The Copperpot Journals have been plying their trade for the last three or so years, in which time they've released one EP, a mini-album, and a full length album (current release 'Pilots'), all to mass critical acclaim, supported Britrock heavyweights Hundred Reasons and Hell Is For Heroes on their respective UK tours, and secured a deal to release their record throughout the rest of Europe (through Germany's Defiance label). Not bad for a band who, according to some, are still relatively unknown. DiS met singer/guitarist Gareth Owen and drummer Euan Rodger at the tail end of their UK tour with Hell Is For Heroes.
Having met at the tender age of
eleven, Gareth and Stuart Turner (guitar) had been playing in various
bands together in and around Leicester,
before meeting Lee Dodson (bass) through playing shows with each other's
respective bands. After seeing Euan playing shows around town with his own band
("We always wished he'd be in our band", says Gareth), their
respective bands fell apart, leading to the first proper practice of the Copperpot
Journals in November 1999.
Shortly after releasing their first, self-titled EP through Blind Bear
Recordings, the band joined the burgeoning Firefly Recordings label
(also home to Kidsnearwater and Jerry-Built, amongst others), to release
their first 'proper' record, 2002's mini-album, 'Plotting To Kill Your
Friends'.
"It's not really a deal we have, as such", explains Gareth. "More of
an agreement", assures Euan, "When we did 'Plotting...' it worked really
well, and Chris (Firefly head honcho) looked after us really well, so it
made sense to do the next one through them as well." Gareth continues, "it's
kind of like how Factory Records worked in the early 90's; on a no-contract
basis. It's more based around trust."
So will it continue as a case of you producing records, regardless of whether
you have a label or not, and them then releasing it, or do they ask you for the
goods?
"I
think we're all quite ready to take the next logical step, and Chris wants us to
do that too, which doesn't mean it would necessarily be out on Firefly. Unless
we didn't get any offers of course, by which I mean a major label or large
independent deal. Chris has done more than I thought was possible within the
resources, but I think we're teetering on the edge, where bands like Hell
Is For Heroes are asking us to come out on these big rock tours,
but there's not been that much press coverage. We did have a PR company,
but to be honest I don't know what we were paying them for. If they read that,
they'll probably be thinking 'you fucking bastards'. They're nice people and
everything, but I don't see what they actually did. Apart from the NME
review (of 'Pilots'), I don't see what they achieved that Chris at
Firefly didn't with the release before ('Plotting...'), in terms
of reviews. Our (new) album's been reviewed in Kerrang, Metal Hammer, Rock
Sound, NME, The Fly...."
It certainly is getting some good press coverage this time around.
"Yeah it is. Because we're on a small independent as well....I mean, maybe
I'm just paranoid that a lot of people don't know us out there. I think
hopefully we might get a second wind with it when Defiance Records release it in
Europe around March."
Will that be
with the slightly different cover (the Firefly release is an elaborate affair
tinted with burgundy, whereas the Defiance release will be blue)?
"The sleeve won't actually be the same now. It's going to look the same, but
it won't be as expensive as the Firefly one. We chipped in for the (Firefly)
sleeve ourselves, because we wanted it exactly as we'd imagined. Chris has a
budget for all the bands on Firefly. That's what's so great (with Firefly),
everything is fair, the same for each band. So we had a budget, but we went over
because of the shiny surfaces, and paid the extra ourselves. But Defiance aren't
doing that. In fact, I don't think it'll even have a lyric booklet. It'll be a
threefold sleeve."
One particular thing that makes the Copperpot Journals stand out above an otherwise-average UK rock crowd is the lyrics; all of which are written by Gareth. It's not often that a UK rock band can make you pay attention to what they're actually singing, but the Copperpots do it with some amount of style and verve. In the past, Gareth described some of his musings as "sarcastic". Were there any particular themes or influences running through the written words of 'Pilots'?
"You
always have your pretensions when talking about your own lyrics. When I read
the review of our album on Drowned In Sound, it mentioned us singing
about girls, but there's not one single song where we sing about girls. The
only one I can think it might have been was 'Ornament', but that's not
about girls either. It went on about "well-meaning gibberish", which
doesn't even make sense. The whole point of it being gibberish is that it doesn't..."
Euan
finishes, "have any meaning at all, let alone any well-meaning."
"So
that guy doesn't know what he's talking about...." Gareth, being
the affable man he is, is quick to make sure he isn't offending anyone unintentionally,
"...in terms of literary correctness, anyway. One line it talked about
was "I'd imagine in a plane crash/the most cynical of non-believers pray",
from 'The Future Is A Dare', and that...."
Again,
Euan concludes the sentence, "You couldn't really get any more literal
than that."
Gareth continues
"There's no hidden metaphors in that, it's an observation, or a thought.
It's not trying to be poncey."
To a fan
of the band, one interesting point about the new record is how subdued it is
in places, when compared to 'Plotting To Kill Your Friends', yet at the
same time how infinitely more complex and intricate it is. A conscious move?
Or something that evolved through the band writing together?
"The latter, definitely. You hear albums where every single song is heavy, or
every single song has the amp turned to ten, like a wall of distortion. By the
time you get halfway through.....you're almost immune to it," says Gareth, "It's
like Slayer, you become immune to the heaviness after a while."
Again, he's quick to apologise, "Nothing against Slayer, of course. I
mean, I've never been a fan of metal, but if I was to listen to an entire Slayer
record, I'd find the riffing ineffective after a while. That's why we
put.....um...well, it's kind of weird - our favourite bands aren't like the
bands people associate us with."
