On 1st November, Simple Minds will release 40: THE BEST OF – 1979-2019, a new compilation album covering all 40 years of the legendary band Simple Minds recording career. It captures their early experimentation, cross over chart successes, right up to their new imperial phase represented by songs from 2015’s Big Music and last year’s Walk Between Worlds, their highest chart success in over 20 years, charting at number 4 in the UK. Mark Millar caught up with Jim Kerr to talk about the new release, the recent live album, Live in the City of Angels, and next year’s tour.
‘Walk Between Worlds’ gave Simple Minds your highest chart success in over 20 years, charting at number 4 in the UK. How pleased were you at the acclaim the album received?
JK: It was great encouragement because the album was received well everywhere. For the last two or three albums, there’s been a lot of support coming our way. We felt it was a fully-fledged record, and we put a lot into it, and we hoped people would feel as good about it as we did. The things that people were saying about it were as we had hoped for – that it had vitality and was energetic, classic, but had something new. All the boxes that you would hope to tick seemed to have materialised.
Simple Minds have released ‘Live in the City of Angels’, which captures Simple Minds live on their most recent tour. How was the tour for you, and why did you choose to release that particular show?
JK: It was a spontaneous decision and a bit of an old school decision because one might say the idea of live albums, in general, don’t have the currency they once had back in the day. Because now, with YouTube and all that stuff, you could say there is live stuff everywhere, so what’s the point? The real thing was the element of surprise started with the tour itself, because we haven’t done a coast to coast tour in America for well over a decade, and the reason we hadn’t done it for that long was when we were last there, it looked like it had gone – there didn’t seem to be that much demand for the band. So to get a chance to go back again, we thought, “This will be interesting; let’s see how it goes.” And the tour virtually sold out coast to coast and thirty-one dates. On that last week, it might have been absence making the heart fonder because every night was chaos, and we wanted to capture that.
As well as the fact that with Simple Minds there is always a development with the band, especially when we play live with different lineups and different arrangements and all that – it was just time to capture it, and it’s very much a fans thing; it’s a hardcore thing. People said, “Shall we film it as an in-concert video?” And we said, “no, let’s just do it old school style.” It’s also a nod back to our first live album, Live in the City of Light, that we recorded in Paris. We have always tried to document the live thing at various stages in our career, and we felt it was time again.
On 1st November, Simple Minds will release ’40: The Best Of – 1979-2019′, a new compilation album covering all 40 years of the band’s recording career. Was it challenging choosing the songs from such a rich catalogue?
JK: I think it’s the same when it comes to playing live – it is tough, but it’s a significant problem to have because, as you refer to it yourself, there is that much stuff. You are trying to show the path that the band has been on through the years. You are going to put in all the big songs – you’re trying to have an element of surprise, and even at the last minute, we managed to put something brand new in which I think is always good as well.
One of the reasons these greatest hits albums come out every five or six years is that a younger audience comes to the shows every time we tour. And it’s also a way of keeping the catalogue in good nick with good artwork and good packaging – but it’s all about the music involved. I don’t get that involved in the actual tracklisting, but the people that do seem to be getting it right.
The album includes a cover of King Creosote’s 2014 Song, ‘For One Night Only’. Why did you choose to record that song?
JK: It’s a funny story with that because I’ve still never met King Creosote. I’ve spoken to Kenny a few times on the phone but never met him, but I’m a big fan. A few years ago, we eventually did this acoustic-based album after prevaricating for decades. There were a few things that made us do it. Just as it was in the air, our manager said, “You should look at this again.” We thought It would maybe work for a few tracks, but we still had our doubts. I was driving home one night, and BBC Scotland was playing a session from King Creosote where he did a cover of our song The American, and I thought it was brilliant – it was great. I thought, “We should look and see if he’s got something we should cover.” I already had a few of his albums, and there wasn’t anything I thought Simple Minds could do.
But when he put out his album From Scotland with Love, there was this track on it I thought, “That’s a Simple Minds song.” I could hear Simple Minds doing it, and when I spoke to Kenny to see if he would be cool with it – before I had a chance to put it to him, he said to me, “That’s my Simple Minds song.” He said, “I loved youse back in the day, and I love this element of the band.” I told him, “We are going to cover that song one day, but I don’t know when.” We envisaged bringing it into the live set and messed around with it a few times during soundchecks, and it sounded great, but we never actually played it live. When it came to this greatest hits album, I said, “We should have one new track – a bit of a rallying call, something energetic. “And Charlie said, “What about For One Night Only?” So that’s kind of how it came to be.
Which one means the most to you of all the songs on the compilation?
JK: There will always be a special place for Waterfront– it’s not even a song; it’s more like a poem; there are only eight lines in it. We wrote it about Glasgow where I’m speaking to you from now. So many of the songs evoke the strongest melodies going right back to the very first one, Life in a Day, where it’s your first record and the first single, and you hear it on the radio and all that stuff. There’s that and the apparent connections to the bigger songs, but I think if I had to pick one, Waterfront would be my favourite.
