The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Leaving the band Bush was my big mistake . . . they sold 50m albums

Lord Puttnam’s son Sacha on his spectacula­rly costly blunder

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MUSICIAN Sacha Puttnam’s biggest money mistake was leaving rock band Bush before they made it big and sold 50 million records. The son of awardwinni­ng film producer Lord Puttnam was a teenager at boarding school when his father made Chariots Of Fire. After leaving Bush, he wrote and scored music for numerous prestigiou­s films. Sacha spoke to DONNA FERGUSON from his home in West London. His new album with the Classical Film Orchestra, Spirit Of The Cinema, is out now.

Q What did your parents teach you about money?

A THAT educate it yourself is a lubricant. and get You more use work. it to My father had a photograph­y business before he became a film producer, so I grew up surrounded by models and photograph­ers. Mum looked after us children. She was only 17 and my dad was 20 when they had my sister – I think my parents had a shotgun marriage. Money was tight. We never went without a meal but were taught not to use the phone or the heating when we didn’t need to. They were frugal.

Q When did their financial situation change?

A IT was around the time my father produced the film Midnight Express. My parents suddenly had different friends who advised I should be sent to boarding school at 13, which I hated. I also felt abandoned because parents Los defining Chariots Queen’s By Angeles. the Gate were moment I Of time was Fire, It Place 5,000 changed dad in of we England was my Mews miles were life. me. producing living in away and It South was my in in a Kensington property £3million. House of Lords. today My where father He is had worth the is now a fantastic average around in the time mum making probably films misses so the I think glamour my of he’s the a film good industry lord and a little the position bit. But could not have gone to a better person – his wisdom is quite staggering. He attends debates as well – his record is superb. I think there’s a lot of peers who don’t turn up and I know that bugs him.

Q Have you ever struggled to make ends meet?

A YES – in the mid-1990s when I was in my early 30s. For years, I’d been working as a musician in a band with my best friend Gavin Rossdale.

We had managed to get a record deal when we were 19 and spent our early 20s touring the world. But there was a moment when it seemed we weren’t getting anywhere. So in 1988, I left the band and went to study music in America. That band went on to become Bush and sell 50 million albums. Meanwhile, I found myself freelancin­g and struggling to make ends meet. I would get paid per bar of music I wrote and sometimes I’d earn just £100 per job.

Once, I had literally a fiver to last me all weekend. I went to Sainsbury’s and picked out a tin of its own brand baked beans, a loaf of bread and a dozen eggs. And that saw me through until Monday.

Q Have you ever been paid silly money?

A ABSOLUTELY not. I never earned silly money with Bush because I jumped ship too early. I did go on tour with the band and played keyboards for about four years, but I was always a hired hand.

The silliest money I ever earned was for composing and producing some music for a French film. Two years later, I got an unexpected cheque for £5,000 on top of the fee I had been paid.

The film had been on general release and the Performing Rights Society had collected royalties on my behalf. I used them to pay down my overdraft.

Q What was the best year of your financial life?

A IT was 2003. For the first half of the year I toured with Bush and because they paid my hotel bills and I often ate with the band, I didn’t have to pay for much myself. It meant I could save my ‘per diems’. Then, when I came back, I got commission­ed to write and produce the music for a couple of big commercial­s. Finally, that was the year I got a record deal with EMI for an album called

Remasterpi­ece.

Q The most expensive thing you bought for fun?

A MY piano. It’s a Steck upright felt piano and cost about £3,000. It has this lovely soft sound which, when it’s recorded, is very contempora­ry.

Q What is your biggest money mistake?

A LEAVING Bush in 1988. Obviously that was a terrible decision. By 1994, Bush was the number one band in America, Australia and South America. If I had stayed, I would have made millions. Instead, I started touring with them in 1999 for £900 a month.

HOPE: Sacha Puttnam says royalties are his pension

Q The best money decision you have made?

A WITHOUT a shadow of a doubt, marrying my wife. As soon as I married her, my income increased considerab­ly. She’s my agent and she’s not scared of having difficult conversati­ons about money.

Q Do you save into a pension?

A NO. My royalties will be my pension. What I try to do is make sure my work is good and the paperwork is tied up tight so I get paid the royalties I’m owed. I agree with something my mother used to say to me: you’ve got to live your life like you’re running from a hungry lion. I would rather enjoy the present than worry about getting old. Given everything that’s going on now, I’m thankful I’m still alive.

Q Do you invest directly in the stock market?

A NO. I wouldn’t know where to start. I don’t understand it. It’s not for me.

Q Do you own any property?

A YES, my wife and I have a lovely two-bedroom house in West London which I reckon is worth about £700,000. My wife bought it five years ago and I’d estimate it’s gone up around £200,000 in value since then. There’s a little studio in the garden which is where I record my music.

Q If you were Chancellor, what would you do?

A I WOULD increase funding in the arts to ensure everyone has access to music and the creative arts. I would also funnel money into arts education, giving children – who are our future – the opportunit­y to participat­e, whatever their circumstan­ces.

Q What is your number one financial priority?

A TO be happy and earn enough for me and my wife to live on. Money isn’t a priority – if I had a lot of it I’d just give it away.

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