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Q 107.1 KGSR.
This is Jody Denberg. Billy Bragg has a new album out called "England,
Half English." And Billy is on the road in the States this spring,
but he's not going to make it to Austin, at least during his first leg,
so we've made it to see Billy. We're in New York City. And oddly enough,
it's the date of the World Economic Conference. And we'll talk to Billy
about that a little bit later. We're going to hear songs from the new
album, "England Half English." But first, we're going to hear
a live song from Billy Bragg. This is St. Monday on 107.1 KGSR.
St. Monday (Song plays)
Q Billy Bragg
live on 107.1 KGSR. Thanks, Billy.
A My pleasure, Jody.
Q That was
St. Monday, which is the first song on Billy's new album, "England,
Half English." It is in stores as of March 5th.
The song you just played, St. Monday, it sings of the pleasures
of a four-day work week.
A Hm-mm.
Q How do you
stay in touch with the thoughts of the working class when, you know, you've
had a measure of success now. It's afforded you a bit of privilege.
A It has, yeah. It has. Well,
I mean, you have to remember, Jody, until I was 25 years old, I'd never
even been on an
airplane. You know, so It's not like I kind of like left school and sort
of waltzed into being a rock and roll star. You know, I've had some terrible
jobs, working in all-night gas station. I looked after a herd of goats
once. I drove a tank in the Army. So you know, I kind of have -- still
have that sensibility, I think, that comes from having a 9 to 5 job. And
I feel incredibly lucky that I don't have to -- don't have to do those
kind of things. But the reality of it is, my brother's a bricklayer, you
know, and my mum's now sort of surviving on a state pension. And those
kind of issues don't just go away. You can't sort of -- I don't think,
anyway, you can just close those things out of your life. The whole point
of, I think, being part of a society is that you keep in touch with those
people that don't have as much advantages as you do. And in my country,
those people, they're in my family. So it's not really -- I'm not really
that far away from it at all.
Q Which kind
of leads me to my next issue. St. Monday, like a lot of the stuff
you write, it combines the personal and the political. Is there a way,
as a writer, to ever really separate the two?
A Well, you can write personal
songs and you can write political songs. But if you really want to touch
people, then you have to try and mix the two. I'm interested where the
two overlap. You know, I'm interested in where people's experience and
their relationships are in some ways curtailed or dictated to them by
their circumstances. You know, what's happening in society. Because I
think that's the way the world is. So you know, I'd be I guess I'd be
really bored if every single song on the radio was political. That would
be really boring. But I also get really fed up with hearing just relationship
songs all the time. So in those areas when the two do touch and the two
overlap, I find that the most interesting area. And not just to work in,
myself, but also to listen to.
Q Well, let's
get personal for a second. I think it was back in 1991 the album was "Don't
Try This at Home." And you did a tour behind the record. And then
we didn't really hear from Billy Bragg for about five years. You got married.
And from what we heard, you were spending time with your family. Did domesticity
change your work when, five years later, you put out "William Bloke?"
A I think, speaking as a
parent, if the experience of becoming a parent doesn't really change your
perspective on everything, then you're probably not doing it right, because
it does. You know, first of all, it certainly changes your perspective
on sleep, for starters. You know, that suddenly becomes really important
in your life. And, you know, you kind of like -- as you kind of get your
life back again, the life you get back is different because you have different
priorities. You're not the center of the universe anymore. And when you're
out on the road and you're doing something that's vaguely strange and
perhaps slightly dangerous, you don't just in the back of your mind think,
what will my mum say if something happens to me. You now have responsibilities
of parenthood to think about. So yeah, it has really changed my perspective.
Certainly my perspective on this job. It's one of those things that keeps
my feet on the ground for doing this job, because beforehand, I didn't
really have any commitments so I was just sort of winging it and having
a great time. And you know, just carried on touring and carried on partying.
