Bombay Bicycle Club
You just came back from a pre-show gig at Birmingham University, how did it go?
Suren: “Well, it was quite good…”
Ed: “We kept fucking up in little ways that made us look very dumb!”
Suren: “It was quite weird because we were playing in a Cafeteria; there was a lot of noise from the crowd.”
Ed: “Yeah, and half the people were there to eat lunch and the other half were watching us.”
So are you more comfortable playing in a smaller environment?
Ed: “Yeah, anywhere but a cafeteria though. It is nice to go to Uni’s and places like that, just for people who can’t come to the show.”
Suren: “We’ll be doing a few things like that during the tour, we’ve played in libraries and just random places like that.”
As a band you started quite young, do you feel like you’ve had a good head start in the music industry?
Ed: “Yeah I think we have, most people reach the stage we’re at now when they’re in their early twenties, so we’ve got a good amount of time.”
Have you ever found that other bands have been threatened by how much younger you are?
Suren: “I guess some bands probably get kind of arsey, they think we’re just stupid little kids.”
Ed: “That’s fair enough, we are stupid little kids! We find most people are friendly with us, but we just play music and hang out.”
You’re known for having quite a laid-back attitude towards your music. Do you feel that it’s something that can be passed on to fledgling musicians?
Suren: “We’re probably a little bit too laid back to be honest. They should find a middle ground.”
Ed: “Yeah, they probably shouldn’t be this laid back about it because they won’t get anywhere, we were very lucky. We are very focused when it comes to playing and writing music, and everything else.”
Apart from winning “Road to V” was there a defining moment when you realised “Fuck, I’m famous”?
Ed: “Well, we entered Road to V more as a joke and then we forgot that we’d entered, but we just happened to win. It didn’t even feel like a defining moment then, only recently have we realised that it was bigger than we thought it was at the time.”
Suren: “But even now we still don’t feel like we are famous.”
Ed: “There’s been defining moments in our career that have been amazing, and we’re thankful for having done them.”
Do you still get to do the normal side of things like going out with friends?
Ed: “Yeah, all the time. When we’re not playing in the band we’re still friends with the same people we’ve always been friends with, prior to the band. It’s just like the band is a job we have, we do it and then we go home, like we all still live with our parents. It’s still fairly normal.”
Ed, you joined the band when you met them at a funeral, how did that happen?
Ed: “Well that’s just something we say in interviews really; I did know the guys beforehand, but we were all at a funeral, and they had to play a gig the next day. I knew them fairly well and I can play guitar so they asked me to play bass just to fill in, and after that they asked me to join.”
You’re playing a fundraiser for the Haiti earthquake in a couple of weeks, is that something you personally wanted to be a part of?
Suren: “It’s definitely something that we wanted to do. We get asked to do quite a lot of charity gigs that we cant do coz’ we’re always up and down, but this is one that we were really interested in doing.”
Ed: “Well after a disaster like that you’ve got to help out anyway you can. And this is something we can do fairly easily, so we have to do it to make a difference.”
And are you getting along well with the other bands on the NME tour?
Ed: “Yeah we love them, they’re all really nice. We usually go and have a few drinks with them most nights.”
Suren: “We sometimes have DJ sets afterwards as well so the other band will come along and they’ll be like…”
Ed: “Boogie-ing to the mixes!”
Some of the songs for “I Had the Blues…”were written a few years in advance, do you think there’ll be a more pressured approach for the second album?
Ed: “Some of the songs are about four or five years old, but some newer ones were written at the time of recording. I think there can be the normal second album syndrome, where you’ve got 15 years to write one album and then one year to write the second, but I don’t think we would find that kind of pressure.”
Suren: “Well we’ve got a few ideas already for songs, so they’re already coming along.”
Ed: “I don’t think we’re a band that would ever rush anything anyway; we’re so laid back it could take years, I don’t think even the record company would be able to make us do it!”
Any other plans after the NME tour?
Suren: “Well we’re just about to finish recording a new acoustic album which was meant to be finished quite a long time ago, in fact I think we’re supposed to finish it like, tomorrow! But that should be coming out in the summer.”
Ed: “I think we’ll do a nice little tour of that as well, hopefully in some nice venues. We like to play in churches, places you wouldn’t expect a band to play. All these bigger venues are the same really, they lack soul.”
Suren: “We did an acoustic tour before, and we asked our fans to suggest some random places for us to play, so we ended up playing on a beach, down a mine shaft, in a castle, and it was the funnest tour ever.”
Any plans to conquer America yet?
Ed: “I’d like to go to America first, really.”
Suren: “We might actually be recording in America, we’ve been talking to a producer over there. We won’t actually be playing over there yet, but hopefully we will soon”.
As they take to the stage and immediately commence with their set
opener; “Emergency Contraceptive Blues” is undoubtedly the beginning of the most energetic live performance I (and most likely a lot of people) have seen the band play to date. Jack in particular, thrashes around like a man trying to shake a bat out of his hair and in the quieter moments, looks as though anything could set him off again. Suren and Ed exhibit none of the lethargy we saw earlier. Instead they display such enjoyment at what they do that when Jack assures the audience (as bands always seem to), that they have been the best of the tour so far, it’s difficult not to believe him. Despite the amount of oomph they throw into their set, it sounds water-tight, and not once during Jack’s physical tirades do I hear him miss a note. All the favourites are thrown in; their most pop-friendly number, “Open House” is greeted with a riotous response and festival-favourite “Cancel on Me” heralds the first of a steady stream of crowd surfers. But it’s “Always Like This” that steals the show, and ensures the band can leave the stage knowing they’ve conquered another city. They aren’t headlining the show, which is brought to a fire-breathing conclusion with an indefatigable performance by The Maccabees, but I don’t doubt that they will be back here soon with a show of their very own; these kids are going to be around for a while!










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