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The plaintive cries and shrill notes of a trumpet punctuate the roar
of the traffic and the hum of electricity the Mariachi's are on the prowl,
bringing their sad northern ballad's to the ravaged streets of the Distrito
Federale's Garabaldi Plaza. For a few pesos, customers buy a song or two,
and slowly drift away into cantinas for tequila and tortillas, heavy on
the lime. In his interview with Consumable Mike Jones said that SPV had given
the impression that they saw Latin Quarter as a long-term commitment,
presumably they never lived up to this commitment? Since "Bringing Rosa Home" was released you've moved to
Mexico City, why? In his review of "Swimming Against the Stream" John Aizlewood
said you were the ideal mouthpiece for Mike Jones' lyrics, so you must
be disappointed that Mike Jones is no longer writing lyrics? What are you currently working on? You've also been reworking some Latin Quarter songs including "Race
Me Down", what's the reason for this? Latin Quarter's musical style has always been diverse, no more so
than on "Modern Times" and "Long Pig",
has living in Mexico City changed your musical style in anyway? Both "Long Pig" and "Bringing Rosa Home" were
recorded with several session musicians, are you working with other local
musicians in Mexico? It's fair to say Latin Quarter have had their fair share of disappointments,
what has kept you motivated? When can we expect to hear any new material from you? Finally, you've written the lyrics to several Latin Quarter songs, what was the background to you writing these songs? "No Rope As Long As Time"....was written after reading the biography of one of the founders of the South African Communist Party: a white guy whose name escapes me as does the name of the book. Sorry to be so vague but it is 17 years ago! The phrase 'No Rope as Long as Time' is/was a saying of black South Africans meaning that no amount of oppression could ever halt their eventual freedom. Musically the song was inspired by Bruce Springsteen. After composing so much at that time on keyboards, often using pop-type riffs ("Modern Times," "Seaport September," "No Ordinary Return," "America for Beginners," "Eddie," "Truth About John"...) I was listening to Springsteen and thought Jesus! why don't I get back to strumming a guitar. Actually you don't hear the acoustic guitar too much on the record, but that's how it started. "February 1990"....In February 1990 I went on a delegation of musicians and actors to observe the elections in Nicaragua. The defeat of the Sandinista government in that election was a great blow and I felt once again that American money and influence had corrupted the region. When I got back to London, the first thing I saw in my bedroom was a magazine article I'd been reading about the murder of four Jesuit priests in El Salvador, another Central American country in which the US was spending a lot of money in order to defeat a popular left wing movement. The song February 1990 briefly expresses my feelings about those two very connected events. "The Ballad of Felipe Escobar"....that year I began reading a lot about Central America. In one pamphlet, I read this story of a young peasant in Honduras who was murdered because he had been militant and spoken out against corrupt and despotic landlords. This was Felipe Escobar. "Bitter to the South"....has a similar origin. The tune came out of meeting and playing with the Bhundu Boys, from Zimbabwe, but the lyrics were drawn from that same visit to Nicaragua in 1990. Tomas in the song is Tomas Borge, one of the leaders of the Sandinistas. The following year I visited a friend who was working in El Salvador for the United Nations, and had the opportunity to go into the guerrilla occupied territory. We arrived in this very small village which was riddled with bullet holes and mortar craters. We went into the only little shop and lo and behold! on the wall: a ninja turtle poster. American culture even here. The song is about the relation between the 1st and 3rd worlds. "Angel"....a rather simple love song, written in those breathless moments when you are on the verge of falling in love with someone. (Not Mike Jones' favourite Latin Quarter song! I think he thinks we should leave this kind of stuff to bands from California.) "The Spearcarrier"....written 6 months later when that love affair abruptly and inexplicably stopped. I was so shocked to be so suddenly pushed out of her life and this image came to me: that one day we can be the leading man, the star in someone's life and the next day nothing. Like an extra, a bit part player, (in Shakespeare) a Spearcarrier. The song didn't mean to be cruel but it is ironic and a little pointed. "Branded"....another love song. This time when I felt I loved and wanted a woman more than she did me. This is great for desire but very bad for peace of mind. But then, maybe love is not about having peace of mind! Only after the song was recorded did I realise the obvious image in the middle 8: 'Comes like skin to fire', obvious given the song is called Branded, instead of the one I had sung 'like ice to fire'. So the booklet has 'skin' the actual singing 'ice'. "Love Ain't What You Get"....was the fourth attempt to write a lyric for this song, which was originally composed at the time of "Swimming Against the Stream." It is about a couple of friends of mine in London. "Remember"....written after going round Westminster Abbey and realising just how connected is religion and war: the British Army and its spiritual wing, the Anglican Church. On Remembrance Day we are asked to remember the dead, but what do we really remember when the church is always quick to bless the next adventure. I'm not a pacifist but the hypocrisy | |||||||||
| Preface by Steve Uzzell | |||||||||
|
Modern
Times | Mick
and Caroline | Swimming
Against The Stream | Nothing
Like Velvet News
| Albums | Band
| Biography | Interviews
& Articles |
Lyrics | Rarities
| Downloads A Little Latin Quarter | Heiko's Latin Quarter | Steve Skaith Band |
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