The compilation also includes your number one UK hit, ‘Belfast Child’. Can you tell me about the genesis of that song?
JK: It’s funny – it was the most unlikely thing because I was brought up in a house where most of the music was Country. (Laughs) In Scotland and Ireland, Country music is very big, but I didn’t like any of it at all. It was my dad’s music – he used to say, “What are you doing messing around with all that electronic stuff? You should put some fiddles and accordions into your music.” And I would say to him, “That will never happen.”
And then, low and behold, we were working with Trevor Horn, and he always comes from an angle you would never expect. So we were working in our place in Scotland, and he said, “Have you ever thought about doing a Celtic tune?” Our keyboard player Mick MacNeil is from the islands and is steeped in Celtic music, and he was always up for it. So we decided to give it some thought, but I certainly wasn’t pushing for it. Then one night, we were in the studio a few days after particularly sad events in Northern Ireland, and I went into the room after dinner. Our bass player at the time, who also played keyboards, was playing this most haunting melody. I didn’t know what it was, but it was Celtic – I thought it was fantastic.
Before I knew it, I thought about images and all that stuff. In the end, when he was finished playing, I said to him, “What is that?” And he said, “It’s a piece of music I’m working on.” I said,” it’s incredible. When did you write that?” He said, “Hundreds of years ago.” I said, “What are you talking about?” He explained that it’s from the classic folk song, She Moved Through the Fair. So I checked out the song and all the versions and thought, “I don’t know if I can do this. Can you take an old classic and contemporise it?.” I spoke to a friend of mine who is like a music historian, and he said, “That’s the very nature of folk music. It’s always been handed down, and people wrote new words, and the songs developed.” So we took a swing at it and had no idea even if it would be on the album, and low and behold, it ends up being a number one record.
How did you feel when it hit number one?
JK: I felt great (Laughs). It was the most unlikely thing. I thought it was a brilliant record, but it wasn’t a single in the traditional sense, and it wasn’t everyone’s taste either. I heard it again recently on the radio one night driving back, and it was playing – I thought the arrangement of it is so like Stairway to Heaven, and I didn’t know that at the time – I’m not a huge Led Zeppelin fan, but I love that song, it’s a classic. I kind of see it as our Stairway to Heaven.
To celebrate 40 iconic years in music, Simple Minds will be embarking upon a major world tour in 2020. What kind of show do you have planned?
JK: Again, I think we will be playing two sets so that we will be playing a lot of music. We are going to have to tick all the boxes that I said to you, and people will hear all the big songs you would expect, but we have got to keep our hardcore fans happy as well, and maybe play two or three songs that either they have never heard us play, never expected us to play, or haven’t heard for a long time – so we will do that. We are only just starting to think about it now, but the very title of the tour and the fact it’s forty years – it has to be all-encompassing, and again, as I was saying, it has to show us as still full of energy and vitality forty years later. We somehow have to bring the whole culture of Simple Minds into these two and a half hours.
Will the tour have the same lineup as the last tour?
JK: I think there is a lot of mileage in that lineup still – they are the greatest people, and they have brought a lot of energy. They are the ones who are feeding us just now. We have had so many great lineups, but I think right now, the lineup we had in the states, there is a lot of mileage still in that.
In 40 years, Simple Minds have had five UK #1 albums, topped the singles charts on both sides of the Atlantic, sold over 60 million records and packed stadiums worldwide. Looking back, what have been your highlights?
JK: I don’t know if this answers your question, but we feel blessed and feel so fortunate – we count our blessings every day. If you had said to us forty years ago when we were kids, “You are going to get a chance here, what do you want out of this?” We wouldn’t have known – we didn’t understand what forty days were like, never mind forty years. No one knew about money or profile or rewards or anything. I’m pretty sure the thing that we would have said to you was, “We would love to be in a great live band and get the chance to take it around the world.” To think that we’ve had a life out of dealing with that challenge forty years later, and we are still dealing with that challenge has been beyond our wildest dreams.
How do you spend your time when you aren’t touring or recording?
JK: When we are not touring or recording, I do have interests. I’m still a traveller, so I love to travel even when not on tour. I love Asia particularly, so that’s a massive thing for me. Still, I also love Scotland, and I’ve almost come back in a circle again because when we were young, we thought we knew Scotland, but we didn’t – we only really knew the central belt, but I’m a hiker and walker. We have just spent the Summer here in Glasgow writing many new songs. People would say, “Are youse working again?” We were working, but it’s some work when you don’t even feel like calling it work – it’s like playing with a puzzle. And Charlie’s in sparkling form just now – even when we’re not working, we are working.
Will you ever return to the Lostboy project?
