Hayes & Harlington Gazette

We make the music we want to make

Nearly 10 years after they shot to fame with Sigh No More, Mumford & Sons remain a fixture on the global touring circuit. The four-piece speak to ALEX GREEN about love, death and that divisive third album

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RIDING high after finishing their fourth album and halfway through recording their fifth, Mumford & Sons are at a crossroads. Looking back, the folk rockers recognise a time they were restricted by the music that made them famous. Looking forward, they see a 60-date world tour and a new-found creative freedom.

“We are in a particular­ly fertile, creative time,” the band’s banjoist and lead guitarist Winston Marshall says while sitting at a worn wooden table, tucked away upstairs at a bar in south London.

A few hundred people sit, eat and drink below in Flat Iron Square, a space that has become a cultural hub for the four-piece.

Over the course of an hour, members of the band traipse in and out of the room. Winston is contemplat­ive and whimsical, while singer and multiinstr­umentalist Ben Lovett sits behind sunglasses as he shares the story of how he came to own Omeara, the venue he opened in one of the seven railway arches dominating Flat Iron Square.

Then comes Marcus Mumford, namesake and de facto leader of the group, and, after him, bassist Ted Dwane. Both seem clear-minded, presumably focused by the completion of their fourth studio album, Delta.

Recorded with super producer and “mad genius” Paul Epworth (Adele, Rihanna, Florence And The Machine) in London’s Church Studios, the album sees the group settle into their new identity as post-Americana troubadour­s.

After two albums of banjoforwa­rd rabble-rousing songs and one of unobjectio­nable indie rock, the group’s latest effort sees them embrace a wider range of sounds.

Their most recent effort was influenced by the idea of “selfservin­g” modern love, the power of nature and, most poignantly, the spectre of death.

“I’ve felt much closer to death over the last couple of years,” Marcus says as he puffs intermitte­ntly on an e-cigarette. “Partly personally, my family, but also with some trips with the charity War Child, who I am an ambassador for.”

After returning from a trip to Mosul, a city in northern

Iraq liberated from IS in late 2016, Marcus looked out the window of his west London home to see Grenfell Tower burning.

“Like most of the community who live in that part of the city, I went down and stayed involved. That’s really, properly changed my life,” he declares.

“I’ve been listening lots and I’m starting to do a bit more.

It’s been very affecting.”

Since then, Marcus has remained involved, helping the survivors of the fire that claimed 72 lives. He raised money through charity football matches and continues to work with Grenfell United, a group supporting survivors and grieving families.

Delta was also influenced by the birth of Marcus’s second child with his wife, actress Carey Mulligan, a marriage that has attracted the lion’s share of media attention around the band.

“The stakes get higher. I think it probably expands your capacity for empathy,” he says of his child’s birth last year.

“Especially seeing other people’s children in really hard situations.”

Asked about the effect of the band’s gruelling tour schedule on his family life, Marcus remains pragmatic.

“It’s no more difficult than any other job,” he insists. “I don’t think we have any complaints in that sense. It looks different because we are away for longer chunks than if we had nine-to-five jobs in London,” he adds.

“But I think being away from family is something you have to do when you work.”

This album also

sees the group collaborat­ing more freely. Instead of the usual set-up – one frontman, guitarist, bass player and drummer – Mumford & Sons rotate their roles. The group are less of a band and “more of a collaborat­ion between four songwriter­s than it is like a normal band dynamic”, Ben explains.

This may be one of the reasons they are so happy to poke fun at their choice of name, which portrays the group as a one-man band. In the past they’ve called it “rubbish”.

“The name is for sure a misnomer but it feels like it’s us now,” Ben clarifies. “We kind of just got used to it.”

Three years ago, Mumford & Sons released Wilder Mind, where they eschewed the folk sound to which they owe their success.

Instead, they recorded an album of what many critics considered mild-mannered indie rock.

The reception was lukewarm and sometimes scathing, and Wilder Mind sold only 500,000 copies – one million less than their charts-slaying debut Sigh No More.

But on Delta the band have dusted off the banjos, the source of both their success and also some ridicule by parts of the press.

Now, they are using the instrument in subtler ways. Delta is a complex, multi-layered affair that could only have been made in the wake of Wilder Mind.

But the group have no regrets, denying that their third record even divided their fan base.

Marcus suggests it was only the press who had been surprised by their change of direction.

“The more we played it, the more people have understood it. I think you are always a couple of years ahead of your audience,” he maintains.

“I don’t think people should have been so surprised and I don’t think our audience were. It was more the press.”

As the conversati­on draws to a close, Ben says: “We just make the music we want to make. We did that with Babel, and Wilder Mind, and that’s what we are doing now,” he declares.

“It’s not so binary, where we are moving towards or away from one thing. To us it feels much more three-dimensiona­l.”

 ??  ?? Mumford & Sons, from left, Winston Marshall, Marcus Mumford, Ben Lovett and Ted Dwane
Mumford & Sons, from left, Winston Marshall, Marcus Mumford, Ben Lovett and Ted Dwane
 ??  ?? Mumford and Sons’ album Delta
Mumford and Sons’ album Delta

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