Finally that has happened! An interview with the band that recorded the song "Axe Crazy" is posted in the blog called Axe Crazy! Yes, right, Jaguar. They helped to shape speed and thrash metal along with Raven and Venom. Their "Power Games" was a brilliant debut and the future seemed so bright. What could go wrong? I'm sure you know the story. The second LP "This Time" was mellower and AOR-ish than its predicessor. The press slammed it. The fans wondered where the aggression and sheer power disappeared. That was a disaster. The history of Jaguar is quite well documented, but usually it's Garry Pepperd, the guitarist, who does interviews (read a good one about the early days of Jaguar here). I decided to get in touch with the bass player Jeff Cox, who also was there from the day one, helped to bring the band back on track in 1998 and then stepped out.
How did you get into rock music
basically? Who were your favourites and were there any punk bands among them?
I’m
not from a musical family, but my Mum had an old record player and some Beatles
and Hollies records which started me off. A big moment for me was a school
assembly when I was about 12, which was hosted by 6th form pupils who played
side 1 of “Moving Waves” by Focus, which starts with “Hocus Pocus” so that sort
of got me into rock. As soon as I had some money I started my regular Saturday
afternoon trips to the local record shop, buying mostly second hand stuff like Deep
Purple and Zeppelin as the cover artwork and imagery gave an insight into the
genre.
I
was also listening to the Saturday afternoon Rock Show with Alan Freeman hosted
on BBC Radio 1 on which he played a good selection of heavy rock, including one
of my favourite bands Budgie. I can remember listening to one of their tracks
but I missed the name of it and ended up buying ever record they ever recorded,
and typically it was on the last one. The track was “Black Velvet Stallion”
which is probably not regarded as one of their best songs.
Another
light bulb moment for me was when I was about 14. We had a school rock band
play a lunchtime show, including some Hendrix stuff, “Hey Joe” seems to spring
to mind as one of the tracks, and that really got me wanting to play the
guitar, so I started building one as a project at school. Back in those days
(1974—1975) there was no internet or even books on how build a guitar other
than a book I found at a book shop in central Bristol, after a lot of searching
by an American guy Donald Brosnac. Anyway, I built from wood that was lying
around in the woodwork shop and it was just about playable up to the seventh
fret, as that’s as far as I got with putting the frets in.
School
was also a good environment for meeting likeminded budding musicians and that’s
when I started playing bass as 3 guitar players and no bassist doesn’t work. The
best guitarist, a guy also called Gary, was a big Brian May fan so we ended up
forming a band without a drummer playing mainly Queen songs initially. We
didn’t do any gigs but wrote a few dodgy songs and split up shortly after. I definitely
didn’t play or even listen to any punk stuff as it really only got started in
1975—1976 in the UK with the formation of the Sex Pistols, although now I do
admire their energy and attitude but it wasn’t my sort of scene back then. The
closest I got was Eddie and the Hot rods.
You met Garry Pepperd at college and played together in several bands before forming Jaguar. Do you remember those bands? Did you play in any bands before you met Garry?
Rolls
Royce College is where I met Garry. We were both apprentices along with another
100 or so. We were both into similar stuff so decided to have a go at putting a
band together. We auditioned quite few drummers, vocalists and even guitar
players and had a few working band names but nothing concrete. Chris (Lovell) was
the first decent drummer even though he came to the audition with his older
sister as he was too young to drive. We knew Rob Reiss from the Granary and offered
him an audition and he seemed like he might be up to it. I can’t remember who
came up with the name, but it could well have been Garry. He had an art student
friend, Jeff Granfield who we also used to hang out with, and it was Jeff that
draw the logo, initially with a swastika on the collar, but that was quickly
changed to a “J”.
At the early stages of Jaguar you all were very young and Chris was only 16. How did you manage to get gigs in the clubs? Was your age a problem for the club owners?
Age wasn’t much of an issue in the old days at the venues we
played and Chris looked older than the rest of us as he was as schoolboy rugby
player and pretty tall and muscular. Most of the time it was me that got asked
for ID, but I was 19 when we started so I was ok. I don’t think the venues or
promoters even considered it to be honest. The only problem we had was hiring a
van, as you had to be 21 for insurance cover so we usually had to get someone
to drive for us.
