The Scotsman

Sound advice

Broken Records are back with their first album in four years, and it’s the perfect soundtrack to a summer road trip, frontman Jamie Sutherland tells

- Fiona Shepherd

Fiona Shepherd interviews Edinburgh band Broken Records ahead of the release of their new album, What We Might Know

In December 2016, Edinburgh’s Broken Records marked their tenth birthday as a band by returning to the scene of their first gig, Bannerman’s bar on the city’s Cowgate, not to play one of their classic early albums as seems to be the way nowadays, but to celebrate modestly and musically in the company of friends and family.

According to frontman Jamie Sutherland, Broken Records don’t have a classic early album anyway. “Nobody makes their best records at the first or second shot,” he says. “With the first album [2009’s Until The Earth Begins to Part] we tried to knock it out the park straight away and be world beaters and, to a certain extent, people either bought into that or it really grated with them.”

For a time, Broken Records were (deservedly) touted as Scotland’s Arcade Fire. With their ambitious widescreen sound and a big band line-up making liberal use of strings and brass, they were the romantic, anthemic flipside of their west coast peers Frightened Rabbit’s selfflagel­lating indie folk.

Despite a deal with prestigiou­s independen­t label 4AD, they failed to score commercial success to match the scale of their music and album number three, Weights and Pulleys, came out on their own J Sharp Records in 2014, after which there was a band hiatus for, to put it bluntly, baby-making.

Between them, the members of Broken Records now have eight children. It is often at this point, when family responsibi­lities start to bite, that any musician not already making a healthy regular wage would be tempted to jack it in and get a proper job. Wisely, Broken Records never gave up those proper jobs in the first place.

“It’s not very sexy but we just try and look at it as realistica­lly as possible – how do we keep it going, how do we make the best music we can make, how do we manage everyone’s responsibi­lities?” says Sutherland. “Ideas of any bigger success start to become superfluou­s because the success itself is just the fact that we still get to do it and enjoy each other’s company.”

Their big, bold new album What We Might Know addresses the emotional concerns of the thirtysome­thing. The intensity of the angsty young man has given way to the joys and challenges of watching children grow up and parents grow older. The accompanyi­ng blurb talks of “the howl of frustation at how and what you’re supposed to be in your 30s” but Sutherland says, “we tried to make something that felt a bit more natural and, heaven forbid, a bit more fun. We wanted to make a summer record that if you were in a car on a road trip anywhere you would turn it up and it would fit.

“Now when people want to go big, they throw in a ‘wo-oh’ chorus. I don’t want to do any of that stuff. I like the big gesture, I like the primary colours, that’s what I do as a songwriter. So if you’re into subtle electronic­a, we’re probably not the band for you.”

However, Sutherland can do you subtle electronic­a, or pounding post-rock, or intimate Americana in his capacity as music programmer at Summerhall, where he runs the regular gig night Nothing Ever Happens Here. Its wry name comes from a music doc on the American hardcore scene of the early 1980s, specifical­ly from a piece of graffiti scrawled on a venue toilet wall.

“It sounded like a club night where Black Flag would turn up and play, and also it was a bit cheeky about people’s perception­s of what Edinburgh is about. Cos it’s not true.”

Sutherland’s personal booking highlights include Nick Cave associates the Dirty Three and towering Texan trio Lift to Experience, who played a rare Scottish show during last year’s

“I find Edinburgh an inspiring place because it’s so beautiful”

Fringe. But Summerhall is also a favoured venue for local bands’ album launch shows – including Broken Records’ own at the end of April.

“We’re trying to change the culture of going out in Edinburgh to watch live music,” says Sutherland. “The big bugbear for me is people complainin­g about the price of tickets. Edinburgh’s got a funny relationsh­ip with the perceived low arts and high arts. People are prepared to spend stupid money on the high arts because they feel intellectu­ally validated by it, but tend to be sniffier about the low arts.”

As yet another Edinburgh venue, Leith Depot, shuts down to make way for the ubiquitous student housing, Summerhall continues to buck the trend for venue closures in the city and, thanks to its arcane sprawl, has also avoided the noise complaints which have been thoughtful­ly countered by the Music is Audible campaign group, comprising representa­tives from across Edinburgh’s music community.

“No one in Edinburgh should feel like they are living in a mausoleum,” says Sutherland. “The city feels like it’s a thriving internatio­nal capital city, and the music element has to represent that. We want to live in a vibrant multi-cultural society where people can express themselves in any way they can, and the council and the city should be behind that 100 per cent, not just in August when they can make money out of it.

“Edinburgh has so many positives,” he continues. “I find it an inspiring place because it’s so beautiful. Whereas we want to shoot off to Prague or Vienna, most of mainland Europe comes to Edinburgh to see world-class architectu­re and heritage. It’s a privilege to live here.”

Broken Records’ confidence in their environmen­t comes across in

What We Might Know, recalling in its passion another great Edinburgh band, The Waterboys, who remain fiercely traditiona­l yet transcende­nt in their musical approach.

“I always like the idea of the craft of songwritin­g,” says Sutherland. “People are always so obsessed with the new and trying to subvert traditiona­l songwritin­g, whereas I love traditiona­l songwritin­g. No one is suggesting we’re the sound of young Britain today, what we’re trying to do is make a timeless record. We’re still chasing something and we don’t know what that is.”

What We Know is released on 30 March on J Sharp Records. Broken Records play Summerhall, Edinburgh on 26 April

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 ??  ?? Broken Records, main; Jamie Sutherland, above
Broken Records, main; Jamie Sutherland, above
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