The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Review

‘If you don’t like the way I look, that’s your problem’

-

Better known as Rag’n’Bone Man, Rory Graham has the body of a Viking and the voice of an angel. Neil McCormick hears how he went from care worker to crooner

Rory Graham is going to be huge. Then again, the 31-year-old singer-songwriter – 6ft 5in tall, heavily tattooed and built like a Viking – wasn’t exactly small to begin with. “People make comments, say things about me that aren’t very nice,” he shrugs. “I’m no Justin Bieber. But if you don’t like the way I look, that’s your problem, not mine.”

Under the name Rag’n’Bone Man, Graham writes songs that draw on blues, soul, gospel, folk and hip hop, and sings them as if his life depended on it. “There’s a reason why you write a song, it doesn’t come from nowhere,” he says. “You have a feeling and you think I’ve got to get this out of me. And if it’s emotional, you want to be able to sing that song and look somebody in the eye and know they feel it, too.”

Rag’n’Bone Man’s first major label single Human – with its simple, heartfelt refrain “I’m only human after all / Don’t put your blame on me” – only just missed out on the Christmas number 1 slot and is already on its way to becoming a pop classic. “It was

YOU’LL BE HEARING MORE FROM THEM: FIVE MORE RISING STARS FOR 2017 Maggie Rogers

born of frustratio­n,” says Graham. “Everybody’s got problems. We need to take a step back sometimes and realise they are the things that make us who we are.”

Before it was even released, Human had been performed on The X Factor by one of this year’s contestant­s (Emily Middlemas). Hundreds of versions have since popped up online, recorded by amateur singers from around the world. Then, earlier this month, it was announced that Rag ’n’Bone Man had won the Brits Critics’ Choice Award, an annual title given to the new artist deemed most likely to make an impact. Previous winners include Adele and Sam Smith. “I thought they had made a mistake,” says Graham. “I’ve been around a long time but I still feel like I’m only beginning.”

In the YouTube era, a teenage singer making videos in his bedroom can become a star overnight. Graham is a

Cosima

reminder that slow and steady can be a better way, learning a craft, paying one’s dues. “I could have put out an album years ago,” he says, “but I felt I had better material in me. I wanted to make every song count.” Raised in Uckfield, Sussex, Graham started out as a rapper. “The hype and energy around that music got me excited,” he says. “It was stupid teenage stuff: girls and weed.” His parents separated when he was a toddler, and his early life was spent with his mother and older sister. “We didn’t have a television. We had a record player,” he says. “My mum’s an old hippie at heart. She played guitar and sang: Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan, that kind of thing.” His father was also an amateur musician who played in local blues and folk bands. “It sparked my imaginatio­n when I was too young to even understand why.” His favourite singer is the Chicago bluesman, Muddy Waters. “He sounds like he’s barking. It’s not that melodic, he proper belts it out,” he says. “But whatever he’s singing, you know he means it.”

At the age of 19, during a blues session in a local pub, he was urged by his father to get up and sing. “I found out right away that I was a better singer than a rapper. People were coming up saying you’ve got to do something with that voice. Getting so much respect from old dudes who’ve been playing for 40 years gave me confidence.” His is some voice, a real gutsy blues roar tinged with soulful tenderness. Tellingly, Graham says: “I’m probably my truest self when I am singing.”

Growing up, he was

 ??  ?? ‘ I’m no Justin Bieber’: Rag‘n’Bone Man’s music is the antithesis of slick, Americanis­ed pop
‘ I’m no Justin Bieber’: Rag‘n’Bone Man’s music is the antithesis of slick, Americanis­ed pop

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom