Derby Telegraph

A BUGG'S LIFE

ALEX GREEN LEARNS HOW A DECADE IN MUSIC HAS TAKEN JAKE BUGG FROM TEEN FOLKIE TO A DANCE-MUSIC AND 70s ROCK-DABBLING POP CHAMELEON

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JAKE BUGG is riding high after his first weekend of post-lockdown concerts around the UK.

The 27-year-old singer, from Nottingham, headlined Tramlines Festival in Sheffield, played to cricket fans at his local ground, Trent Bridge, and took to the stage at Hertfordsh­ire’s Standon Calling.

“It was surreal, to be honest,” he admits. “To be spending that much time away, to being on stage in front of a crowd. I couldn’t ask for a better show to come back to and just see the audience really up for it having a great time... As soon as I went on there, it all went away and it just felt normal again,” he says of the Tramlines gig.

Jake was a wiry teenager with an acoustic guitar and a handful of bluesy songs inspired by the likes of the Beatles, Dylan and Hendrix when he rose to fame with the release of his Mercury Prize-nominated debut in 2012.

Since then he has developed his sound and incorporat­ed country rock and Americana, with some experiment­s more successful than others. Now on his fifth album, he has gone a step further and turned to his passion for 70s soft-rockers Supertramp and ABBA.

Jake is not alone in looking back to a decade that until only recently was considered decidedly unhip – Rag’n’Bone Man, Jessie Ware and Dua Lipa have all mined that era for earworm gold.

“I’ve never felt like I’m not allowed to do anything,” he explains.

“But obviously you always put yourself in a vulnerable position trying something new. But yeah, working with (English DJ duo) CamelPhat definitely showed me that if I was to do something like that, then it would probably work. Even if people think I shouldn’t be doing something doesn’t mean that I won’t give it a go.”

Written before lockdown, then tweaked during it, many of the singles emerged towards the end of the creative process. Lost is most likely to surprise fans – a house music stomper worlds apart from the retro folk of Lightning Bolt from Jake’s debut.

“I was prepared for the criticism,” he admits.

“But at the same time, I knew I had other songs that were very in contrast to songs like Lost, other songs on the record like my new song Downtown for example.

“I knew that once people hear those, they know that I’ve not totally gone the full distance in the pop world. So I wasn’t too worried.”

The name of the album is also important. It was inspired by the 1960 film adaption of author Alan Sillitoe’s book Saturday Night And Sunday Morning – regular viewing during Jake’s youth.

“Because of how mad life has been in the last few years and the different experience­s and places I have been, I wanted something that was reminiscen­t of my hometown on this record,” he offers.

“I thought that the title Saturday Night, Sunday Morning was quite apt because I thought it made sense with the songs – some songs sound perfect for a Saturday night and some for the hangover on a Sunday.”

Jake was 17 when he signed to Mercury Records and understand­s more than most the pressures of the spotlight.

“I guess it was a bit of a crazy thing to happen,” he says in typically understate­d fashion.

“But at the same time, I’m never one to reflect very much or stop and think about how crazy things were or what could have been.

After a pause, he adds: “I was quite lucky actually.

“Because when the first record came out, and when it topped the charts, I went to tour America with Noel Gallagher. So that’s probably the best thing that could have happened. I got out of the country and started touring in a country that didn’t know me.”

Still, comparison­s to Gallagher and even Bob Dylan couldn’t have been easy to shoulder as a teenager.

“That’s just how it is,” he replies. “It’s a high-pressure job, especially in this industry. You’ve got the pressure of the comparison­s.

“But you’ve also got the pressure on the label side of trying to sell records.

“And to be honest, there’s always a lot of pressure no matter what. You just either deal with it or choose not to.”

 ??  ?? OWZAT! Jake plays for cricket fans at Trent Bridge
Saturday Night, Sunday Morning by Jake Bugg is out now.
OWZAT! Jake plays for cricket fans at Trent Bridge Saturday Night, Sunday Morning by Jake Bugg is out now.
 ??  ?? Jake Bugg hasn’t been afraid to expand his musical tastes
Jake Bugg hasn’t been afraid to expand his musical tastes

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