Daily Express

EXCLUSIVE By Kat Hopps

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ARTISTS who achieve phenomenal success at the start of their careers can struggle to shake off the shadow of a defining hit song. Katie Melua, the singer-songwriter whose first seven albums sold more than 11 million copies, has two such enduring tracks – Nine Million Bicycles and The Closest Thing to Crazy.

Both were written by Wombles songwriter Mike Batt who discovered Katie, aged 19, at the world-famous Brit School in London and made her a global star. Now 37, she’s achieved eight UK top 10 albums and has performed for everybody from the Queen to the late Nelson Mandela and supported her childhood heroes Queen.

Yet whenever her name is mentioned, it’s usually in the same breath as Nine Million Bicycles, which was released 16 years ago now. Does that bother her?

“You know, because of that song,

I live where I live,” Katie says, gesturing to the cavernous west London home behind her as we chat over Zoom. “I’ve been able to buy my folks a place [in Paddington] and I can’t deny that.”

Katie, the daughter of a heart surgeon, was Europe’s biggest-selling female artist in 2006 and was reported to be worth £18million in 2008.

That’s quite some achievemen­t for an eight-year-old girl who struggled to speak English after moving with her family to Britain from Georgia.

Luxurious home aside, Katie seems more down-to-earth than most high-profile music stars. She is dressed in a plain white sweatshirt, soft curls below her chin, and looks relaxed, happy even.

The reasons for that soon emerge. First is Album No. 8. A languid, sultry record infused with ethereal strings, it earned her the best reviews of her career when it was released in October last year. Encouraged by that “love and respect”, she’s releasing an acoustic version next Friday.

“I didn’t want it to just be a pandemic record and thought what else can we do to keep it alive?” she says. “I’m proud of those songs and an acoustic version seemed apt.”

The lead track this time is a pared-back reworking of Remind Me To Forget about how nature can help to heal a broken heart.

Last year, Katie’s eight-year marriage to World Superbike racer James Toseland ended. She began writing the lyrics, following their split, on a November drive to a recording studio with two of her co-composers.

“We passed exquisite leaves on that drive and the song started with the burning colours of autumn,” she says. “I was writing down words and themes and the boys asked how I was doing as we [my husband and I] had separated by that point.”

She’s previously said Album No. 8 was not a “divorce record” but a reboot of the romantic, everlastin­g love she has “been guilty of” singing about in the past.

But a year on from her break-up, it appears the fairytale might have a second chapter after all.

“I have a new man in my life and that’s going super well and I couldn’t be happier,” she says.

She won’t disclose his name because, she says, their relationsh­ip is at an “earlyish” stage. But Kate says it’s already informed her songwritin­g.

“You become so sure of how you see life and love and then something else happens so it’s important not to be too absolutist,” she explains.

“On Album No. 8, that idea that we have given love too much air time was really strong in my perception of life – but now, when you’re in a good place, you want to see what of that can come into your work.”

Her amicable split with former manager and mentor, Mike Batt, in 2016 was a turning point.

Now she’s enjoying the validation that comes from a “certain level of freedom, which I didn’t have as a youngster”.

“You have to take the punches,” she says. “You can really learn from the critics too if you don’t take it too personally. I had a mad life in the music industry and things blew up for me very quickly.

“That happened besides a strong creative person in Mike Batt. I look back at that time and think those were great songs for a young Katie to sing.”

THEY MET after Mike toured music colleges to find a young face for his songs and Katie impressed him with her original interpreta­tions. He convinced the producer ofTerryWog­an’s Radio 2 show to play The Closest Thing to Crazy and the veteran Irish broadcaste­r became her number one cheerleade­r. “I was so fond of Terry Wogan,” says Katie, who sang at his memorial service in Westminste­r Abbey in 2016. “When you stepped into his room at Radio Two, he always had this aura of real gentleness and respect.

“He would be excited to see you, but very respectful and he always exuded this calmness that would calm me down.”

Katie’s ascent was meteoric. After her first album Call Off The Search and subsequent album Piece By Piece became internatio­nal number ones, she toured the globe relentless­ly and sang at many prestigiou­s events.

She first performed for The Queen at Buckingham Palace in 2005 for a special concert featuring schoolchil­dren and then at Her Majesty’s 2013 Coronation Gala.

“It’s an honour to be asked to perform for The Queen,” she says now of the experience. And while she plays it down, Mike Batt shared a more candid story about the event. Recently replying to a mum on Twitter who said her child had flushed her knickers down a school toilet, he wrote: “Reminds me of the time @katiemelua lost her phone down the loo at Buckingham Palace. I swore I’d never tell anyone!”

Although Katie’s life seemed glamorous, in private she struggled with the relentless touring and demands of marketing executives, culminatin­g in a breakdown in 2010.

She was admitted to London’s Nightingal­e Hospital for two weeks and placed on medication for two years afterwards.

Today, she is working with a “supportive” team at independen­t record label Reservoir.

“I don’t have to chase chart success,” she explains. “We live in a different world now. Back in the noughties, there was a black and white binary version of what success was and wasn’t whereas now there are so many differ

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 ?? ?? HAIR APPARENT: Katie grew up listening to Queen and later performed with Brian May for Nelson Mandela. The star was discovered by songwriter Mike Batt, above
HAIR APPARENT: Katie grew up listening to Queen and later performed with Brian May for Nelson Mandela. The star was discovered by songwriter Mike Batt, above
 ?? ?? EARLY DAYS: Born in Georgia, Katie moved to Britain with her family as an eight-year-old
EARLY DAYS: Born in Georgia, Katie moved to Britain with her family as an eight-year-old

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