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Echoes of the past
Echo & the Bunnymen’s Ian McCulloch tells Eamon Sweeney why he’s looking forward to Oxegen, why he told Coldplay their songs weren’t good enough and why he just had to be in the ‘best band in the world’
By Eamon Sweeney
Friday July 04 2008
'If you think I Will Follow by U2 is an anthem, then I Will Lead is the song I would have written." Such grandiose statements are typical from the man nicknamed Mac the Mouth, renowned for an unshakeable belief that his band, Echo & the Bunnymen, are none other than the best band in the world. Not of all time, just the best band in the world.
Their 1983 masterpiece, Ocean Rain, was actually marketed with the modest tagline, "This is the best album ever made". Years before the Gallagher brothers would trumpet themselves as the saviours of rock 'n' roll, Ian McCulloch was the undisputed master of overstatement.
To be fair, Ocean Rain still stands up as a remarkable album and I fondly recall being endlessly enchanted by a battered cassette copy in my youth. Its signature tune and lead single, The Killing Moon, memorably soundtracks the opening credits of Donnie Darko, and its gorgeous lilting melody is also used to mesmerising effect in Gia and Grosse Point Blank. Despite all the bluster, there is no denying the fact that at their best, Echo & the Bunnymen are a band apart.
Ian and his cohorts return to Oxegen 2008 after their appearance in 2005 and a Witnness slot in 2003. " I love being backstage at Oxegen, not because the dressing rooms are particularly great, but you get to meet everyone," he enthuses. "It's not full of poxy portacabins like other festivals, so it's a good place to mingle and it's dead relaxed. I'm not really a big eater on gig days, but I like the good old-fashioned food they serve up there with loads of roast potatoes."
Moving swiftly on before Ian turns festival-goers green with envy, there is the forthcoming matter of The Fountain, the band's imminent 11th studio album. "I'm not going to give the game away yet, but this one is very unusual," he teases. "If we manage to pull this off, it will be the first time anyone has done this sort of thing. Right now, we're thinking about early January. We want to focus on the Ocean Rain shows this year. Rather than sideline the new stuff, I'd rather go into the New Year with proper new shows."
The Bunnymen's most iconic album will be performed in its entirety with a full orchestra in the Royal Albert Hall, New York's Radio City and a hometown show in Liverpool. "I didn't want to do some fortnight of classic albums in the (Camden) Roundhouse," he says. "We wanted to bring it back to the Albert Hall because our manager spent a year convincing the powers that be in there that we should play there as all rock bands had been banned. That's something that is never remembered and it opened the floodgates for every other Tom, Dick and Harry to play there. We blazed a trail and we always wanted to do things differently. I know the records are there, but sometimes it p***es me off that we're not credited with things like that."
In addition to writing a solo album and a series of compositions for his daughter, Ian is currently completing his memoirs, which are due to be published next year. "They're not really memoirs, it's like a dream," he adds mysteriously. "It's a total mish mash. It's the way I think and talk. I try to capture the feeling of Ziggy Stardust coming out when I was 13. During that year, everything just sparkled. There are a lot of poignant moments in it and a lot of laugh-your-head-off bits as well. It won't be about what we've done as a group, but my life up to then and why I had to be in the best band in the world."
Ian is enjoying moonlighting as an author. "I find writing classic songs easy," he boasts. "Any time I write 10 songs, I know three of them will be classics and the other seven might be as well. Everyone says The Cutter is great, but it's not in the same class of The Killing Moon or Nothing Lasts Forever."
McCulloch was also mysteriously credited as an "associate producer" on the second Coldplay album, A Rush of Blood to the Head.
"That made me laugh!" he cackles. "Brian Eno just took over my role! I was amazed when I read that. I just came in and did a bit of Bowie dancing and a few impressions. Then I told them the songs weren't good enough, and just f***ed off or hung around in the bar. I'd basically just crack jokes and make them laugh.
"It was great that they recorded in Liverpool. I immediately got a sense that they were a band that was just meant to be together. I had to be in the best band in the world because that's why I was born. It wasn't because I needed to write music."
Mac the Mouth is on a roll. "People think being in the gig guide of the local paper means something," he continues. "For Coldplay, they'd already written Yellow when they started. From day one, they had a blueprint. Chris (Martin) would say, "Hey Mac, I think we've done our Ocean Rain." I'd say, "Give us a listen," and tell him it's nowhere close and that I never want him to darken my doorstep again. It was just funny hanging out. I was a Bowie impersonator and a gag-teller, not an associate producer."
For the record, Ian currently digs Glasvegas, MGMT and Nouvelle Vague, whom he will be recording with in Paris after Oxegen. It's time for Ian to pack his bags on the eve of three shows in Brazil, but he doesn't seem to be in any particular hurry to sign off.
"Can I end with a stereotypical cliché?" he asks. "Have you got any tips for the 7.45 in Redcar? I actually won on the National this year, but I forget the name of the horse." (I try to tell him that it was Comply Or Die and that I backed it too, but he doesn't seem to hear me.) "The names of the horse don't seem to be as nice or alluring anymore... Now, it's all -- "Thick as Pigs***" or "Hung Like a Donkey", rather than "Falling Haven". Anyways, buy us a pint at the festival, and I'll buy you two! Ta ra." n
- Eamon Sweeney
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