Leicester Mercury

You can hear in the record that I’m having a good time

Take That’s Mark Owen chats with MARION McMULLEN about life in LA, new music and turning 50

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TAKE THAT’S Mark Owen has made himself at home in the Los Angeles sunshine since moving there with his family, but he admits he does sometimes find himself pining for old Blighty.

“Recently I’ve been back to Manchester a few times and it’s funny because there is something about the place,” he says. “I don’t know if I’m at that point of my life, but I’ve been sort of getting a calling.” He adds with a laugh: “Manchester has been calling me. It’s strange because I never expected it.

“The last Take That tour, the Odyssey Tour, we spent a week in Manchester and I remember really enjoying it and re-discoverin­g the city in many ways. It’s really nice to go back there.

“My family are still in and around Manchester and my mum and dad are there so I get to see them. At some point I’ll think I’ll end up back there.” He sighs: “It’s just the rain. I’ll have to buy a raincoat or an umbrella.”

The rare rainfall in LA often leaves motorists bewildered, Mark reveals. “I have this old truck and it leaks and when it rains my seats get watered,” he says. “The winder is broken on my window and I have to push it up with my hands. It doesn’t rain often in LA, but when it does, LA does not know what to do.”

Los Angeles has inspired Mark’s forthcomin­g album Land Of Dreams, due out in September, followed by live dates in October.

Mark says: “I was working with people I hadn’t worked with before and in studios I had never worked in before and that was what I think I was looking for – inspiratio­n and trying to do new things.

“I’ve been doing music for 30 years and, you know, you’ve been in a lot of the music studios in the UK and worked with a lot of the same people, but I think it was important for me to try to do something different.

“I met this wonderful producer called Jennifer Decilveo. She’s from Jersey and she’s really cool. She’s brilliant and she’s worked with some amazing artists, people like Demi Lovato, Miley Cyrus and Anne-Marie, and she’s won a few Grammys in her time so it was really exciting for me to be around that energy.

“She was brilliant in the studio, very creative, very inspiring. You can hear that in the record. I think you can hear that I’m having a good time. I think it’s 10 years since the last album. A long time, but I tell you what, it’s worth the wait.”

Mark has won eight Brit awards, scored 12 UK number one singles, eight UK number one albums and sold more than 45 million records as part of pop group Take That. He has also released several solo albums and says working apart benefits the band.

“I think it is good for us all to do our own projects, our own things, and it makes it exciting when we all come back together and share our stories. I think it’s important.

“We are hoping to be back in the studio later this year and I know everyone is excited already.”

Mark won Celebrity Big Brother 20 years ago and laughs at some of his early looks. He says: “I saw some footage of our first television show recently and I had this bleached blond hair.

“Our manager at the time had an arrangemen­t with

this one salon in Manchester to go and get our hair cut and I think they tried all these products out on us and I had this bleached blond hair with a little side quiff.

“I saw some footage of me with that wearing a red jacket. It is insane when you see things like that. When I got my hair done – and it didn’t stay bleached blond very long – I was out in Oldham and friends from school did not recognise me and walked right past me at the bar. I had to yell ‘Hey, I’m here’”

The father-of-three says he does not tend to show his own children too much of Take That’s early days. “They come across it obviously now and again and they have a chuckle at some of the outfits I used to wear, that’s for sure.

“There was a bit of a phase recently in America when crop top T-shirts came back and one of my daughters wanted one.”

He laughs: “I showed them a picture of daddy wearing a crop top, which I think has put her off forever. I feel like I set off a trend... it just took 20 to 25 years to hit the masses. But I was the instigator of the crop top T-shirt.”

Mark turned 50 this year. “I am celebratin­g all year,” he says happily, “this interview is part of my celebratio­n. I might even extend celebratio­ns into next year. When people ask me what I did for my 50th I can say I played some festivals, some concerts around the UK, I made a record. It’s lining up to be quite a good year.

“What’s nice, if I’m really honest, is to have some things in the diary. When people say ‘Oh, can you come here on Thursday’ I like to say ‘I can’t, I’m busy working that week.’ Good times.”

■ Mark will be appearing in concert specials in October. Go to markowenof­ficial.com for further details

 ?? ?? Mark Owen loves Los Angeles but says his hometown Manchester is calling
Mark Owen loves Los Angeles but says his hometown Manchester is calling
 ?? ?? TAKE THAT: Robbie Williams, Mark Owen, Jason Orange, Gary Barlow and Howard Donald in 1992
TAKE THAT: Robbie Williams, Mark Owen, Jason Orange, Gary Barlow and Howard Donald in 1992
 ?? ?? Mark’s new album is due out September 23
Mark’s new album is due out September 23

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