|
|
| The Enemy - Interviews
Updates now on: 15/07/09: The Enemy @ RockCorps Manchester The Enemy performed in front of 3,000 volunteers in Manchester on July 13, each of whom had given at least four hours of their time to help local communities . Tom Clarke spoke about the bands involvement with the charity gig for Orange RockCorp explaining why they liked the concept, "When we first heard of it, the whole gist of it, that you have to earn your way into the gig you can't just buy a ticket. It puts everyone on a completely level playing field, regardless of how easy it is for you normally to go too gigs or how hard it is for you to go too gigs. It puts everyone right back down at the bottom and says 'right, you've got to contribute to go there', I think that's a really good way of approaching it. It's a really worthwhile thing."
Tom remained true to his roots, whether performing at Wembley or Apollo saying, "It's an honour to be able to play to any audience, fact of the matter is - we are three normal lads from Cov, every time you step out on stage it's an honour to be able to do what you love doing."
The Enemy were truly the rock band of the night as this Female First review highlights, "After[N-Dubz] came the obligatory rock band - it was called Orange RockCorps after all - in the form of the hottest new rock band on the scene, The Enemy. I was quite shocked to see that many of the fans that were crammed into the Apollo knew a few of The Enemy’s songs, considering the line-up was mainly pop music and the band have only recently been getting loads of radio overage.
Acting very much like their new celeb best mates in Oasis, the Enemy has unrivalled stage presence, despite there only being three of them on stage."
The Enemy - one of the artists at Orange RockCorps, Manchester
24/06/09: XFM.COM - Tom Clarke "Liam Is A Proper Gent" The Enemy's frontman says all is well after Oasis feud... The Enemy's Tom Clarke has revealed that his well-publicised spat with Oasis is well and truly over after the band joined the Mancunian legends on tour. Last month, the singer was quoted as saying the Gallaghers were "past it", prompting Liam to call Clarke a "little fucker", but Tom has told Xfm it's all been smoothed over. Speaking to Xfm's Steve Harris, Tom explained that the current Oasis/Kasabian/Enemy tour featured "probably the best line-up that's ever existed." "Liam came up straight away," he explained. "As soon as I got there and got over my little illness, he made sure I knew the score. He's a proper gent and Noel is the most normal bloke in the world, who happens to have written some of the best songs ever." Tom also told Steve that being onstage while Oasis did their thing wasn't necessarily the best vantage point. "I've watched them from the side of the stage, but to be honest it's better watching them out the front. The fans have the best seats. You've got to be out there, steaming, singing the songs." Listen to the full XFM interview here: Play Steve Harris meets Tom Clarke Part 1 Play Steve Harris meets Tom Clarke Part 2 22/06/09: OASISTERIA.COM - Exclusive Interview With Tom Clarke Used by kind permission from the #1 Oasis fan website. 
Here at Oasisteria we were very excited when we heard we had the chance to interview Tom from The Enemy. The band are currently supporting Oasis on their stadium tour and with their second album “Music For The People” reaching number 2 in the UK charts back in May, our chief writer Scruff spoke to Tom about life on the road, touring with Oasis and the bands future plans. Oasisteria: Your recent album “Music For The People” has a much broader sound than the debut, is this natural progression or a deliberate attempt to change the sound? Tom: Both. There were things about the first album that we wanted to improve on, but there was a big natural growth that happened over the course of being on tour for years. It was a fairly easy record to make. Oasisteria: Who are the people in the albums title? Are we talking politically here or metaphorically? Tom: Neither. The “people” are the people who buy our music. They’re the only people that matter. The ones who come to the gigs, stand at the front and sing their hearts out. They mean as much to us as we do to them. Oasisteria: Your songs are inspirational to many; with other bands are currently doing the same thing as you. If there was a revolution in this country who’d be leading the charge? Tom: I honestly couldn’t give a shit. It’s a pointless question because there will be no revolution. It’s impossible to demonstrate in this country. You can’t even come home from a holiday without having your retina scanned so how the fuck is this said revolution going to take place? 
Oasisteria: The summer gigs are going to be massive, how are you looking forward to playing in front of Oasis fans? These are your kind of people surely? Tom: Oasis fans and Enemy fans are the same people. It is simply going to be the best tour ever. And don’t forget that Kasabian, the most underrated live band in the world are main support, and proper Manchester punk rockers Twisted Wheel who are fucking amazing are opening a lot of the shows. Oasisteria: If you’re offered the ultimate Oasis accolade of getting up on stage with the boys, what songs would you want to play? One Oasis song and one cover only please. Tom: Songbird. Genius song, wish I’d written it. And God save the queen with Liam on vocals. Oasisteria: How does it compare being the main act on your last tour instead of supporting other acts? Are there any bands that supported you which you can recommend? Tom: Twisted Wheel. Lowline. Both great Manc bands. And frankly loading the truck on an Oasis tour would be an honour. Oasisteria: What do Oasis mean to you and do they mean as much to you now as they did when you first got into them? Tom: They are, and always will be, the soundtrack to my generation. Simple as. Oasisteria: You must have been gutted when Liam took your recent comments the wrong way. Liam himself is no stranger to controversy so who would you like to tag team against on the current music scene? Tom: I have no interest in slagging bands off, it’s pointless and life’s too short. I was a bit gutted when I heard Liam had taken what I said the wrong way. He’s basically a geezer, came straight over when I got to Heaton Park and was dead sound. I’m still a massive fan. Oasisteria: Do you see your music as us vs. them in the class system grand scheme of things? Could an Eton going, fox hunting champagne swilling Tory get the same from your record as say a factory worker in Bolton or any other satellite town? We are all people after all? Tom: I make music about what I see in my life. There is no limit to who can enjoy music regardless of class, age or anything else. Oasisteria: The title 51st State has been used before as song title, but is it anymore relevant now? Is the UK more Americanized now that it was in the Reagan/Thatcher years? Tom: Of course. But 51st was a response to our first trip to the states when the elections were about to happen.  Oasisteria: You will be performing at a number of Summer Festivals this year including Ibiza Rocks, Somerset House and V Festival. How do these compare to your own gigs and do you find it harder to perform in front of people that may not be considered “die-hard” fans of The Enemy? Tom: I love playing to people who haven’t got a clue who we are. It’s a challenge and a chance to step up and prove what we’re about. Oasisteria: And not to stir the hornets nest, but fast forward ten years, Could The Enemy be as big as Oasis are now? Tom: Will there ever be a boy born who can swim faster than a Shark? Oasisteria: Finally, what are your plans after this summer? A well needed break? Will there be any more singles released from the album or any more gigs to be announced? Tom: I think we all deserve some quality time with Jeremy Kyle. Probably take at least a weekend off! Thanks to Tom and Morad Khokar at Warner Music for the oppurtunity 11/05/09: Clash Magazine Interview 
When Woody Guthrie thought to pen ‘This Land Is Your Land’ in 1940, he did so in response to a country in despair; it was heartening realism designed to encourage a nation to endure its debilitating recession. Nearly seventy years later, as every town and city up and down Britain witnesses the devastating effects of another financial downturn, The Enemy are uniting in the raised voices of defiance, offering encouragement and hope to everyone. ‘Music For The People’ might just make you feel alright… It’s clear when you listen to ‘Music For The People’, The Enemy’s second album, that never do they claim to have any answers. They are not prophets nor politicians. They pride themselves, however, on being the everyman. They are almost twenty-one-years-old, but grasp the triteness of life better than most double their age. They’ve grown up through the decaying of their hometown, Coventry, and can’t bear the assimilation of every other city like it. This is fused into their music, which rails against the daily grind that is forced upon so many, with the belief that it can shine a glimmer of hope into an otherwise tedious or difficult routine. It is sustenance for subsistence. When Clash travelled up to Birmingham, the Midlands metropolis that’s big brother to the neighbouring Coventry, The Enemy’s affinity with the local socially-minded populace was made crystal clear in not only their welcome on stage, but in the passion echoed from the audience that accompanies their considered tirades. “You wouldn’t be the only one / To be a slave to the modern wage”, the crowd sing back to ‘Away From Here’, relishing this Monday night escape. There’s genuine compassion to see the throng resonate with the chorus of ‘We’ll Live And Die In These Towns’. These and other songs from their million-selling debut (the similarly titled ‘We’ll Live And Die...’) have become a war cry to the masses. It’s with great surprise to Clash that although only a week after going to radio, new single ‘No Time For Tears’ has been equally embraced - it’s another chance drop the daily shackles: “We’re gonna get out the city, we’re gonna get out the way / We’re gonna cash in the kitty, we’re gonna get on a plane”. ‘Music For The People’ may surprise a few when it’s finally released. Its visions are as grand as its creators, its sound as dense as their principles. The Enemy have a lot to say, and they’re not afraid to say it. Clash sat with the trio - the forthright mouthpiece Tom Clarke (who does all the talking), baby-faced drummer Liam Watts and the timid yet towering bassist, Andy Hopkins - to find out how fame and success had changed the old friends, and how their convictions will continue to guide them...
