Robyn Hitchcock came to Exeter Phoenix on Wednesday 6th March, I interviewed him for the student newspaper 'Exepose'- in case you missed it in print, here's the article with bonus embedded music and pictures.
Read on for Robyn's take on songwriting, psychedelia and the human condition...
Read on for Robyn's take on songwriting, psychedelia and the human condition...
Robyn Hitchcock is a busy man. Having released his 19th solo album the day before, and celebrating his 60th birthday two days prior to that, he arrives on a delayed train about an hour and a half before his gig at the Phoenix, and still has time for a chat in the bar. He confirms that his creative juices have been flowing freely since he trained himself to write songs in the '70s, and now it's an involuntary process. If he stops, he says, it will be to due the fact that he cannot go on as an organism indefinitely. This irreverent answer is typical of the charm which has gained Robyn a cult following and provided a continuing demand for his strange and often touching music.
The promotional poster in the Phoenix, featuring his bemused head peering through the branches of a fir tree, proclaims him “One of the UK's most enduring psychedelic treasures”. I ask how he has avoided the tendency among his peers and influences to burn out:
“Or to just die,” he adds, “in that first wave, the great wave of
psychedelic artists, people probably went too far too fast, you know?
So when I came along I was a lot more cagey about those sorts of
things. Whilst I've had my nose in the rock 'n' roll trough, I never
went overboard on drugs. I never saw any point in frying my brain,
others had already fried theirs. I figured you'd get more out of it
by lightly basting it occasionally and then taking it off the boil. I
never write on anything stronger than coffee really. Actually, a good
hangover - they're no fun but they can be quite productive when your
mind is slightly cracked.”
“I
absorbed the attitude of some of the things inherent in psychedelics,
and in pot, a tendency towards hyperrealism, great intensity, things
apparently at random seeming enormously significant. Maybe it's about
texture a bit. My stuff isn't very textural at all. I should probably
subject myself to things and listen to them in that way but I'm too
impatient really, I just want to get the song down and move on to the
next one.”
Perhaps
this is modesty. After all, Robyn's recent work, including his new
album Love From London,
shows
him colouring his songs with a variety of instrumentation. There's
even a tabla on the track 'Stupefied'. This seems like a move away
from a more sparse streak of records with which he found some
popularity in the past towards a more textured 'psychedelic' sound.
Nevertheless, lyrics such as “Ain’t no whiskey
in the Talbot / Ain’t no sugar in your tea / There’s an answer to
it all / But it’s still mystifying me”
ensure that his songcraft remains the main draw. He explains that the
draw of his music is that it keeps people company, mixing intimacy
with a constant surprise at existence.
“It's extraordinary that everything's happening. Agitated
molecules, the torture of electricity is producing light, the burning
gas in black heavens is producing the blue sky that we wander around,
then there's the grey mist we pad around in between as we get more
and more addicted to electronic media. The fact is that we're not
necessarily an evolutionary pinnacle - if we are something we're
probably a stage – whereas the Fender Telecaster or the Shure Mic
or the Zeiss lens, these are things that cannot be improved on - I
don't think any of us are that finished. We're like a dinosaur
becoming a bird, it's got a few feathers, it doesn't know what it is,
you look at these evolutionary half-way things and I suspect that's
what we are.”
Luckily, unlike the dinosaur-birds, we have the eternally startled Robyn Hitchcock reminding us that all is not what it seems, and that maybe we should have a cup of tea and a little think.
Luckily, unlike the dinosaur-birds, we have the eternally startled Robyn Hitchcock reminding us that all is not what it seems, and that maybe we should have a cup of tea and a little think.
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