What are your best memories about such a legendary place like the Granary Club? Could you please share some memories about it? What were some other places to go in Bristol and around?
The
Granary was a legendary venue, and some mega bands have played there over the
years. There’s a book written by Al Read, who was the first and longest serving
DJ at the Granary which chronicles all the gigs in detail, including how much
the bands got paid. Jaguar played there 7 times. I remember playing there one
night and we had 2 massive
pyrotechnics set up on top of the PA which went off with such force and were so
hot several people on the balcony dropped their beers onto the lower floor and
stage due to the shock. Have a look at the photo and you can see someone’s
hand and glass in the flames. Not much in the way of Health and Safety in those
days and the offending pyrotechnics were caused by our overzealous roadie and
Granary DJ Glen Daniels.
"We had 2 massive pyrotechnics set up on top of the PA which went off with such force and were so hot several people on the balcony dropped their beers onto the lower floor and stage due to the shock".
I think your roadies Glenn, Lyndon and
Ray deserve some attention too and guess they were (as all roadies) really good
in getting into troubles with promoters, fans and strangers. Can you recall
anything about this matter?
We
had quite a few roadies during the first 5 years, and yes, as you mention
Lyndon and Ray deserve a lot of thanks for dedicating lots of time for very
little money to support the band. Lyndon was usually the brunt of most of our
jokes, which was a lot in those days when we got bored of taking the piss out
of Chris. Lyndon was level headed and sensible, whereas Ray just wanted to get
pissed and have a fight. There were numerous incidents, in fact too many too recall
clearly, but most of them were instigated by the idiots in the band, myself
included, rather than the roadcrew and usually ended in hysterical laughter
even if we did sustain a few cuts and bruises or warnings from people in
uniform. A common recurring scenario revolved around the driving to and from
gigs in hire vans. Most hire vans were box vans with only had 3 seats in the
front and a separate section in the back for the gear and rest of the band as
there was never enough room for us all. Travelling to a gig usually involved
sitting in the back on an old mattress with an acoustic guitar, beer, legs
hanging out the back of a van with the door open, weather permitting. Coming
back was a slightly different scenario, usually the 3 people sat in the front
of the van refusing to stop to let the 3 or 4 people in the back stop for a
piss. Ongoing consumption of beer and littering the highway with the empty cans
or worse bottles contributed and often ended in us being stopped by the police for
opening the shutter door and urinating over the highway and the car following
which was usually travelling twice the speed. We won’t mention our foreign
incidents, some in hindsight very stupid, such as driving down the motorway the
wrong way on the hard shoulder in the dark with the lights off to get to the
petrol station we just passed 4 miles ago, or the time Chris got a slap round
the face by a Dutch guy due to my poor driving as he was sat in the passenger
seat of a right hand drive van, which was quite amusing. Another trip to
Holland saw a few members of the band and crew, can’t recall who, participated
in a ritual stoning of the van in a busy service area with half bricks as it
wouldn’t start and showed no sign of life with another missed ferry crossing imminent.
Luckily It was our van, even though it was purchased by our girlfriends of the
time, and it did eventually make back to the UK, under assistance.
Jeff Cox with Paul Merrell and the roadie Lyndon Allen |
Do you have any special memories about recording the first demo (1980)?
The
first demo was recorded at Sound Conception in Bristol in a very short time,
can’t remember exactly how long but it was quick, maybe 3 or 4 hours. Rob Reiss
was singing and had a few problems as I recall. It was our first time in a
studio so we were all a bit fazed by the equipment and the process.
Tell me about songwriting process within the band. At the early stages you were active in that field and came up with some really cool tunes like “Stormchild”. Tell me please about this song. Do you remember how you wrote it?
