The new album hears you take on a different sound, but still
sticking to the fundamental principles as a band. Was that your intention going
into the studio or did it just happen organically and unexpectedly?
I mean, everything we do happens pretty organically… It was
a great process making this record as, while the first was recorded over such a
long period with so many different people, this was just the four of us, and
Producer Dave, in a studio for six weeks making exactly what we wanted to make.
It gave a real cohesion to the sound and we were, for the first time in so
long, completely on the same wavelength.
What did you learn about yourselves making this album that
you didn’t know before?
That we’re right miserable bastards. Although I always had a
suspicion.
Who were some of your influences making this album?
We really streamlined what we listened to for this record… I
guess the template was roughly ‘melodramatic, widescreen pop’ and I guess that
roughly incorporates Scott Walker, Echo and the Bunnymen, Ennio Morricone… We
went to see Morricone in Verona when we were over playing a couple of shows
last year in fact. Every human emotion over the course of a two hour show!
Extraordinary.
The title of the record, “We May Yet Stand A Chance,” is a
bold statement. What does it signify to you?
I think there’s a certain self-deprecation to it. Which is
our sense of human (or lack of). It ties in with the lyrical theme of the
record though really. Things often seem bleak but, you know, we may yet stand a
chance.
The cover of the record is also pretty bold, it is the four
of you pulling a casket into the sea. Why the morbid reference?
Well the first record, Funtimes, used all this bright
iconography when really the album, lyrically at least, wasn’t a particularly
happy one. And that went over everyone’s heads... We played it a bit more
literal this time.
Is this your sink or swim record?
It’s our kitchen sink record.
The Heartbreaks have been a band that has seen such amazing
highlights over the years. What has been the standout moment of your career
thus far?
Oh, Sal! It’s gotta be New York… That was a real trip. Do
you remember sitting on the 19th floor at the Standard and looking out over the
meatpacking district and the high line and all those tug boats singing their
deep and sonorous hymns of commerce? I think I was truly happy in that moment.
We know how much you love your hometown of Morecambe and how
it still plays a key role in your music. How does the town still influence you?
It’s inescapable, I think. I used to feel like I’d been born
a long way from where I was supposed to. But I guess that’s just the arrogance
of anyone growing up in a small town. Now I know how important it’s been in
shaping me and the band.
Did you ever think that hailing from such a small place that
your dreams would come true?
Yes. We had unfailing belief in that.
The last time we all spoke was when you were in New York
City in 2011 for Fashion Week. One wild night among us all, when can we, and I,
expect you back here?
We’d love to go back. It’s just impossible not to feel
coloured by the place. I miss it.