- - -
The Enemy – ‘No Time For Tears’
- - -
Is the title of the album an assumption that people are expected to like the music within? No. It’s not a pretentious ‘Music For The People’. It’s not “This is music for the people, and here we are on a pedestal”. It’s not that at all. It’s quite a humble notion; we realised when we released the last record, all these songs that we’d written were really quite personal for us. When you release an album, it’s the handing over of songs, because they’re no longer yours. When you release that, you see people then singing them in the crowd and they’re singing them for their own reasons, and it means something totally different to them. I went to a Verve gig recently in Manchester. I realised I was stood there singing ‘Bittersweet (Symphony)’ for my own reasons, and the person next to me was singing it for some completely different reasons. It’s about that, really. It’s about how to people who buy the album, it becomes their music. Ultimately, every band is a band of the people, because you make music for people - apart from real introspective jazz stuff where they just make if for the sake of making it and for them and their own enjoyment. That’s cool, but all albums, that is what an album is. Every album, regardless of its title, is music for people that like music. Taken literally, it sounds more positive than your debut’s title. Are you trying to remain optimistic in bleak times? For a start, there are two points there. The first is that ‘We’ll Live And Die In These Towns’ depends on how you interpret that as well, because for us, we view that as a really proud statement. We might go off and travel the world, but we’ll come back to Coventry and we’ll probably die in Coventry. That’s how we viewed that. But I think that a lot of people misconstrued the first album, and I think that, yeah, it is important to tell people that we haven’t just got this pessimistic view of the UK. I think it’s something that I’ve tried to touch on recently, which is that... We talk a lot about industry collapsing, and the reason for that is quite simply that we come from a town that has relied on industry for decades and decades. The fact that the industries are going is quite sad, because you see a lot of people out of jobs at the moment and you see a lot of skilled workers not being able to put those skills to use, but the reality of that is that they will learn new skills and that it’s just the changing face of the UK. We used to be an industrial nation; we were at the heart of the industrial revolution, and I’ll always have a certain sympathy and a certain romance for that, because I just love anything slightly industrial. I love the way that bridges are made. I love cars - I absolutely love anything with an engine. So, personally, I can always relate to that, and I can see the sadness that the car workers in Coventry and all across the UK must feel when you stop being able to make these amazing things - you know, the massive ships in Scotland. But I think that whilst I’ve got that romantic notion, I’m well aware that it’s just the changing face of the UK and that, actually, already one third of those jobs have been replaced with jobs within the service industry, and that in years to come will provide a better quality of life for people - they won’t be working in factories, but will hopefully be in more comfortable service jobs. We’re just a changing nation, and people are afraid of change and they cling on to romantic notions, but you just have to go, ‘Yeah, you can feel romantic about it; you can feel passionate about industry and about what made Britain great throughout the Victorian era, but you’ve got to be just as willing to let Britain be great for other reasons and let it change and embrace the change.’ Do you think that the bigger you get, the more elevated your status, that you’ll lose that grass-roots reality and your viewpoints will change? I don’t think so. That’s something that I’m not concerned about now, but I was concerned about it at the start of all this. We’re gonna go out on tour, you see how it changes bands. People get a bit of money and they go on tour and they have people surrounding them telling them they’re great - it’s easy for lads to get egos and start disappearing up their own arse and believing their own hype. I said at the end of last year that the biggest achievement of The Enemy - fuck all the awards, it’s none of that, and it’s not one album or a platinum disc on the wall - it’s that, at the end of the day, when you come off tour and you go home for Christmas, you can sit down and you’ve still got your two best mates. We haven’t changed a bit. The first year of going out on tour is probably quite a traumatic time for most bands. If you can get through that - if you can get through that massive change of going from transit vans to tour buses to nice hotels - and not become an arsehole, then I think you’re alright. And then there’s the flood of temptations that come your way... Liam: It’s a test of how strong a character you have. Tom: It’s how well you know yourself and how well you know your mates. Liam: I don’t think we were gonna let two years of success change who we were for the first however many years of our lives. You all still live in Coventry? Well, I live just outside now; about four miles out of the city centre. Do your friends treat you the same? Yeah. I mean, I had a load of lads that I haven’t even seen in ages - I mean, in years; long before the band - who I went to school with before I moved from Birmingham to Coventry. I went and saw them - just literally went to a pub and saw them. Totally surprised them. You’ve just got to act the same. Everyone knows we’re sound lads and it’s not gonna change us. It gives you a wider perspective and it gives you a broader view of the world - when you go around the world you obviously meet a lot more people and it makes you a more worldly person - but at the same time, we’re of an age where we’re doing the whole growing up thing, so it’s an exciting time because you’ve got all this going on and you’re just discovering life and discovering the world at the same time. Is getting out and seeing the world what has inspired the breadth of this album? Yeah, totally. The first album was written within three months and I always said it was a snapshot of where we were at that time in our life; we were in jobs that we hated and we just wanted to get out of. We wanted to go and see places and see the world. The second album is the realisation of those ambitions. It was written over two years, so if the first one was a document, the second one is a much more detailed document, and because of that, in the music you get a lot more light and shade in it; the loud and fast songs are loud and fast, and the real quiet poignant moments are equally on the other end of the scale. When you do it over that period of time, you just get a lot more depth to the record. And we’ve been playing every night on tour with each other for the last two years, so you improve as musicians too. It’s a natural progression, really. There was no, ‘Let’s make a bigger, more worldly sounding album’, it was just we went in to the studio and played. That’s how I would describe it. Have you tried to put Coventry on the map? We said two or three years ago, when we very first started, we said we wanted to put Coventry on the map. Then there was an NME piece, one of our first ever pieces, and just above the piece was a map of England with Coventry pointed out and we just went, ‘Right, we’ve sorted.’ Andy: Bands come to Cov now a hell of a lot more. There’s a venue called The Casbah, and loads of bands come down, but before we started playing there, nothing really happened. Liam: And the Ricoh Stadium. The Chili Peppers played there and Bryan Adams. It’s drawing a few more people in. How do you balance being patriotic to the city but without appearing parochial? I’ll be honest; I thought exactly the same thing when we first wrote these songs. I thought that no one outside of the pub that we drank in would understand it, and I thought that no one outside our circle of friends and no one that didn’t work at Peugeot would get it, but then you do some gigs and people in Cov start going, ‘No, no, I get it’. I honestly then never thought that anyone outside of Cov would get it, and we went and did some gigs in Manchester and Liverpool and I was going, ‘They ain’t gonna get this. It’s about Coventry’. But you go round and people identify with it all over the world, because the situation that’s going on in Coventry - the change that’s so evidently occurring in Coventry, this changing face of Britain where the industries have taken a back seat and other jobs are being prominent - is going on throughout the country. You go and chat to people and they all see it. Coventry is a really typical city, so when you travel about the UK - you could be in Coventry or Hull or Leeds or anywhere - and it is so stereotypically British, and without being extraordinary - without being one scale or the other; it’s not really, really, really fucking grim, it’s just normal and average, which is probably why it relates to so many people when we sing about it. The same goes for us - we’re not extraordinary people. We weren’t brought up in the depths of poverty - I grew up in a three-bed semi in a normal street in a normal place, not spectacular, just a little three-bed semi. Because of that, we related to a lot of people because there’s a hell of a lot of people that have come from exactly the same place as us. What’s the worst mistake you could make? What would make you ashamed? I think I’d just be gutted if any of us started developing massive egos. We did a thing with a magazine recently when they wanted to put us behind a lectern for a photo shoot. That’s total bollocks; that’s when people start losing it. We’re not preaching to anyone. Why is what I’ve got to say more important than what anyone else has got to say? I’m just a normal person. And I’ll never accept us being pigeon-holed, because that’s fuckin’ awful when people back you into a corner and put you in a box and go, ‘That’s your band. That’s what you do’. I mean, the second album is gonna surprise a lot of people - it’s probably gonna piss a lot of people off, but equally there’s gonna be a lot more people that’s gonna love it. But I just don’t wanna ever be pigeonholed, and I don’t want any of us to develop egos and start thinking that we’re the be-all and end-all. We’re not; we’re three lads from a normal place. You’ve previously said that getting into politics was not something you were interested in, but would you want to follow Will Young’s example and go on Question Time to put a few opinions across? Not particularly, no. I did love the Jeremy Paxman / Dizzee Rascal interview though. It was quality. But I think that we’ve got a really, really satisfying job. We go out every night on stage, we play songs that we’ve written in a room about the size of this, and people go mad to ’em. You get to chat to people afterwards and have an amazing night and just enjoy talking to the people that have bought your record and come to your gig. It’s a really fulfilling job. Politicians, on the other hand, people view politicians as these evil people. They’ve got into politics because they wanna change the world, because they’ve seen it and gone, ‘I think we can make it a better place’. They’re not evil at all; they deserve a lot more credit than they get. They’re some of the best people going. I think when they get into the job they then find how difficult it is to actually change the world and just become totally delusional. Andy: Once they change something, it affects someone else in a completely different way. Tom: Basically, as much as politics interests me, and as much as I enjoy watching what goes on with it, I would never, ever wanna dabble in it, because it just seems like one of the most unfulfilling places to be. How many fifteen-year-olds are gonna go to a political party conference? Not a fraction of who’s coming to the gig tonight. Being on stage is a much more effective platform. Yeah, definitely, but I’m not naive enough to think that musicians change the world. We’ve been through various different musical phases - punk and the whole hippie revolution in the Sixties - they all thought that they could change the world and they can’t, but what you do get is a movement, and when you’ve got a movement it becomes significant. It might not change things overnight, but it will affect the direction of society. You talked about the intended difference for the second album. What did you want it to be? How did you want to change it sonically? The first album’s got its place and I love it to bits, and now we’ve made the second I love it even more, but I think that we always knew that we were bigger live than we were on record, and we wanted something really that sounded like we do live, or as close to. We didn’t really know how that was achieved, and I didn’t know what the reason was, why the first album didn’t sound as big. I got talking to Mike Crossey, who’s made the majority of the album. He’s really, really passionate about old school recording techniques - using mic techniques that haven’t been used for ages, and using tape as well, specifically - and I really wanted to do as much live, rather than fuss over correcting minor mistakes. I love mistakes in songs on albums. My