Now, I'm trying to get a balance between my work life and my family life
like everybody else. And you know, I'm in a situation where my work life,
although it doesn't bring me all the way to Austin this year, brings me
-- certainly brings me across the Atlantic. So I have to try and balance
that up. I hope that this sort of world that I'm part of and the world
that my son and my family can also be a part of. They came last year to
New York with me. That he'll be able to see a bit of that world and it
will be somewhere that's, you know, instead of somewhere daddy goes it
will be somewhere where daddy works and sometimes if we get to go there
as well. That's what I hope.
Q You moved
a while back from London to Dorset. Is that similar to in the States if
someone moved from the city to the suburbs?
A Yeah, it's kind of upstate
England, Dorset. You could call it that, you know. It's about two-and-a-half
hours from London. The important thing about it is it's by the ocean.
And we British people, we're very fond of the ocean. You know, we live
on a little island and the sea is very, very important to us. If you go
to Australia everybody lives around the edge of Australia. That's because
they all come from Britain. You know, they can't bear to be too far away
from the ocean. It's a very meditative place, I find, the ocean. I once
wrote in a song, Must I Paint You A Picture, there's a line in
there that says, "This would never happen if we lived by the sea."
Because the sea has that soothing, calming effect on people. And that's
one of the great things -- because sometimes people say to me, "How
could you live in the countryside with all that mud and that cow muck
and all those people with their green-willy ideas?" And I say,
"Look, I don't live in the country. I live by the ocean."
And they get it. And they're like, "Oh, okay. Yeah. I get
that. I can see that."
Q We're talking with Billy
Bragg today in New York City. Now, if I move from New York City to upstate
New York, it would remove me a bit from the fray and the issues of New
York City. Has your move from London to Dorset removed you from the issues
that are at hand in London?
A No. I don't think so. This
is a paradox, because I thought it might do that. But when the general
election came last year -- we had an election -- and I'd moved from an
area which was kind of like Labor sort of heartland, London, into an area
where Labor really have trouble getting in. So when the election came,
I had to think, well, what can I do down here that's political activism?
And I got involved in this great campaign of trying to get the Tories
out and get Labor in, which ended up me having to dress up as a Roman
centurion and appear dressed in this garb -- I won't go into the whys
and wherefores. But it was great fun. And I would never have been that
politically active if I'd have been in London, because there's no reason
for that because, you know, the Conservatives don't have that hold in
London.
And there's a few other things. I mean, like the local high school asked
me to come and run a songwriting workshop every Wednesday, which ended
up with us doing a concert with -- my band came down and we spent a week
with these kids learning the songs they wrote. I would never get to do
that in London. And a number of other things that I've been doing down
there. Because what there is in Dorset there isn't in London is there's
time and space. And those things, I think, are very, very important.
 |
| Billy Bragg in NYC having performed
a solo acoustic set for WFUV, January 2002 - with Sean Coakley, WFUV's
Rita Houston and Russ Borris, Tiffany Suiters, Jody Denberg - and
up front producer Grant Showbiz and Lisa Michelson-Sonkin of Elektra. |
Q That, Billy Bragg, stirs
it up wherever he is. Wherever he goes, he stirs it up, I'm telling you.
And, well, there's a song on the new album that may stir up a little talk
at your house. It's called Jane Allen. It tells the story of an
old lover. And I'm assuming it's an old lover of yours, because I always
think songwriters are telling exactly from their own life.
A Surely, they are.
Q It's sort of an old lover
of yours coming around to visit. And now that you're married, it's obviously
a different situation. So is it proper for us to assume in this case that
this is a first-person account, and what did your wife have to say about
the song Jane Allen?
A Well, it is a first-person
account. And my wife -- I'm in a very lucky position that my wife and
I have known each other for much, much longer that we've been together.
We -- I've known her about eight years before we got together. So -- and
she ran my record company in England. So she kind of knew all of my ex-girlfriends.
Had met quite a few of them. So when I'm out on the road and I happen
to bump into one of them, which is purely, you know, socially, "Hi.