At
the start we all contributed to the lyrics. I wrote pretty much all of “Stormchild”,
lyrics and music. I can’t remember the inspiration behind the music but
lyrically it’s a bit of a Rainbow era Dio theme. I also wrote “Battlecry” which
is Black Sabbath inspired. These were early songs when Rob Reiss was singing.
He didn’t contribute to the writing process and needless to say he didn’t last
long in the band as he didn’t have the level of commitment the rest of us had. When
Paul (Merrell) joined he wanted to write his own lyrics which from a vocalist
point of view is perfectly natural so we all stepped back from inputting into
lyrics post “Power Games”. My last contribution was “Dirty Tricks” which is
written about Rob Reiss.
Why did you diminish you contribution to the songwriting when Paul Merrell joined the band?
The
writing process changed for most of the songs on “This Time” as Garry and Paul became more
influenced by bands like U2 and spent more time writing together. This had an
obvious effect on the music which changed drastically from the aggressive
sounding earlier songs on the “Power Games” album.
Was there anything special or odd during recording the second demo or was it just a routine process?
The
second demo was recorded at Studio 34 in Bristol also in a very short time
frame and we were beginning to get more comfortable in the studio but still
struggling to get good guitar sounds. Garry was never happy with the guitar
sound but we learned to live with that.
Could you tell me everything you can recall from the recording session for “Back Street Woman” in the famous Spaceward Studios? Did you choose it because Iron Maiden had recorded their “Spaceward Tapes” there? Who produced/engineered the single? Did it take long to record it?
That’s
exactly why I suggested it and was every bit as good as we were expecting. If
you compare it to anything we’d done up until then the sound and playing is way
better. I remember Bruce
Dickenson reviewing it for a magazine and he loved it.
How do you think why Heavy Metal Records didn’t extend the deal after very successful single?
We
didn’t give Paul Birch at Heavy Metal Records the opportunity as I recall. We
were playing in Holland, supporting Raven at one gig, and the boss of Neat
records Dave Wood was there, he saw our set and offered us a deal on the spot. The
recording of “Stormchild” and the final mix on the Heavy Metal Heroes
compilation was appalling, possibly the worst recorded song on the album, so we
had no regrets in looking elsewhere.
"I remember Bruce Dickenson reviewing it ["Black Street Woman"] for a magazine and he loved it".
Is it true that Chris was responsible for booking gigs and all that management stuff? Did you try to hire a pro manager?
Yes,
Chris was good at the business side of things as he had a lot of self-confidence
and was good at negotiating, so we often ended up with a better deal than we
were offered to start with. Chris would usually give out free t-shirts or
promise something extra but he didn’t arrange all the gigs, as we all had
contacts. I used to book all the gigs around the Midlands through a local
promoter who was also a big fan for ours, so that helped. Garry did a bit as
well. We did later sign to Grey Bray Management under the supervision of a guy
called Tom Doherty hence the Girlschool tour support slot and other one off
gigs in London and surrounding area, but that was just before the Ill-fated
second album.
Could you tell me that story when two guys from Holland came to Chris Lovell’s house? How did they find him at all?
I can’t remember exactly how that happened, I think
they had got hold of the 6 track cassette and got in contact with Chris as his
house was our contact address and phone number at the time. The 2 guys were
Nico Wobben and Frits Gijsbertse, who went onto to arrange for us to go to
Holland and play at a Festival in Amersfort. We even stayed at his house and
went out for drinks to meet some local metalheads the night before the gig.
Jeff Cox and Garry Pepperd |
That was our first experience of playing a big
festival so we were slightly overwhelmed by the Dutch fans and how enthusiastic
they were. We had no idea of where we were on the bill and were half expecting
to go on first. We almost fell over when Fritz said we were joint headlining.
He then showed up to our dressing room which had 2 crates of beer and a crate
of soft drinks. Totally mental, we were superstars for the day. That was a
cracking gig and we played pretty well and didn’t upset the Hells Angels who
were acting as security. That was the start of a very good relationship with
both our 2 new Dutch friends and the Dutch fans in general. They also put us in
touch with Metal Mike who was a local Dutch promoter, as well as starting up
the Dutch Jaguar fan club including writing and printing a half yearly fan club
magazine called “War Machine” of which there were 3 editions. We returned to
Holland another 3 times, the next time was with Paul when we played in Uden. It
was less than 6 weeks since our last gig in Holland with Rob, so Paul who only
joined the band a couple of weeks prior was under pressure to learn the lyrics.
