Showing posts sorted by relevance for query andy gill. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query andy gill. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday, February 1, 2021

"He Absolutely Lived It:" The Enduring Authenticity of the Late Andy Gill




Andy Gill is a moving target even in death.

When the Gang of Four co-founder/guitarist/producer passed away on February 1, 2020 at 64, the devastating grief surrounding the news was soon deepened by the thought that Gill’s creative output had been silenced forever. Thankfully, the man’s music continues to live on in a series of posthumous releases that kicked off mere days after his demise and will continue through the better part of 2021.

On Valentine’s Day 2020, the surviving members of Gil’s final incarnation of Gang of Four – singer John “Gaoler” Sterry, bassist Thomas McNeice and drummer Tobias Humble – joined his widow, Catherine Mayer (co-founder of the Women’s Equality Party and the Primadonna Festival), in sharing the completely unexpected news that new Gang of Four sounds were on the way. Released 12 days later, the digital This Heaven Gives Me Migraine EP was comprised of reworked versions of three past Gang of Four numbers (2015’s “The Dying Rays,” 1979’s “Natural’s Not in It” and 2019’s “Toreador”) bookended by two audio clips of Gill speaking.

“This collection of songs was recorded just before Andy died, and it was his intention to get these out – to represent the way we played them on tour, late last year,” explained Sterry in the February 14, 2020 announcement. “All three songs were recorded in Andy’s home studio in London, and there’s a fly-on-the-wall intimacy to this EP – from the song selection to the snippets of spoken word.”

“From the hospital, Andy continued to give final notes on mixes of music that he looked forward to releasing,” added Mayer. “Since his death, I have been working with the band to fulfill his vision. The only change we have made is to include on the EP two brief recordings of Andy speaking, both, in different ways, essence of Andy.”






This Heaven Gives Me Migraine was promoted by the advance single “The Dying Rays (2020),” an updated version of a song originally included on 2015’s What Happens Next. On the original, guest singer Herbert Grönemeyer perfectly personified the quiet sorrow that hits many of us as we age and begin to contemplate our mortality. While Grönemeyer’s performance embodied the ravages of time and regret, Sterry’s interpretation reflected a young man who got to experience the world under the tutelage of a renowned mentor before seeing that magic come to an abrupt and sad end:

Control and power
Empires were built in our minds
But it will all go up in a blaze
Only dust
In the dying rays.

“[‘The Dying Rays’] is classic Gang of Four in a way,” Sterry observed during a call with this writer last July. “It’s talking about a grand concept like particles of dust in the universe but then sort of condensing it down and going into the personal. That’s what it meant to me – how these grand concepts can relate to someone as an individual.”

Perhaps the most powerful aspect of the EP’s version of “The Dying Rays” is that Sterry recorded his vocals for it only days after Gill’s departure.

“It was one of the most emotional recording sessions I’ve ever done. We had our long-suffering sound engineer controlling the desk, and we had to stop a couple of times. It was one of those things. But I’m glad I took it on, and I’m glad the reception to my vocals on that has been really, really positive, which is great.”

Sterry, McNeice and Humble later performed the song at Gill’s memorial in London.

July 2020 saw the arrival of a second EP, Anti Hero. Again culled from Gill’s final Gang of Four sessions, the collection featured “Forever Starts Now” (a track that, according to Sterry, “just missed the cut” for 2019’s Happy Now album) and re-recorded versions of 1979’s “Glass” and 2019’s “Change the Locks.” A fourth song, “Day Turns into Night,” marked Sterry’s debut under the solo moniker JJ Sterry and found the singer offering a deeply personal tribute to his fallen friend.

“I was doing a lot of writing for other people around the time of Andy’s death and the six months prior to that as well. I had this track sort of bubbling away; when Andy died, I finished it off. It’s unequivocally about Andy. I sent it to the Gang of Four management, because I send him most of what I’m doing just to keep him in the loop. He heard it, and he goes, ‘That’s about Andy.’ I was like, ‘Oh, shit. Is it that obvious?’ Catherine heard it as well, as she loved it. She was like, ‘This has got to go on the EP.’ I initially was a little bit skeptical of it, because it was quite different to the other tracks on there. It was really quite black-and-white. Normally, I try to have a little bit of ambiguity and things so it could mean different things to different people. But having put it out, I’m glad it was written as it was, because it was so pure in his intention. There’s no cynicism in there at all.”