How are you? What are you up to? Here are my baby photos" kind
of thing. I have to understand that, you know, that has an effect on Juliet
and I have to take that on board. I have to accept the way she feels about
it. There's no point in me standing around saying, "Look, there's
nothing in it." I have to accept the way that she feels about
it. So the way she feels about it is what I'm trying to explain to her
in -- you know, in Jane Allen. That it's all in the past and I'm
-- you know, this is what I'm doing now. And I'm glad we know each other
from all that time because we have all those experiences in our life from
before we got together. But yeah, occasionally, I do recognize it does
kind of tread on her toes a little bit. So I have to be careful, but I
always have to be honest, both with myself and with my wife.
Jane Allen (Song plays)
Q That was Jane Allen
from Billy Bragg's new CD. It's called "England, Half English"
on 107.1 KGSR Radio, Austin. The first leg, at least, of Billy's US tour
this year will not come to Austin, so I've come to New York to talk to
Billy prior to the release of the album, which you recorded in Wales.
A That's right.

Q How far is that from where
you live and why Wales?
A Why Wales? Well, Wales
is not London and it's not Dorset. So we were all out of -- we were all
out of our own little pools there. And we were in a residential place
in a studio called Monnow, which sounds like a type of recording. It's
actually M-o-nn-o-w, which is the name of the river that runs through
Monmouth. So we were backing onto the river. And we were just there, just
living there and hanging out and playing songs. And the great thing about
it was the spirit. Working with the Blokes was very similar to the spirit
of working with Wilco on the "Mermaid Avenue" sessions. We sat
around and we played these songs and just messed around for them and played
different versions of them and turned them inside out and messed them
up and down. And people threw in their two-penny worth. And it was great,
because normally Billy Bragg records are a pretty solitary affair. It's
me coming up with ideas, trying to explain it to people how I want it
to sound and then trying to get that down on tape. Whereas, you know,
if anything stops in the studio, one looks to me. Well, with the Blokes,
it's more, you know, you can go in and you can go into town and do a little
bit of shopping or walk up the hill and write the lyrics to the song,
whilst the guys rearrange it for me to sing. And that's a great luxury
for me.
But also, the spirit of it. I think working that way is much more organic.
And that's the thing I really enjoyed about "Mermaid Avenue"
is the organic aspect of it. And I tried to sort of engender that same
sort of feel on "England, Half English."
Q Now, the phrase "England,
Half English," I read that this was first coined by a novelist from
England, Colin MacInnes.
A Uh-huh.
Q Who wrote "Absolute Beginners." What does the phrase
mean to you? Why did you co-opt it for your new album's title?
A Well, MacInnes saw in the
1950s, he was kind of a generation older than teenagers in the '50s who
were turned on by American rock and roll music. And he went to this concert
and saw these English people dancing to American music, being sung by
an Englishman with an American accent, playing electric guitar. And he
just had this incredible -- it had an incredible effect on him. And he
realized that with the arrival of the teenager, that from then on, English
people would get their culture from anywhere they liked, instead of having
to accept the culture of their parents and listen to English music and
wear English clothes and eat English food, what a dreadful thought. They
would be able to, you know, pick up their culture from wherever they liked.
And that was the sort of the beginning. He was there at the very beginning,
I suppose, of our multicultural society. He was witnessing the first changes
in the teen generation, which has gone on and carried on. And you know,
now, you can listen to music from all around the world by tuning in to
radio stations on the internet, pick up stuff. And instead of having to
accept the mainstream stuff that's force-fed to us, whether we like it
or not, and adverts and soundtracks and movies and stuff like that, you
can actually seek out those areas, those radio stations that are pointing
out stuff that's actually quite really interesting. You may find something
unfamiliar. That's one of the problems I find about mainstream media is
the fear of the unfamiliar. Everything's got to sound the same, look the
same, be the same. It's those stations, Jody, like yourselves, that are
trying to find other things and the -- you'll get the feeling that the
DJ's communicating enthusiasm to you, rather than just advertising. And
that sort of stuff.