He was still getting to grips with them on the ferry on the way over which was
usually an 8—10 hour rough trip in winter, so not much fun. We returned again in
March for the second time in 82 and then again in December the same year, after
the release of “Axe Craxy”, so you can imagine things really picked up a level
from that point onwards. English
bands were always held in high esteem, and at the time bands like Raven and
Jaguar didn’t hold back on stage which the Dutch fans loved. We played
one gig in Holland, can’t remember the venue, but it was a small club with a
low stage and we only had Lyndon with us, so not much crowd control. It may
have been the Utopia in Eisloo or a club in Alpen but towards the end of the
set there were more people on stage than in the audience, which was a laugh as they kept standing on Garry’s
pedalboard and bashing cymbals causing sonic mayhem whilst headbanging out of
control. At least it kept Lyndon busy.
The band stated that Bob Reiss quit Jaguar due to nonexistent input in the music. Was it the only reason? Garry said that Bob changed as a person as well.
Rob Reiss
didn’t contribute to the writing process and never showed any intrest in writing
lyrics which is weird for a vocalist. I think he was more intrested in the posing
side of it rather than the music, and as we became more popular which intially
happened really quickly, he became less approachable and put himself on a bit
of a pedestal. Needless to say he didn’t last long in the band as he didn’t
have the level of comitment the rest of us had.In fact I wrote the lyrics to “Dirty
Tricks” which appeared originally on a Neat compilation tape about Rob Reiss an
his disintrest in the music and his shitty attitude to the fans.
Jaguar are often labeled as inventors of speed metal. Would you agree with that? Your music definitely influenced thrash bands like Metallica. Wasn’t it a pity to see how they became popular while you didn’t get bigger recognition?
Yes definitely, we were always trying to play stuff
louder, faster and heavier. Garry once said of the early song “Feel the Heat” off
the 6 track demo, “I’m not sure if it’s heavy enough”. “Yeah, right” followed
by a few roars of laughter. Unfortunately we have to accept the blame for our
own demise or failure to live up to fans expectations for the second album.
Looking back I wish I had been a bit more vocal in my reluctance to embrace the
new direction the band started to take post “Power Games”. I wasn’t into U2 or
Big Country like Paul or Garry. I was a more of a traditional rocker, and the
new songs didn’t give me as much scope as a bass player as the earlier stuff. But
we were young with a lot of outside influencers who didn’t know any better than
we did the direction the band should be taking. What’s not obvious to anyone
looking in on the band at different points a few months apart is that we were
living this and rehearsing up to 3 times a week plus gigs so to us the
evolution of the music within the band was a slow process, but to someone
looking from the outside album to album or year to year it must have seemed
like a different band. I’m sure if we’d have continued on our original path we
would have become a much bigger band but maybe not quite up to the elevated
level of Metallica.
What influenced the band to write songs like “Axe Crazy”? Was it intentional decision or did you do it just for fun at first but like the result?
I think
it started with a riff Garry had written which we jammed at rehearsal, but yes
the idea was to create a fast tempo monster of a song, not subtle at all. I
think we succeeded on that count.
Live 1982 |
Those
shows were all at the famous Marque club in London, and to get a gig there was
a sure fire way of getting notice, as it was packed every night with everyone
from hardcore music heads to Japanese tourists looking to tick it off their
list of places to see. I remember The Rods were up themselves and wouldn’t let
us use the backstage dressing room, so we had to get changed out the back in
the recording studio and push our way through the whole audience to the front
and climb onto the stage. Not very rock and roll. Stampede was a good show and
they were friends of the band, so myself and Boggy aka Colin Bond, bass player
from Stampede, swapped cameras and took some photos of each other’s band. Bizarrely
we both had the same Olympus OM1 cameras, so the photos turned out OK even
though the lighting wasn’t brilliant. I can’t remember anything extraordinary
about the Starfighters gig other than we had recently seen them at the Granary
in Bristol and given them a hard time from the audience. I don’t think they recognised
us but they probably remember the ensuing fight and beer throwing. Oops. Our
other appearance at the Marquee was supporting Lita Ford from the Runaways, who
was very kind to us, allowing us to use her dressing room, even if she was in
there at the time ogling Chris as he removed his pants to put his Spandex on.