In addition to its heart-rending lyrics and performance, “Day Turns into Night” was made memorable by McNeice’s pristine production.
“It actually started off as a bit of a drum-and-bass track. It had mad drums on it. All the other elements were there, but then we sent it to Thomas. He’s basically a genius; he stripped it back, took the drums off it, kind of made it half-time and mixed and mastered it. It just sounded great.”

All net receipts received by Gang of Four from sales and streams of Anti Hero are being donated to Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust in support of those who tried to save Gill’s life. The EP’s cover artwork is a variant of a full-scale portrait of Gill by Shepard Fairey, creator of the iconic Obama "Hope" image.





“Gang of Four has been a profound inspiration for me because the band demonstrates that great art can powerfully merge pleasure and intellectual provocation," Fairey commented before Anti Hero’s release. “I was devastated to hear of Andy Gill’s passing but honored to make a portrait of him in the hope of creating an iconic image of one of my heroes – with apologies to Andy; to me, he was a hero – to serve as a reminder that though life may be fleeting, Andy’s potent art and ideas will endure.”

Although it is not uncommon for classic acts to re-record older material, it’s a different matter entirely to see a band remake tracks from its most recent album. Why was Gang of Four so quick to reinvent “Toreador” and “Change the Locks” during the band’s final session when it had released the original version just a few months earlier on Happy Now?

“When you’re recording an album, you’re creating as you go,” Sterry shared during our call. “But when you’re playing those songs live over the course of a 30-date US tour, you really get to know them inside out. As a vocalist, I certainly interpret the songs differently and put my own personality to them as I grow with and learn them. ‘Toreador’ and ‘Change the Locks’ were in the set […] When we came off tour, we felt we were playing them differently and could interpret them in a different way. We wanted to get [those] down with the energy of a live performance. It kind of was; we recorded at Andy’s studio just straight off the bat as if we were at a live show. The thinking was not just to re-record it live; it was to re-record it with how we reinterpreted the songs at that point, which were certainly different to the originals in terms of feel.”

Anti Hero and This Heaven Gives Me Migraine were released together in physical form last August as a single full-length LP in limited-edition red and orange pressings. As with the Anti Hero digital EP, proceeds from the vinyl editions are going to Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust.


JJ Sterry, a.k.a "Gaoler" (Photo by Lemuel Dufez)


For Sterry, the release of both EPs represents the final steps in a journey he began when Gill recruited him to front his restructured Gang of Four lineup in 2012. The singer’s unusual stage name was inspired by both his former band, Gaoler’s Daughter (named after a character in The Wind in the Willows), and his penchant for carrying around “a massive bunch” of keys.

“I was staying at a couple of different houses in London at the time. I think Andy may have commented, ‘Do you work in a prison?’ Then, the story of my old band came [out]. Before I knew it, [Gaoler] was what I was called. (laughs) Andy steadfastly stuck with that name.”

Despite such playfulness at the start of his working relationship with Gill, Sterry was fully aware that some very serious work – and a considerable amount of scrutiny – was right around the corner. In addition to now working alongside one of the most revered guitarists and producers in Alternative music, he had to follow in the footsteps of original singer Jon King. Naturally, it took him some time to build an identity for himself within such a legendary act and find acceptance from its fanbase.

“I think at first, I was a little bit too reverential. I never wanted to do – and I never did – the same stage moves as Jon King; I never tried to copy what he did at all, because that would just never work. But at first, I think I maybe sort of hung back a little bit and let Andy be the more visible one, because he’s Andy Gill. But then over a period of time, I just realized that if I’m going to be the frontman, I’ve got to be the frontman. I just gradually took it further and further. I know those songs inside out; by maybe three years into it, I felt perfectly comfortable. The concept of being Jon King’s replacement didn’t really come into my mind. It certainly did at the start, and I think people could kind of tell. You don’t want to be apologetic about it; you’ve got to kind of own it. If you feel confident and you own it, then I think people can kind of tell that and they go with it and believe it.”

The last year of Gill’s life had been a particularly active and rewarding time. That April saw the release of Happy Now, while the band wrapped up 2019 playing some of the most well-received shows of its career. No one within the camp could have known that Gill would be taken from them so soon.

