Leftdance Interview

Yaay! Lovely interview with Spanish music blog Leftdance, click here to see it or here for the English version!
Three Imaginary Girls Interview

Thanks to Matt Schild for interviewing me for the wonderful Three Imaginary Girls website. Click here for the full thingy!
Computer Music Guide Interview

The lovely Chris Gunn asked me to do an interview for his website, Computer Music Guide. Click here to read my rambling skillfully disguised as answers.
Indietracks Interview

Hello! As you may already know, I’m playing the violently lovely Indietracks Festival this year
And I’ve just done an interview with them. You can read it by clicking here!
It’s my usual rambling nonsense, enjoy!
Original Sin Interview

I’m very happy to be interviewed for the excellent Original Sin site! Click here to read it!
Sunday Mercury
Below is the interview I did recently with the Birmingham Sunday Mercury. I had no idea it would be such a big feature!
Lookee:

And now here’s what it actually says:
A CHART topping Midland pop star is to name and shame MPs who voted for the invasion of Iraq in a controversial anti-war song.
Jyoti Mishra, who performs under the pseudonym White Town, has recorded a track titled These Are The MPs on his forthcoming comeback album Don’t Mention The War.
Over a synthesiser drone, the 40-year-old Derby musician recites the names of all 412 MPs who gave the Government the authority to topple Saddam during a Commons debate.
They include Birmingham politicians such as Estelle Morris, Steve McCabe and Gisela Stuart. Outspoken anti-war MP Clare Short is conspicuous by her absence.
Mishra, who lives in Derby and topped the UK singles chart in 1997 with Your Woman, says songs on the album are meant to remind people that the horrors of war continue daily.
“I used to be a lefty,” he told the Sunday Mercury. “Now I’m a failed lefty. I thought I knew everything there was to know about politics, but then I started to question my own beliefs.
“One absolute certainty, however, is that the invasion of Iraq was illegal. Even people who were in favour of war back in 2003 now admit that it was wrong.
“Day to day life goes on here; in Britain while we pay our taxes to have people killed in Iraq. We watch Celebrity Big Brother while we bomb children. I don’t want to kill
anyone.”The synth songwriter says he wanted to capture the contrast between everyday life and war on the album – but it’s These Are The MPs which will spark controversy.
“It is a list of all those who voted for the invasion of Iraq,” said Mishra. “I got all the names from Hansard, starting with Estelle Morris, and read them out.
“There were so many that it took me 40 minutes to get through them all. To squeeze them into a four-minute track, I had to layer my voice. In the end there are 18 of me,
reading out the names.“These people may have been misled by Blair but they still voted to kill people. Some may have followed their conscience but a lot just followed the party whip.
“Towards the end of the track my voice is ragged. It’s not any acting skill or dramatic device, it’s just that the whole thing was starting to freak me out.”
Mishra, who has just returned home from hospital after suffering a glandular disorder. which left him unable to eat or sleep for a month, says he was humbled by the dedica-
tion of NHS nurses.“They work hard in the face of cutbacks,” he said. “Yet they were being told they would have to re-apply for their own jobs. There is always money for war but none for hospitals,
schools and housing.“How can so much money be available for killing people?”
Last night, Midland MPs were unimpressed by the anti-war track, Steve McCabe, Labour MP for Birmingham Hall Green, said: “I won’t be breaking down the door to get a copy of this, not even for the Commons Christmas party’.
“I confess I can’t remember his No 1 hit. Was it any good?
“The way I voted on lraq is alreaiiy a matter of public record so this won’t add anything to that. If people like, the song, and it gets in the charts; then fine.
“It’s not unusual for a pop musician to dabble, in politics in this manner. I recall Simon & Garfunkel doing something similar with Silent Night and a radio report on the Vietnam War.”
Gisela Stuart, Conservative MP for Birmingham Edgbaston, said: “People take a narrow snapshot and forget what Saddam Hussein did to his people.
“If we had gone all the way to Baghdad in the first Gulf War, then he could have been brought to book then and many lives could have been saved.
“If this piece of music gets a wider debate on the conflict in both Iraq and Afghanistan going, then that is good. But otherwise, there seems little point.
“I am sure, however, that it will be not only my first but also my last appearance in a pop song.”
pauLcole@mrn.co.uk
Hmmm… ‘MPs’ is hardly a pop song. It’s not even a song! I think the comments from the MPs are quite funny. I find the one from the Tory particularly stupid, trying to justify the 655,000 Iraqis killed since the invasion by harking back to Hussein. He was a mere beginner at mass slaughter compared to Bush and Blair.
Notice also the dismissive tone from the New Labour apparatchik Steve McCabe:
“It’s not unusual for a pop musician to dabble in politics in this manner.”
Yes, we should all keep our mouths shut and leave the politics to the professionals. That way they can offer honours for cash and invade non-aggressor countries without any trouble from us pesky serfs.
Subba-Cultcha

The lovely people at Subba-Cultcha recently interviewed me. It’s a lengthy one so if you’re going to have a read, I suggest you make yourself a nice hot cuppa and grab a couple of biccies. Ready? Okay, click here!
Queerty.com Interview!