You know, that, to me, is the way the world is now. We can pick our culture
from anywhere. And with the song England, Half English, we're using
an Arabic folk song as the basis for it, rather than using something out
of an -- from an English background. We're trying to make people understand
as soon as they hear the song that we're talking about Englishness in
a global, world music kind of sense by using this song. And I think that
works better, because if you're going to talk about those nationalist
things, you have to make sure people understand where you're coming from.
And you can't get the wrong end of the stick and think that you're talking
about how fabulous -- because I say at the end, "My country, what
a beautiful country you are." But I'm not saying that because
it's more beautiful than anybody else's country. It's beautiful and I'm
sure there's parts of Texas that you'd like to show me that are absolutely
beautiful as well. And we could -- you know, I can relate to that.
Q Actually, I'm glad that
you do love your country, because there's another song on the record about
the Union Jack. I was starting to go -- does Billy love England anymore?
A But that's -- The Union
Jack doesn't represent my country. That's -- Great Britain isn't my country.
Great Britain is a state of which I'm a citizen. But the country I was
born in is England. I'm an Englishman. And, you know, it's a strange concept.
I recognize that, but you know, our neighbors in Scotland and our neighbors
in Wales are getting the strongest sense of their identity and who they
are. We English have not really made that leap yet, which is a shame because
we're quite -- we're quite a multicultural society. I'm quite proud of
that.
Q Yeah, 'cause I was wondering
if you thought that multiculturalism, which isn't endemic to England,
of course, America, the Great Melting Pot, do you think that that deprives
us of our identity or is it a blessing, given all the new hybrids that
we get in art and --
A Well, it's -- if you think
there was ever a purer race in England to be lost, perhaps I would argue
against that. I mean, you know, we're Anglo-hyphen-Saxon, supposedly.
That's what they call us. The Angles came from somewhere around Denmark.
The Saxons came from somewhere in Northern Germany. So what's the only
part of that phrase "Anglo-hyphen-Saxon" that actually comes
from England? Well, it's the damn hyphen, you know. So don't let anybody
tell you that we weren't always a diverse people. You know, you're fortunate
in that your country is based on that idea of pluribus unum, so you can
fall back on that. And that gives everybody a stake in society, whether
they've come last week or 100 years ago.
We don't have that. We have a different kind of history. And that history
can be abused by people who seek to create hatred -- racial hatred and
xenophobic, fear of foreigners in our country. And this is something that's
very much on the agenda because the issue of whether or not we should
join the European single currency, which is not a very sexy thing to talk
about on records, I know, but the issue then becomes, what does it mean
to be English? Is it something to do with, you know, Elizabeth I and Shakespeare,
or is it actually English to do with what you see when you go out of your
house in England. I would argue it's this 21st Century thing. You know,
that Englishness is about where you are, not where your parents are from
or your grandparents are from. I'm interested in that and we can talk
about that and I have respect for that. But I want you to think about
where you are and where your kids are going to grow up and what we have
in common in this society that's just in the borders of England. Surely,
that's more important than what happened, you know, 200, 300 years ago.
We have plenty of examples of that in Northern Ireland of how that can
be a complete trap. History can be a trap. History should be something
that informs us in the present, but doesn't rule us. So I'm more interested
in what you are.
And I have to also say it's a very personal thing. Identity is purely
personal. It's what you think you are. I mean, there you are down there
and you're down in Texas, having come from the Bronx. You know, I'm sure
that when you're in New York you talk proudly about the Bronx and when
you're abroad you talk proudly about Texas. And I understand that. But
it's what you think you are, not what I think you are. Not what I pick
up in your accent or the way you dress. It's what you think you are. And
I think identity is personal. And I just want people to think a little
bit more about themselves so that they don't exclude themselves from saying,
yeah, I am part of this English thing, whatever it is, because we're trying
to make it into something inclusive, rather than a narrow, exclusive definition.
England, Half English (Song plays)
Q The song we just heard
on KGSR, England Half English, as well as the Billy Bragg album
that takes its name from it, has strains of music from India, the Caribbean,
New Orleans, Reggae music. And the band that brings it about, Billy, is
your group The Blokes. Can you tell me about these five guys? And have
you ever been in a band that has an identity the way The Blokes have for
you?