“When Andy died, we had just come back from doing Australia, New Zealand, China and Japan,” Sterry recalled. “It was the best that we had ever done; it just felt like we were only getting better. Tobias is just out of this world; he really pushed that band forever. Finally, on that tour, it felt fully justified. It felt like Andy’s initial version to reimagine the band had come to fruition at that point […] That’s one comfort – the fact I feel like that last tour was the best we ever did.”

According to the singer, last year’s releases officially close the vault on the 2012-2020 version of Gang of Four.

“Who knows what will happen with reissues and things like that down the line with classic stuff or even the more recent stuff. But in terms of original music, that was all we had, really. Andy’s always been the core of the band; he’s sort of like the Mark E. Smith figure. We always used his seeds of ideas for songs […] There may be some interesting things happening in the future that are in the pipeline, but in terms of original recorded music? No, there won’t be.”

However, that doesn’t mean the Gang of Four discography won’t grow in 2021. The band’s classic original lineup – Gill, King, bassist Dave Allen and drummer Hugo Burnham – will soon be celebrated with Gang of Four: 77-81, an extensive box set coming this March from Matador Records. The release will include new vinyl editions of 1979’s Entertainment! and 1981’s Solid Gold (both remastered from the original analog tapes), a “singles” album and the exclusive double LP, Live at American Indian Center 1980. Additionally, the package includes a 100-page hardbound book (complete with photos, liner notes and the first official publication of the band’s lyrics), two badges and a C90 cassette tape compiling 26 never-before-issued outtakes, rarities and studio demos.


Photo courtesy of Matador Records


This May sees the release of The Problem of Leisure: A Celebration of Andy Gill and Gang of Four, a double album of covers, reimaginings and remixes by Sterry, Grönemeyer (feat. Alex Silva), Killing Joke, Gary Numan, Helmet, The Dandy Warhols, Robert Del Naja (a.k.a. 3D) of Massive Attack, Red Hot Chili Peppers Flea and John Frusciante, former Gang of Four/David Bowie bassist Gail Ann Dorsey, past Gang of Four collaborator Hotei and a host of others. The first single, an interpretation of "Natural’s Not in It" by Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine and System Of A Down’s Serj Tankian, was released on January 8.

“Andy Gill was one of a handful of artists in history who changed the way guitars are played,” Morello shared in a statement. “Gang of Four were just incendiary and completely groundbreaking, with Andy’s confrontational, unnerving and sublime playing at the forefront. His jagged plague-disco raptor-attack industrial-funk deconstructed guitar anti-hero sonics and fierce poetic radical intellect were hugely influential to me.”

The Problem of Leisure was already well underway at the time of Gill’s hospitalization. With his passing leaving the project with loose ends, Mayer stepped in to guide the endeavor to the finish line.

“There was never any doubt in my mind that I should finish what Andy had started,” she said in a press announcement for the project. “He took so much pleasure from hearing from artists which track they had chosen and why. He was delighted by the tracks he lived long enough to hear. Even in what turned out to be his final days of life, he listened to mixes on a laptop in his hospital bed and asked me to send notes and responses to the contributors on his behalf. He also talked to me about further musicians he hoped to coax to come on board. After he died, I made contact with several of these. All said yes.”




The album’s artwork was created by longtime Gang Of four aficionado Damien Hirst.

“Everybody who grew up with Gang of Four in their lives can remember how mind-blowing and forward-thinking and filled with creative energy it was at the time,” Hirst observes on Gang of Four’s official website. “Guess what? It still is now. It’s art. Art that’s reaching out of this world yet somehow still down to earth. It’s so great to be involved with this release and to see and hear a new generation of musicians paying tribute to Andy Gill’s incredible music. My artwork ‘Dog with Bone,’ which Andy picked for the cover from a few ideas I had, is from a new series of giant pipe cleaner animals based on little ones made in my studio by kids. I think he wanted this work for the cover because it’s new and unexpected and in your face and hard not to like. They make adults feel like children, and Andy always wanted to celebrate that.”



The trinity of upcoming Gill-related releases will conclude in July with the US/Canadian publication of Good Grief: Embracing Life at a Time of Death, a memoir written by Mayer and her mother, Anne. Originally published by Harper Collins in the UK, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa last December, the book chronicles how the mother and daughter – widowed within 41 days of each other – dealt with these losses and cared for one another under the growing weight of the coronavirus pandemic. The book also explores the very strong possibility that Gill died as a result of contracting COVID-19 while on tour in China with Gang of Four in late 2019. (Mayer also tackles the topic in a May 2020 piece on her website.)