Click here to read an interview on the wonderful Queerty.com website (winner of the best gay weblog in the 2006 awards).
I’m very, very proud and honoured to be featured on Queerty and Andrew Belonsky came up with some wonderful questions that I could ramble on about.
Aversion.com Interview

Click here for a new interview on Aversion.com. I was brutally interrogated by a scantily clad Matt Schild and, crying tears of rage and sump oil, I dissembled magnificently. Who is Keyser Soze, you may well ask? Well, it’s definitely not me.
Nope.
(cough)ALBUM!
En Garde
Anton from En Garde fanzine (antongustavsson@spray.se) interviewed me for issue 9. Here’s the lengthy, very rambling result:
1. The reason I think your story is very interesting is partly because I have understood that you had to overwin some personal/political ideals to sign for EMI when they wanted to release your “Your Woman”. For someone with Trotskij, Gramsci and Rosa Luxemburg as heroes, it has to have been a difficult step. Did you personally find it difficult signing to a major label and thus agreeing to raise money for its owners? How did you think about this at the time?
It wasn’t my own personal politics that much. After all, everyone who has a job is working for some form of capitalist, big or small. There’s no difference between being in a band being signed to Sony or working as an assistant in a Sony shop: both are cogs in the corporate machine.
My problem was that I didn’t want to abandon Parasol, who’d supported and released my records for years. But when my record got onto Radio One, it went crazy, shops wanted to order tens of thousands of copies. I had perhaps fifty? I tried to make Parasol understand that this record could be a big hit and to invest in pressing thousands but they just didn’t understand. Understandably, they probably thought I was exaggerating and if they pressed thousands they wouldn’t sell and they’d be left with a huge debt.
So then I had to think, do I let my record die and miss maybe the one chance to get my songs out to millions of listeners? This is the chance I’d been waiting for since 1982, when I first started writing songs. I knew that if I signed to a major, they could take the already successful song and spread it round the world. Plus, I could get a chunk of money that would set me up for a long time and make me musically independent. I wouldn’t have to scrape by, doing shitty jobs to try and afford recording gear.
I had a few days of pretty anguished thinking and then I decided to go with a major. It was the best and worst decision I’ve made in my life.
2. I have understood that your experience from the major companies is pretty bad. Do you have any specific, exceptionally bad experiences from the time on EMI/Universal?
Hah! Where do I start?
…forcing me to have single cover work I hated for ‘Undressed.’ I protested that I had creative control in my contract. The label replied, “Certainly, have the cover you like. But we won’t release it for a year…” Bastards.
…constant unending mind games. One minute they’re praising you, the next they’re tearing all your songs down, making you feel like shit. It’s all part of the method they use to de-stabilise artists. Like Moonies…
…forcing a second single choice on me that I *knew* radio wouldn’t like. Come the day, I was right, radio hated it and then we had to scramble round to release the track I wanted originally. This pretty much fucked-up the momentum from the number one single. So the follow-up tanked.
Basically, I could go on like above for about two pages. By the time I’d been on EMI for three months, I would come home from London and just go to bed and cry for hours. It was so draining, fighting over every tiny fucking thing with this label who hated me even though I’d just got them an easy number one record.
2b. I presume there were some aspects from which it was better to be on a big label as well. Which ones?
It automatically opens the doors to the mainstream media. I got access to newspapers and TV stations who’d never give me the time of day before. Therefore, you can reach a much bigger audience, you can break out of the indie ghetto. Which, for me, was a relief since White Town has never been trendy in those circles anyway.
3. Let’s talk, just a little bit, about your big hit. In an interview, the (superbe) Swedish band Radio Dept. said, roughly, that they found it bizarre when they understood that as many as 500 people actually owned their debut 7″ and played it at home. What was it like realising that millions of people all around the world were buying your music? Didn’t you find it absurd?
I worked out one time that I must have sold around 1.5 million records. That’s combining single and album sales. I know that the single sold 400,000 copies in the UK alone (and it was number one in 8 countries). And the album sold at least 350,000 in North America.
How does one grasp those figures? It’s insane!
I’d been happy to sell maybe a thousand records before. That would have been excellent! And then to jump to that does send one crazy…
I still don’t think I’ve completely recovered now.
3b. At the time, did you think it was worth its sales?
Oh yeah – it’s a catchy tune.
But there are so many catchy songs! If I could get ‘Black Cab’ onto a Levis’ advert or something, I’m sure that would be an international number one. Or The Lucksmith’s ‘Camera-Shy.’ Or The Sprites’ ‘Do It Yourself.’ Or Maritime’s ‘Some One Has To Die.’ Or… Well, you see my point.
3c. Listening to the song today (if you ever do, that is), 8-9 years after recording it, how do you find it?
I remember recording it in my little bedroom so I guess I hear it differently from the average listener. I hear all the bits where I was being silly or going wrong.
For me, each one of my songs is me, a part of me. I know exactly what I felt when I wrote it, it’s like a diary entry. ‘Your Woman’ is partly about my first love affair and how I couldn’t reconcile my grand Marxist posing with real love: with fucking, blood, tears and betrayal. Partly…
