Page 1 of 2

RADIATORS HOT PRESS INTERVIEW

PostPosted: Tue Jan 09, 2007 8:07 am
by philipchevron
27 years after their classic Ghostown, The Radiators have returned with a blistering new album Trouble Pilgrim.

A strong candidate for the accolade of best Irish album ever, The Radiators' 1979 Ghostown collection was boldly ambitious and creatively way ahead of its time. Produced by Tony Visconti, it contained such classics as ‘Million Dollar Hero’, ‘Kitty Rickets’, and ‘Ballad Of The Faithful Departed’ – later covered by Moving Hearts. Though it was recorded in 1978, the album’s release was delayed, and by the time it eventually came out in late 1979, the band had lost much of their momentum and it failed to take off commercially.

Now, a mere 27 years later, the band’s third long-player, Trouble Pilgrim has just hit the shelves. A 14-track tour-de-force, it proves Ghostown was no accident – but why did it take so long?

“The band didn’t actually break up, we just went into abeyance for a while,” laughs founder member Steve Rapid. “It was kind of, ‘Let’s take a break and see what happens.’ We’ve maintained contact over the years and generally kept in touch. That contact drew us back together and this is the conclusion of where it should have gone after Ghostown. Though Philip [Chevron] said it sounded more like the album that should have come out between TV Tube Heart and Ghostown."

“The 27-year gap is not really relevant,” chimes in Pete Holidai, guitarist/vocalist/songwriter. “If we’d released an album within two years of Ghostown it would have been something like Trouble Pilgrim. And it’s not just a record put together by a bunch of old has-beens either. I imagine a lot of people would be happy to put it into that category, but it’s just a typical Radiators album with a lot of contemporary issues addressed on it.”

With original members Phil Chevron, Pete Holidai, Steve Rapid, Mark Megaray and Jimmy Crash, The Radiators From Space, as they were originally known, emerged in the spring of 1977 into the white hot heat of punk. Their debut single ‘Television Screen’, regarded as a punk classic, made Single of the Week in the influential Sounds magazine, also hitting number one on the alternative charts. Their debut album TV Tube Heart, also released in '77, was one of the first punk albums, and they looked set to dominate the burgeoning scene. But the commercial failure of Ghostown caused internal tensions, and they eventually went their separate ways with Phil Chevron going on to join The Pogues, Steve Rapid (Averill) becoming a design consultant to U2 (and Hot Press contributor), while Pete Holidai pursued a successful career in music management, education and production.

Apart from a one-off gig in Dublin in 1987 the Radiators didn’t re-convene until 2003 to take part in a Joe Strummer tribute night. With new members, ex-Pogue Cáit O'Riordan on bass and Johnnie Bonnie on drums, their official comeback on Bloomsday June 16 2004 was a triumphant celebration. They appeared at Oxegen that year and also guested with U2 at Croke Park in 2005.

“It started with the Joe Strummer concert but the aim had always been to produce some new music at some point but only if we felt that it was new music,” Rapid says. “In truth, a lot of it was written in the studio. It’s not like everyone had a stash of songs waiting to be used.

“It was almost organic,” he continues. “The band got together, we played and then got into writing and then did the album. A lot of effort went into it. It was recorded in the same studio as Snow Patrol’s album [Grouse Lodge]. We deliberately went out and did the studio thing and made the best album we could. We wanted to get a sound.”

A lot has happened musically in the intervening years, and the key challenge for The Radiators was to capture the essence of the band without deliberately going for a retro-sound, as Pete Holidai explains: “We used the latest technology but we used it the way we wanted to. A lot of bands who use pro-tools for example would do a take and then go off and play pool and then come back and it’s all perfectly in synch. We didn’t want to do that. It’s digital but it’s only a machine that you record into. We decided to have a little bit of movement in the tracks, to have a natural chemistry. So if anything is slightly off it’s because we weren’t going to use the machine to auto-correct things. If you listen to a lot of great records from the '70s you can hear things that are way off, but that’s what makes them great.”


The songs range from the angry menace of ‘The Concierge’ to the melodic power-pop of ‘Heaven’ and the gorgeous balladry of ‘The Dark At The Top Of The Stairs’. Unlike most of their contemporaries, The Radiators always conveyed a broad palette of styles.

“There’s so much variety, our albums are almost like compilations,” laughs Holidai. “If there’s any link to the other two records it’s the fact that the way we tended to work was to write the song and serve each song individually in the studio. But the main thing is it stands up on its own feet. If you knew nothing about the band at all you could listen to it. And it still sounds fairly contemporary, almost like a bunch of young guys.”

According to Steve Rapid the hardest thing now for the band is how to communicate to a new audience.

“It’s very hard for a young audience to accept someone like us,” he proffers. “You see it in Whelan's where people are streaming in after a gig to the late night club just to sing along to a track that they’ve heard 5000 times on the radio. For us getting in front of that audience is quite hard. But when we played at Whelan’s recently there were more people in the audience that I hadn’t seen before and who knew the words to the songs – obviously they’d bought the album. Young people have said to us that the songs are much more melodically structured than they expected. They say, ‘You’re a punk band; we expected you to be noisy.’ But I think the writing on Trouble Pilgrim is some of the best we’ve ever done. It is in many ways the best album the band has ever made.

“There has always been a sense that the band is bigger than the individuals,” he concludes. "We’re fondly known as ‘the legendary Radiators’, you don’t even hear people talking about ‘the legendary U2’.”

