It's odd writing about a band you've grown up with. In my early years of music geekdom, moving out of the Manic Street Preachers obsession was never going to be easy, but I always craved something a little more... current? No, I'm not sure current was the correct description; I just think that I resented the fact that This Is My Truth, Tell Me Yours was, on the whole, a pile of toss.
Happily, I did the whole 'support the local scene' thing and caught late 90s/early 00s underground nearly-grunge 'heroes' Thirst at Southampton's dirty gem, the Joiners. That particular night, however, didn't end in eventual regret at attempts to get served, or even being stuck at the wrong end of Solent with no way of returning to Portsmouth. I left with a new band to love and collect, to stalk and savour.
Fast-forward nearly six years and we're both older and most-certainly wiser, we've both suffered periods of disillusionment, success, unhappiness and confusion, but we're both sitting here today with a renewed sense of positivity, ready to take on the world. Whilst my personal positivity and drive will affect few, the magnificent return of The Cooper Temple Clause has the potential to touch many.
"We had to reinvent the wheel," begins guitarist Dan Fisher, "spend more time on the songwriting. The experimentation comes naturally to us - it's the sort of band we are. More about getting the best from the tracks we'd written, than letting everything end in a wig-out. It's definitely more immediate."
For a band that has an array of effects and samplers to make the staff at your local Korg dealer cry with lust, the decision to let this album run off guitars and pianos may come as a surprise. "It's still eclectic," Fisher continues, "but there's a lot of connotations that come with labeling it as 'mature', but I'd have to say that yes, it probably is. It definitely reflects the past couple of years and everything we've been through to get this made. We're proud of this baby."
They've every right to be. Make This Your Own speaks for itself: the songs feel more like songs and have, for the first time in the band's career (with the exception of early song 'Sister Soul'), the power to affect you emotionally from the outset.
As we speak, drummer Jon Harper is next to me, cutting stencils for the spray-painted sleeves of new single 'Damage', being sold on the tour the band embark upon in a week's time.
"We're looking forward to it," says Harper. "We did a couple of shows in Switzerland, Austria and Italy. Switzerland is one of the most rock n' roll countries we've ever been to. Seriously. We tried some of the new stuff on those dates and it went down really well, which means we're looking forward to these UK dates even more. We've got a bit of a back-catalogue now, so we've got a nice diverse set to choose from."
He laughs: "It almost feels like we're a proper band!"
Following the departure of bassist Didz Hammond many speculated upon the implosion of the band, but it seems to have pumped a new life into the Coopers - there's a renewed sense of why they're doing what they're doing.
"We feel a tighter unit. Five people can gel better than six. That's not to say it's been easy though; everyone has had to raise their game, take on new challenges. Kieran [keyboardist] is now playing bass on a few tracks live as well. He's been sat behind a keyboard for five years, so as you can imagine, we've stepped up the instrument-swapping acrobatics as well."
Of course, to begin with, Didz leaving the band was far from expected. "It was gutting," says Fisher. "We didn't see it coming, but that's perhaps part of the problem. We were doing a lot writing and recording from the album, either in Reading or the Westcountry. It got really tough for Didz, with his family. To come to the studio was a six-hour round trip, whereas London was half-an-hour each way - that's another five hours to spend with your family. In our struggle to get the album done, we maybe weren't there for him as much as we should have been."
Fisher is keen to stress the amicable nature of the split, adding that they still talk and are friends: "The biggest thing was whether or not we got a new band member. We spent some time with Dan Austin [producer] playing bass in America. We wanted Dan to do it, but he's got a really exciting career as a producer ahead of him and we wouldn't want him to be taken away from that. It would have been strange to welcome someone else into the family. We wanted to give it a shot."
Regardless of your opinion on The Cooper Temple Clause, their resolve to complete their album, their renewed positivity and the widespread anticipation of the new album, despite their lengthy absence, has to be admired.
I'll nod to my past and smile fondly, but it's the future where things are always much more exciting...
Fair play to them for keeping
going but apart from one or two tracks off the debut album they have always failed to excite me.
I will give the new lp a go but don't have high hopes.
