1 pm at Hyatt Hotel, Hamburg. Robert Smith, unpainted and unshaved, takes a seat in his armchair and asks me while looking at my glass of water: "What´s in there, Vodka?" Ehm, nope. Really water. Robert nodds calmly. He sure saw enough Vodka yesterday; he experienced the nightlife of Hamburg together with the colleagues of the record company until five in the morning. "I really pulled myself together during the first days of this promo tour" he explains and smiles. "But I really felt like it yesterday. Nevertheless Hamburg was a real disappointment - there isn´t anything happening on monday evenings...“
Regardless of the long night Robert is in best mood. He confused the ladies of the promotional department anyway with the wish to do at least one hour interviews, which is quite unusual nowadays, where most musicians allow you a maximum of thirty minutes. But after twenty years of The Cure and an album which is again rumoured to be the last one, he obviously has a lot to tell.
When "Bloodflowers" is released in february, it will be four years
since the last album "Wild Mood Swings". Anyway, the breaks between the
albums in the nineties were much longer than in the decade before, where
they released a new sound carrier almost every year.
Do you focus on other things than music today? "Yes" Robert nods
"in a certain way, this is right. Not that much that you could assume from
the long breaks. "Mixed Up“ took us a lot of time, even if it didn´t
bring us much. I also always lose a few months for promotion." He leans
back and stirs his coffee. "What happened in 1991?" he considers. "No idea,
we probably wrote there. Maybe this was the first real blank. There´s
been very bad reactions to "Mixed Up" from the critics and the fans and
it was the first time that such a thing happened to us. I felt quite hurt
by this reaction. This has been one reason for me to take a break. I thought
"Mixed Up" to be really good. Maybe people realized later, that it shouldn´t
be a regular Cure album but an experiment.“
Now Robert passes the nineties in review. Even if there are just
three regular albums compared to seven ones in the eighties, The Cure weren´t
lazy. After the Wish tour, it took Robert months to cut the live video
"Show" because he wanted to do it on his own and he had to learn what is
necessary to cut a film. After this he was involved in mixing the live
albums "Show“ and "Paris“ and 1993 was over.
"1994 - we had the case with Lol which took us three or four months
struggling with lawyers" he continues. "I also took a break of six months
in 1994 after I thought the material for "Wild Mood Swings" was written.
Probably this was the point where I realized that I liked staying at home
for a change. In 1995 we worked on the album, in 1996 the Swing tour took
shape... In 1997 we had a year off. During the eighties there was
probably one month in ten years where I hadn´t anything to do with
The Cure, during the nineties it was two and a half or three years altogether.
I just realized that I like to have a private life. To do things that are
not intended for publicity - talking to people, taking a walk. Having free
time.“
Robert discovered the preferences of family life. Indeed, he and
his wife Mary haven´t got children on their own but they live in
close contact to the extended families Smith and Poole with altogether
21 nephews and nieces. The youngest is a year, the oldest 23 years old,
the most are between five and ten years old.
"By spending much time with them in the past 18 months, I became
a part of their lives" Robert says. "I play soccer with them, I pick them
up from school, the really dull things, which I like a lot. Normal things
like going to cinemas and such. If I´d go on tour for eight months
now and do an album right after this, I´m out of this for two and
a half years. And they grow up during this time. I´d like to carry
on like I used to but today I just feel different. And it´s impossible
to do both, I can´t tell them to wait growing up because I haven´t
finished The Cure yet.“
This was the main reason for the announcement this album would be
the last. Robert couldn´t imagine that anything could be more important
than the band for years but now it seems he has grown up. The conception
of travelling the world for months suddenly seemed quite unreal.
"In the last five years I relized that I got used to another life
quite well. I had to struggle through doing this again. But "Bloodflowers“
was a necessity for me - cause I felt that I hadn´t made an album
that sounded like The Cure since "Disintegration“. And I wanted to make
this album, no matter if I stop or not. But now doing the album was a lot
of fun - and I think it´s really good - so I actually don´t
want to stop. Indeed I´d like to spend more time building up my private
life. I haven´t had a real home for a long time. I had a flat in
London during the eighties but that wasn´t the same. I didn´t
want to go back there absolutely. But that´s different now - I long
for the people at home, feel homesick, that´s a completely new experience
for me.“
For this reason, there won´t be a gigantic tour around the
globe, even if The Cure look forward to playing live: Instead of going
on tour for fourteen weeks they will be on the road for just four weeks
in a row.
"You know, one reason for me to make music was being my own boss.
