Music-News.com caught up with Therapy? frontman Andy Cairns at the Union Chapel just prior to Therapy? taking to the stage for their acoustic show. Check out the full uncut interview with the lovely man above and below.



YOU DON’T LOOK LIKE A BOY THAT SINGS…”

This quietly devastating critique, delivered to Therapy? frontman Andy Cairns by a workmate at a Michelin tyre factory in the late ‘80s, neatly encapsulates the sense of suspicion and confusion which enveloped the Northern Irish band at the outset of their career. Outsiders from day one, Therapy? have drawn upon the attendant feelings of alienation, frustration and dislocation for strength and inspiration across their remarkable 26 year career, crafting a dark, idiosyncratic worldview which has garnered the group a reputation as one of the most uncompromising, creative and individualistic bands of their generation.

2015's Disquiet, the band’s fourteenth studio album, but first recording for new label Amazing Record Co., extended this proud legacy, and proved the trio of Cairns, bassist Michael McKeegan and drummer Neil Cooper are in incendiary form. The album has been widely hailed as a worthy sequel to their iconic album, Troublegum, and featured on numerous Albums of the Year lists, with Metalhammer proclaiming “Therapy? released a batch of killer songs that sounded like an all-new Greatest Hits collection.”

For those unfamiliar with Therapy?’s storied past, 1994’s Troublegum set represented what Cairns recalls as “a leap of faith” for both the band and the partisan fan-base they had accrued in the first five years of their career. Following the release of a self-financed seven inch single (Meat Abstract) on their own Multifuckingnational Records label in 1990, the trio – then featuring drummer Fyfe Ewing - recorded two corrosive mini albums, 1991's Babyteeth and 1992's Pleasure Death, for the respected London independent label Wiiija, with both collections attaining Number 1 status on the Independent music charts in the UK and Ireland. A major label bidding war duly ensued, with the trio ultimately signing to A&M Records: the label’s faith in their new charges was repaid promptly with the delivery of first a Top 30 single (the wilfully abrasive amphetamine-abuse anthem 'Teethgrinder') and subsequently a Top 40 album (Nurse) in 1993.
With the following year’s Troublegum album, however, Therapy? surpassed all commercial expectations. An impossibly thrilling collision of razor-sharp pop melodies, metallic riffs and caustic punk rock attitude, the 13 track collection plays out as a whip-smart, cynical yet open-hearted teenage journal, a dog-eared, tear-stained survivor's manual for adolescent souls cast out into the Hell of modern existence. An album which distilled the aggression, black humour and off-kilter experimentation of the trio’s early releases into electrifying short sharp shocks, Troublegum transformed the Northern Irish misfits into the nation’s most unlikely pop stars, spawning no fewer than five Top 40 singles (‘Screamager’, 'Turn', 'Nowhere', Die Laughing' and ‘Trigger Inside') and clocking up a cool million sales worldwide, scoring a Mercury Music Prize nomination in the process. It was, recalls Cairns, “the album where I was able to be the guy standing in front of the mirror with a tennis racket, miming on Top Of The Pops.”

“It was never in the game-plan to make a melodic rock record, but it ended up succeeding,” Cairns notes. “But then people began to look at us differently. If you have a successful album, you’re meant to keep your eyes on the prize and – quote – ‘give the kids what they want’: our next album was meant to be a big mainstream rock record. We were being marketed as a European version of Metallica-meets-Depeche Mode, but that wasn’t really what we were about. So things turned out rather differently than anyone imagined.”

Beginning with the subversive, fearless and schizophrenic Infernal Love album, Therapy? gleefully spent the following 20 years re-writing the conventions of what is expected from a successful rock act, releasing a string of critically acclaimed, fiercely individualistic albums which married their experimental roots with an increasingly sophisticated harnessing of distortion and dynamics. The recruitment of Neil Cooper on drums in 2002 only strengthened the collective’s desire to transcend genre boundaries and forge a unique, challenging catalogue of work. In 2014 the trio’s tireless creativity and restless artistic derring-do was acknowledged on home turf when they were presented with the ‘Oh Yeah Legends’ award (previous recipients: Stiff Little Fingers, The Undertones, Gary Moore) at the Northern Irish Music Prize ceremony in Belfast. Which brings us neatly up to date, and to the release of Disquiet, an album which draws together the disparate threads of the band’s history in a beautifully streamlined, impactful and hard-hitting collection.

“In constructing Disquiet we went back to the old-fashioned way in which Troublegum was written,” explains Cairns, “whereby I’d take my guitar, play a song, record it on my phone and then send the song to the guys ‘finished’, in terms of lyrics, melody and guitar chords. We started with 19 songs, demoed 18 of them and then worked with Tom [Dalgety] to select the ones that best represented what we were trying to do with this record. And we’re genuinely delighted with how things have turned out.”

From the brilliant, brutalist wake-up call of snub-nosed opening track Still Hurts (“Each year, it gets worse. It won’t stop, still hurts”) through to the aching, end-of-the-world desolation of closer Deathstimate (“The road ahead looks shorter than the one behind…”), Disquiet is Therapy? at their sharpest and most focussed, a weighty, undeniably powerful and emotionally affecting body of work which both builds upon the band’s acclaimed catalogue and opens up new creative horizons. Updating the angst-filled Troublegum story with searing honesty and no little wit, it’s a fascinating, bold and belligerent set of modern rock anthems which stands toe-to-toe with the finest albums in the Therapy? canon. Cairns laughs dryly when asked what he considers are the lessons learned by Troublegum’s older, wiser but no less satisfied central character twenty years on.

“I don’t think the album’s protagonist is a happier man,” he muses, “but I think he’s a more capable man in terms of dealing with the world than the guy who wrote Troublegum was. Troublegum was largely impotent rage, whereas Disquiet is more… considered anger. We’re very proud of this album, and we feel that it’s another step forward on our musical journey.”

Therapy? have just announced a string of European dates for November 2016, as part of a new acoustic tour – 'Wood & Wire'. Following on from extensive periods of touring for their most recent album, Disquiet, and for the anniversary of Infernal Love, the new dates offer a rare chance to see the band in a different context.

Frontman Andy Cairns says:
"We in Therapy? are proud and excited to announce that we'll be taking our music on the road in an acoustic setting. This will be a challenge for us and hopefully a chance for our fans to hear the melodies, guitars and rhythms in unique settings. We'll be working on songs from across all our albums and in intimate environments we'll be able to give insights into the stories and influences behind them. We'd love you to join us in helping make this a celebratory experience"

A special limited edition CD featuring 11 new acoustic recordings of tracks spanning their career will be available on the tour.

ON TOUR - BUY TICKETS NOW!

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