The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Malcolm in the middle: Tucker star takes centre-stage with first album for 41 years

Peter Capaldi on why, more than four decades after leading his punk band into glorious obscurity, he’s making music once again

- By Billy Sloan news@sundaypost.com

When Peter Capaldi walked down the stairs into the tenement’s dingy basement it felt like another world.

Peering into the gloom of the makeshift recording studio called The Hellfire Club, he prepared to record a bunch of songs he’d written for punk-rock band The Dreamboys.

The aspiring singer suddenly found himself rubbing shoulders with Simple Minds, Orange Juice, Aztec Camera and Clare Grogan of Altered Images. They, too, had ambitions to make it as musicians and each would go on to write their own chapter in Scottish pop history.

But Capaldi, then a student at Glasgow School Of Art, followed another path as he struck out into acting, and never looked back during an acclaimed career during which the 12th Doctor Who and foul-mouthed political spin doctor Malcolm Tucker in The Thick Of It were just two of his standout roles.

Now, 41 years later, he has returned to his first love. On November 19, Capaldi will release his debut album, St Christophe­r – more than four decades after The Dreamboys put out their first and only single, Bela Lugosi’s Birthday, on the indie label St Vitus Dance.

The album was produced by his friend Robert Howard, better known as Dr Robert of hit 1980s band The Blow Monkeys and, discussing his passion for music, the former Time Lord spun back through the years to reminisce about the scene that first captured his imaginatio­n.

“In the late 1970s, Glasgow was exploding and everybody seemed to be in a band,” he recalled. “But I’d been quite uncool at school.

I’d see guys carrying Pink Floyd albums under their arms and wasn’t really into music because I was a bit frightened of the hierarchy.

“I remember going to somebody’s house and they played me Heart Of Gold by Neil Young. I thought it was the most incredible and beautiful thing.

“But of course you couldn’t actually say that when you were 16. So I was always scared of not being au fait enough to join in.

“When I went to art school in 1976 all that changed. Everybody was listening to Love And Affection by Joan Armatradin­g, and then The Sex Pistols happened. We’d all previously had long hair and wore army greatcoats but we came back after the winter break with peroxide hair and plastic trousers.”

Capaldi’s musical education came from buying records in Listen or Graffiti and hanging out in venues like The Rock Garden, The Griffin and Maestro’s. The legendary Glasgow Apollo also played a significan­t role.

“I saw Television play there in 1977. They were an incredibly influentia­l and strange guitar band who came from CBGB’s in New York,” he said. “They were supported by Blondie but it wasn’t packed. I was sitting in a half-empty Apollo watching them. It’s amazing when you think of it.

“I also saw David Bowie on his Stage tour the following year. He

played for four nights and I managed to get tickets for three of them. Glasgow was a really happening city.”

When Capaldi formed The Dreamboys at art school things moved up a gear. “I’d got involved in trying to put a play on and somebody said, let’s put a band together and do a concert to raise money for it,” said Capaldi.

“I became the singer and thought, I really like this. In 1977 we started getting a few gigs but we chose the worst band name you could think of. I don’t know where we got The Dreamboys from. We were thinking more of

a kind of Kafka-esque, German expression­ist, Dr Caligari-type dream/nightmare thing.

“As opposed to a Chippendal­es kind of group, which we could not have foreseen at the time. You’d record your band on a cassette then take it around the pubs and ask them to listen to it, hoping they’d phone you back. Eventually we started getting gigs. We became part of the whole Glasgow scene. It was a wonderful, glorious time.”

The band built up a following with his eccentric stage persona capturing the imaginatio­n of fans. “We were really surviving week to

week, gig to gig,” he recalled. “Our problem was that we didn’t take ourselves seriously enough. We were having too much of a good time. Even with no money you still thought you were a superstar while strutting your stuff in The Rock Garden or the QM Union. As soon as you got on that tiny wee stage, you were away.”

The Hellfire Club – in a lane adjacent to Charing Cross in Glasgow city centre – was also pivotal to the band’s steady progressio­n.

“It was run by David and Jaine Henderson, who were brother and sister,” recalled Capaldi. “They’d worked with Simple Minds. David was the band’s sound engineer and Jaine did the lights. They’d actually been on proper tours in Europe and America. So they were kind of rock aristocrac­y to us. They were wonderful, imaginativ­e and elegant people. David had made a very rudimentar­y studio in this crumbling building. He got chipboard and soundproof­ed it.

“He had a four-track TEAC tape machine which was primitive even in 1978. The Beatles and everybody had been much further ahead than that way back in 1969.

“David was totally part of the scene and had the imaginatio­n

– part of the zietgiest. He never charged you very much either so long as you brought some drinks. It was our own wee movement within a movement.”

The Dreamboys’ single was played a couple of times by DJ John Peel on Radio One. “But we were the only Scottish band never to get a session on his show,” said Capaldi, laughing. “Peel was brilliant and has done so much for so many...but not us.”

But their success was short-lived. After the band ran out of steam, Capaldi, 63, who recently celebrated his 30th wedding anniversar­y to actress Elaine Collins, who starred with him in Soft Top Hard Shoulder a year after getting hitched, moved into stand-up comedy and acting.

“I loved being in the band but we were not making any money and scratching from gig to gig,” he said.

“Our records were not selling very well either and we were all running out of patience. I thought, fate has presented me with a signal. This might be for me, so let’s give it a go.”

In 1983, he got his first real break when Gregory’s Girl director Bill Forsyth offered him a part in the movie Local Hero, which starred Burt Lancaster, Denis Lawson and Fulton Mackay.

He never looked back and has now appeared in more than 40 movies and television dramas including The Crow Road, The Field Of Blood, In The Loop, Paddington, Waking The Dead, World War Z and The Suicide Squad.

“I’ve always loved music and been interested in it but my career and life took me in another direction,” he said. “I didn’t keep up playing or songwritin­g but I always maintained a real passion for it.

“However, I don’t want people to think this is me saying, I’m a rock star now. I have the greatest of respect for musicians. The great ones have written songs and played guitar for the last 40 years. I haven’t done that. At 63, I’m a bit of a Johnny Come Lately. Unlike them, I haven’t put in the hours.

“But I did take the making of this album very seriously. The first new song I wrote was called If I Could Pray. Robert gave it to his musicians, who were real profession­als.

“They just went bang, and recorded it in a day. I was both amazed and excited by that. So I thought, I’ll just keep going. And that’s how the album was made.”

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 ?? ?? The many faces of actor Peter Capaldi at the
The many faces of actor Peter Capaldi at the
 ?? ?? Peter Capaldi and his wife, Elaine Collins, in 1992 film Soft Top Hard Shoulder
Peter Capaldi and his wife, Elaine Collins, in 1992 film Soft Top Hard Shoulder
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Pictures Andy Buchanan

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