal of me when Iâm like 19 years old. Itâs an archive of myself. And thatâs really what I was into. I loved playing fast, noisy music and we didnât really listen to too much else at the time. We didnât think we were going to do too many other records, so we put everything we had into that in terms of energy. And it still feels exciting to listen to.
Rod: I suppose thereâs a fondness, which is probably not ranking your records to their merit. It was the first time weâd been in a studio â to us, five days in a shit studio in London seemed like we were going to Abbey Road. It was the easiest record to write because it was all of the songs youâve got. And they still work. Thereâs a simplicity to themâŠ
Roddy: And some good melodies. We came up with some good melodies. It was dressed up in this noisy, aggressive band, but when you take those melodies out of context, theyâre nice melodies.
Rod: Iâve not got much more to say about it really.
So these were the songs youâd written before you were a professional band, in a way. It was just for fun.
Roddy: I remember walking back to the hotel from the studio and weâd just got a Chinese takeaway because Deceptive Records had just given us our first paycheck, and we were all like âWow â we actually made money!â So we went to get a Chinese takeaway and we were walking back to the hotel and weâd just singed a publishing deal, and there was a realization that week that we were going to make some money by doing music. So there was a proper euphoria there: weâre in London, recording these songs with a producer. Like Rod said, nowadays it looks like real tiny, small scale and really quite skanky, but it was fucking amazing!
3. THE REMOTE PART (2002)
So this is your number one, Rod. Talk to me.
Rod: For me, if I listen back to it now, itâs not the most creative record weâve ever made, but itâs a record that everything kind of fired together at the right time. Weâd just kind of learned how to play properly, how to use a studio properly and it had a completeness to it. It didnât feel like there was any filler on the record. We kept going back and doing another session and another session, like âNo, itâs not quite complete yet, letâs write another four songs.â And I think because of that, I remember on the last day of mastering kicking off songs from the record that were pretty good songs, genuinely thinking "This is actually a really good song and probably the most expensive b-side weâve ever recorded."
Roddy: There was a really high level of quality to it. Weâd learned, through the process of 100 Broken Windows, that the record label were really serious about the band and they made a lot of comments about all our demos. They were really investing in the band and we took it quite seriously. We realized weâd been leaning towards writing anthemic songs and we felt that we could do that really well. It was a properly produced record and really well mixed â itâs a fully realized, modern commercial rock album. âYou Held The World In Your Arms,â âAmerican Englishâ âall these songs are custom-built. We were listening to a lot of Bad Finger and Fleetwood Mac and itâs our attempt at that kind of thing. Itâs just a real sin that it wasnât more successful than it was.
How disappointed were you about that? I remember it being the album that was going to make you guys huge.
Rod: I remember thinking at the time that it was a huge success! [Laughs.]
Roddy: It was in the charts at number 3 and itâs the only record weâve had that went Gold. It was like Red Hot Chili Peppers, Oasis and Idlewild, and that feels mental now!
Rod: Take any indie band, or even any major label band, and offer them that now and theyâd bite your hand off. I think the problem was that the record label started to realize we were the classic indie cult band who had a really devoted and whoâd sell out tours, but whose tours were never moving up from 2,000 capacity venues. The record went really high in the charts then disappeared quite quickly, and I think that set the precedent for Warnings/Promises and thatâs why I think EMI eventually said âThereâs no bad will, but weâve decided to not renew your record deal.â For some reason, the man on the street wasnât connecting with Idlewild and I think the label realized that. It was more music fans and students who were into us, and not hairdressers â nothing against hairdressers, but you know what I mean!
Is it my mis-memory, or was there some kind of backlash from your fans about that record because you were slightly more mellow and youâd âlost your edgeâ?
Rod: There is with every record. Whereas Warnings/Promises made us new fans there was a backlash with that. I even seem to remember there was a bit of a backlash with 100 Broken Windows from some of the people who were listening to Captain. Thereâs always going to some little dweebâŠ
Roddy: Weâre one of those bands who mean a lot to people and weâve found when weâve put records out that people would be scared that weâd start meaning more to someone else than they did.
I also remember, when it came out, it being the record that I wish R.E.M. had made. Because that was the point at which they really started to go downhill and I listened to The Remote Part and was like "You can still make great music like this."
Rod: I do feel like, where we maybe went one record over, they went a couple of records where they should have stopped. But theyâre one of my favorite bands of all-time.
Roddy: We got a real endorsement from them, too. Around that time, there were a lot of people saying we were the new R.E.M., and we played quite high up the bill at T In The Park and R.E.M. were headlining, and Michael Stipe was watching us from the side of the stage, which was a bit of a thrill. And afterwards, he sat with us for ages and was just talking about how great he thought we were and he said that Idlewild were the greatest, or something like that, and we were all beside him, just likeâŠ
Rod: Itâs the only photograph of the band where weâre all actually smiling!
