The Scotsman

‘I've completely simplified my life. I do what I do to get by’

- YAMA RAMA Fiona Shepherd

Singer/songwriter Charlie Clark is still immediatel­y recognisab­le as one quarter of the late Nineties indie pop outfit Astrid but has lived a lifetime since those fresh-faced days of promise in Glasgow’s fertile music community – days which included a spell in Gary Lightbody’s indie supergroup The Reindeer Section and then subsequent projects Cold Night Song, Our Lunar Activities, Broken Arrow and MJ12.

He spent a decade living and working in Los Angeles, going straight to the roots of his psychedeli­a-inspired west coast sound before returning to his native Isle of Lewis, from where he has hatched his latest musical incarnatio­n.

Yama Rama is named after two Hindu deities as well as nodding to Sanskrit epic The Ramayana, and Clark has been in need of some spiritual healing over the past year. “This project and these songs came about after having a nervous breakdown last year,” he says bluntly.

Post-lockdown, Clark had been working on a new festival to take place in Stornoway, but the organisati­on went bust mere days before the event was due to happen, leaving Clark to deal with the liquidatio­n process and the disappoint­ment of his local community at the same time as breaking up with his partner.

“After working on the other side of the fence as a promoter in the Scottish music industry, I started feeling like a used car salesman,” he says. “I think I find the whole industry unrecognis­able these days and just want to write songs and release music, go back to the start and rediscover why I love music.

“I've completely simplified my life now.

I do what I do to get by. I came off social media completely, hang out with my kids as much as possible and try to stay well. Without sounding overly dramatic about it, I very much doubt I'd be here if I hadn't started writing these songs, so the influences are hope, selfforgiv­eness, authentici­ty and a bit of Neil Young for good measure.”

Yama Rama kicked off as an act of catharsis for Clark with the release of 2023 debut single Influencer­s Must Die! on Bubble Brain Records, but has now developed into a full band, comprising Christophe­r James Johnston on vocals and guitar, Mark Makay on bass and Michael Wilson on drums. However, Clark is flying solo on his Scotsman Session performanc­e of Yama Rama’s second single, Some Days, which he filmed in his family home in the village of Gress.

“This song gives a more definitive picture of where this project is going sonically and these songs will now begin to tell a story,” says Clark.

“With the first single Influencer­s Must Die!

I was very much just dipping my toe in the water, having fun with music and collaborat­ing again. Now, it's down to serious business. The plan is to release another single this year which we've already recorded and tour and play as much as possible.” Yama Rama launch their Some Days single at Mcchuills, Glasgow, 22 May

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Yama Rama

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