A
No, I've not, really. I mean, I have worked with some bands and some great
bands as well. My own Red Stars, which I put together after "Don't
Try This at Home." Of course, Wilco, working with them. They have
a very strong identity. But what I think is great about this band is how
they draw their identity from outside of what we would call, I suppose,
Western music traditions. The two guys who played the stringed instruments
that you heard on that last record, which include things like bouzoukis
and tarbushes and djembes and these kind of weird sort of like Asian-African
instruments, they've been in bands -- they've been close to bands like
Public Image and the Three Mustaphas Three. My drummer played with Shriekback
for many years. The bass player was in a band called Fairground Attraction.
And they play this incredible mixture of world music. And then there's
me and Ian McLagan, who - a resident of Austin, proud resident of Austin,
who, of course, played in the Small Faces and the Faces. And he's kind
of like -- he and I, I think are the kind of like glue that draw together
these influences, but ground them very much in, only for want of a better
word, called Billy Bragg, I suppose. Because I want these things to be
drawn together into a new focus. I don't want me to be over there making
a world music record or them to be dragged over here making a rock record.
I'm trying to find a different groove somewhere in between there where
I can take a song, a Billy Bragg song, and work it into a new kind of
sound. Because, you know, I've got people who came on board from "Mermaid
Avenue" who enjoyed the sound of that record. I've got older people
who heard the albums before that. There's even people coming back to the
absolutely solo records. So I'm trying to find a way to bring all of that
together in one record, without -- you know, without making it sound like
I've turned into Bjork or something. D'y'know what I mean?
Q Well, what's funny is,
the questions of identity having to do with the band and your music are
the same questions of identity we were just talking about in England.
A Well, that's the thing.
Q I think you should call
the album "English, Half English." It would work perfectly.
A Yeah, I mean, the whole
point is that the -- playing with this band gave me the courage to address
these issues, because I think that if you start to talk about issues like
nationalism -- you know, if one is sharp (intake of breath here). You
know, what's the agenda here? If you can do that over the top of an Algerian
folk song, the people can clearly see that you're not -- you know, you're
not taking a very narrow definition of what that means, but you're actually
trying to, you know, strike a chord with something that's actually really
going on, if you look out with your eyes open.
Q You're reflecting your
beliefs in your own work.
A Yeah.
Q Billy, "England Half
English" is your first album of all original new songs in five years.
Inbetween, you did these two projects with Wilco, "Mermaid Avenue
Volumes I and II." Together you and Wilco put the unpublished words
of Woody Guthrie - who is a quintessential American folk songwriter -
to music. So how did working with Woody lead you to this album, which
is so broad?
A Well, one of the interesting
things that I found looking at Woody's work was the lack of cynicism in
his lyrics. Here's a political songwriter, writing about people -- writing
angry songs. But there's no cynicism in there. He really believes in people.
And I looked at my own work. And I thought, well, that's something really
to aspire to. But actually, strangely enough, if you actually look at
the way politics are going in the last ten years, I think actually cynicism
is one of the greatest enemies that we face in trying to make a better
world. It's not organized, but it's incredibly damaging and pernicious
outlet, because on one hand, you've got the cynics who sit on their butts
and just -- you know, and pour disdain on anybody who tries to do anything
positive. And you can't argue with a cynic because they have all the answers.
Or you've got the even more cynical people who feel that there's no way
for them to express their anger and frustration so they turn to violence.
And we know where that leads. We can all see where that leads in the last
few months.
So I'm, you know, committed as ever to fight against that, against cynicism
and try and create optimism about the ability of people to control their
lives. I don't want to write songs like that. And you know, I never thought
of this before. It's not a particularly political analysis. But listening
to Woody Guthrie songs, there's a famous quote of Woody's about writing
songs that lift people up, "I don't wanna hear no more songs about
making people feel down and feels that it's their fault that they're in
the situation they're in." He says, "I want to write
songs that lift people up and inspire people." Well, I think
there's a lesson for all of us in whatever we're doing. Not just songwriting,
but whatever we're doing from that. And that's certainly the lesson I
learned from working with the little guy.