favourite bit of [The Who’s] ‘Won’t Get Fooled Again’ is there’s a little slip-up on the organ right in the middle where it breaks down - it’s the best bit of the song; I wait for it! I just wanted something that was a better representation of a live sound, but also a more honest representation of what a band sounds like. There’s hardly any bands on the radio anymore - there’s hardly any bands in the charts - and people need to be reminded what bands are about and what great music has always been. Liam: And what a guitar sounds like! Does being a trio limit your creative parameters, or does it give you room to experiment? I think it enhances it. I’ve had to devise ways of writing guitar parts where I can keep a rhythm part going and do a little lead bit. If we had two guitars it’d be a piece of piss, cos you’d go, ‘Okay, you play the chords and I’ll play the lead’, and you’d sound like every other band going. I think when you get a good three-piece, it’s the perfect good combination. We’ve now got somebody who plays keys on some of the tracks that have got strings on it. When we were doing the first album, I played violin. There were certain bits where we were like, ‘Right, it needs strings’, so I put ’em on. Somebody plays those bits now, and we’ve got Emma who sings on ‘No Time For Tears’. I don’t think that you should allow being a three-piece to limit you, and if you need to bring another musician in for a certain bit, then yeah, do it, but I think it’s a good basis to have because it enhances your creativity and it makes you play notes you wouldn’t. There are some nice atmospherics and sounds on the album - for example, the backwards sound of the snare in ‘No Time For Tears’. Where did the ideas for these finer details come from? ‘No Time For Tears’, I think, is a production masterpiece. Matt Terry is a local producer - well, I’m not gonna call him a local producer because he’s not - he’s local to us, he lives near us, but he’s one of the best fuckin’ producers in the UK at the minute and no one knows. He did our first ever demo, ‘40 Days And 40 Nights’, so he’s pretty much responsible for us being signed in the first place. We went back to him and went, ‘Right, we’ve got this monster of a track. We don’t know what the fuck we’re gonna do with it, but we want you to work on it and see. Basically, we waited around all day - he’s got a studio in a barn; it’s a little brick building within this massive steel agricultural barn - we waited until everyone had gone home from work in the offices around, put the drums in the barn, and Liam did two takes of ‘No Time For Tears’ and we just left. We said, ‘Do what you want with it.’ He rang me up really excited a couple of weeks later going, ‘It sounds fuckin’ amazing. I’ve done all sorts of weird reverse delays and stuff on it. It sounds great.’ He played me a bit down the phone and I couldn’t hear anything, and then we went in and just went, ‘Fuckin’ hell, this is amazing!’ Then we pretty much gave him free reign. We finished the track in probably a day - we started it, left it for weeks, then came back to it and it was pretty much done within a day. There were references made to other bands that you sounded like with the first album, and this album has got some cheeky nods to other songs’ melodies. Does people pointing these out detract from the song itself? Right, I always view it exactly as you’ve just described it, as a “nod”, because whilst I can listen to those songs and go, ‘Right, there’s a bit of The Clash in there’, and you can and whoever else, if you go to the gig tonight, the whole front three rows are of an age where actually they’ve probably never listened to The Clash. I watched The Sex Pistols play at the Isle Of Wight and just thought, ‘Most of these people have never listened to The Sex Pistols’. They’ll buy that record because it’s The Enemy and they like The Enemy, and they’ll go home and they’ll put it on and their mum will go, ‘That’s The Clash, isn’t it?’ And they’ll go, ‘Who’s The Clash?’ I did it with Oasis. Listening to ‘Definitely Maybe’, my mum went, ‘It’s just T. Rex isn’t it?’ And I’m going, ‘Who’s T. Rex then?’ Then I put T. Rex on and I went, ‘Yeah, this is alright’. You discover so many bands through little nods like that. So, is it an unconscious nod? Yeah, I think so. In places it’s a conscious nod though, definitely. In places, I want people to be reminded of that and I want people that haven’t heard it to go and listen to it. Is it hard to sustain originality as a rock band? No. You just have to be clever about it, because there are only so many notes and there are only so many chords. People have been writing songs for decades upon decades upon decades, you’ve just got to find clever ways to write songs so that they are original. They can be done. I think the reason ‘Away From Here’ was so massive when it was released was because it sounded like nothing else, but it’s such an obvious melody - it’s two notes. You’ve just got to be clever. What’s your relationship like with the press, is it alright? In general, yeah. I never get wound up by it, but there is stuff out there. There’s definitely times when people take segments of quotes and then purposefully blow them out of all proportion to sell magazines. I don’t really care - that’s their business. At the end of the day, I think that the British press is actually some of the best in the world - we’re very lucky to have it - and I really haven’t got a problem with them. Certain magazines need to focus a little more on the music, but for young people who just can’t buy magazines, we’ve got some of the most informative press in the world. How have your musical tastes changed over the last few years? Massively, actually. But the thing is, what people don’t realise is...I think people have ideas of what we listen to, and actually me and Liam have sat around his for hours listening to Frank Zappa and Genesis and Bill Bruford, Brand X, Earthworks UK... That to most people is just a list of random words - we’re into bizarre stuff - but equally, if I show you my iTunes, I’ve got The Sex Pistols on there, I’ve got Mozart on there - I’ve got the whole of Mozart’s ‘Requiem’ on there - I’ve got Ralph Vaughan Williams... I just love every type of music. I can appreciate every type of music from the most over-produced Eighties stuff to The Velvet Underground. I think that in recent years of being on tour, because you meet so many people, they put you on to new stuff. Like, even now, last year I discovered ‘Dark Side Of The Moon’. I mean, I’d heard it before, but I properly discovered it and just went, ‘This is the best album ever.’ It’s probably my favourite album now. Who’s your benchmark for songwriting? I think David Bowie is probably one of my songwriting heroes. Most people write songs and I can listen to ’em and work out from hearing it what they’re playing and just sit down at the piano and play it. David Bowie is just fuckin’ incredible. I have to take quite a bit of time to work out where the fuck he’s going with it, because he just doesn’t play by the rules and I really like it. David Johansen talked elsewhere in this issue about his pride of influencing other musicians is greater than his regret of never achieving huge success in the ’70s. Which do you think is more important, influence or success? I think it changes from person to person, but I don’t know. I mean, I think it’s key to just hold a tight balance between it, because you’ll always be able to make music, even if you’ve just got a shit guitar - that’s how we fuckin’ started. We had to save up the money to be able to rehearse each week. But being successful is nice as well! (Laughs) It’s nice walking out on to a stage in sold-out venues - that’s a massive buzz. I think if you’re in it for the money, you’re in it for the wrong reasons. If this album flopped, what would your next move be? Just write another one. That wouldn’t be a choice or a decision, it would just be that throughout my life I’ve written music as a form to express myself, and I couldn’t stop. You wouldn’t consider any other options? You wouldn’t go work in a bank? Well, I dunno. You might have to. I worked in a Co-Op when I was writing songs, and I did it because you have to eat. Yeah, I probably would end up working in a bank, you know, but the fact of the matter is that there’s people who work in normal jobs every day that are potentially the greatest song writers in the world - it’s just a lucky break, isn’t it; that’s all you need. What do you hope The Enemy’s lasting legacy is going to be? I don’t really care, to be honest with you. It’s not about leaving our mark or anything like that, we just keep writing songs because that’s what we know how to do, that’s all we’re really good at. I remember a conversation with Liam going, ‘Well, we’re not fuckin’ good at anything else, so we may as well write songs.’ There’s no master plan, really. It’s just write songs and as long as people like ’em... Like I said right at the start, I never thought anyone outside our local pub would appreciate it, so as long as people are appreciating it, that’s great. What’s the best thing a fan has said to you? It was when we released ‘It’s Not OK’ on 7” vinyl and it got played on radio. Someone I know said to me that it had made them re-evaluate their life and they’d jacked their job in and changed their job. People always ask you, ‘When did you first know you’d made it?’ and THAT was the point. It’s one person’s life, but you’ve changed someone’s life - you’ve made them re-evaluate everything, and that’s priceless and amazing. Even if you only do it once with one person, you’ve made it. Do you think public opinion could sway the direction of The Enemy? Ultimately, every band has got a debt to your fans. They put a roof over your head, at the end of the day. If there was a massive revolt - I don’t think there will be - and every single person hated something that we did - if we went off our heads and made a jazz album and everyone went, ‘We fuckin’ hate it’, we’d probably go, ‘Okay, we’ve done it now. We got it out our system. Sorry everyone!’ then write music that they’d like. Again, it’s a balance between what you want to do and what people want to hear; there’s got to be compromise on both sides. You’re going to be supporting Oasis over the summer. Buzzing? Oh yeah. Have you played with them before? No. I’ve never even seen them live before! Liam: We met Noel briefly two years ago. I said, “Alright, I’m Liam”, and I think he thought I said ‘Leon’, and he said, “Oh, you’re my name backwards”, and I thought, ‘No I’m not’. Looking forward to the gigs? Yeah, totally. Kasabian, as well, are one of the greatest live bands in the world. Are support slots intimidating? No, I love ’em. It makes you raise your game. But also, when you get a crowd that’s not your crowd, it’s fuckin’ brilliant watching - literally within minutes - changing people’s opinion about your band. Your own stadium gigs are coming up later this year. Is that what you had in mind with this album - writing something that could fill the space sonically? Not really. We could be doing stadium gigs this tour. The fact of the matter is I love these venues. This venue is like fuckin’ home. We wanted to do another one of these tours. If you look at the number of gigs that we’re doing this tour over the time that we’re doing it, we could easily have done stadiums. But it’s not intimidating at all - we’ve done it with the Stereophonics, we’ve done it with The Rolling Stones; we can fill stadiums anyway, we know that. It’s stupid though, because you end up making an album that’s not natural. This album’s been really organically created - it’s just two years on the road and what happens on the road, and you write songs. What gig that you’ve been to has made the biggest impact? I hardly go to gigs. I don’t enjoy going to gigs, because I just feel like I’m on the wrong side. But I really love little gigs. There’s a band called Exit Calm that a lot of people won’t have heard of yet, but it sounds really like early Verve, like ‘A Northern Soul’ and ‘A Storm In Heaven’. I saw them in a little pub in Rugby - I’d just come off a big tour, and going back and watching a really little gig and the intensity of it was amazing. Tonight is almost a homecoming gig. Does that mean there’s more pressure or less on the performance? A bit of both. More adrenaline, but probably less pressure. [Phone beeps] And that as well, which is just people texting you going, ‘Can I get a guestlist?’ So, what are your hopes for the album? A positive response is what I’m after. I honestly couldn’t give a shit about chart positions - that’s not our territory, that’s Simon Cowell’s territory. And the fact that we fuckin’ smashed the arse out of it on the first album was quality. Even if I don’t like the band, I love seeing bands doing well in the charts because it’s just two fingers up to the pop society. If we have any chart success then bonus, but all I really care about is that the fans like it and that it goes down well. And then on to the jazz album? Yeah, jazz album is number three. (Laughs) *Photo by Ellis Parrinder *This interview appears in the June issue of Clash Magazine, out now. Read all about the issue HERE
25/04/09: Andy And Liam Talk To MTV The Enemy have spoken to MTV News about their new album and much more- basking in the sun with presenter Laura backstage at the Camden Crawl in London.
