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From: rhill@netlink.cts.com (Ron Hill)
Date: Sun, 2 Feb 1992 01:09:28 -0800
Subject: Lionheart Promo Interview REALLY GOOD
To: Love-Hounds@wiretap.Spies.COM
Organization: NetLink Online Communications, San Diego CA
LIONHEART PROMO CASSETTE
------------------------
Interviewer unknown
1978
[Transcribed by Ron Hill. Thanks to Tom Richards for supplying me with the
tape]
This is one of the most interesting interviews I've seen in a long
time. It is apparently from an official EMI promotional cassette issued in
Canada.
I: How did the sleeve design come about, of Lionheart?
K: Well that was just an idea that we had that was basically around
the title Lionheart. We wanted to get across a vibe within me of a lion.
And for the front cover it basically comes from an idea that my brother had,
which was an attic setting with me in a lion suit, so it's slightly comical,
but just a really nice vibe on the front that would take away the heavy,
crusader, English vibe, because Lionheart is always associated with Richard
the Lionheart. And I think it's a word that could become more readily used,
it's such a beautiful word. It's kinda like hero, and hero's a very cliched
word now. It's used in so many songs.
["Symphony in Blue" is played]
I: Have you or will you be writing more songs on classic English
themes?
K: Not intentionally, no. But I think that's already been done a
little on this album. There's a song on in called "In Search of Peter Pan"
and it's sorta about childhood. And the book itself is an absolutely
amazing observation on paternal attitudes and the relationships between the
parents - how it's reflected on the children. And I think it's a really
heavy subject, you know, how a young innocence mind can be just controlled,
manipulated, and they don't necessarily want it to happen that way. And
it's really just a song about that.
[The song is played]
I: Which have you most enjoyed recording, so far?
K: Well, I think I there are probably two, for me. I've really
enjoyed recording "Wow". I'm very, very pleased with my vocal performance
on that, because we did it a few times, and although it was all in tune and
it was okay, there was just something missing. And we went back and did it
again and it just happened, and I've really pleased with that, it was very
satisfying.
[The song is played]
I: Can you tell me how you enjoyed recording in France?
K: Ah, it was an amazing experience. I mean it's the first time
I've ever recorded out of the country. And the environment was really quite
phenomenal, I mean it was just so beautiful, it was so unlike anything I'd
seen for a long while. And I think there was so many advantages to it, but
there were a couple of disadvantages - the fact that it was so beautiful,
you couldn't help but keep drifting off to the sun out there, you know, that
sort of thing. But you just didn't feel like you needed a break, because
the vibes and the weather and everyone around was just so good, you know,
you didn't feel like you were working. It was really, really fun.
["Don't Push Your Foot on the Heartbreak" is played]
I: Can you tell me, why is it called Lionheart?
K: Well, again it's similar to the last album, in as much as it's
the title after the title track. And the title track on this album is
called "Oh England, My Lionheart." And it's really very much a song about
the Old England that we all think about whenever we're away, you know, "ah,
the wonderful England" and how beautiful it is amongst all the rubbish, you
know. Like the old buildings we've got, the Old English attitudes that are
always around. And this sort of very heavy emphasis on nostalgia that is
very strong in England. People really do it alot, you know, like "I
remember the war and..." You know it's very much a part of our attitudes to
life that we live in the past. And it's really just a sort of poetical play
on the, if you like, the romantic visuals of England, and the second World
War... Amazing revolution that happened when it was over and peaceful
everything seemed, like the green fields. And it's really just a
exploration of that.
[The song is played.]
I: Did you find that this time writing the songs for the album came
easily to you, or was it quite difficult?
K: It was a difficult situation because there was very little time
around and I felt very squashed in by the lack of time and that's what I
don't like, especially if it's concerning something as important for me as
my songs are, they're really important to me. But it all seemed to come
together and it was really nicely guided by something, it just happened
great. And there were quite a few old songs that I managed to get the time
to re-write. It's a much lighter level of work when you re-write a song
because the basic inspiration is there, you just perfect upon it and that's
great. And they're about four new songs so they all came together, it was
great. In fact, we ended up with more then we needed again, which is
fantastic.
["Fullhouse" is played.]
I: And where will you be touring?
K: Well, in February we're hoping to start in England, and then go
on to Europe.
I: And America?
K: I don't think that's actually be thought of yet, I think we'll
play it by ear as we often do when the time comes.
["In the Warm Room" is played]
I: Have you got plans for the third album yet, or is it....?
K: Oh, no. No, I think, that has to be written yet. I never think
of it in those terms really. When we're still very much involved in this
one, I think it would be unfair to neglect it. I think all the attention
should be focused on it, until the very last fader has been lifted.
["Kashka From Baghdad" is played]
I: Are there any other tracks that you could explain the meanings of
to us, from the album?
K: Yeah, well there's one called "Coffee Homeground" which was in
fact inspired directly from a cab driver that I met who was in fact a bit
nutty. And it's just a song about someone who thinks they're being poisoned
by another person, they think that there's Belladonna in their tea and that
whenever they offer them something to eat, it's got poisen in it. And it's
just a humorous aspect of paranoia really and we sort of done it in a
Breteen [?] style, the old sort of jamming [??? vibe] to try and bring
across the humour side of it.
[The song is played]
I: And a single, any idea of a single?
K: We've got a short list. And I'm sure we'll know which one it is,
it'll tell us in a few days.
["Hammer Horror" is played.]
--
rhill@netlink.cts.com (Ron Hill)
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