Q That's quite a lesson.
The first song from "England, Half English" that we're hearing
in the States is called N.P.W.A., No Power Without Accountability.
It's one of the most political songs released as a single in ages, I feel,
as a listener. And here we are in New York City on a day when the World
Economic Conference is taking place. And in your song N.P.W.A.
you reference organizations like the IMF and the WTO. And I know a book
could be written about each of them, but is there a way for you to just
briefly try to tell those of us who aren't familiar with the IMF and the
WTO who they are and what they do?
A Yeah, sure. Well, the WTO
is the World Trade Organization. And what they do is, they make it safe
for multinational corporations to trade around the world. They can put
sanctions on you if you don't open your country to their goods, for instance.
And they ostensibly deal with trade disputes between nations, but it's
really trade disputes between companies, really.
The IMF, they are a kind of like a bank. And they give out loans to countries.
But they only give out loans to countries on their terms. That is, that
those countries spend less money on welfare, don't tax people and open
their country to privatization.
Now, we can see where that can lead to quite easily in countries that
are voting in governments that are going to spend more money on schools
and health and housing. And suddenly, they are in trouble, they go to
the IMF and the IMF say, "Reverse that." And we were
talking just a second ago about cynicism. Well, what could be more cynicism
-- what could generate more cynicism that you vote and work to get a government
in and then that government do the absolute opposite to what you voted
them in to do. And I think governments do generate a lot of cynicism that's
surrounding politics.
So how do you combat that cynicism? Well, I believe that you have to encourage
people to believe that they have control over their lives and that they
can hold, not just their government to account, but the IMF and the World
Bank and the WTO to account. Because after all, it's our resources that's
being spread around there, although it's not in our name. We are contributing
to them. So it should be possible for us to hold those extra-governmental
organizations to account.
And then if you extend that on, perhaps there's a principle where we should
be able to hold the corporations to account, as well, so that corporations'
decisions are accountable not only to their shareholders, but also to
their employees and to the citizens of the community where that corporation
has a factory or plant or something. So that instead of those companies
just being able to pull the plug and move to another country, it should
be possible for the workforce to say, "Well, hold on a minute.
Surely we can do something about productivity and we can work it before
you just pull the plug." And another way to stop that happening
will be to ensure that wherever those companies go, the fundamental labor
rights that we enjoy go with them so there's no incentive for them to
go to another place and exploit already poor people even more. Because
what happens is, they go to India to make a product at a third of the
price, that it is in the United States of America, and someone says, "Hey,
we can do that for half that in China." No, we can do -- you
know, it just goes down and down and constantly down.
And you know, there's nothing wrong with, you know, supporting your community
by buying the things that are made in it. It's tough to find sometimes
things that are made in your community. And you know, I bought some --
I've seen some of these little stars and bars things that people are wearing
on their lapels, the broaches. All the ones I've seen so far are made
in China. I have no disrespect for that. That's where they're made and
there's people in China. I have no problem with those people in China
making a living. I totally accept that. But it would, perhaps, be better
if there was a level playing field that wherever our jobs went, those
labor rights went with them. The right to a fair wage, whatever the local
fair wage is, and the right to representation. Those kind of things.
You know, we're trying to get to a place where people have control of
their destiny through the ballot box, through accountability.
Q It's not -- like all politics,
like all issues, thought, it's not all black and white, I don't imagine,
with the IMF and the WTO. We're in New York City, the World Economic Conference
is happening here today. I understand that people like Peter Gabriel and
Bono, perhaps, are working within that system to try and affect change.
I don't know where you stand, but I know there's a lot of protesters who
are going to be on the East Side of New York City tonight, outside of
this gathering. Where do you stand? Outside, probably.
A Yeah, I do. I stand outside.
I want to know what right these people have to make these decisions about
the way the world is run. You know, they're rich people and rich corporations.