Haha!
I know that “Power Games” was recorded in 5 days. How did you manage to do it? What comes to your mind when you think about that record session? Any special memories about Keith Nichol and Impuls Studios?
You’re
absolutely correct. “Power
Games” was recorded in 5 days because as Dave Wood famously said when we asked
for longer, “What do you want to do, go on a fishing holiday?” Memories
from the recording sessions include Keith (he’s a canny lad) dry comments and
the occasional appearance of Cronos from Venon, or Conrad the tape op as we
knew him initially, to make tea and help mic stuff up or go to the shops to get
fags for Keith. Dave Wood stopped him working in the studio after a while as it
was affecting his reputation and stage persona. The studio was on the top floor
which was also a pain in the arse with Neat Records offices on the floor below.
Dave was well into it expecting good sales as “Axe Crazy” did really well. The
band weren’t impressed at the time as sound wise it’s not as punchy or as clean
as the Spaceward Studio recording, but the band were pretty tight and the songs
more rehearsed.
“Power Games” was recorded in 5 days because as Dave Wood famously said when we asked for longer, “What do you want to do, go on a fishing holiday?”
Why didn’t you re-record anything from the demos and the singles on the full-length album? Did you fell you had stronger material?
We
had enough songs to not have to revisit any of the old material which was
getting a bit tired by that point, even though we played most of the stuff live
if we had a long enough set. The new material was definitely stronger with
songs like “Dutch Connection” and “The Fox” which was also superfast.
“The Fox” was about fox hunting in the UK. Who came up with this theme? Did this subject matter for you?
Yes,
“The Fox” was an anti-hunting protest song with the lyrics cleverly penned by
Paul, and as all of us were anti-hunting we did a gig at the Granary with
another band Gold to support the cause and raise some money for the anti-hunt
supporters.
If I am correct the band wanted to call the album “War Games” but changed it to “Power Games”. Any memories why?
I
think that was probably Garry’s idea but it’s all a fuzzy 35 years on.
The cover of this album was your idea, wasn’t it?
Yes,
the cover was my idea and hinted at the Cold War tensions, which were still
ongoing at the time. I sketched out the idea in the pub or Bed and Breakfast we
were staying in, can’t recall which, but the final artwork on the cover was
pretty poor, I could have done it better myself to be honest as I was a
Technical Illustrator at the time. The first time we saw it in a record shop
there were a few choice comments.
The band moved in a slightly different direction on the second album. Why was that? Did you try to get more airplays or did your musical taste change by that time?
All
I can say was that we were young and easily influenced, with so much going on
musically at the time it was difficult to not let it affect the song writing
and the direction of the band.
How was it to work with Tom Doherty on “This Time”? Did you have plenty of time to lay down everything? Was the band full of enthusiasm during that period of time?
The
second album with Tom Doherty producing was at times tedious as we had almost a
month to record it with most of the songs already written. A lot of time was
spent trying different guitars and amps as everything sounded out of tune as if
the intonation was out on all the guitars. We had strobe tuners, mesa boogie
amps and numerous guitars but nothing really cured it. The guitar sound was a
bit bland, nowhere near as aggressive as “Power Games” and the drumming
uninspiring. I think Chris knew the end was nigh. We also experimented with
keys on a couple of songs plus more backing vocals, and I even played a
fretless bass on one song so not very NWOBHM.
A lot of people consider “This Time” as a disaster but I still like it! What do you think about the record? Do you get back to it and listen time after time?
The
songs are good but I’ve probably only listened to it 2 or 3 times in the last
30 years as I think it sounds quite dated and very eighties. We were
even listening to Bryan Adams early albums back then.