Although there is plenty of activity in the world of Gang of Four these days, it is impossible to consider any of these developments without a deep sense of loss. The sting of Gill’s profound absence has not lessened in the 12 months since his death. Not surprisingly, his passing prompted an avalanche of accolades from fans and music scribes (including yours truly) as they attempted to encapsulate the man’s contributions to composition and production. But how does Sterry – someone privileged to experience Gill’s creative mind up close – best describe what his late friend and bandmate brought to the world of music?

“I don’t know anyone [else] who’s ever got that [guitar] sound. It always felt like it was kind of on the brink of breaking down. I think that was the beauty of it; it didn’t sound like it was easy […] Behind all that, there was a lot of theory behind what he was doing – that push and pull between anarchy and rule.

“In some ways, Andy was totally Punk Rock,” he added. “It was like, ‘Right. It’s done. Get that out.’ But in a lot of ways, especially in his lyrics and with his production, he’d exhaust every possibility. He’d fine-tune things constantly. He was constantly analyzing, and he was constantly writing. He would never work to an album cycle; it wasn’t like, ‘We’ve got an album to do. Let’s start writing.’ He’d watch TV, and there would be some little phrase that would pique his interest, and he would write that down. Then, we’d go to the studio, and there would be reams of paper everywhere – completely illegible, but it was all there. He was creative all the time. That was something I was inspired by. He was authentic; he absolutely lived it.”




EMAIL JOEL at gaustenbooks@gmail.com

Monday, July 12, 2021

"Leisure" Lives On: Inside the Global Celebration of Andy Gill






As regular readers of this website know, the past 18 months or so have seen a slew of releases honoring the many innovations and talents of late Gang of Four guitarist/producer Andy Gill, who passed away in February 2020 at the age of 64. Now, after years of preparation (including considerable work done by Gill himself prior to his death), fans, admirers and fellow musicians are finally able to experience The Problem of Leisure: A Celebration of Andy Gill and Gang of Four.


Released last month, The Problem of Leisure collects 20 artists from around the globe (some legendary, some new to most listeners) who offer their unique spins on hand-picked Gang of Four compositions. Considering Gill’s widespread influence on the world of music, it’s no surprise that the end results are eclectic and intriguing. From the faithful (Helmet’s “In A Ditch;” Hotei’s “To Hell With Poverty”) and ferocious (IDLES’ “Damaged Goods,” Tom Morello & Serj Tankian’s “Natural’s Not In It”) to the wildly inventive (Warpaint’s “Paralyzed;” Flea and John Frusciante’s “Not Great Men,” complete with vocals by the Silverlake Conservatory Youth Chorale) and idiosyncratic (Youth of Killing Joke’s dancey Dub reinvention of “Forever Starts Now,” Sekar Melati’s live gamelan version of “Not Great Men”), the album serves a suitable celebration of a man who spent his life stretching sound beyond convention.


The Problem of Leisure was initially conceived as a multi-act tribute release commemorating the 40th anniversary of Gang of Four’s legendary 1979 debut album, Entertainment! However, Gill’s widow, Catherine Mayer, explains that those plans – and the project’s initial timetable – soon changed.


“It always would have been a bit of a tight schedule. This sort of album, where you have multiple artists involved, is going to take a long time. Some of them will turn around and deliver a track right away, and others will say that they’re going to and then they’ll disappear. Also, Andy was always deeply involved in every aspect of what the band was doing and busy in all sorts of other respects. At various times, he sort of co-managed the band, but he was also always writing new stuff. He also had a funny relationship with time; he always hoped things would be quicker than they were. I don’t know that he would have ever necessarily hit the deadline for it being launched on the 40th anniversary of Entertainment! But even before he was tested in that way, it changed course because he started approaching musicians he really admired and who he thought might do something interesting. Several of them came back and were really enthusiastic, but they wanted to do tracks that weren’t on Entertainment! So, it had already moved away from being just Entertainment! Once that happened, he then started being more interested in what the creative process was. He was really very, very excited by that. He was getting feedback from all these musicians he really cared about who were talking to him about the songs themselves and what could be done with them.”


With the artists afforded a free hand in selecting their tracks, it soon became clear that the album would end up featuring more than one cover of a particular number – something that wasn’t an issue for Gill.


“He was actually curious to see what different people would do with the same track. It didn’t matter to him which album people chose things from; he just wanted to see what they’d come up with. He got very far down that track at the point where he became ill.”