JK: Yes, if I found myself with time on my hands. What happened with that was Charlie’s kids were younger than mine at that point, we had finished work, and he wanted to spend time with his young one and all that, but I was so full of creative energy – I wanted to keep writing and doing stuff, and that’s what led to Lostboy. So should that happen again, it’s almost parked waiting for that to happen. I enjoyed that.
The last time I spoke to you, you worked on a song called ‘Love Til You Hate Me’. How did that turn out?
JK: Pretty good – it needs to be brought up. I played it to a few people, and it got a good reaction. It’s a bit of an oddball – we haven’t got anything like it, whereas the bunch of songs we wrote in the Summer all sit well and nicely together, but sometimes it is a great song, but it’s not the songs moment, and then there are other songs that you think you would never look at that again. It’s the greatest thing when you have got it playing on the laptop, and stuff pops up, and you go, “What is that again?” And you kind of crack it from a distance and find what is wrong with it, and you go back and upgrade it a bit. I think Love Til You Hate Me is due to an upgrade, but there is something strong there.
What artist or band would be your dream collaboration for a song or album?
JK: I’d love to work with Kate Bush – Charlie and I were working on a track the other day called Ice, and I could hear this Kate Bush thing. I would probably change my mind every week, but I felt it would be great to have her on the song. I also think Simple Minds and Arcade Fire would work well on something.
The Simple Minds sound is constantly evolving, so what can we expect for the next album?
JK: It sounds like a dance album, and when I say dance, I don’t mean rave. I mean Simple Minds dance, as in rhythmically, with great bass lines, similar to the period when we did Love Song – some of the new stuff to me is making me think of that. Charlie and I are excited about it – once we have got a bunch of songs and think we have the making of something, unlike the old days where we would go in and record in one go.
We kind of record three or four EPs in a sense because that way, when it’s three or four songs, everyone can keep focus. Otherwise, it starts to sprawl – whether it’s the producers or engineers, it all gets a bit overwhelming. So we do four sessions where we record three or four songs, and we have already done two of those sessions. We would put it out as soon as possible, but the way the industry goes and the way promotion is, they are keen on a gap. (Laughs) The new album won’t be out next year, but it will be the year after.
40: THE BEST OF will be available on a 3CD deluxe edition, single CD, 2LP coloured vinyl and a 40-track digital format. It was remastered at the world-famous Abbey Road studios and has spectacular new art designed by long-time collaborator Stuart Crouch. It features iconic symbols by Malcolm Garrett, representing the 40 years.
Buy Simple Minds40: The Best Of 1979-2019
3-CD DELUXE EDITION
DISC ONE
Waterfront
Love Song
I Travel
Glittering Prize
Sense of Discovery
The American
Up on The Catwalk
She’s A River
Someone Somewhere in Summertime
See the Lights
Jeweller to the Stars
War Babies
Belfast Child
DISC TWO
Home
Magic
Promised You A Miracle
This Is Your Land
Honest Town
Glittering Prize (Acoustic)
Waterfront (Acoustic)
See the Lights (Acoustic)
Let There Be Love
New Gold Dream (81,82,83,84)
All the Things She Said
Once Upon A Time
Don’t You (Forget About Me)
DISC THREE
Chelsea Girl
Cry
Hypnotised
Stars Will Lead the Way
For One Night Only – New Track
Theme for Great Cities
Life in A Day
Changeling
Celebrate
Blindfolded
Sanctify Yourself
Mandela Day
Speed Your Love to Me
Alive and Kicking
1-CD
Waterfront
Love Song
I Travel
Glittering Prize
Sense of Discovery
Someone Somewhere in Summertime
See the Lights
Belfast Child
Promised You A Miracle
Honest Town
Don’t You (Forget About Me)
Chelsea Girl
Hypnotised
Stars Will Lead the Way
For One Night Only – New Track
Sanctify Yourself
Mandela Day
Alive and Kicking
2-LP / 2-LP COLOURED D2C VINYL EDITION
SIDE ONE
Chelsea Girl
I Travel
Love Song
Promised You A Miracle
Glittering Prize
SIDE TWO
Someone Somewhere in Summertime
Waterfront
Don’t You (Forget About Me)
Alive and Kicking
Sanctify Yourself
SIDE THREE
Belfast Child
Mandela Day
See the Lights
Hypnotised
SIDE FOUR
Stars Will Lead the Way
Honest Town
Sense of Discovery
For One Night Only – New track
To celebrate their 40th anniversary, Simple Minds embarked on an 11-month world tour in early 2020. Beginning in Europe in February, they tour the UK in April:
14th Cardiff Motorpoint Arena
15th Bournemouth International Centre
17th London The SSE Arena Wembley
18th Leeds First Direct Arena
20th Brighton Centre
22nd Dublin 3 Arena
24th Birmingham Resorts World Arena
25th Glasgow The SSE Hydro Arena
As they turn 40, Simple Minds legacy is something to be proud of as their story continues to evolve.
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