TCTC
I was 18 when I first heard the coopers and thought "great! a uk band who aren't just crying over their acoustic guitar". There was some real venom in the first album. I can't help but think though, that perhaps I wouldn't have got into the first album had it come out when I was a little older. I remember everyone else at the gigs being sorta 16-20. Was it just teenage rebellion music?
No,
theyre bloody good idiot!
why oh why are the tickets not yet dispatched less than a week before the gigs? shithead promoters...
Oh dear!
My tickets for Bristol came a few weeks ago from seetickets.com, perhaps you should contact who ever you got the tickets from?
I don't think The Coopers are a "teenage rebellion" band; I've seen them twice before, one in a small venue called the Fleece in Bristol, where everyone was 20+, and once in Bristol Carling Academy, where everyone was 13-16. I genuinely think it's a mixture of pot luck and the venue itself that effects who turns up to gigs, not necessarily the band at all.
I realise "See This Through And Leave" was a lot more attractive commerically than "Kick Up The Fire..." (and arguably better for it), but both albums were unique and both progressed away from contemporary bands. For me, that's what music is about. I'm glad they're carrying on without Didz, and I'm really looking forward to the next album.
are you sure?
i swear at the FLeece everyone looked about 12, but at Academy they looked older...
perhaps my eyes are failing in my "old" age.
the debut was great, the second lacking somewhat, but the third could be a monster.
crackers
Maybe we were standing in different places? Although I suppose Fleece is quite limited as to where you stand...hmm.
Oh well, I'm sure you still know what I mean. At the Carling gig, I was right next to this girl who couldn't have been more than 15, she was smoking in my face all night and screaming at Didz. Stole the setlist off of me. Cow.
I went to see the Bravery (God forgive me) at Carling, and that was TERRIBLE. All the little girlees, I though I was going to accidentally stamp on one just getting to the bar.
....
I got into The Coopers because they were part of that wave of exciting new brit bands from the early 00's. I saw them at the Brighton Concorde about 4 years ago; it was the start of my gig going I suppose, for which they'll always have a special place in my heart. Perhaps that's why I associate them with the later years of my teenage life.
'Lets Kill Music' though....The message that the song conveys...Its the sort of thing that would grab a teenagers imagination, not someone older. Then theres Panzer Attack. A song about getting beaten up for being different! Now don't tell me that theres not a whiff of teenage angst about that one!! Regardless of that, they're still two of my favourite songs by TCTC. I quite like the new single too!
They Rule
The Coopers are my favourite band since the Verve. I first saw them at the 100 Club in summer of 2001 at the ripe old age of 25. I was blown away by their enthusiasm, inventivness and awesome tunes. I've seen them 14 times since and will be seing them twice on this tour. Long live the Cooper Temple Clause!
TCTC...
...are qualiTAH.
STTAL is awesome and their live performaces have made me see them 15 times. I'm dead excited about the new album, out in September, as I rate Damage very highly.
Yes, I recall
being shunned by my friends for suggesting that T.C.T.C made a good racket. I was told that they were nothing but a bunch of haircuts; because of this I didn't see them first time around at the Southampton Joiners, but did catch them at the Wedgewood Rooms before the release of their 2nd LP, and was presently surprised. I see they've toned their hair down as well.
I never really got into them...
I first heard of 'em through a promo copy of their debut EP (Hardware EP was it called maybe?) and felt that there were basically a lot of experimental sounds covering up a lack of tunes.
They then did a single I really liked but can't remember the name of now (would have been the 3rd off the debut album and sounded enjoyably pissed-off and paranoid) but the rest of their career has largely passed me by.
They look
like tarts.
Thirst were the dapperest
I saw them at the Magnet in Maidenhead when I was a proper yout. Stood out above every other band I've ever seen there.
Which isn't surprising really, seeing as Jecano were something approaching regulars.
haircuts
to be fair the haircuts were shit and all the fans who coppied were worse!!! but they provide an angry sound that just gets your blood pumping!!! seen them twice, last being warwick uni and they are an awesom live band!!! even converted a few mates by takin them before they had heard of them!!!
Great Live band
I saw them Wednesday 24th May at the BIERKELLER, Bristol.
I didn't like their old recorded stuff.
This however, was excellent. Punchy, dark cynical, poppy and tight as could be.
Harmonies were superb and experimental.
I can truly say I have found something new. I like them, they have energy and passion.
GREAT