Sunday News

The Darkness: lights on!

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It’s the Darkumenta­ry... It’s reaching its final stage. There are now producers involved. They way they put it, it is a rags-to-riches to rags story. We will never be seen in the same way again.’’ DAN HAWKINS

just a comical version of ourselves. Nowadays, so many artists are scared they won’t sell so many records if they upset someone or don’t have the right image that you wonder if they are having fun.’’

The Darkness certainly had fun, maybe too much. In 2005, internal upheavals forced them into temporary retirement. Justin went into drug rehab, and Dan and the other members of the band formed Stone Gods.

‘‘For a long time it was 100 per cent done and dusted for me,’’ says Dan.

‘‘It was only when we were in different bands that I started to hang out with Justin again and it wasn’t long before we both realised how much fun it was hanging out together. That is the most important thing about being in a band. There is no point if you are not having a good time. I realised I missed my brother. So here we are.’’

The reunion became official in 2011 and there have been two albums since: Hot Cakes and Last Of Our Kind.

‘‘When we were kids growing up in Lowestoft, Sussex, we were quite different,’’ he says. ‘‘We used to fight all of the time. We just clashed on so many different things. The things we did agree upon, we could only afford one of them, so we would fight over that. We shared the same room. We had this sort of Victorian upbringing and I think that was the main reason why we didn’t always get along because we both felt suffocated in some ways but showed it differentl­y.

‘‘Justin moved out when he was 16 and we became really good friends. Apart from that one major falling-out, we have been ever since. Being in someone’s space, even if you love them to bits, can be a really hard thing to do. That was one of the main reasons the band initially split up. Also Justin had to get his s... sorted out.’’

By the time they head to New Zealand, the band hopes to have completed a feature length documentar­y, which is a warts- and-all insider’s glimpse into ‘‘the darkness’’.

‘‘It’s the Darkumenta­ry,’’ Hawkins says. ‘‘These guys have been hanging around like a really bad smell. We had a photo-shoot with some mates and they just kind of stuck around. They said ‘do you mind if we just tag along with the band and do a bit of filming?’ They just wouldn’t go away, they kept following us around.

‘‘It’s a bit like having gaffer tape stuck to your shoe – even though you take the tape off you can still feel its stickiness on your shoe. That’s what it’s been like for the past year It’s reaching its final stage. There are now producers involved. They way they put it, it is a rags to riches to rags story. We will never be seen in the same way again.’’ ● The Darkness play The Powerstati­on, Auckland, April 20; Hunter Lounge, Victoria University, Wellington, April 21 and The Foundry, Christchur­ch, April 22.

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