Singer Tom could not attend the interview because of problems with his throat- which is currently being rested.
Speaking to us about Saturday's (25th) headliners at the same venue bassist Andy said they are big fans.
“We saw Kasabian in Japan when we were doing Summersonic festival last year and they were absolutely brilliant (live). We’ve hung out with them a few times.” he explained.
The Enemy and Kasabian will support Oasis this summer at Wembley Stadium and drummer Liam told us the group are excited.
He said: “If we could choose a dream line up for any gig- then would be it. Us, Kasabian and Oasis.”
Speaking about their new album Andy said: “We are just really proud of it. We played quite a few songs on the tour and people are into it- especially our new single No Time For Tears.”
Despite never playing the festival before Liam said the boys would be getting into the spirit. He said: “We’ve never been to the Camden Crawl but we might be going to the Marathon bar for kebab later.”
23/04/09: XFM.COM - The Enemy Talk To XFM About New Album The Enemy headed back to XFM radio for an interview with John Kennedy who talked to Tom, Liam and Andy on their second album, ‘Music For The People’. Hear their track-by-track interview now.
The Enemy’s debut created waves on the scale of a tsunami. It was so vital, fresh and exciting we even awarded it our very first XFM ‘New Music Award’. The big question, we thought, was how you follow it up.
The answer, however, was very, very simple. You come back with a bigger, bolder and better record that not just puts their debut in the shade, but pretty much everything else we’ve heard since. John Kennedy was suitably enthused by it and pulled the band in for an in-depth track-by-track interview.
You can listen to the full fifty minute XFM interview again right here:
Part 2: ‘Elephant Song’ and ‘No Time For Tears’ open the album. Tom, Liam and Andy talk about these block-busting tracks. [Hear The Full Answer Now]
Part 3: ‘51st State’ sees the band revert to Clash-influenced territory and ‘Sing When You’re In Love’ is an old favourite re-visited. [Hear The Full Answer Now]
Part 4: A string-laden ‘Last Goodbye’ and the national identity-baiting ‘Nation Of Checkout Girls’ gets discussed. [Hear The Full Answer Now]
The Sun Review by Jacqui Swift : THE ENEMY - Music For The People 4/5
A LITTLE man with a lot to say, Tom Clarke has never shied away from telling it straight.
When Coventry trio The Enemy emerged in 2007 with We’ll Live And Die In These Towns, their vociferous tales of small-town frustration, earning the minimum wage and football hooligans selling tellies struck a chord with the masses of disaffected youth.
Tom’s lyrics lashed out in a way that Paul Weller’s had in The Jam three decades earlier.
With bags of self-belief and a cocksure swagger, when SFTW first met the frontman — then a no nonsense, opinionated 19-year-old — he told us: “There’s no point being in a band unless you think you’re the best in the world.”
His big mouth proved justified in July 2007, when their debut album went straight to No1, selling 450,000 copies and helping them scoop various best new band and album of the year awards.
Sombre in his mood and serious in his delivery, today Tom tells me: “In some ways we were too early. A lot of the stuff we were singing about is what people can relate to more now with the recession. In towns like Coventry, people understood those frustrations, but there were still a lot of people elsewhere who didn’t.”
Two years on, and set to release follow-up Music For The People, have things changed for Tom in light of their success?
Well, the first noticeable thing when we meet is that he is accompanied by one Jerome, his very own burly bodyguard.
 But before I ask if Tom has gone all rock star, he says he isn’t there because he is needed, just for insurance reasons.
Sitting down in the bar of one of Southampton’s newest hotels, Tom, still looking like he’ll need ID to buy a drink, tells me another thing that definitely hasn’t changed is his friendship with his band mates.
He says: “The biggest achievement is me, Liam and Andy can sit down and still have a pint with each other. We’re still mates. No one’s got an ego.”
With success came respect for the band who, just 18 months earlier, had been in dead-end jobs; Tom and bassist Andy Hopkins selling TV sets while drummer Liam Watts temped in an office.
Says Tom: “At the beginning people wanted to pigeonhole us as lad rock. But we knew where we were going musically and didn’t accept that. When We’ll Live And Die In These Towns came out, people realised there was more to us than just three-chord thrash.
“I never expected the album to go to No1. We were absolutely euphoric when it happened and on top of the world. It was at that point we felt like we’d broken into Simon Cowell’s back garden and p****d in his fountain. It felt like we shouldn’t be there.
“With the first album we literally went from touring in a Fiesta to, suddenly, people turning up offering us designer clothes for free.
“I can see where bands go wrong. They start getting driven about and it goes to their head. We had to stop people and say — ‘Look, I can open a f****** door’.”
There have been moments of indulgence — buying his own flat as well as a classic E-Type Jaguar — purchases Tom defends with his own matter-of-fact logic.
“Well, everyone leaves home at my age anyway and I haven’t lost the plot with the car.
“It was far, far too much money for a car, but it wasn’t to be flash. I bought it because in 1972 my grandad used to work in Jaguar’s Browns Lane plant. I wanted a car he’d worked on. He’s dead now but every time I look at that car I think of him, that his hands have touched that car. And that’s something very special to me.”
Like their first album, Music For The People provides a snapshot of the band’s surroundings. But this time they’ve been inspired by travelling to far-off countries such as Japan, America and across Europe.
Tom says: “Success meant we got to tour the world and if we hadn’t had the opportunity to do that, the second album wouldn’t be what it is. Music For The People is the same lads, two years older, but just a bit more worldly.
“It’s still a document of our lives but made over a much longer period of time.”
Opening track Elephant Song, a triumphant, Led Zep-style howler, is named after the symbol of Coventry and was inspired by the band’s first trip to Japan. Tom says: “It’s about being on a plane for 12 hours and landing in Tokyo and it seeming like another planet.
“It’s an amazing place, it’s like Mars.”
First single No Time For Tears was written after Tom was in a fight with a Coventry bouncer.
Explains Tom: “He didn’t like the jacket I was wearing. It was a brand new Harrington.
“I was totally sober. I was left with bruised ribs but after dealing with a d***head bouncer I then had to deal with a d***head copper too.
“He attended yet never helped me a bit. So I went home absolutely furious and wrote that song to vent my anger.”
In the anthemic psychedelic piano finale Silver Spoon, Tom unleashes an attack on people in the music industry who have fame handed to them on a plate.
“Some people think there’s a fast track to fame. But forget X Factor and that route, you don’t need a golden ticket, you can do it on your own through hard work.” Nation Of Checkout Girls, inspired by the Jeremy Paxman book The English: A Portrait Of A People, is a pro-English song.
