Uxbridge Gazette

DIVIDED BRITAIN?

Paul Weller is regarded as one of the most influentia­l British musicians of his generation. He speaks to ANDREW ARTHUR about turning 60, his tribute to David Bowie and why he thinks the UK is ready for political change

- Paul Weller’s new album True Meanings is available now.

IMAGINE walking into your local pub to find Paul Weller entertaini­ng the regulars. This would have been a realistic prospect in 1970s Surrey, where Weller started as a live performer.

On the phone to the singer-songwriter, I ask what he thinks he’d be doing had he not become a successful musician.

“I have no idea really, have I? But I would imagine I would be playing in pubs and clubs in Surrey still.

“If it’s in your blood, it’s a hard thing to stop doing, whatever level we’re talking about.”

Paul is celebrated for an eclectic body of work and a forwardloo­king approach to his craft.

Having turned 60 this year, ‘The Modfather’ has entered a period of his life where, for once, he is momentaril­y looking back.

Paul acknowledg­es reaching the milestone did impact upon his latest album True Meanings, a collection of acoustic songs.

“I think it certainly informed some of the themes on the record. I don’t think it’s particular­ly nostalgic, but it’s reflective.

“If there was ever a time in life that I might be reflective, it would be around turning 60. Which is pretty monumental.

“I think it’s also quite distressin­g, I suppose, the thought of my mortality really. Without being morbid, which I don’t feel it is. But I can’t help but think about how f ****** quick it has all gone, more than anything. And how much more have I got left?

“Like I said, it’s not in a morbid way, it’s just reality you know? You can’t help but think about it.

“I don’t spend too long pondering on it. There’s no point.”

After accumulati­ng songs over a five-year period, Paul enlisted the help of co-writers to finish some of them. The esteemed songwriter admits he enjoyed being partially freed of the burden of agonising over his own lyrics.

One of the four joint efforts on True Meanings is Bowie, which Paul composed with singer-songwriter Erland Cooper.

The song is a tribute to the late David Bowie, as well as a broader reflection on loss. Like Paul, the Starman enjoyed a long-lasting career defined by transforma­tion and Paul confides Bowie’s death in 2016 affected him.

“It made me sad for an awful long time. Because he had done so little for so long and then he came out with The Next Day and then a couple years later with Blackstar.

“There was all this activity and I thought, ‘Great, he’s well again and he’s back on it’. So it was a shock for me when he died.

“When me and my wife had twin boys six years ago, he sent us a bunch of flowers and a card saying congratula­tions. That was sweet.

“One of our boys is called Bowie as well, obviously named after him. My wife is an even bigger fan than me.”

Age does not seem to have mellowed the fire in Paul’s stomach when it comes to politics. Many of his songs with The Jam were noted for lyrics about working class life. The Eton Rifles offered a withering attack on a privileged elite. He’s encouraged by the growing political consciousn­ess among young people.

“This government is hopeless. All of them. Look at them, they’re like ridiculous caricature­s of silly toffs.

“Rees-Mogg, Boris and all those t***s. We’re all sick of it. I think it’s time for a change. But to expect that any one party is going to wave a wand and it’s all going to be different is absurd. I think people have just got to do it for themselves really.

“Compared to the 1970s and 1980s, there are a lot of things that are way better now. People’s attitudes in general are better now.

“People are fairer and openminded, they’re well travelled. I think, generally speaking, there is less racism.

“I don’t believe in the idea of ‘divided Britain’ – I think that’s a lot of bol***ks really. I could cite many examples of people being united, all colours, all religions.

“I think ‘divided Britain’ is just another tool of the Tories and the right-wing propagandi­sts.”

Paul offers a measured response when asked if he feels contempora­ry politics and society is not reflected in popular music as it was in previous decades.

“I don’t think that’s true in hip-hop or grime is it? Those artists seem to be still telling it like it is. But in pop or rock? I guess not. I think it’s inevitable after 20 years or so of wishy-washy politics.

“You have to ask, has music still got that cultural force? I think the last shout on that was in the 1990s.”

For many of his fans, Paul is a fashion icon, with his style changing as regularly as the genre of music he plays.

As our conversati­on ends, I ask him if he finds it unusual seeing men with haircuts that he has inspired. Laughing, he says: “Yeah, sometimes but it’s quite sweet.

“I have copied so many of my heroes’ haircuts. Sometimes with success, sometimes it’s a complete disaster. But I don’t walk around thinking I’m a style icon. “Humility is a quality that we must find at some point in our lives.”

That’s just a tool of the Tories Rees-Mogg, Boris and all those t***s. We’re all sick of it. I think it’s time for a change .... Paul Weller on the state of politics and the merits of certain politician­s

 ??  ?? Paul Weller says he was deeply affected by the death of David Bowie, pictured
Paul Weller says he was deeply affected by the death of David Bowie, pictured
 ??  ?? Jacob Rees-Mogg and Boris Johnson
Jacob Rees-Mogg and Boris Johnson
 ??  ??

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