The Scotsman

Luke Pritchard on ‘duetting’ with his late father on the new Kooks album

The band has gone back to its guitarbase­d roots, the lead singer tells Andrew Arthur

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‘Don’t ever go in there man, it’s really messed up,” warns Luke Pritchard, his voice adopting a foreboding tone.

The singer-songwriter is talking about the Museum of Death in LA, next door to the studio where his band, The Kooks, recorded their new album.

“It used to be a recording studio owned by Ray Charles,” the 33-year-old explains.

Pritchard has a bit of a time-traveller air about him. In 1980s-style high-waisted trousers and a button-down shirt, still sporting that mane of curly locks, he reclines on a sofa in his record company’s London headquarte­rs.

“The museum has a Charles Manson room, it’s so weird, dude! Really disturbed me. You go in there and you’ve got pictures of decapitate­d people. Definitely not a nice respite after recording,” he says.

The morbid surroundin­gs certainly did not rub off on the indie band’s uplifting fifth album, however. It marks a return to the band’s brand of guitar-driven pop singalongs, after they experiment­ed with computer-generated samples and loops on their previous effort, 2014’s Listen.

While making the follow-up with hip-hop producer Inflo, Pritchard and his bandmates had an epiphany. They realised they needed to make “a real band record”, carrying on the lineage of great British groups such as the Beatles and the Kinks.

They shelved the material they had been working on and returned to recording together in one room.

The sessions yielded Let’s Go Sunshine’s 15 tracks, among them Honey Bee. The song was written by Pritchard’s musician father, Bob, who died of a heart attack when Pritchard was a child.

“A big reason why I do music is my dad. I have all his records and his guitar,” he says. “My sister sent me a song he recorded in the 1970s. My stepbrothe­r asked me if I could record an acoustic version for him.

“I just started playing the song and all the boys came in and thought I’d written it. I didn’t want to push it, but everyone liked it. So it happened organicall­y. We did it in half a day.

“Then I thought, ‘We could get my dad’s voice on’. We had some expert technician­s who got his vocal and lifted it. I sing the first verse and then he sings the second and we both do the chorus, so it’s a duet with my dad.

“It was emotional but in a fun way,” Pritchard adds. “It’s upbeat and a bit like Cecilia by Simon and Garfunkel.”

“It would be cool to know what my dad would think of our music. It’s nice to have a family connection, that I’m continuing something of his.”

It’s fair to assume Pritchard’s father would be proud of his son’s band’s success. Their debut album, Inside In/inside Out, went platinum four times in the UK and yielded six top 40 singles, including Naive and She Moves In Her Own Way.

But after the overwhelmi­ng success of their debut, they experience­d a rough ride with the critics. Despite topping the album charts, their sophomore effort, Konk, received some negative reviews. With the band’s music now being enjoyed online by a new generation of fans, does Pritchard feel vindicated that the critics failed to kill The Kooks off?

“You’re not really allowed that in music. You’re not owed something by the world because you think that you’re good.

“One thing that has been nice for us, is probably having a platform that is more democratis­ed,” he says. “People just go and listen to your music, you don’t have to be told it’s cool by a radio station. We’re a bit of an anomaly. We’re definitely not loved by the press. We’ve never been an awards band.

“I hope it flips people out. It’s good to be an outsider.”

When asked what he thinks caused the backlash, Pritchard jokes: “We’re just so good-looking, man.

“I think there was an element of our first album going really big and quickly. Everything was about Arctic Monkeys that year, and we sold more records than them. People were like, ‘What the f*** happened there?’

It’s clear from his songwritin­g that Pritchard is not afraid to share his feelings. As our conversati­on ends, I ask if he worries whether he risks revealing too much about his private life in his songs.

“I’m too honest,” he admits. “I think I am good at the open stuff, that’s what people like about my writing.

“It’s about sharing a life experience, isn’t it? As songwriter­s, it’s our job to say things people feel they can’t themselves,” says Pritchard.

“Naive was about being cheated on. People asked, ‘Do you really want to talk about that?’ I find being honest is potent for writing.”

“As songwriter­s, it’s our job to say things people feel they can’t themselves”

● The Kooks’ new album Let’s Go Sunshine is out now.

 ??  ?? 0 Luke Pritchard: ‘It’s good to be an outsider’
0 Luke Pritchard: ‘It’s good to be an outsider’

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