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James Blunt
Some ageing rockstar once said that what he feared most, in a
musical sense, was the songwriting well running dry. That's something
that's unlikely ever to worry James Blunt. He has, it can be said
without exaggeration, lived a life that should provide enough material
for a dozen albums, with sufficient left over for a couple of
screenplays. Sure - that's what all the singer-songwriters say. But
this is a definitively different singer-songwriter.
Take "No Bravery", the song that closes his debut album, "Back to
Bedlam", for instance: It was written in Kosovo in 1999, while James
was a reconnaissance officer in the British army. On patrol around
Pristina, he kept his guitar bolted to the outside of his tank. But in
quieter moments, it came out, as he wrote about life as a 22-year-old
peacekeeper in the aftermath of one of the decade's bloodiest civil
wars. The rest of his unit ordered him to keep the noise down as he
wrote and sang in the post-midnight stillness. He didn't keep the
noise down. "'No Bravery' is the only complete song I wrote in Kosovo.
I wrote it lying by my tank in my sleeping bag with my boots on. You
had to sleep with your boots on. The song is pretty fatalistic. The
rest of the album is fatalistic," he says wryly.
But his Kosovan experience is only one aspect of a new artist who's
destined to find his way into a lot of record collections.
Essentially, James is a find - an old soul who's somehow unafflicted
by cynicism, a young writer who sounds likes he's been doing this for
years, an angelic voice who's had a hell of a ride. Elton John, with
whom he shares a manager, thinks "You're Beautiful" is a modern
successor to John's own "Your Song". An astute comparison, because
much of "Back to Bedlam" is reminiscent of John's early-career best.
Meanwhile, Tom Rothrock, who produced the album, sees James as a
potential British answer to a couple of other clients, Beck and
Elliott Smith. Rothrock had never heard of James until he stumbled
across a live track he performed at last year's South by Southwest,
upon which the producer was so smitten that he instantly agreed to
work on "Back to Bedlam".
What's odd is that a military family like the Blunts - his father, a
career Colonel, has only recently left the army - should spawn a
James. As he tells it, his upbringing was the traditional sort that
scarcely seems to exist anymore: born in an army hospital in
Hampshire, he was sent to boarding school at seven, excelled at
science and maths, got a pilot's license at 16 ("I can fly anything
with a single engine – Tiger Moths, Spitfires"), did a spell at
Bristol University, and then, "because my dad was pushing for it",
joined the army. He eventually made Captain, and was the first British
officer into Pristina, leading a column of 30,000 peacekeeping troops.
Music, though, has always been his mainstay. Actually, this needs to
be qualified. James got into music lateishly, the result of growing up
in a musicless house that didn't possess a CD player. "My dad was
really practical, and saw music as just noise. The only CD player was
in the car, and we had just three CDs - 'American Pie', and a couple
of Beach Boys ones." When he went away to school, though, he learned
piano, then appeared in a school musical, and that was it. From then
on, he listened and learned as much as he could. A love of Queen and
Dire Straits came and quickly went. Picking up a friend's guitar at
14, he played along to Nirvana's "Nevermind", and wrote his first song
soon after. In so doing, he made himself unpopular with the school
housemaster, who knew that music drifting down the corridor late at
night could invariably be traced to Blunt's room. His teen years were
a battle between teachers, who were intent on imposing some sort of
education, and himself, equally intent on making music his career.
Armed with "some dodgy demos" he'd recorded, he left the army in 2002
to become a full-time musician ("My dad was nervous, because I was
leaving a steady job"). Said dodgy items were an impressive enough
showcase of his haunting voice and exquisitely personal songs to land
him both management and publishing deals within months. "And then I
met Linda Perry [songwriter-producer for, among others, Pink and
Christina Aguilera], cos my publishers gave her some songs, and then I
went to play South by Southwest, and then she gave me a deal with her
own label, Custard Records," James says, still half-dazzled by it all.
He went to California in September, 2003, to record his album, and
discovered that being a slightly scruffy English boy in Los Angeles
could be very pleasant. Staying at the home of an actress, he spent
his days recording with Rothrock, and his nights...well...researching
LA's club scene. "With my naïve background, it was like stepping into
a devil's cauldron," he says, in happy reminiscence. He recorded the
painfully poignant track "Goodbye, My Lover" in the actresses’
bathroom, where she kept an old piano.
His current favourite listening is Cat Power and Lou Reed's
"Transformer" album, and "Back to Bedlam" has a similarly enigmatic
quality. He won't explain what most of the songs are about, though he
does admit that the deceptively bubbly "So Long, Jimmy" was inspired
by Messrs Hendrix and Morrison. As for the rest, he says only, "You
can get away with murder in a song". |
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