Colm O Hare

PostPosted: Sun Jan 21, 2007 4:03 am
by Paddy Rolling Clone
Has there been problems with the distribution of the album? It doesn't seem to be too widely available.. I was asking a guy in a music shop in Temple Bar a few weeks ago and he was saying that he was finding he was difficult to get hold of. The local HMV told me they had no listing of the release. :? I got it from I-Tunes anyway (I'd still much prefer the album though) and I'm really enjoying it, especially Huguenot. 8) Current favourites are THe Dark at the Top of the Stairs and Package From Home. :!:

PostPosted: Sun Jan 21, 2007 10:19 am
by Shaz
Paddy Rolling Clone wrote:Has there been problems with the distribution of the album? It doesn't seem to be too widely available.. I was asking a guy in a music shop in Temple Bar a few weeks ago and he was saying that he was finding he was difficult to get hold of. The local HMV told me they had no listing of the release. :? I got it from I-Tunes anyway (I'd still much prefer the album though) and I'm really enjoying it, especially Huguenot. 8) Current favourites are THe Dark at the Top of the Stairs and Package From Home. :!:


Road Records in Dublin ordered it for me -- it took three or four days to arrive -- and then posted to the UK. It turned up two days later!

PostPosted: Sun Jan 21, 2007 11:25 am
by Alex
Shaz wrote:Road Records in Dublin ordered it for me -- it took three or four days to arrive -- and then posted to the UK. It turned up two days later!


got my copy from them, too. Great music, am just playing it again 8)

PostPosted: Sun Jan 21, 2007 1:49 pm
by Noel Kenny
Philip. There was an interview with Larry Gogan in yesterday's Irish Times. He listed "Ghostown" as one of his top 5 albums of all times

PostPosted: Sun Jan 21, 2007 3:53 pm
by philipchevron
Good ole Larryfuckingogan. Even in his eleventh decade in Irish pop music, he is still the King of the Pop Pickers. 8)

PostPosted: Sun Jan 21, 2007 4:09 pm
by KathleenwithaK
Not on Amazon, anywhere to get this in the US?

PostPosted: Sun Jan 21, 2007 7:27 pm
by Cdn Steve
Philip, any chance that the 'legendary Radiators' CD could be sold at the upcoming Pogues shows at the merch booth?

PostPosted: Mon Jan 22, 2007 6:42 pm
by philipchevron
philipchevron wrote:Good ole Larryfuckingogan. Even in his eleventh decade in Irish pop music, he is still the King of the Pop Pickers. 8)


LARRY GOGAN'S TOP FIVE

U2 The Joshua Tree

Steely Dan Katy Lied

Thin Lizzy Whiskey in the Jar

The Radiators Ghostown

The Blades Ghost of a Chance

PostPosted: Tue Jan 23, 2007 8:58 am
by Bud Byrne
All good stuff from young Larry. You know he is being shunted from his prime time slot. I suppose it comes to us all in time.

PostPosted: Tue Jan 23, 2007 10:57 am
by philipchevron
Bud Byrne wrote:All good stuff from young Larry. You know he is being shunted from his prime time slot. I suppose it comes to us all in time.


I don't think he's being shunted from his daily show exactly. Larry has been Ireland's best-loved dj since at least the early 60s and, while no one knows his exact age, it's fair to say he is elderly enough to be considering semi-retirement. My understanding is that's why he's winding down to a weekend slot.

This might be as good a place as any to pay tribute to him. Larry played the Radiators' "Television Screen" single regularly on daytime radio in 1977, at a time when punk singles were lucky to get a single play on the John Peel show. He took the view that it was just a great pop record and always prefaced it with a hearty "Long live Irish Punk, say I!" He also went into print with the immortal prediction "Tastes change. The Radiators will be the easy listening of the 90s!" How right he was. In any event, Larry's support helped "Television Screen" to become the first ever Top 20 punk single anywhere in the world [it reached #17 in Ireland]. There is not a single Irish musician of note who does not owe something to Larry's support, and the great thing is that is true whether you were a punk, a ballad boomer, a metalhead or a showband star.

Though his language is always impeccable on air, Larry disarms everyone who meets him in person by making free with the profanities, as if relieved from some sacred duty of propriety. So when Roddy Doyle called the family dog Larryfuckengogan in one of his books (was it The Snapper? The Van?) many saw it as an appropriate tribute.

But perhaps Larry will be best remembered for his daily phone in quiz which became a rich source of unwitting entertainment for many years, as Larry was always eager for the caller to win.

Larry: Complete the phrase "Happy as......"
Caller: Um....no...dunno
Larry: Here's a clue. It's my name!
Caller: Oh! Happy as a pig in shite?

PostPosted: Tue Jan 23, 2007 11:23 am
by Bud Byrne
Yeah, he really was the first true music radio personality in Ireland and is rightly a legend. As you say there can hardly be an Irish musician of note who does not owe him a pint or two.

I just can't picture him cursing and swearing. It kinda ruins the image of him I have while at the same time giving him a bit of an edge....respect to the man.

Another quiz one, which is a bit in topic now was:

LG: Name a dangerous race?

Answer : The Arabs. (A truly Irish answer)

PostPosted: Tue Jan 23, 2007 11:28 am
by philipchevron
Larry: What was Hitler's first name?
Caller: Would it be Heil?

PostPosted: Tue Jan 23, 2007 11:35 am
by Bud Byrne
My brother was actually on one day about 20 years ago and got 14 right. My mother still has the little trophy at home. 8)

PostPosted: Tue Jan 23, 2007 12:25 pm
by The Duke of Ingmar
philipchevron wrote:Larry: What was Hitler's first name?
Caller: Would it be Heil?


According to Homer Simpson "Hitler" was the capital of North Dakota. :D