And they're in there and they're making decisions that could ultimately
affect our lives. Now, I think that what we should be asking is: Who elected
these people to these positions? Who gave them the right to have these
decisions? And what control can we have over that?
So I will be firmly on the side of the protesters. But I have to say,
I don't think you can change the world by smashing up fast food outlets.
If you want to change the world, go organize a union in a fast food outlet.
That's much more world changing. That's much more challenging than just
smashing them up. So I'm in favor of positive engagement with capitalism.
I'm in favor of, you know, drawing attention to things that could be done
and should be done. And why aren't these things being done and making
these people justify their greed? Because, you're right, it's not black
and white. You know, this isn't the end of history. Frances Fukiyama (phonetic)
wrote "The End of History." He's in that meeting, as well with
Bono and Gabriel and all those other guys. And that wasn't the end of
history. But what it was was the end of black and white -- a black and
white version of history. It's much more complicated. And economics is
much more complicated than that.
But in the end, you know, we have to make sure that the world we hand
on to our children is one which is environmentally sound. And however
you may feel about the methods of the anti-globalists, they have made
a choice between living in a world based purely on exploitation and greed
or a world based on something else. They haven't yet come up with an ideology
or a soundbite to explain what that is. But they clearly have made that
distinction. And I have to be on their side, because I think that's the
choice we still have to make. Do we want to live in a world based on exploitation
or a world based on a compassionate idea?
Q And the ideas that Billy
and I were just talking about are represented very well in a song from
his new album. The song is called N.P.W.A. on 107.1 KGSR. This
is Billy Bragg live.
(Song.)
Q N.P.W.A. -- No Power
Without Accountability. Billy Bragg live on KGSR. And that's the first
song you've been hearing from his new album that's out as of March 5th
and it's called "England, Half English."
Billy, like most of your albums, "England, Half English" is
produced by one Grant Showbiz. For years I've seen that name and I'm goin',
is that a pseudonym for someone. Who is he? Why is he entrusted to produce
you for all these years?
A That's a very good question,
Jody. I'm glad you've asked that. I'll tell you for why, because he's
also our soundman. He's been my soundman for a long time. When I first
met him, he was a soundman for the Smiths. And he actually produced one
of their albums, "Rank." He's done a lot of work with English
bands, such as The Fall. He's produced a few of their albums. And because
he's our soundman, when he's out on the road in soundchecks, where you
do so much good work in sort of like jamming new songs, he's running a
cassette all the time. He compiles those cassettes. He reminds us of those.
You know, you're stuck on the studio and he comes and he says, "What
about that song you played in blah, blah. You know, I've got the DAT here."
And he puts it on and reminds you of that. Or he'll say something
like, "You know, the way you're singing that, you're not singing
it like you do it live." So instead of being a producer who's
coming in cold and just taking the songs as presented them, he's seen
us work and perform these songs. And he knows our strengths.
And one of the interesting things of working with a bunch of guys like
The Blokes is working out their strengths and how to write, as a songwriter
songs, that play to the best strengths of the band. The individual strengths
of the band. And Grant has been a great help in doing that. I mean, he's
as much a part of the band, really as anybody else, in that sense, because
he knows how I do it solo. He knows how I do it with the band. And he's
-- that insight that affords him when we get in the studio is something
that's -- it's -- that's part of the collaboration because, instead of
being someone who comes in that we don't know is going to produce the
record, which can be a bit like a teacher and sort of school kid kind
of thing in the studio, to be perfectly honest with you. They're going
to send a grownup to make the record with us. With Grant, it's a much
more of a give and take thing. And he's committed to this record as much
as anybody else.
Q I saw that that there was
an authorized biography about you called "Still Suitable for Minors."
Where you pleased with how this book turned out and would you suggest
it to those who wanted to know more about you and your work?
A I would, very much so,
because I think the things that shaped me, mainly in the 1980s, as a songwriter,
the ideological events that happened in England, may -- I mean, maybe
the people in England don't even remember them, you know. Kids who are
coming to the gigs who were born in the '80s may not know what I did.
