Daily Star

FORGET HIS BORING Sno reall Oker ace Steve ly is interestin­g

- ■ by NADINE LINGE

HE might have won six snooker world titles – but Steve Davis is more proud of his musical achievemen­ts than anything he accomplish­ed on the baize.

He retired from the game in 2016 after more than 35 years and has since gone to form a band, play festivals including Glastonbur­y, and release four albums.

And Steve still can’t believe anyone in that world took him seriously – considerin­g his only previous musical venture was a solo line on Chas & Dave’s song Snooker Loopy.

The green baize legend, 63, says: “What you can judge is how much thrill it’s giving you and how proud you are. And in that respect I’m more proud of what’s happened recently, maybe because it’s fresher.

“Winning snooker events became the norm. But this is all so unexpected, beyond belief, when the snooker, in the end, was expected.

“But kudos to my bandmates for having the guts to go on the road with somebody whose only previous output was one line in

Snooker Loopy.”

A long-term lover of psychedeli­c and experiment­al music, Steve became pals with guitarist Kavus Torabi in 2006. They did a radio show, some DJ gigs, formed band The Utopia Strong with Michael York, and have a book out this week called Medical Grade Music.

Robot

It details the pair’s musical adventures from Djing a packed-out tent at Glastonbur­y in 2016 – worse for wear after starting drinking gin at 11am – as well as another festival where the crowd were given Steve Davis masks to wear, and the champ’s idea for a Youtube channel where he plays snooker while on drugs.

It’s quite a change for the man who had the reputation of being boring, most notably due to his “Interestin­g” Spitting Image puppet.

In December Ronnie O’sullivan even claimed Davis “ruined” snooker in the 1980s as players went on to copy his emotionles­s style of play, leading to a lack of characters in the game.

The south-london born star only began to show his real personalit­y later, including when he famously stripped off while appearing on I’m A Celebrity in 2013.

But he’s happy to admit that in his snooker heyday, he really was boring.

He says: “If you practise eight hours a day in a dark room you’re not going to have any personalit­y, are you? How can you?

“The nature of snooker lends itself to having a robot-style mentality, so I wasn’t out partying. I fully hold my hand up to my boring persona but I was on a mission.

“When the ‘interestin­g’ puppet came out, I was able to laugh at it – as long as I was playing snooker well, I didn’t really care what people were making of my personalit­y.

“If you wanted to identify what makes someone a winner, one of those things would be being in control of yourself.

“I agree a lot of personalit­ies could get exorcised from a sport if it gets more successful and I was a stepping stone to that.

“But you’re always going to get the maverick, a Ronnie, a Jimmy White, a Bubba Watson, a John Mcenroe. What is nice is the mixture of personalit­ies.”

The so-called age of snooker”

1970s and ’80s

“golden in the is the subject of an upcoming Louis Th documentar­y, for which Steve has interviewe­d.

But he reckons the game is in its p now, comparing the 18.5million vi he got during the 1985 World Sn Championsh­ip final against D Taylor with the 60m who will tu from China alone for this event, which starts on Saturday Steve adds: “This docume concerns itself with a specific back in people’s memories. “They were asking me all questions and I was thinking is all in the past.

“For me there’s a frustrat think, with the UK in ge We’re living in the past. The a

golden era of snooker is now. The game more worldwide than it’s ever been.

“I sense with this documentar­y they’ll make a fair bit of the bad boy image of it, sensationa­lise it. I understand they’ve got to try to make it attractive to watch, so it can’t be about me going to bed at 10pm with a glass of hot milk.

“But somewhere down the line maybe we can stop living in the past.”

Blessing

is

In the book, Steve dubs his snooker fame “The Thing” and admits it’s been both a blessing and curse when launching his new career in an alternativ­e band – where he plays a complicate­d electronic instrument called a modular synthesize­r.

He adds: “I’d never even considered I was a liability. Usually it would be the seal of approval if I put my name to a snooker product but when the record company had to try to sell our record, you can imagine people going, ‘What?’

“It could have backfired if the record had been crap. But we believed it was good.”

While the events of the past year put gigging on hold, The Utopia Strong have a tour planned for November.

Steve adds: “Making records and rehearsing has taken over as a driving force and it’s certainly injecting enthusiasm into the veins.

“There was no plan – this has just happened. And going on stage to play live improvised music is not the job spec of somebody once they’ve retired. I really should be filling out the forms for the heating allowance now.”

Medical Grade Music by Steve Davis and Kavus Torabi (White Rabbit, £20) is out tomorrow.

 ??  ?? ON TOP: World Champ in 1988
ON TOP: World Champ in 1988
 ??  ?? IN TUNE: Steve with Kavus and Michael. Right, from top, performing with Kavus; Djing at Glasto with Madness singer Suggs in 2016; and playing the piano in 1982
I’M A CELEBRITY: Steve after stripping in the Jungle
IN TUNE: Steve with Kavus and Michael. Right, from top, performing with Kavus; Djing at Glasto with Madness singer Suggs in 2016; and playing the piano in 1982 I’M A CELEBRITY: Steve after stripping in the Jungle

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