Belfast Telegraph

‘You can be the happiest you’ve ever felt, after playing to 20,000 people, and three hours later feel completely devastated’

With Snow Patrol currently out on a world tour, singer Gary Lightbody speaks frankly to Laura Harding about his battle with mental health, the decision to give up alcohol and finding the mental clarity that helped him write the band’s latest album

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Gary Lightbody is at home with his parents in Bangor for the weekend and feeling like a kid again. It’s a place of refuge for the Snow Patrol frontman, who has been through the mill in recent years. He has suffered from depression, vertigo, writer’s block and a dependency on alcohol that he does not call alcoholism, but which resulted in his hand shaking if he felt in need of a drink.

But being at home lets the 42-year-old feel like a teenager.

“There is definitely a part of yourself that reverts to the age you were when you left home,” he says, laughing.

“I think that’s true of a band too, it doesn’t matter how long you’ve been at it, there always is an element where you’re still kids.”

But it has been quite a journey for Snow Patrol to get where they are today, with numerous changes in name and line-up, as well as endless disappoint­ments.

First founded at the University of Dundee in 1994 under the name Shrug, the band briefly flirted with the name Polarbear and released an EP before Snow Patrol was born.

Their first two albums, Songs For Polarbears in 1998 and When It’s All Over We Still Have To Clear Up in 2001, failed to make much of a splash.

But in 2003, they released Final Straw on a major label. It blew up and the band became famous.

What came next was even bigger — the smash hit that was Eyes Open in 2006, with its anthem single Chasing Cars.

It topped the charts and was the best-selling British album of the year. Snow Patrol were global stars.

“It took us so long to have a hit, so I do think that most of the stuff that has happened to us over the last 15 years is like my dream, my fantasy,” he says.

“It’s very hard to take that completely seriously, so perhaps I tend not to live in the real world as much as most adults would.”

But Lightbody has also become much more reflective as he’s got older, more aware of his own weaknesses, but also better at protecting himself.

“I was always a very sensitive kid growing up. I wrote poetry from an early age, I wore my heart on my sleeve a little bit, maybe too much,” he says.

“It probably wasn’t good for me. But I also found that being open about my frailties, open about my frustratio­ns or pain is actually the best medicine.

“I have suffered from depression my whole life. I actually feel good these days, but I’m a serious introvert and it was years playing gigs before I could look at the audience, before I could look up past my shoes and figure out how to be a frontman.

“There is a dual life where you’re trying to present the songs as best you can, because you wrote them, so you may as well give it everything you’ve got on stage.

“But then you come back to the hotel and you’re eating Quavers at three o’clock in the morning, watching 30 Rock.

“There’s a dual existence and it can really mess with your head. There is a strange parallel to depression, because you can be the happiest you’ve ever

That includes other songwriter­s and Lightbody lists Kurt Cobain, Jeff Buckley, Chris Cornell and Prince as other artists who “dealt with the very fabric of our humanness”.

He pauses for a moment. “Most songwriter­s, for the most part, sit on their own and stare at a blank page.

“Sometimes it’s for seconds, sometimes years. So that’s a very solitary, reflective existence just by itself.”

But today, Lightbody feels better than he thought was possible.

“I’m waking up every day feeling like I’m ready to go, rather than waking up every day feeling like I’m ready to quit.

“It’s a hell of a change and I’m very happy to have got to the other side of it.

“I know there are a lot of people that haven’t got there. I know where they are. It’s hard. I think the most important thing is reaching out to people that you can talk to.

“The first thing I did when I tried to deal with my mental problems was speak to people that I trusted.

“The band didn’t even know. We are all very close. We are aware that sometimes we’re having

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