That’s what the song means to me, it’s totally personal.
4. In 1997, you left the major circus, right? What was the strongest reason for that?
I didn’t have any choice, I was dropped!
But I do admit I’d been being naughty for quite a while, throwing worse and worse ‘tortured artist’-type tantrums at EMI till I became a liability. And they didn’t like any of the rest of my songs anyway.
4b. You say in an interview on your website that “I was always suspicious of majors but that was based on prejudice, I had no solid experience to back that up with. Now, having dealt with both Universal and EMI, I can say that I directly know that two major corporations are run by idiots who have no knowledge of music and little understanding even of basic bourgeois economics.” Hypothetically, if you in 1996 would have known what you know now about the majors, would you still have signed to one of them? Why/why not?
Yep, I would have signed. Despite it all, my whole life has been aimed towards connecting with people. Whether it was in my political campaigning days, with music or now with blogging and photography, I want to connect. Specifically, I want to ask questions and to make people unsure and puzzled.
EMI gave me the chance to bewilder millions of people. I know, because I’ve got their confused emails…
…are you a woman?
…why are you singing about being a woman when you’re a man?
…are you gay?
…what the hell is that song about?
To have created such mass confusion is one the best achievements in my life. To make people rise out of their normal approach to pop songs and actually *question* the lyrics, question themselves and perhaps their own gender/sexuality.
And I got *so many* emails from women and girls, saying that the song must have been written specifically about their experience. For a songwriter, that’s the ultimate compliment.
5c. In Sweden during the last few years, the majors have been pretty quick to sign indiepop musicians to their labels (since they have seen there are money to make on that kind of music as well, I suppose). On that background, do you have any words to say to people who get the “opportunity” to sign to a major?
Think very, very carefully. Here’s some important questions:
1. If you sign to a major, will you be upset when all the hip indie kids who used to like you start slagging you off and calling you a sell-out?
2. If you’re a band, are you prepared for money issues to tear the band apart (especially true if there’s only one writer – writer’s get much more money)?
3. How will you feel when the label forces you to release a record / cover / interview / remix that you hate? Remember, creative control is a total lie.
4. How will you cope when people in your home town who used to hate you now suddenly want to be your friends? And vice versa?
5. Are you prepared to sacrifice your relationships, your normal life and even your sanity in order to promote your music?
There’s loads more but that’ll do for now.
6. Looking at the current situation and the future rather than the past: you now run your own label/blog, Bzangy Groink. What’s your ambition with it musically?
It’s fallow at the moment. I’d love to re-start it and release music both by myself and other bands I love. Perhaps if I can find some more money from photography, I’ll re-start it.
6b. What’s your ambition with it in a social context?
I’m 38 now and I want to do exactly the same as I wanted when I was 28 or 18 or 8: I want to change the world.
I’d love to see a united humanity, free of the cancer of religion and the crutches of drugs/drink etc. I’d love to see a rational, mature humanity. A human race that can feed and house all its children, give everyone the right to live and love and learn. Where art and science can blossom because there are no wasted resources, no babies dying of starvation in fields or being blown to bits by liberating bombs.
I’d like to have a house on Mars. Or at least the Moon.
But it’s now 2004 and nothing is as it should be. 2001 was wrong, Space 1999 was wrong, all those old sci-fi films were wrong. We haven’t even been to our moon for the last thirty years.
Instead, we hurl bombs at each other, exploit each other. Men exploit women, the rich world exploits the poor world, the bosses still exploit the workers. Only now, those workers don’t even call themselves working class, they’ve been fooled into believing they’re middle class. It’s still simple for me: if you labour, mentally or physically, in order to live then you’re working class.
I give the human race no more than another 100 years. Unless we can become rational, some loony will blow us up before then. And I guarantee, whether it’s a Bush or a Bin Laden, they’ll destroy the world in praise of their “god.”
7. What are your plans with White Town? Do you have anything specific planned?
Funny you should ask – I’d actually like to come and play a gig in Sweden! I’m planning to do some DJing in Spain (through Elefant Records) and I want to go round Europe more, playing gigs and DJing. Not in the UK – I can’t be arsed with this country’s music scene.
I’m just attracted to Sweden. Since it’s your home, it’s probably very ordinary for you but because of people like Komeda and Lekman, it’s a romantic place for me.
So, if you know of any promoters who’d like me to DJ / play some kind of low-key gig, please put them in touch.
I don’t want to do big-ass gigs (not that I’d have an audience of thousands now anyway). What I do is basically electronic folk music so I’d love to do some intimate gigs, with no more than 30 or 40 people, all sitting down. I’d like to be able to look each person in the eyes, to sing to that person and see them smiling. The opposite of a rock gig. I hate rock.
Apart from that, I’m working on the next album. It’s very angry so far, I’ll have to calm it down or it will be too extreme and people will just switch off. Since I want to subvert people, I have to sugar-coat the bitter pill better