To rule my own life. And I had the feeling that there isn´t endless
time if I wanted to do something else. If I don´t build me a private
life now, I´ll be just an old Rock´n Roller in a few years
and this is a terrible thought. I have to keep The Cure as something that
means fun to me and not something that I have to do. This is the
reason why I don´t know how many Cure albums there will be between
2000 and 2010 - maybe just one.“
Besides he looks back on the past twenty years without a touch of
regrets.
"I can´t imagine having had that much fun with any other thing.
And I also haven´t got the feeling to be to old to play with The
Cure. Probably some people think so but that doesn´t bother me. I
even can imagine to do this at the age of sixty. I don´t care what
others think. But it would be horrible to this at the age of sixty just
because I can´t imagine of anything else. As long as I make music
with people I like it is wonderful, it´s something most people dream
of. But if I work the next one ot two years with The Cure thinking I´d
much rather be at home, then I wouldn´t be honest to myself."
The honest listening to oneself has a big influence on most of the
songs on "Bloodflowers", best to hear in "39“ which Robert wrote on his
39th birthday: The fire´s burned out, he ascertains, and he hasn´t
got a clue how to light it again.
"Actually I haven´t wrote about myself since "Disintegration"
except for songs like "Want" or "Bare", but I haven´t sat down and
written a whole album that reflects on how I feel since then. I wanted
to do this again now, but I was frightened to have it turn out boring.
To come to "39" - I don´t feel like having no ideas all the time
but sometimes I do. It´s an odd song that didn´t fit in the
album easily and wasn´t easy to sing either - with a message like
"I don´t know if I still want this anymore, I´ve got nothing
to say". It had quite a contradiction in it. If I really hadn´t anymore
ideas, I wouldn't have been able to write this song. But this was exactly
the point that made it exciting. I told myself that, if I wanted to be
honest to myself, then the song had to be on the album.“
Anyway, the impression of "39" will be neutralized by the following
titletrack, the mighty "Bloodflowers" which wipes away all doubts about
Roberts creativity with it´s power and gloominess. Contrary to the
last albums "Wish" and "Wild Mood Swings" he knew this time how the record
had to sound like. And like he did with the 1981 album "Faith" he chose
a one-word title on purpose, that should express a certain sound.
"On the last albums I fought against the idea of The Cure having a certain sound but on this record I used this in a positive way. I wanted the album to sound like us. I asked myself, why I thought "Disintegration" to be that capital: At first the songs are simply good but there is also a certain context. You can´t take a single song out of the album on it´s own, which works very well on "Wild Mood Swings". There you can start somewhere in the middle or press "shuffle“ on the CD player. The same with "Wish", there were many different styles, which symbolized what I was feeling at that time. I didn´t want to write about me, I wanted to try many different styles. I like "Wish" and "Wild Mood Swings" but I had the feeling that , if we don´t do an album that has a certain emotional power with this line-up now, we won´t ever succeed in doing this. It should mark a sign. And it does. I can´t really tell if "Bloodflowers" is an end or not.“ Robert pauses and laughs: "I don´t want to say this anymore, it´s becoming kind of a cliché."
Before The Cure started the recordings, Robert played "Pornography"
and "Disintegration" to the band to tell them the direction and to reach
the intensity that he thought they lost after the Swing tour. Today he
thinks that the 1997 festivals were terribly average - "okay“ but in fact
not Cure-worthy.
"For a time I thought the reason was that I lost interest, because
the band often reflects my inner feelings - sometimes, without me noticing
it. And because I absolutely wanted "Bloodflowers" to turn out to be the
best we´ve ever done I infected the others with this idea. The recordings
were a very intense experience. Compared to this, "Wild Mood Swings" was
like a one-year-party, as if you were living in a commune and recorded
an album by the way. With "Bloodflowers" we had a total time of three months
from the beginning until the end and I knew exactly where I wanted to go,
what we should do. The lyrics were already written at that time. It was
like "Disintegration" - I directed the band and made them play in a certain
way. It wasn´t that much fun while we recorded but the result is
much better.“
So, for the first time in a decade, Robert took his part as the
musical director. After the very democratic "Wild Mood Swings" where every
idea of the whole band got tested - "no matter how silly it was" (Robert)
- there wasn´t any input of his colleagues wanted for "Bloodflowers",
except of Simon Gallup who wrote the music of "Last day of summer". What
was the reaction of the band to this change?
"I don´t know" Robert claims and pauses: "Yes, of course I
do. It wasn´t that much fun for then as it was with "Wild Mood Swings".
But I explained to them at the beginning that fun wasn´t the point
this time. Simon and Roger had been present before with the "Disinitegration“
recordings and hated the work on this one, too. They loved the result and
the tour afterwards but the work on the album itself - I had been quite
difficult at that time because I knew exactly what I wanted. I drove Roger
mad for the keyboards, because I didn´t let him pass by not playing
clean. Of course, I got them whispering, now he´s completely mad.
