MANRAZE - “Push The Boat Out A Bit”
July 17, 2011, 13 years ago
Low-key supergroup MANRAZE are set in sunny August to launch their second full-length album, follow-up to Surreal, called Punkfunkrootsrock, which is, unsurprisingly, a good description of the sound conjured by SEX PISTOLS drummer Paul Cook, along with Phil Collen and Simon Laffy, both of GIRL fame (Phil’s been in another notable band too, I hear).
“I guess, it’s just a bit of a free spirit thing,” begins “Cookie,” down the line to BraveWords.com from his home in London. “It’s a band that enables us to do what we want, really, without any restrictions. Especially as far as Phil is concerned, I guess, and myself, where we can go off on certain tangents that we couldn’t do in our other bands, and be a bit more freewheeling with the music.”Indeed it’s quite refreshing to hear, particularly, Phil Collen in this mode, texturing, making use of rhythm ‘n’ reggae, generally finding new ways to make the guitar talk. “It gives us the freedom, where it allows us to experiment,” agrees Cook. “Well, I wouldn’t even call it experimenting, even. We’re just freed up to do what we want musically, without any restrictions. Just to go out there and push the boat out a bit, you know? Because in our other bands, either Pistols or DEF LEPPARD, there’s a certain sound there, and you’ve got all those other guys in the band to deal with, and it doesn’t deviate that much, so this is completely different to that, I guess.”
And where does the band’s odd spot of reggae influence derive from? “Well, in England, we grew up in a big West Indian community,” explains Paul. “We grew up listening to ska and early reggae stuff. It was really big over there at the time, because like I say, the West Indian community is strong, and they had songs all the time in the charts. It was massive in the early ‘70s, in the UK. We grew up listening to that stuff and we were kind of influenced by that, you know? And around the punk time as well, reggae was really big as well. All the reggae bands that came along were huge, for punk. And all the reggae bands were kind of brothers in arms with all the anti-racism stuff. For concerts, they pulled together bands, like reggae bands and punk bands, and so we grew up around that stuff. You can’t help being influenced by it really.”
Finally, by the end of all this, I was proud of myself for figuring out how to spell Manraze, but I still didn’t know where the name comes from… “I don’t know either, really, to tell you the truth,” laughs Paul. “Basically, Phil and Simon were getting this project together before I joined, and they kind of agreed on the name before hand. I think it had something to do with Fay Wray, who was an actress. She was in King Kong or something, and it just kind of worked out around that. And the Surreal thing… people constantly got us mixed up with Man Ray, the photographer, all the time, so the name of the album, Surreal was just a play on that.”
OK, still don’t get it! But maybe we’ll have ‘er straight after our scheduled chat with Phil Collen later this summer, as the album sees launch and a likely touring schedule take shape.