"Garry and Paul became more influenced by bands like U2 and spent more time writing together. This had an obvious effect on the music".
Why did Chris leave after the recording of the second album? Was it fair to replace his photo on the back cover?
We
did give Chris a hard time during the recording, some of us more than others,
and it did signal the start of the end for his position within the band. I
don’t think we had the artwork or photos prepared for “This Time” until later
when Garry Davies had joined, so it was logical to put photos of Garry on and
not Chris, even though Chris had recorded the drums.
Drummers. Well they are the pain of my life. It’s hard to find a really good
drummer who is committed to one project, or dedicated to one band. We found
Garry Davies who fitted in well musically but I think he struggled with the
piss taking side of the band. Also he didn’t drive and lived in Chepstow over the
Severn bridge so that was a bit of an issue long term. He also grew up with
Prog rock and got offered a position with local Prog band which was more his
thing, so he made his excuses and left. I did make contact with him in 2014 and
persuaded him to join a heavy progressive rock band I was putting together
called This Raging Silence. We did record an album together in 2015 and
rehearse for live gigs but he had an ongoing shoulder injury so never got to
gig with us. Les Foster was a guy we found who used to play with Tokyo Rose,
who were also from Wales. He didn’t last long and I can’t remember why. Will Ng
was a guy we knew also in a local band but different genre of music, but he was
good and we played Ashton Court Festival with him in 1985, I think.
You toured in support of “This Time” with Girlschool. Was it successful? Any particular memories abut that one?
The Girlschool
tour was a good one, in fact probably our last successful gigs. A few things
stick in my mind such as sleeping in Kim McAuliffe Mum’s house on the dining
room floor after one of the London gigs as we had no money for accommodation.
It was stripped pine as I remember so not too comfy. Paul would often ask the audience at the end of
the show if anyone had a room we could crash in.
The band also recorded a session for the “Friday Rock Show”. Did you like that experience of doing that and working with Tom Wilson who produced the session?
We
did the session for the “Friday Rock Show” at the BBC Maida Vale studios while
we were up in London rehearsing for and recording the album so we knew the
songs quite well by that point. It was a good session and recorded in a massive
studio used by The Beatles among others. Tony Wilson, the Producer, did push us
quite hard, especially Paul, but the end result was worth it. We recorded 4
songs in quite a short time frame, maybe 4 hours or so after the gear set up.
Why did the band split up? Did you consider an option to return to your original sound and record another album?
I
think we all realised that we had gone too far down the wrong road and the
music and line up had changed so we just called it a day.
Tell me please about your career after Jaguar’s demise in the 80’s with such bands like Targa, Escape and The Lost Boyz who released the album “Diamond Dust” in 1991 or 1993. What kind of music did you play with those acts? Is “Diamond Dust” still available to purchase?
After
Jaguar ended I also became a bit confused with my musical direction as the late 80’s were an uninspiring
era music wise. Even the best bands were coming out with the most mundane
boring dirge, so my attempts to start singing and playing guitar with
Escape was never going to go anywhere. It was only the nineties and Grunge,
including the likes of Nirvana, Red Hot Chilli Peppers and Pearl Jam that got
me back on track. I formed The Lost Boyz with Fred Hale, also from Escape and
now with Sons of Liberty. We put together a line-up with potential and recorded
an album for Tom Doherty, who managed Jaguar for a while, which was eventually
released in 1993 on Communique Record, entitled “Diamond Dust”. Tom had managed
Jaguar from the “This Time” period so I was still in contact with him although
the limited budget meant the album never received any promotion, but is still
available in CD format. It was a promising start and we were all set to record
the follow up when bass player Justin announced he was off to London to attend
music college for 2 years. We struggled on but never really found the momentum
or a suitable replacement for Justin. I spent the next 4—5 years in the
acoustic guitar wasteland, writing, recording and playing a few gigs and open
mic nights. Nothing really changed until I got the call from Garry, which
brings us back to Jaguar and the Neat 20th anniversary reformation.