And with "Bloodflowers" I´ve been just as obsessed for a few months,
because I wanted to realise exactly what I was hearing in my head.
I saw them both (Simon and Roger) looking at each other murmuring
"Oh shit, this thing is happening again...“ but I think the result justifies
this. Therefore we had a lot of stress in the band and in the end I stood
there alone. All the others were gone because they got the feeling I wouldn´t
listen to them. So I had to record the vocals alone. As they came back
and listened to it they thought it was fantastic.“
The recordings took place in St. Catherine´s once again where
"Wild Mood Swings" had been recorded also. Not the least because Robert
liked the region around Bath and he enjoyed taking a walk through the fields
at 5 am after a recording session. They had much less time than in 1995
because Jane Seymour wanted to live in the house again sooner or later.
Robert didn´t mind because the rigid timetable prevented squandering
their strength on too many ideas. They recorded all the songs in these
three months except for the vocals. After that Robert moved to RAK studios
in London where they once recorded "Pornography" and "Disintegration" to
record the vocals.
"It was great to go back there. On the first night I listened to
"Pornography". I have fantastic memories for that time, even if it was
very difficult. The studio gave me the feeling to do something important.
I had a kind of crisis in self confidence, I think. When I started singing
in St. Catherine´s I thought, why should anybody be interested in
the things I´ve got to say. But I knew that I didn't have these doubts
with "Disintegration", so I got back to RAK. And it worked, I finished
one song each day and after two weeks the album was finished.“
After this he also had enough of the capital-hectic. "I didn´t
want to do the mixing there. I did stay in a hotel in London for two weeks
and had a terrible headache; the traffic noise, the dirt, all these people...
so we moved to the country again to the studio of Genesis which they just
opened - we were the first there, it´s like a farm. It was wonderful,
around early summer and so the album finally got a consiliatory note. I
think if I had mixed it in London it would turn out much more agressive."
Whereby "Bloodflowers" is still much harder and heavier than the
last albums. Another reason for this is that Robert changed his attitude
towards guitar solos which he took for hippie stuff for years. And even
if he needed one for a song he´d rather let them be done by a feedback
guitarist like Porl Thompson. Now we can find long, classic guitar passages
in "Watching Me Fall" and "Bloodflowers". Second guitarist Perry Bamonte
had to take a step back. As everywhere on this album Robert wanted
the guitars to sound exactly like he imagined them to.
"Concerning to this, Perry has got a very calm attitude. I wanted
to show him how he should play certain songs and he asked me why I won´t
do it on my own. So there are a few songs where he doesn´t play anything,
but he doesn´t mind. There is no sense in telling him what I want
to hear and doing it on my own two days later anyway. He plays something
on "Out Of This World" and "39", those solid things. The solos are all
mine. Robert grins: "Because I want to win a guitar award this year."
But it´s not only these things that cause the powerful sound
of the new album. While even on "Disintegration" there were poppy singles
like "Lovesong", "Bloodflowers" is an extremely dark, complex album which
- for the first time since "Pornography" in 1982 - doesn´t include
any singles. On purpose.
"Do you remember "Galore"?“ Robert asks me. Of course, the second
single collection after "Standing On A Beach" which was released in 1997.
"There was hardly any promotion for this album. There were even people
in my family who didn´t know about this release. The reason for this
was a heavy quarrel I had with Polydor and Elektra. They wanted to have
songs from "Standing On A Beach" included on this album plus a few songs
from the last decade - a normal Greatest Hits compilation because that
would appeal to more people. "Boys don´t cry" and stuff like that.
I didn´t want it like this. To me it seemed like an offense to the
fans if we included those old songs.
They didn´t want to agree to this - they were like naughty
little children. If you do it like you want, we won´t do any promotion.
And I thought, fuck it, then there won´t be any promotion. So they
pressed the lowest edition they could. Even if this first edition had sold
out in Britain in the first week we hadn´t cracked the Top 40. There
just weren´t enough records in stores. I was really pissed by that.
And now I´ve got my little revenge - on this album there isn´t
a single. None."
In May The Cure invited a few responsible people of the record companies for a pre-listening and watched their reaction to the songs very carefully: The two songs they liked the most were taken from the album. "That was very childish of course" Robert explains. "And if we really stop some day, I´ll compile a real Greatest Hits album, which they´ll hate much more because there won´t be any singles on it, too.“
Whenever this will be. Maybe in the year 2020, when Robert marks the end of forty years of The Cure at the age of sixty. Or sooner. Or never.
Interview by Kirsten Borchardt
(Thanks to Martin for translating and typing this up)