"We
just felt we wanted to explore different things with this, it was a natural
progression. Some of the songs on the last record were almost three years old,
almost as old as the band were, and a lot of them could've been released on the
first EP. The songwriting just seemed very natural."
So are
some of the songs on the new record fairly old as well? I seem to remember you
playing a few of them on the 2002 Hundred Reasons tour, and 'Coronary'
was on a Fierce Panda compilation too.
"That (Coronary) was one of the first things we did after 'Plotting...'.
We always knew that the song would be on the new record, even before we did that
Fierce Panda record. We did a better version of it (a newly recorded version
of the song is on the album), slowed it down a little, and took out some
annoying guitar parts that were on it."
Concept albums have had something of a bad reputation over the last musical
decade or so. Things, however, have slightly changed in recent times, with some
of the finest rock records of the last few years (Garrison's 'Be A
Criminal', The Mars Volta's 'De-Loused In The Comatorium')
being concept albums. 'Pilots' is a record that can be added to that
list.
"Because
I did the lyrics....this is probably gonna sound a little pretentious, it's my
leanings towards prog rock, ha ha. I was really thinking thematically, and about
how each song is meant to be in that order. I had an idea when we were putting
it together about what would go where, and before we recorded it I deliberately
held back on committing myself to some of the lyrics. I wanted to make sure it
was one long... thing. A whole journey, in a way; that's why 'We Are A Black
Box Recorders' is at the end, that is the end of that particular journey."
"It
was a conscious effort to do it in that way. We went through three different
draughts of the running order, it's very clear, in order," Euan adds.
"It's a concept album, but I don't think people necessarily realise it's
that. We weren't consciously trying to write a concept album, it's not like we
sat down and thought we'd do an album by prog bands like Spock's Beard or
anything," continues Gareth, "We didn't ever set out to write it like
that, at the start. Once we put the lyrics together and knew what we wanted for
the artwork - that's why the artwork looks like it does, we asked my cousin to
draw that illustration - and the reason the lyrics are the way they are is
because we tried to fit them into an order. They aren't random song titles
either; it sounds pretentious - in fact, I won't keep making apologies for it -
but they are like 11 chapters in a book."
For a band who have been receiving glistening reviews in major music
press for their efforts, perhaps the strangest thing about the Copperpot
Journals is that they don't have a manager - Gareth does it himself.
"I'd
like to think that's the reason that we're getting held back from the next step.
But realistically, I work for the production music department at a major music
label, and I speak to people in the industry, and they're saying that the thing
holding us back is that we haven't got a manager. It's quite a tricky business."
"There's
only so much you can do yourself," adds Euan.
"If I
said to A&R that we were managing ourselves, they'd be like "see ya", but if,
say, Sanctuary management said 'we've got this band, the Copperpot Journals',
y'know, it'd be different. With bands like Iron Maiden and what not, management
like that holds a lot of clout."
So are
you waiting for someone to approach you, or have you been actively seeking
management?
"People have asked us before, but nothing we've ever felt...we might cut
our nose off to spite our face but...no-one we've ever trusted. I think as soon
as we finish this tour, next year, we'll start looking for one. We've got a few
leads through this tour, so....."
Would the band have any qualms about signing to a major label? The pair let
out a resounding "No."
Gareth: "There's no difference between them and big independents. In
fact, you can get more fucked on big independents sometimes. Some independents
can really fuck you up, because they work on the same contract basis (as
major labels), but they're not part of 'the big five', and that's what a lot
of people think about, 'the big five'. Their contracts are exactly the same, if
not worse sometimes. Maybe I'm saying this because of who I work for, but a
major label's interest is to run a business, and to a large degree they don't
give a fuck about music. I think the label I work for prove that they don't
really give a fuck. I mean, they do and can," he says, quick
to make sure he's not putting out the wrong message, "but you just have to
look at some of the artists they've signed, or the fact that they put out
novelty records. Shit, I'll probably get sacked if they read this."
So, you mentioned the evolution of the songwriting within the band, what's
the next stop for the Copperpot Journals?
Euan: "It'll
be a progression from 'Pilots', I think. As a band, creatively we've barely
scratched the surface. We've got so many diverse influences as musicians."
Gareth: "I
hate it when bands do an album, and think "we've got it, we'll ride with this,
we've got to make it with this album". You kind of think, well, they've not
really got faith in themselves as writers, as musicians, as a band, to think
that's the best they could ever do."
So the band are constantly pushing themselves onwards personally and
music-wise?
"As musicians, everyone pushes themselves. As a band, if we thought for a
minute that we'd be standing still, it wouldn't be right. The next thing we do
will be a progression from what we've done. I'm hoping it won't be a sidestep,
as it were," explains Euan.
Gareth reminisces, "I remember when
we finished 'Pilots', our mates were asking what it sounds like, and I
remember saying "I'm so proud we've got this record out, and if the band ended
tomorrow, I'd be happy", in the sense that after we did 'Plotting...' I
knew we could do another record, and if we'd finished there I would have been
gutted. Looking back on it now, I'm back there. I'd listened to it for the first
time in a while for rehearsal purposes, and I was thinking "Christ, I know we've
got so much more we can do", even though I'm so proud of it. I'd be letting
myself down if I was to say I'd be happy leaving it at that. There's no way I'd
leave it now."