2. 100 BROKEN WINDOWS (2000)
This is probably the fan favorite, and both of you have this in the number two slot. What does it mean to you now, looking back?
Rod: Itâs probably the only one thatâs gone up my order of preference the further away Iâve got from it. I think maybe because we did a tenth anniversary tour of it, I feel that weâd put that to bed. We didnât feel beholden to it anymore. Coming back after that break I can listen to it with fresh ears. And there are some really good songs on it. And I think, like I think everything aligned for The Remote Part, something definitely happened during 100 Broken Windows where there was something in the ether.
Roddy: Itâs got genuine mystery to it. You donât really know why it works so well, but it does. We were still not amazing musicians, so we still had problems where weâd had really good ideas, so itâs like a band who are on their way somewhere but havenât go there yet, but theyâve still got all these great songs and theyâre not laboring over them too much. Itâs very pure in that way. Thereâs a rawness to it. And the album artwork, itâs black and white and very oblique, and the lyrics reference weird things like post-modernism and crofting and all this kind of stuff. Obviously, itâs melodic music, but itâs got this sort of mystery to it and I think that really captivated people.
Rod: The strange thing about the record for me was at the time, and shortly after it, I assumed it had had the impact it had because it had been such a dramatic jump, and that was always going to be impossible to recreate, even from that to The Remote Part. Roddy was starting to sing more confidently, the lyrics were getting better, everything was on such an upwards curve. But bizarrely, even my friendsâ kids who later listened to the band, thatâs the record they gravitate to. So thereâs obviously something there that I canât quite comprehend what it is.
Roddy: And itâs a mystery to us as well as the listener.
Thereâs a wonderful adolescence to this record, and I mean that as a compliment. Itâs still young, but itâs also like a third year university student. Itâs still full of life and joy and excitement and wonder, but itâs also got that cerebral edge and that desire to be grown up.
Rod: Itâs just clever enough, but not too clever!
Roddy: Iâd agree with that totally. One reason why itâs not number one for me is that it still feels, as I said for Hope Is Important, a wee bit like I havenât quite found my voice yet. But ultimately, I think the songs are strong enough for me to forgive myself.
1. WARNINGS/PROMISES (2005)
Rodâyou said this was a difficult record to make. Why?
Rod: I think with the band that we have now, it would have been a much better record. I think we were trying to do something that a few of us were interested in, but we were doing it with the wrong band. It didnât feel genuine to me. It was an interesting exploration, but not with the right band.
Roddy: See, Warnings/Promises is my favorite Idlewild record other than the new one. It was my favorite version of the band other than the new one and I think itâs what we were working toward from the very inception of the band. Because originally the band is inspired mainly by underground US indie rock from the â80s and early â90s like HĂŒsker DĂŒ and Superchunk, but then we started to get away from that and discovered a lot of music from the west coast of America â Buffalo Springfield and Neil Young and The Byrds, all that kind of stuff. It really resonated with us and I feel like Warnings/Promises was a combination of those two influences but put through our own filter. And it was a great experience recording it. We wrote it up in the Highlands and we recorded it in Los Angeles over two months and Iâve got nothing but good memories about the whole thing. And I think lyrically, musically, itâs still interesting to me. I still like some of the words and I love the artwork. Itâs the complete package, other than Everything Ever Written, which represents me now.
You obviously donât agree with that, Rod.
Rod: A lot of what Roddy says I do agree with, but for me it got to a point musically a lot of the time where it was a real struggle. We had maybe too many song ideas and there quite a lot of compromising going on. It became quite an uncomfortable situation.
Roddy: I agree with that, but I think in a good way. Sometimes you do need that. If things are easy artistically, generally speaking theyâre not going to be that good. But it was particularly difficult because Gavin [Fox] and Allan had just been brought into the band and they wanted to obviously play a part in the record. And to be honest, I think it was our age â we werenât skilled enough with our communication skills at that point to fully let them do that.
Rod: And for me towards the end, it just became a little convoluted. I remember when weâd finished the record and were mixing it, I was still not a fan of the way it was. I remember just sitting in New York in a coffee shop after weâd finished mixing it and taking a sigh and being like âIâm really glad thatâs finished.â Partly in a proud way, but also partly just from relief.
Roddy: Thereâs that whole philosophy in art that you can never really finish a work of art â you just abandon it. And Warnings/Promises felt like it was finished to me. I felt like some of the other records had been abandoned, but it really felt quite complete. And it still does.
RODâS LIST
7. Make Another World
6. Hope Is Important
5. Post-Electric Blues
4. Captain
3. Warnings/Promises
2. 100 Broken Windows
1. The Remote Part
Everything Is Written is out via Empty Words now.
Mischa Pearlman will be listening to Idlewild for the rest of the week and into the next. He's like, totally NOT on Twitter.
from Noisey http://ift.tt/1NdcDBG
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