Tom says: “I think too often people whinge about how s*** England is, when it’s not. England is one of the best countries in the world with one of the most advanced societies. We’ve got a National Health Service, which the rest of the world is envious of. I’m massively proud of our country.

The Enemy ... Music For The People
“The song is looking at the changing face of the UK. People fear it.
“Like America, we now need a return to democracy. We just have two political parties which are exactly the same. And that’s why young people don’t vote.”
But despite these rants and song subject matter, Tom insists The Enemy are not a political band.
“No we’re not political because we can’t change anything. The amount of times I’ve seen me labelled ‘voice of a generation’ and it’s boll***s.
“We don’t have the answer, we’re just highlighting the problems. The reason this band has got to where it has is because we’re not spectacular.
“We’re normal lads, with normal backgrounds and people relate to us.
Musicians have been trying to change the world since music began and it doesn’t work. It’s down to those politicians who are genuinely good people and who want to change the world for the better.”
Music For The People — the title signifies handing over songs to the fans — is a natural musical progression for the band, who have become better musicians.
And Tom says they are looking ahead to a year of high points — in particular touring with Kasabian and Oasis in the summer.
He says: “I remember playing with the Stones, the band that got me into music, thinking this is what life’s all about. It will be the same with Kasabian and Oasis.
“This is the best job in the world. People in bands forget how lucky they are. I hate hearing bands who moan.
“I will never forget how much I dreamed of touring the world. You must never forget where you started.”
Music For The People is out on April 27. *Source: The Sun  Interview by Les Reid THE ENEMY are back with a new mature sound and worldly experience. In an exclusive interview, Coventry’s biggest and best band for a generation talk about music, the recession, politics and their families.
THE ENEMY frontman Tom Clarke this week drove his 1972 E-type Jag up to Jaguar’s Browns Lane plant - returning the glorious machine to its birthplace where his grandad Fred had worked on it.
It led to both narrow and broad reflections on families and the state of the world which have made this always impressive and thoughtful 21-year-old one of the most quotable figures in music.
Since the three unlikely striplings exploded into the nation’s consciousness two years ago with the number 1 album We’ll Live And Die In These Towns - with songs exploring both the mundanity and celebration of ordinary lives - the singer and guitarist has demonstrated a canny refusal to be pigeon-holed into being an overtly political voice or the spokesperson for a generation.
Yet his reflections on jobs, governments, the economy and humanity continue on the long-awaited second album, Music For The People, out on April 27, the first single from which was released this week – No Time For Tears.
Those reflections remain grounded in personal experiences, those of his family and friends back home, and his deep sense of community.
But they are also now infused with a broader perspective, partly inspired by worldwide touring which recently took them to America in the run-up to Barrack Obama’s historic election victory.
As Tom, drummer Liam Watts and bassist Andy Hopkins belted out the new single at Coventry’s HMV store on Wednesday – accompanied by keyboard and female backing singer – the musical progression was immediately apparent.
The new material is substantial. More mature and layered with more instrumentation, yet still direct and anthemic.
Lyrically, the first album’s protest against manufacturing decline, dead-end jobs and getting wasted on Saturday night is replaced with a greater acceptance of the changing economy.
One song – Nation of Checkout Girls – speaks of the dominance of the service sector and the uniformity of British high streets.
Be Somebody is a pastiche of post-punk/new wave band XTC’s 1979 hit Making Plans for Nigel.
Nigel’s stifling parents then wanted his future to be in British Steel. The Enemy’s Nigel now works in a department store. Yet it is not a criticism, more an accepting reflection on the changing face of Britain.
Which is where Tom’s trip to Browns Lane comes in, and tales of his grandad Fred O’Gara, father of Tom’s uncle Mick O’Gara, once a miners’ union rep at Keresley Colliery who is pictured with then miners’ leader Arthur Scargill in 1984 on the cover of the single You’re Not Alone.
Tom told the Telegraph: “I took the car up there on a day off. We drove it up there and parked it next to the plant, or what was the plant. It was quite weird. My grandad used to live in Sheldon.
"When it snowed at Browns Lane and the coach back to Sheldon didn’t turn up, he used to walk home in the snow from Browns Lane.
“He was just an amazing bloke. He passed away a few years ago now. My memories of him are as an old man looking after me as his grandson, cutting trees down with me and moaning about petrol.
"He used to do the piecework at Browns Lane. He did all the chrome. So I wanted a car I know he would have worked on, and it’s got Jaguar Coventry on the steering wheel so I know it’s one from there.
“I think the whole family throughout the 1980s and the difficult times were all deeply affected by them. I think it’s something that reverberated through the generations of the family.
"But at the same time I’m not an old industrial romantic. I like my old stuff, I love my old Jag, it’s a beautiful symbol of what Coventry can do when it puts its mind to it, that it produces a machine as amazing as that.
“But at the same time I’m also acutely aware that where jobs are lost in the manufacturing industry they’ll be replaced within the service industry. It’s important to put a balanced view out there, otherwise you end up really being quite negative about change.
“We can’t be this great manufacturing nation forever. There are other nations out there that will do it better than us, there are others that will do it cheaper than us. You’ve got to be open and say, ‘OK, what are we going to do then to look after our workers’?
"If we can’t compete with the manufacturing process, what areas of industry can we compete with?”
He said families and friends had been hit by the current recession. “It hits everyone. The whole thing of uncertainty in families throughout recessions and people being uncertain about their jobs – that’s the main thing, it’s the not knowing.
"Once a job’s gone, it’s traumatic but families pull together and they have done through some of the most difficult times in the 60s, the late 70s and 80s through to the miners.”
Andy and Liam say their families were less political. Liam, who has moved out of the Holbrooks family home to Coundon, says: “My mum and dad were very young when they had kids. They were a bit preoccupied with bringing me and my brother up. That shaped their lives before they were even 18.
“My dad played drums in loads of different Cov bands. There was always drum kits. I always remember mum and dad going off and me going to my nan’s while he played gigs.
"So it was something I inherited and my grandad was a drummer on my mum’s side, so there was a whole family tapping on things.”
Andy says: “My uncle played guitar and my dad played drums a bit. He took me to an ACDC concert and Status Quo. That’s how I got my musical influences.”
Tom says one of the most visible manifestations of the recession is one of his favourite haunts – the “curry mile” in Birmingham – which he says is now reduced to just one “old school” curry house.
He said media reports that The Enemy’s first album had forecasted the recession have been slightly exaggerated since, but he adds: “Coventry was hit a long time before anyone else. There are industries that will never recover that have now disappeared out of Coventry. Peugeot axed 3,000 jobs. It’s been visible for quite a few years which is what we were inadvertently writing about on the first album.
“I don’t think we are qualified enough to have predicted a recession. I think that world leading economists will tell you that any economy that rises and rises will crash.
"From the legacy years of Blair that was obviously his intention. To take the economy as high as it could go so that he could go out with a bang in the same way that Bush managed to do in the States and then leave everyone else to clean up after him.
“But its not our business. There are big issues that are the politicians’ responsibility to tackle rather than musicians. It does help with musicians talking about it, but ultimately we’re here to make music.”
The new album belts out lyrics including “Labour’s a joke” and “the morning after the revolution”.
But Tom believes in democracy. He says: “If you’re truly going to exist in a democratic society then people deserve choice. Politically at the moment people don’t really have a choice. We’ve got two main parties that are so close in the majority of their policies it doesn’t excite young people.
"When they don’t think they’ve got a clear choice, they won’t vote, and that’s when elections stop making sense.
“That’s the problem with British politics. And that’s why the reform in America is so important, because they were offered a clear-cut choice – we can go this way as a nation or go this way – and people got excited.
"We went over and toured America in the middle of all that pre-election excitement, and everyone you spoke to had a political opinion. More people turned up to vote than they had in years.”
The new album’s messages are essentially the same as the debut album says Tom, adding: “It’s probably less pop and more proper music.
"We just had these songs at the end of a two-year tour. We went into the studio and did what we do and it sounds that size because that’s the size the band has grown into over two years.
“The reason so many people relate to us is because we are actually just three typical lads.
"There’s nothing extraordinary about any of us or our backgrounds or our families. That’s why they relate to us. That and good music.
“I think the focus a lot of the time is shifted away from the fact that we made a great musical record, and it takes a backseat – probably because of my big mouth,” he jokes.
Source: Coventry Telegraph
16/04/09: BBC - The Enemy Newsbeat Interview
By Greg Cochrane Newsbeat music reporter.
The Coventry rockers come out fighting in the lead up to the release of their second album Music For The People.
When speaking to Newsbeat upstairs in a Brixton pub last November, The Enemy's Tom Clarke attempted to sum up his band's new expanded direction.
"Imagine cloning a woolly mammoth and an elephant," he began, "then gluing the two together."
It might have sounded ludicrous but, now the world has heard the first single No Time For Tears, it is also a hint at their lofty ambitions.
According to reports, and the band themselves, the remainder of the record - entitled Music For The People - is similarly "huge" sounding.
'Not ridiculous'
"It's not a big ridiculous, pretentious title like everyone thinks. It's quite a humble little thing," says Tom Clarke, sat backstage at Brighton's decadent Dome venue.
"When we release an album you're sort of giving the songs to people," he continues. "They become their property, they become their songs.
"And it's really just to signify that, the handing over of an album from a band to the people that buy it."
