The Scotsman

‘We didn’t know whether he was going to survive or even talk again’

Dave Bayley of Glass Animals talks to Alex Green about the trauma behind new album Dreamland

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Two years ago, Glass Animals drummer Joe Seaward collided with a lorry while cycling in Dublin – his leg was broken and he suffered a complex skull fracture.

But following neurosurge­ry, he made an astonishin­g recovery, regaining his speech and rejoining the psychedeli­cpop band for a series of emotionall­y-charged gigs.

Singer Dave Bayley studied neuroscien­ce at university and so had some understand­ing of the seriousnes­s of his friend’s injuries.

He remained at his bedside in the weeks following the crash, and the collective trauma of that time permeates Glass Animals’ third album, Dreamland.

“I was lying to his parents for quite a long time,” he recalls.

“I was saying ‘Oh, it’s absolutely fine, he’s going to be totally fine, don’t worry.’

“But really inside I was like ‘He’s probably never going to play the drums again’.”

Bayley formed the indie four-piece in Oxford in 2010, with childhood friend Seaward, Ed Irwin-singer and Drew Macfarlane.

And it was these memories, as well as those from his early years living in the small city of College Station, Texas, that began to emerge as he found himself in stasis, bound to his friend’s hospital bed.

“You’re not doing anything new or having new experience­s so what you start to do, with all the adrenaline of waiting for news, you end up going really deep into memory and the past, and reliving old experience­s,” he recollects.

No surprise then that Dreamland is more intimate than its Mercury Prizenomin­ated predecesso­r, 2016’s How To Be A Human Being.

It tackles the cost of toxic masculinit­y and documents the nervous excitement of a burgeoning relationsh­ip.

The question of whether Seaward would ever play again forced the band to face existentia­l questions.

Could they continue to play as Glass Animals without him?

“We basically didn’t know whether he was going to survive, or even if he was going to recover enough to talk or walk again.

“That led to questions about the band continuing at all.

“The future seemed pretty bleak.”

But Dreamland is an album drenched in optimism and named after Bayley’s propensity to daydream in class as a schoolboy.

Bayley is speaking on Zoom from his home in Hackney, east London, flanked by lush indoor greenery.

Explaining the title, he recalls a favourite teacher in Texas who used to tell him “Dave, get out of dreamland!”

Bayley’s formative years were guided by a diet of chartready rap like Dr Dre, Missy Elliott and Busta Rhymes, played on the US hip hop radio stations he tuned into.

Since 2015 Bayley has worked with rap royalty like Joey Bada$$, Wale and, more recently, Denzel Curry in Tokyo Drifting, which features on Dreamland.

“After Joe had his accident I was always drifting off and going on these weird little … holidays,” he says, searching for the right word.

“I did find again when the lockdown started that I was having really crazy dreams. “I was daydreamin­g a lot. “I saw the parallel between drifting off when I was young and those moments more recently.

“It’s an album about nostalgia and memories starting around that period of my life – that 4th grade period.”

The band’s first performanc­e back with Seaward was in Manchester at a small venue called Gorilla.

“I felt nervous for him,” he says. “The whole accident made us feel really lucky to have ever done those little shows – to have done any shows at all.

“We went back and played all the venues we played on our first tour, all over the whole world. It was a proper moment. I remember looking at him and just going…” Bayley exhales forcefully. “We just smiled at each other. And he was just like ‘What? I got this’.

“He’s very stubborn and knew in his head that he was going to be better.

“If you have it in your head that you are going to be OK, I think that dramatical­ly improves your chances of recovery.”

Of course, the band’s bestlaid plans were disrupted by coronaviru­s. Yet in a peculiar twist of fate, the conditions of lockdown have created the perfect environmen­t for the album’s release.

Lockdown forced them to conjure up new ways to connect with listeners.

They recorded “quarantine covers” of songs by Nirvana and Lana Del Rey, created an open-source website and invited fans to remix their tracks.

“Weirdly, there is this parallel between when the record was written – the head space from that time – and now.

“All of my friends, what they are eating, talking about, watching on TV, everything is nostalgic.

“It’s looking back. It’s memories.

“When the lockdown started I was super bummed for two weeks.

“Slowly it dawned on me that actually the record can be released now, it fits the social atmosphere better than I could have ever imagined.”

“It’s an album about nostalgia and memories”

● Dreamland is out now via Polydor.

 ??  ?? 0 Dave Bayley, second right, with the rest of Glass Animals, including drummer Joe Seaward, second left
0 Dave Bayley, second right, with the rest of Glass Animals, including drummer Joe Seaward, second left

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