The final section is a collection of short comments on The Church (all good comments, you will note) and provides a good hitlist for older articles. People ! To your back issues !
The first thing that the discerning observer will notice about the new Church album is that 8 of the 10 songs are credited to the entire band, rather than just me, as its usually been in the past. This change came about, not because my songwriting has 'dried up' nor, for some obscure democratic (or financial) reason, but rather to explore the inherent musical tensions and reactions that exist between the four players. As a band celebrating its sixth birthday in 1986, The Church have come to a point where we enjoy a certain musical gestalt or intuition, which made it dead easy to turn any song I wrote into the identifiable Church sound. So the real challenge was to compose together, to put our identity to the test, to let five long years of constant playing pay off in a week or two of spontaneous creativity. I feel the result of this gamble is the loosest, warmest, and most musically exciting album we could make."
Peter Walsh - who produced and engineered the album - and himself the result of an intuitive guess by the band for that position, was involved all the way down the line, often summoning performances from the group that had us quite surprised with ourselves. Form my view point, I see Walsh not so much as a technical boffin hired to pull big modern sounds, but more as a motivator - someone who could gauge the cpabilities of each member - patiently extracting the finest performance for the required part.
When the backing tracks were completed, I then took home a cassette of the instrumental part of the album, and would sit for long periods, listening and letting the music dredge the words from my subconscious, and then trying to get those words to insuate themselves into the pre-existing order, enhancing - but not changing - the mood of the original piece. The actual recording of the album was relativly smooth, quick and easy; the emotional highlight for me was watching Tony Ansell (the string and horn arranger) conduct the small orchestra and breathe life into our ideas for added instrumentation.
Gradually, in my mind, a theme for the album developed: at first nebulous concept - fame, success, the aftermath and the decline, not just on the small and narrow level of a "pop group" (though that too). But in any and all broader contexts imaginable, hoping to explore this concept with some kind of backwards/forwards hinsight starting with "myrrh" (an old gift for a new god) and ending with "roman" (an endless historical feedback loop). I just seemed natural to call this album Heyday.