Despite the universal title the band refute any suggestion that they're representing the everyman after the success of their working class chronicling debut album We'll Live And Die In These Towns.
"I don't see that," says Clarke firmly. "I don't like that term 'band of the people' - I think the fact of the matter is, we're a band and we are people.
"The other one you get branded with is voice of a generation and we're not the voice of a generation at all. We're three typical lads that a lot of people can relate to because we're from really typical backgrounds.
"We're not the voice of a generation; I won't be up on a pedestal proclaiming to be the voice of a generation. I'm not interested in that."
The message is clear then. While they make music for the people, it's not solely designed to please the people.
"Most bands make music because they know it'll get played on Radio 1," says Clarke. "It's an easy pay cheque and we're not into that.
"I want to make music which pushes my musical boundaries and our fans' musical boundaries."
Studio sessions
Following a short break last summer the trio spent the majority of autumn 2008 recording in rural Wales at Monrow studios with producer Mike Crossey.
Whilst the plan was to capitalise on the buzz from their debut, the band didn't rush the sessions.
"We totally took our time," Clarke argues.
"It's really important to just not exploit your fans - you've got to look after them because at the end of the day they're the same as you and me.
"I used to queue up for Oasis albums when I was younger. You've got to remember, they're just people who love music."
Indeed, the Coventry band spend a lot of time with their fans. They played a low key club tour earlier this year and deliberately play parts of the UK not often visited ["Margate was mental" pipes in a tour manager].
While they'll argue they're not just producing chart-filling ladrock, they're not about to go tinkering too extensively with their winning formula either.
"I think most bands are bright enough to know - if you put out an indie record and you follow it up with a jazz record you're probably not going to have a career for very long.
"You can't sell your soul at any point, you've always got to make the music you want to make. People like to be acknowledged and not ignored."
"You need to remember the power of numbers - and the power of people," says Clarke concluding.
A solid mantra then, and one which Tom Clarke doesn't seem to be forgetting anytime soon.
Source: BBC Newsbeat
 The Enemy Interview - April 2009 by Jodie Humphries for Live Music Scene Thanks to the newly renamed 02 Academy, I was not only given the chance to review The Enemy live, but I was also given the opportunity to interview the band. A band that have gone from playing The Louisiana, to Academy 2, to headlining the 02 Academy. The Enemy, if you don’t know, are Tom Clarke (vocals/guitar), Liam Watts (drums), and Andy Hopkins (bass).
The interview was supposed to take place at the 02 Academy, but at the last moment the location was changed, and a mad panic assured as I desperately tried to find the new location, and not miss my opportunity to interview a band whose CD sits amongst my collection.
I arrived, only a few moments late to be greeted by Huw from Mission, who work with 02, and led me to meet the band, who were relaxing playing pool (or it could have been snooker – I was so nervous I didn’t notice). Settled in the next room with Tom, Liam and Andy, the interview started. This may be a charting band, but they’re just every day lads, doing what they enjoy, there was not a trace of arrogance that you may have expected to see with the band, which could have made the experience unbearable.
As they yawned away, the guys started by saying they were “Tired, as it was the last interview of the day.” I started by asking how the tour’s been going, to which Tom replied, “Really well, a lot better than we expected because no-one’s heard the second album yet, so it’s going out there and playing songs that people haven’t heard, but the reactions have been very good.” The night before they played Bristol, The Enemy had played Swindon Oasis, which Tom said was “A good venue. It’s like a big sports complex, but it was a brilliant gig.”
As we chatted about the venues, I mentioned that I’m going to see Kasabian in Swindon in June, to which Tom said, “We’ve played with them before, at Leeds Refectory where The Who did Live at Leeds. We did a tour in Japan, and ended up playing a massive baseball stadium with them. They’re one of the best live bands I’ve seen, absolutely amazing.” Those who have paid attention will know that The Enemy, along with Kasabian have been confirmed as support for Oasis later on this year, but I wanted to know what the guys ideal line-up would be. Without any hesitation, Tom replied, “Probably, The Enemy, Kasabian, and Oasis to be completely honest with you. We’ve said that for quite a few years, and obviously it’s happened, and it’s just an amazing line-up.”
The support acts for this particular tour, are Kid British, and Twisted Wheel, I was interested to know if The Enemy chose these bands as support themselves. Tom said, “Yeah we chose them. Kid British was a tip off from a mate. I think they’re a really good band, totally different from us, but I think that’s the point with support acts, you show your fans a different type of music Twisted Wheel are an absolutely great Manchester band, they just epitomize everything that’s great about Manchester music, and without it being post-Libertines bollocks, which is what it seems to be coming out of Manchester recently. There’s a few bands, liked Twisted Wheel and LowLine who are proper Manchester bands, it’s an honour to have them on tour with us.”
Every band member has a highlight of being in a band, for Tom, “The best thing, this bands biggest achievement in my view, is not number one records, or platinum discs, not half a million records or a Q award, it’s being able to go home at the end of the day and half a pint with your two best mates and know that no-one has really changed. We’re the same lads.” On the subject of Tom saying they’re the same lads, I wanted to know if their fans help keep them grounded, “Yeah definitely,” Tom said, “I think most of them know we’re normal lads, and you know, we have a laugh with them.” As The Enemy are a well known band, I asked if they can still walk down the street without getting approached. Tom said, “People know who you are, but that’s up to you if you think it’s a problem or not. We all make a point of making time for people, they’re the fans, they buy the records and put a roof over your head.” Liam said, “People are surprised to see you at times. If you need something from the shop, you have to go and buy it.”
It seems that fans are very important to The Enemy; they recognise that without them, they wouldn’t be anywhere. Some bands get fans that go to some extremes, so I asked what the most extreme reaction they’ve ever had from a fan was. “Somebody licked his face,” Andy said about Liam, to which Liam replied, “I don’t think that happened. I don’t think I’d let a fan lick my face.” This then led to Andy asking, “Did somebody ask to lick your face?” Realising that he might have imagined things, Andy quickly said, “There was a girl who dislocated her knee, as she walked up to us.” Tom added, “She proper hit the deck.” About fans, he said, “We just have a chat with most of our fans to be honest, if it’s after a gig; we have a drink with them. I think it’s massively important to respect the people who put a roof over your head. When we won the Q Award, we gave it away to a lad in the crowd, at a Manchester gig, because the band is their band, and the album is their album. I just think, there’s no sort of putting yourself on a pedestal. The minute you start believe your own hype, and your bigger and more important, the day starts to fall apart from my point of view. I’ve got a massive respect for our fans; they’re exactly the same as us. We always make the time to chat to then.”
Talking of albums, it’s a matter of weeks until, ‘Music for the People’, their new album is released (27th April). Tom said about the release, “Yeah it’s always an interesting time. The pre-orders are better than the last album so you know it’s looking like it’s in pretty good stead to do what the last album did. I think the interesting bit when you release an album, is that all the songs that we’ve written ourselves, suddenly become the fans’ songs. I really enjoy it.” As the last album, ‘We’ll Live and Die in These Towns’ did so well, I wondered if the band felt any pressure on them for this new album. Tom said, “I don’t think so at all really. We just wanted to make an album that we thought was better than the first one, and we’ve done that, we’re massively proud of it. I think it’s a great album, and really that’s more important than chart success.”
As the main focus of LMS is unsigned bands, I asked the band what advice they can offer unsigned bands. Tom said, “The best piece of advice I ever got was off a geezer called John Dawkins, which was simply ‘believe in yourselves, because if you don’t believe in yourselves, then no-one else will’. It’s still the best piece of advice I’ve ever been given, just know that you can do it. If you’re good, stay in the knowledge that you’re good. Don’t take any shit, and don’t change for anyone, be yourself.” While Liam said, “It’s not all about travelling to London and paying to play in a venue.” Andy said, “When you do get management, get someone that you trust, there’s no point just going with anyone. Don’t just go with anyone, you have to work them out first.” The final bit of advice was offered by Tom, who said, “I think more than anything, be very wary of record companies because a bad record company will prevent you from breaking. The best bit of advice is just to believe in yourself and no know that you’re good and stick with it.” As I’ve already said, I was nervous about interviewing The Enemy, not that I had any reason to be, so I wanted to know if they’ve had any moments when they’ve been star-struck, Tom said, “Not particularly, I don’t really do star-struck. I’m crap with famous people; I don’t know who anyone is. I knew who Paul Weller was when I met him. It’s impossible to get star-struck with Paul Weller because he’s the nicest bloke in the world, you meet him, and after two minutes you feel like you’ve known him forever. He’s just an absolutely lovely bloke – I can’t say enough nice things about him.” Andy said, “We met The Rolling Stones. We knew them from photo’s and everything, but it was like ‘Jesus’, we had out photo taken with them, but they had loads of security around them. You can’t really get close and have a conversation with them.” While Tom added, “It’s quite weird; I grew up listening to The Rolling Stones, because my Mum had an amazing vinyl collection. We met them just as we came off stage at the 02 and they were going on, it’s pretty bizarre, but I wouldn’t describe it as star-struck, just, ‘this is a bizarre moment in life’. They’re one of the few great bands who have stood the test of time, in the fact they’re still touring. I think they’re a good template for bands to look at today, in terms of what they’ve achieved. If you look at how bands rush albums out these days, with just a year between them, and then you look at The Stones, they’ve got an amazing back catalogue, and they’ve just played the long game, with is massively important. Bands nowadays just don’t realise that.” I asked if that’s where they’d like to be a few years down the line, to which Tom replied laughing, “I don’t think I want glittery shirts with sequins, I wouldn’t mind the income they’re getting.”