Gill continued to work on the album (as well as Gang of Four material that would later comprise the posthumous EPs This Heaven Gives Me Migraine and Anti Hero) from his hospital bed.


“I was not involved in the project in any formal way at all, but when Andy was in hospital, I was actually helping him with his computers and communications. But really, this was totally his project. He was excited about it literally until the moment he couldn’t be excited about anything. So, that’s why when he died, there was no question in my mind that it needed to be finished. In the hospital, I had made – at his request – a list of people he still felt he wanted to get involved with the project. There was also a rudimentary track list, which I followed to a very large extent.”


Very much to its credit, The Problem Of Leisure doesn’t pretend that Gang of Four’s relevance ceased once the original lineup splintered following 1981’s Solid Gold. Instead, the collection provides a fairly far-reaching representation of the band’s work, even touching on later tracks ( “Broken Talk” [reimagined in Mandarin by Hardcore Raver in Tears as “Last Mile”], “Where The Nightingale Sings” and “Forever Starts Now”) released during the time Gill stood as Gang of Four’s sole remaining original member. This part of the album’s focus was due in part to Massive Attack’s Robert Del Naja (appearing on the album under his remix name, 3D, alongside British duo Nova Twins), who suggested having a go at the 2015 track “Where The Nightingale Sings.”


“Robert was one of the first people to come back and say, ‘I actually want to do something much later.’ ‘Nightingale’ was already in before Andy died. In fact, it was being mixed while he was in hospital.”


The final track received for the album – former Gang of Four/David Bowie bassist Gail Ann Dorsey’s fantastic rendition of 1982’s “We Live As We Dream, Alone” – holds a special place in Mayer’s heart.


“That just felt like a commentary on what we were all going through. It also meant so much, because Gail and Andy really loved each other. She had been in the band, but they had also been friends for so many years. I’m so happy she was able to deliver that. I’m sad that he didn’t hear it.”


Fortunately, Gill was alive long enough to be blown away by several of the recordings.


“He took so much pleasure in the bits of this album he heard. He really did love the IDLES track; he loved the Gary Numan cover [“Love Like Anthrax,” with Ade Fenton], and he loved The Dandy Warhols [“What We All Want”] and talked about Everything Everything [Natural’s Not In it,” produced by Gill]. The Flea and John Frusciante track came in when Andy was still not only able to hear it but able to both laugh himself silly and say, ‘This is absolutely brilliant!’ There was so much on that album that excited him.”


Artwork for The Problem of Leisure (which is available in a plethora of formats and editions) comes courtesy of Damien Hirst.



“It was a bit of a mutual appreciation society,” Mayer says of her late husband’s relationship with the British artist. “They both really liked what the other one did and saw echoes of what they were trying to do in each other’s work as well. Andy and I had gone to the huge exhibition that Damien did in Venice, ‘Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable.’ We had been to a lot of his stuff, but that had been while this project was gestating. Andy had seen the artwork by Damien and loved the kind of playfulness in it – the way in which it sort of plays with your expectations and the sort of deceptive, often childlike simplicity of the imagery. If you think about the artwork, which Andy did himself, for [Gang of Four’s 2019 album] Happy Now, there’s an awful lot of the same impulse in there – something that is a bit joyous and silly but also, in that case, a bit dark. You can take those images and make something that’s multilayered out of it.


“Damien sent all these different possibilities,” she adds. “There was a whole different set of imagery, but Andy instantly went for the dog. He just loved it.”



The cover’s googly-eyed charm reflects a side to Gill that few detected amidst a body of work full of political observations and melancholic introspection. On stage, the man was all business – very often well dressed and regularly delivering the penetrating, steely-eyed glare of a disapproving headmaster. However, as this writer experienced firsthand in 2016, backstage was a decidedly different affair. Once the seriousness of the Gang of Four experience was stripped away for the evening, Gill was jovial and extremely good company – something Mayer knows better than anyone.



“His stage persona was so austere, [but] he was such a bloody nice person. He was lovely, and he was very, very funny. I don’t think that those sides come across in the public persona. That was, for me, the thing I wanted to get across. I’ve posted some pictures [on social media] that he’d probably kill me for posting! (laughs) Instead of it being all cheekbones and scowls, it’s him doing very silly stuff. I just wanted people to be able to see that.”