I mean, you know, the really important aspects of my career was being
part of something called Red Wedge, which was a group of musicians playing
together to support the Labor Party. Now, in the context of today, with
the Labor Party in government and doing things that, frankly, we sometimes
have to go out and protest about, that may sound ridiculous to someone
who's 16 or 17 years old.
But what the book does, it puts those actions that we took in the '80s
into context. You know, there is no Artists Against Apartheid anymore.
Thank God. I'm proud of that. However, if you want to know how those things
came together and the -- you know, where I got my inspiration from, then
the book is pretty good on that.
It will also tell you that the first of the Billy Bragg gig was on the
same -- the 20th anniversary of which is the day this album is released,
which I find really funny. I just looked it up the other day. And, you
know, how does a guy from East London suburb get from, you know, playing
in his backroom to playing in Austin, Texas? I mean, if people can't -
I certainly couldn't work that out when I was in my mum's backroom. And
anything that gave me a few clues, would have been quite helpful. So,
yeah, I would recommend it.
Q The book's called "Still
Suitable for Minors" for those of you who would like to look into
it.
So Billy, you're going to the United Kingdom, the UK, in March, the States
in April. Doesn't look like you're going to make it to Austin, at least
the first go-round. But I have seen you do your shows. And I've seen some
shows where your monologues were quite long and others when you spoke
a lot less and danced more. So I'm wondering, you know, what dictates
how you're going to be when you get onstage?
A Well, if we knew the answer
to that, Jody, we would be able to -- we would be able to -- it's very
strange. I mean, I've done shows -- I can remember doing a show in Austin
where part of the show seemed to be dictated by some hats we'd found in
the dressing room, which was the catering -- big catering college. And
we came out wearing the hats. And the show kind of like revolved around
these ridiculous -- this ridiculous headgear, which means nothing the
night before or the night after. So it's really, you know, if anything's
took my interest the day before or the day after, it may be that or I'm
-- you know, it may be that I have to put some songs into context, because
as I was just saying, I've been writing about what's happening in England.
It sometimes needs a little bit of contextualizing. Other times, I might
only have an hour to play. So rather than waste my time yakking, I get
in there and play.
But you have to remember that what I'm doing, I suppose, is more folk
music than anything else. And folk music is about talking and communicating.
And it's not just about -- I think one of the problems with -- about rock
is it sometimes can get rather po' faced and serious. And even bands that
are singing the most, you know, assinine lyrics take themselves incredibly
seriously. Well, I don't take myself seriously. I know I've got a stupid
job. I know it's no way for a grown man to act. And everybody else is
having to -- you know, everyone else has a day job. So I see how daft
all this is and how lucky I am. And I just want that to come across to
the audience. A, that I don't take myself to seriously; and B, that I
want to entertain people. Because my feeling is this: I have a political
message which I want to deliver. It's much easier for me to deliver that
if people are relaxed and enjoying themselves. Then you can slip in a
bit of serious stuff. The other way round, if you're just hammering people
over the had constantly with it, I've always found that's rather self-defeating.
Q Well, years ago, you sang
that you were still "Waiting for the great leap forward."
Do you think that leap is ever going to come?
A That's difficult -- very,
very difficult question to answer, Jody. But even if it doesn't come,
practicing our leaping, I think, is an important thing to be doing. It's
not about reaching utopia. It's about heading in the general direction
of it and not falling back and heading away from that. So that's the important
thing. So I still wait, but I'm also practicing my leaping and seeing
how far I can leap and hope that when it does come, I'll be ready.
Q Well, Billy's got some
leaping to do. And we're going to leave everyone with a song from his
new album, "England Half English." It's called Some Days
I See the Point. And it nicely puts together the different facets
of your musical personality. Is there anything you can tell us about the
inspiration for this song?
A Yeah. I have a big, black
dog and he needs a lot of walking. And, you know, that's where I'm looking
out and thinking and the songs come and things about my life come. It's
my meditation. I walk on the cliff, I walk on the beach. It's what I do
to expand my mind.
Q Case closed.
A Thanks, mate.
(End of interview.)
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