As a band in the public eye, The Enemy are going to get criticism at some point, there’s no escaping from it, so I asked them how they deal with it. Tom said, “I don’t really give a shit about it to be completely honest with you. I actually actively look for the bad reviews because I enjoy reading them. I think it keeps you on the ground and keeps you rooted, when you’ve got people blowing smoke up your arse twenty four hours a day.” One person, who has publicly criticised the band, is Alex Zane. On the subject of that, Tom said, “The whole thing with that, was he was a bit of a prat. We made him look like a prat, and he took it into the public domain and lost very ungracefully with him being forced to hand us XFM’s Best Band Award. I don’t know, I just don’t have enough time for that. It’s just insignificances that I could do without in daily life. There’s so much good stuff going on to focus on. Whatever – he started it,” he added on the end as the band laughed, showing that they didn’t take it to heart.
For those who don’t know, before being signed to Warner Music, The Enemy were signed to the legendary label, Stiff. I wanted to know how they felt about that at the time. Tom said, “It was just a massive honour to even be involved with them, they hadn’t put anything out for twenty years. The last thing they’d put out was ‘Irish Rover by The Pogues’. It was just a huge, huge honour to revive such a legendary label.” I then wanted to know if they check sites like Ebay for their first single released on Stiff, ’40 Days and 40 Nights’. Tom said, “The last one I saw – which is going back about a year and a half, went for about 65 quid, which is completely mental.” You’d think that in some ways the band would be chuffed, but they’re so loyal to their fans, that Liam said, “I don’t like to see people getting ripped off. If it was genuinely collectable, then that’s sound, but I remember seeing a pair of drum sticks we’d signed with a reserve of a 100 quid. Luckily it didn’t go, because a pair of drum sticks isn’t worth a 100 quid. If someone actually wants something signed, just come down to the gig and we’ll give it to you, rather than actually paying that kind of money. If you give something to someone at a gig, you give it to them in good faith.” And Tom said, “I don’t like the idea of people paying over the odds for music. But I think a lot of that is Stiff collectors who want the last few Stiff Vinyl’s.”
Staying with buying music, I asked the band what the last CDs they bought were. Andy said, “I bought one today – The Cure.” Andy was the only one of the band who had escaped during the day and had managed to find Fopp! Tom said, “The last one I bought was, ‘The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust’ (David Bowie), actually I didn’t buy it, Ollie, our sound guy got if for me on vinyl. It’s one of my favourite albums, and I didn’t have it on vinyl, so he got it for me. Classic album.” While Liam said, “I can’t even remember,” when Tom asked him for me, but then Tom wanted to know if it was Spice Girls greatest hits, to which Liam never did actually reply, so you never know. Following up that question, I asked what the first CDs they ever bought was. Tom said, “Mine was Greatest Hits of Queen, the first compact disc I ever purchased.” Liam said, “I don’t ever remember things like that.” And Andy said, “I always used to buy compilations, cos I didn’t see the point of buying albums. All the Now CDs was probably my first.” When Andy said this, Tom said, “My first experience of music was completely different, I used to wait until my Mum and Dad went out, then I used to go through their vinyl collection and put vinyls on. I’m a big fan of actual albums you know, listening to an A side of an album, then having that 30 seconds when you turn over the album, then have the B side. When I’m at home, I only listen to things on vinyl, I just think all my best albums are best listened to like that, like ‘Hotel California’ (Eagles), ‘Abbey Road’ (Beatles), and ‘Dark Side of the Moon’ (Pink Floyd). If you take tracks off them, they’re good, but they’re better if you listen to them as a full album. I think people should make the space, it sounds so much better on vinyl.”
Moving back to the tour, I asked if there have been any times on stage where it’s all gone wrong. Andy said, “We’ve had the sound go when we were supporting The Paddingtons.” While Tom filled in the story by saying, “About three years ago we had a power cut – it was alright though, we just did a drum solo and got the whole audience clapping. I think it was for about 8 minutes.” Andy added, “That’s a long time just stood there not knowing what’s happening.” Other than that it seems to have gone well on stage for The Enemy, as Tom said, “I think in the last 3 years, I’ve only broken three strings on stage. We’ve never really had anything go tits up.” Every band has a highlight when they’re on tour, for Tom, “It’s meeting new people and being in different places all the time and having the opportunity to meet really interesting people where ever you go. It’s a massive buzz.” While Andy said, “Being on stage is amazing.” When going out and performing in front of hundreds, even thousands of people, I wanted to know if the band gets nervous. Tom said, “Never really done nerves.” While Andy said, “The only time I’ve ever been nervous, is when I used to work in House of Fraser and I’d got into this band, I knew we were good, so I went round telling everyone to come down to Cox’s Yard, it’s this place in Stratford that holds about 200 people, so I rounded up about 30 people saying ‘we’re pretty good, come and listen’. I really bigged us up, then I got there and was like ‘shit’, when they were going ‘come on then’ I was dead nervous, but the gig went well and they loved it, so it was alright in the end.”
Again, every band has a favourite venue, Tom said his, “Used to be The Astoria in London, but that’s sadly been knocked down now, I think its one of the best venues in the UK, and it’s unfortunate it’s gone. I think they’re turning it into a shopping centre, which is exactly what central London needs, more shops. It’s a massive shame. And Birmingham Academy is always a brilliant place to play, but I think they’re looking at moving that.” To which Liam added, “They’re stupid if they do.”
The tour is a huge one, with the band playing in many towns that at times are forgotten. Many people in Bristol have found lately that their favourite bands seem to be missing the Bristol area completely. On the subject of bands’ missing towns out, Tom said, “A lot of bands do miss Bristol, and a lot don’t go to Swindon, and a lot of places we’re going to on this tour, which is why we’ve chosen specific places. I think it’s really important to play everywhere. People go and play Liverpool, Manchester and Newcastle, which is fine, but there are actually people in other towns who love buying music and going to gigs.” While Andy chipped in, “We did Oban.” Which Tom explained, “Yeah this tiny little village in Scotland, where there had only been like two gigs. I think it’s really important to go to these places, because you normally find that you get a better reaction when you go there.”
Finally asking if all the dates on the huge tour they’re doing is sold out, Tom said, “I think most of them by the night have sold out. The few that haven’t usually sell out on the door, but I think it’s actually nicer when it doesn’t sell out, cos people who turn up on the night when it’s sold out, will buy from touts.” To which Andy adds, “So many people in Birmingham by from touts. It’s ridiculous.” Once The Enemy have finished their extensive tour of the UK, they’re off to 5 Irish dates, and 5 European dates.
To finish the interview, the final words go to Tom, “A massive thanks to everyone who’s come on this tour so far and made it what they have. It’s been an absolutely amazing tour, which is down to the fans, so thanks again to them.”
*Source: Live Music Scene
Here is an interview with Tom Clarke from the Irish Independent ahead of the tour over there:
Was there any pressure to follow up a number-one selling debut album? We wanted to do something that pushed the boundaries a bit but still delivered what The Enemy fans want. I think the charts at the moment aren't a rock band's domain and it's not really our territory, so I couldn't believe it when we went to number one and I still can't. The charts belong to Simon Cowell, so for any band to make it is a massive achievement. And wherever this one goes I'll be happy that we've made a great album. On your new album Music For The People you've got a track called No Time For Tears that deals with personal resilience during the current economic crisis. Why do you think such contemporary subjects aren't being broached by most songwriters?
I don't understand why, I really don't get it. We're living in such poignant times and are knee-deep in recession, yet a lot of people don't seem to notice. If this was 10 or 20 years ago, there would be songwriters queuing up around the block to write songs. People are somehow carrying on regardless. There are bands that go for the more escapist route, which can still be relevant and I do like MGMT and The Klaxons. But, in terms of people who know what's going on and are not afraid to talk about it, you've pretty much got The Enemy and Reverend and The Makers. That's it.
You sing, play guitar, piano and sing. Did you always want to be a multi-instrumentalist? I was totally frigid as an early musician. I used to look at other people playing musical instruments and wanted to do what they were doing. I remember seeing violins on TV when I was about three. Playing piano comes from my grandparents after my grandad bought a piano instead of a carpet. They had saved up money especially to buy a carpet, but he knew she'd really love a piano. I found that the piano also gets you birds when you're in school, so that was handy. But when I got to mid-secondary school, suddenly violins and pianos weren't particularly cool anymore, so I took up a guitar. I didn't start singing until I met Liam (drums) because there wasn't any need to and I certainly never rated myself as a singer.
Did you really only form in 2006?
It's been quite a prolific few years.
We formed in late 2006, so it's no time at all really. We never really stopped and we carried on writing. Luckily, we found out that writing on tour was the best place. It's been the most exciting couple of years of our lives and we travel to places we never even imagined, so it's easy to get inspired. I wrote a tune after a show in Glasgow the other night, because I'd just bought a new guitar that day. We never really stop. I'm not particularly good at getting frustrations and emotions out, so it seems to come out in songs. I was always really crap at sports, so at an early age I was aware that music was my outlet. XFM DJ Alex Zane claimed he was banning playing The Enemy on his breakfast radio show. What happened?