Above all, The Problem of Leisure showcases the legacy of a deeply creative force who never stopped working. While most musicians are a notoriously lazy lot, Gill was very much a moving target – always on his way to conceptualizing and achieving the next thing. Considering she spent years alongside a man of such drive, what does Mayer credit as the engine for a work ethic that enabled her partner to maintain his focus even as his sun began to fade?  


“I don’t think he had a choice. It’s funny; I’m a writer, and sometimes I actually feel there’s something wrong with me if I’m not writing. He was like that, but even more so. Back in the pre-digital era, he was forever tormented by getting whole songs coming into his head that he wanted to find a way of recording or writing down. He wouldn’t know how to do it. They would come at inopportune moments – when we were in the middle of dinner or on a walk in the middle of nowhere. He would ring our old-style answer phone that had a cassette tape in it. He would sing things or do rhythms down the phone or whatever into those tapes.”


Not surprisingly, Gill’s mind worked overtime while traveling as well.


“[With] the no-frills airlines that we used quite a lot, you really wanted as little luggage as possible. Andy would nevertheless pack an entire keyboard and a computer in his luggage! He was never not writing music.”


Naturally, Gill left behind an extensive – and chaotic – personal archive of his adventures both as a member of Gang of Four and as an in-demand producer for the likes of Michael Hutchence, The Red Hot Chili Peppers and host of others. Mayer is in the process of making sense of it all.  


“Sorting through what there is has been astonishing, and I’m nowhere near the end of it. I’ve found music that has never been out there […] I also have funny things. I’ve got not one but two battered microwaves, with the implements used to beat them to death [on the Gang of Four track “He’d Send In The Army”]. I have things that people wore on stage and lot and lots of personal letters. It would take me forever to go through this!”


Although there is a mountain of Gill-related material that has yet to be heard or seen by the world, Mayer cautions that it’s likely that much of it will remain that way. 


“I’m kind of exhausted with doing all of this stuff myself. There’s a whole thing that happens with widows being the keeper of the flame. He was and is the love of my life, and I don’t want to cloud that with stuff. I only want to do stuff that’s good for him; he’s not here to represent himself. I would only ever put something out there if I thought it was of value to Andy’s legacy. I don’t know what’s on these tapes I’ve found, but I’m not going to rush half-finished songs out there. That would be a disservice to him.


“There’s a thing about people saying [about the dead], ‘Oh, this is what he’d have wanted,’ and you know that’s not necessarily true,” she continues. “But in my case, there’s a ton of stuff that I know that he would have actually wanted, and it’s not all about him. Gail Ann Dorsey and I have been joking about it – and it’s not entirely joking – but Andy was pushing her and pushing her to do more solo work. I want part of his legacy to be to turn around to Gail and say, ‘Do that bloody solo work!’ He wanted her to do a cover of Blue Öyster Cult’s “Don’t Fear The Reaper.’ She and I have been talking about her finally doing that. John Sterry – JJ Sterry, who was the last singer in the [Gang of Four] lineup – and Andy became very close. Andy so wanted him to have a solo career. So, again, that is to me another part of his legacy.”



When the world heard the devastating news of Gill’s passing, social media feeds and media reports were instantly flooded with tributes and remembrances (including a piece by yours truly). These expressions of appreciation were very much in line with the reverence shown to Gang of Four in recent years – a well-earned (if decades-late) acknowledgement of the genius of a band that unjustly struggled to achieve mainstream success for the majority of its career. This posthumous praise, and the release of The Problem of Leisure and other recent Gang of Four-related projects, begs an important question: Did Gill have a sense of how much people loved him and how meaningful his work was to them?


“No, and that’s one of the things that’s the most difficult for me,” Mayer replies. “He was such a funny person. He knew how good he was; he used to periodically tell me that he was a genius and I was very lucky to be with him! (laughs) And I would agree, obviously. But he also was incredibly modest [...] You have no idea how many of our close friends were utterly shocked by the outpouring about Andy after he died. They really had no idea he was a prominent musician. I’ve worked in very different fields to him, so we have lots of friends who are in politics, other areas of the arts and other areas of life. They didn’t know much about music. They’d go to his gigs and they’d like the music, but they had no idea – and he wouldn’t have thought to tell them. He saved the ‘I’m a genius’ stuff for me!”


Purchase The Problem of Leisure


More on Andy Gill/Gang of Four on This Website




EMAIL JOEL at gaustenbooks@gmail.com