"The late 80’s were an uninspiring era music wise. Even the best bands were coming out with the most mundane boring dirge".
Was it an easy decision for you to resurrect Jaguar in 1998? Why didn’t you ask Chris to join you?
The 20th
anniversary of Neat Records (and Jaguar) plus the proposed new album and Wacken
Festival appearance were the catalyst for both the reformation of the band and
the return to a heavier sound. Garry initially contacted me after being
contacted by Jess Cox from Neat Records and we had a chat about reforming. Paul
didn’t think he could commit to the project and had doubts if he could sing in
that style any more, and we had no contact or knowledge of Chris’s where
about’s, not that we would have asked him anyway so we advertised for a
vocalist and drummer.
What are your best memories about the gig at Wacken in 1999? What were some other shows you played with Jaguar after the reunion?
With
new members Jamie Manton and Nathan Cox (no relation) on board it was inevitable
it was going to be heavy. The Wacken festival appearance was a good experience
and showed that if anything we were better than we had ever been. There are a
couple of Youtube videos out there of the Gig from an onstage perspective as head
roadie Lyndon wandered around the stage recording us on his newly acquired
video camera. Best memory
from the gig was probably Jamie climbing up the lighting rig and meowing like a
cat as he got stuck for a bit before crashing back onto the stage in a heap.
How and where was the album “Wake Me” written and recorded? Who produced it? Did you feel the same thrill working on it?
The “Wake
Me” album was definitely a return to form and re-energised both Garry and
myself. It was recorded in Coleford at a small studio called Berry Hill Studios
over a week or so and was engineered by John David who owned the studio. We
pretty much produced it ourselves to be honest. I still listen to it for a bit
of nostalgia and I still think it’s a good album. Everyone was putting in ideas,
which was good, and Jamie’s enthusiasm and vocals are excellent as well as
being totally manic in places which I guess makes the record a bit more modern
sounding. I was massively into the Red hot Chilli Peppers at the time, still
am, so we did add some funky bits and the novel vocal style added to the
uniqueness of our sound at the time. Nathan’s drumming was in a different
league so the rhythm groove was always going to be spot on. Obviously it goes
without saying that the guitar parts were at least a good match in comparison
to “Power Games” in the heaviness stakes.
Why did you quit after the album was released? What have you done musically since then?
I
didn’t want to quit to be honest but things were starting to take off for the
band as we had just been offered a 3 week tour in the US, but I had 2 young
daughters, and the most responsible best paid job I ever had and I needed the
money so couldn’t commit to carrying on with the band. As it happens the tour
didn’t come off but Garry did persevere and the band did record a few more
albums and keep the name alive.
How do you view the years you spent with Jaguar? Are they still important for you? Are you still in touch with Garry, Chris, Rob, Paul and others?
The
Jaguar years were my musical initiation and formed the basis of everything I’ve
done since, so yes, they were my musical foundations if you like. I’m still in
touch with Garry, we recently got together at a friend’s wedding. I’m friends
with Paul via Facebook but we haven’t met up in years.
I guess this question isn’t for you but what happened to that “Archive Alive” series? The label announced it would be a 3 CD set but so far only one CD was released.
I
have absolutely no idea about that but I wouldn’t hold your breath.
Tell me a bit about yourself. What music do you listen to these days? Are you into sports, reading etc.?
These days I’m still an avid rocker. I’m really into Steven Wilson, both his solo work and Porcupine Tree stuff. I still play the guitar everyday but I haven’t played bass for a while, well not in a band anyway. I still ride a motorbike , KTM 990SMT is my current bike, I’ve been riding on and off since I was 16. I’m also currently building a recording studio in my garden so I don’t annoy the neighbours so much with my guitar playing. I formed a heavy prog/rock band in 2014 called This Raging Silence and we released our 2nd CD “Broken Ocean” which is available in digital format. We’ve been gigging since 2016 but we are looking to do more gigs and festivals soon, so watch this space. You can find us on Spotify or any other online streaming site or visit the website www.thisragingsilence.net.
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