He took the piss out of me, so I took the piss out of him, and did quite a lot better I think. He used to present Popworld, which used to regularly mock good bands. We went to play on the show in goodwill and it was just the most stupid interview ever by a complete rank amateur. We pulled it and he slagged us off for pulling it. When someone is absolutely shit at their job, you don't want it to go out. Then he decided not to play our records on his radio show.
So, keep your friends close and The Enemy closer?
Absolutely. XFM were quoted as calling him childish. They also forced him to present the XFM Best New Music award to us, which was a sweet and funny moment.
29/03/09: thisiswiltshire.co.uk - Interview With Liam Watts
By Flicky Harrison » Chart topping band The Enemy will be leaping from The Oasis in Swindon to a tour with Brit pop band Oasis in June. The rock band who shot into the charts with such singles as Had Enough, You’re Not Alone and Away From Here, are touring the UK to promote their new album, For The People. Drummer Liam Watts said: “It is an evolution from our first album. It tells of what we have done and all the experiences and emotions that we have been through in the past two years, and how the state of the world effects us, our friends and families.” Many youngsters follow in their father’s footsteps when it comes to a career choice and Liam was no different. His father was a drummer and his grandfather was a drummer, so bashing hell out of a saucepan lid was second nature right from the word go. “I picked it up quickly and there was always a drum kit in the house,” said Liam. The boys have supported a number of top names including Manic Street Preachers, Kasabian, Stereophonics and The Rolling Stones. “We were over awed watching The Stones but all the bands made it an enjoyable experience and we would give 100 per cent every night.” Much as he loves touring with the guys and the crew, Liam says he is glad that when they come to Swindon it will be a hotel tour. “The bus is full up of sound and lighting men so we are driving. It means I can have a shower straight away and not wait in a queue of 15 other guys - that is not pretty. we are like a big touring family and we get a good vibe only when everyone is happy. There is always a football on tour for a kick about.” The band found once they signed to Stiff Records in 2006. Liam admits: “It was right place, right time, but we had the tunes to back it up.” Their debut album, We’ll Live And Die In These Towns, went to number one in the UK album chart. The boys all hail from Coventry and Liam still lives there. “I think I will live and die here, it’s home,” he said. The drummer says the band are all looking forward to coming to Swindon. “We love playing places we haven’t been before and making new fans,” he said. 06/03/09: MySpace - Tom Clarke sums up his thoughts about the secret gigs on The Enemy's MySpace page............ So… Just finished our random gig run which was… well… totally amazing and made us all remember what we are doing this for to begin with. I would say that there were highlights in terms of gigs but they were all amazing and everyone was fantastic.
But I will mention a few things that made us all chuffed...
Starting in York we played The Stone Roses Bar which is a fave haunt of 2 of our crew Olly and Leon (the latter plays there in his truly brilliant band Sychronised quite often) and the ..Yorkshire.. lads and lasses didn’t disappoint us. We played a bunch of new songs which went down really well even though I’m not sure how well we actually played em, but cheers anyway. Afterwards we went off to a bar called 30-13 which all got a little messy… and we will leave that there..
Next Up was ..Dundee... What can I say but ....Scotland.... is nothing short of a second home to us. Yous lot are mental, brilliant, loyal and totally UP FOR IT!
In fact the only Fucker in ..Scotland.. that wasn’t ‘Up For It’ was the night manager of the Dundee branch of Premier Inn who was just not in the ‘zone’ However we all have a job to and I guess he was doing it. ..Wakefield.., ....WAKEFIELD....!! well that went off didn’t Eh? Not sure we knew what to expect from you lot but we do now don’t we. Nice to see the lads from the Pigeon Detectives popping their heads round the door too. Another Premier Travel Inn ‘got it’ that night too!
So Tunbridge Wells, an apology is needed here.
I had just bought a new Bike and basically had been riding it too much the day before the show and my hand had seized up. The quacks told me not to play for 24 hours so we had to pull the fecking gig. I/we felt so bad about it. However I did personally call everyone whom had won tickets in order to invite them to the venue for a chat a dance and a drink. To be honest although we didn’t play it was in some ways one of my favourite dates on the tour as I got to meet almost all of you. I really hope We can make this up to you soon. Bare with us and thanks to everyone at the venue for being so brilliant.
Last up. ..Corby...
Wrist fully recovered we rolled into town at around 3pm to be confronted by a 20 strong line of Scooters belonging to The Corby Steelmen SC whom had turned up to welcome us. Sound lads, shout out to Dave Sillers whom got everyone together for a photo shoot we were doing. Gaff we played at is a good solid boozer in the heart of Corby called The Kingfisher ran by a Top chap called John who went to superhuman lengths to make sure that we were looked after. The show itself in the main bar of the pub was something else. Fuck knows why more people don’t play in Corby because the crowd (a mix of Scots and ..Midlands.. blood) ARE INSANE. Our Mate Roddy had set the whole thing up and had managed to fit a stadium PA in a Lounge Bar. I am surprised that anyone at that gig can hear ever again. Thanks to everyone we met and that helped us sort all this stuff out and sorry to everyone that didn’t manage to get tickets. There are however a few tickets left on a handful of our headline shows over the next 2 months! 28/02/09: XFM.COM - Tom Clarke's Tour Diary - Day 3 February 24 – Escobar, Wakefield
It’s pretty non-stop on tour, especially on little tours like this. We’ll get up, get in a car, travel to the gig, get to the gig, sound check, grab some food and then after that you’ve normally got five phone interviews to do. After that, you play the gig. If you didn’t get time for the interviews beforehand, you get back on the phone after the show. Once that’s all done, you get back in the car and travel to the next gig. After all that, playing the show is actually a bit of a relief. You can spend up to six hours in a car tapping your foot and going through every tune on your iPod. Once you get on stage, you buzz off it and let it all out. Wakefield was quality, it’s been one of my favourites. It was totally mental. All the locals were bang into it and the new stuff went down really well, which is a great sign. The difference between a good show and a great show is the crowd. We always have a good gig, we don’t really have bad gigs – we buzz off each other when we’re on stage. What makes a great gig, and a memorable gig, is when the crowd’s going mental. Those are the sorts of things you remember, that’s what sets it apart. Wakefield was definitely one of those. It was a tiny little mental room full of mad-heads. It was the hottest gig ever as well. I’ve never sweated so much in my life. We’ve got a few days off now, but it’s not really ‘days off’. We’re off to the NME awards tonight, which will be good. It’ll be nice to show our faces and see who’s winning stuff. After that, it’s a travel day and then we’ll be iTunbridge Wells. Bring it on.
26/02/09: XFM.COM - Tom Clarke's Tour Diary Those lovely people at XFM Radio have really shown their support for The Enemy once again, this time the XFM website is home to the 'Tom Clarke Tour Diary'. The lead singer will be jotting down some thoughts while out on the road in the UK. Here is the first page from the diary (keep checking XFM.COM for more updates): Basically, where we're from, you hardly ever get touring bands coming through and there's lots of places – Dundee, Wakefield, York and Corby – that big touring bands never bother to visit. I think it's a bit unfair to forget that it’s the people in these towns that buy your music and put you where you are. If we were sat in our local pub in Coventry and a band who’s albums we’d bought was playing, we’d be absolutely buzzing. That’s why we decided to do this tour of small venues – we didn’t let anyone stand in our way. We've done the Ricoh Arena, massive arenas with the Stereophonics, the O2 with The Rolling Stones – we've done our fair share of massive places, but I always enjoy getting into a proper nitty-gritty venue. Last night in York, the only thing between me and the fans was my monitor, and that's a beautiful thing when you're there and in the same room, face-to-face with your fans. The venue itself was quality. The clue’s in the title, but it was a shrine to The Stone Roses, among other greats. Legally the capacity was about 100-150, but how many people we had in there was another thing entirely. We played a long set - we put in six tunes off the new album. The new stuff went down better than I ever imagined. I can never work it out, but whenever you write a new song, you play it at a gig for the first time and people start singing along immediately. How the hell does that happen? 18/02/09: XFM.COM - The Enemy: ‘Second Album Was A Pleasure To Make’  Tom Clarke and co. reveal the ‘difficult second album’ was anything but. You can hear the new single ‘No Time For Tears’ on XFM Radio Tom Clarke spoke to Steve Harris last night about making the band’s second album, ‘Music For The People’. Far from being a difficult process, the singer revealed it was an easier album to make than their debut. “It was a lot easier than the first one. People refer to the second as a ‘difficult’ album, because for a lot of bands it’s make-or-break and they rush it. We’ve given it the proper time to mature... It’s been a pleasure to make, to be honest with you”. With lead-off single ‘No Time For Tears’ sounding suitably huge, the album follows suit with a raft of classic-sounding rock and gigantic ballads. “We’re all massively proud of it. We’ve obviously taken a bit longer than a lot of bands lately have taken to make records. And I think that’s right. If you look back at classic records and classic bands it’s always taken this amount of time to make a record”. You can hear the first fruits of the album right now. Listen to the band’s new single ‘No Time For Tears’. And hear the full interview with Tom Clarke right now. You can also win tickets to The Enemy's secret warm-up shows by heading here.
| |
|