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He's appeared before Coldplay favourite Ron Sexsmith
(another of Terefe's acclaimed productions) and, more recently,
the Kings of Leon, and also been spotted by members of Travis, when
he did a gig at the Enterprise Club in Primrose Hill. The excellent
Travis drummer Neil Primrose appears on this album.
Great records aren't usually created in limbo and Michael Clarke
is perfectly happy to pay tribute to the artists who inspire him.
"My earliest favourite album is Achtung baby by U2 and I still
reckon you should never lose that initial thrill of discovering
something that is important to you. I love Crowded House for Neil
Finn's songwriting. I'm a huge fan of Bob Dylan, for his poetry
and his honesty. I love the Beach Boys, Elvis Costello,, The Flaming
Lips, Beck's Mutations, August and Everything After by Counting
Crows...."
It can be common practise in biographies to censor the likes and
dislikes of the artist at hand because - oh, that won't sound cool
blah blah and no, that doesn't fit the image we want etc. etc. There
is absolutely no point in doing that to Michael Clarke, since his
insistence on the values of honesty and melody is interlinked. "When
I came back to England as a teenager," he recalls, "I
felt an element of not fitting in and there was a certain amount
of rebellion from me. But it was more about culture shock than some
false desire to be a loner. I'm a miserable bastard at times, I
can be a major hypochondriac, even though there is sod all wrong
with me, and I am prone to be a depressive. Not a manic one. I'll
leave that for later on," he laughs.
His refusal to inject a bit of cool pretence into his story is refreshing.
"Well, when I say everything I do is trying to be honest I'm
not being pretentious. I just want to relax in my songwriting. I
don't care about momentary fame, I'd rather leave people not being
able to wait for the next song. It's like a friend recommended Royksopp
to me. I didn't know anything about them but I fell in love with
their album immediately."
The "pretty special" element Clarkesville aspire to is
evident in everything on "The Half Chapter." The album
title, incidentally, is skimmed from the Julian Barnes novel 'A
History of The World In Ten and a Half Chapters.' As for Clarkesville
itself? "You've got to have some fun. This album is by me and
about me but it clearly isn't just all me so it would be wrong to
take all the credit. Much as I'd like to. It's a collective name
that I like. I mean Clarkesville, Georgia. Yep. Clarkesville, Tennessee.
Sure. But Clarkesville, Birmingham? It's a lot funnier."
Not that Clarkesville is about to try and confuse anyone. Even so
the album opens on an enigmatic mood with the looped and grooved
'Evergreen,' a reflection of Michael's love for classy chill out
sounds. "I wanted an intriguing start and the first three minutes
means you're not sure where the album will go. The beats and loops
are thanks to my Swedish element of Martin and our programmer Andreas
Olsson but there are other musicians bringing something to the party.
Left to my own devices I'd probably have made a folky Neil Young
acoustic album, but this production team is perfect. It's not overblown.
We've used the Love Sponge Strings (recorded in Nashville), Glenn
Scott on Fender Rhodes, and some brass. I do the mainly the guitars
and the piano. "
In amongst the who does what where stuff it's worth accentuating
Michael Clarke's own gifts for melody, words and that voice - which
you need to hear for yourself. "I really find music easy to
write. I've worked hard enough to know what melodies suit me and
how they can grab a listener," he says. "I also love language
and I stress about lyrics more than anything, although I accept
that for most people the tune is the thing and you can concentrate
on the words later on."
And what great songs there are to pore over! In 'Heavy Soul' Clarke
deals like the young Dylan in the lingua franca of "being pissed
off by a person who is eager to dump their problems on you. I'm
tolerant, but there's limits," he grins. "Obviously there's
girl songs in here like 'Last man Standing' where you want to do
something completely careless. You've fallen in love, it's all gone
wrong and it's not that you're enjoying that feeling of being on
the rebound but rather you're looking for something
anything
to
take you're mind off this person."
As well as the universal themes which anyone could relate to, Clarke
extends himself on songs like 'Moonflowers' where the metaphor circles
around a person who blooms out of sight, and he and raises the bar
joyously in 'Everyone Will Have Their day,' a moment of glorious
optimism. "Unusual for me," he smiles.
Musically, Clarkesville offers a lasting and rewarding experience.
Beats and loops are subtly employed and dropped into a warm mix,
the harmonies are cut
straight from the "West Coast vibe" Clarke owns up to
loving, the ballads are poignant and punchy but never wet and windy,
and hey, there are plenty of straight down the line classic sounding
pop songs like 'Secret File', 'Someday' and 'Spinning' which all
strike that must-hear-that-again-right now chord.
So maybe that's enough biography for now. Suffice to say that once
'The Half Chapter' grabs you, and then you won't want to put it
down. Great music is an addiction. Clarkesville are making great
music.
www.clarkesville.net
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