Richard Hawley: ‘I’m never going to write a finger-wagging, soapbox song’

The Sheffield singer-songwriter on soundtracks, the virtues of solitude, and not ‘disappearing up your arse’

Born, bred and still living in Sheffield, Richard Hawley played in indie bands Treebound Story and the Longpigs, and live with Pulp, before becoming a solo artist 20 years ago. His new album, Further, is his first since 2015 and is due on 7 June on BMG. A new musical, Standing at the Sky’s Edge, for which he wrote the music and lyrics, runs at Sheffield’s Crucible theatre until 6 April.

You’ve had a career shift in recent years, making music for films (for 2017’s Funny Cow and the forthcoming Denmark, both directed by Adrian Shergold). Why?
I hit 50, a proper milestone. I needed to break the cycle of album, tour, album, tour that I’d been on since I was 14. I’m not knocking albums and touring as a career – or as a life, I should say, as anyone who does that is avoiding a career. I wanted to do something more creative, and wanted to spend more time with my kids, who are growing up. Doing the films was really great. Adrian even got me playing a working-class bloke, auditioning in a working men’s club [in Funny Cow]. That idea must have taken him hours.

Standing at the Sky’s Edge tells the story of three families living in Sheffield’s Park Hill estate. What does the estate mean to you?
A lot. My grandparents, Albert and Elizabeth, lived in the slums that were cleared for them. They were in the queue for a flat, but didn’t get one. My first drummer lived there, and I went out with a girl who lived on the top landing. Park Hill was a desperate solution when it was built. Sheffield’s working class had a terrible time with housing after the war. No one really sits on the fence about Park Hill in Sheffield. People love it or hate it. Although I do have mixed feelings about it, which the musical explores. I built the fence!

What was it like working in theatre?
Everyone was deferential when I turned up. I was all, “Please take these songs to pieces”, and they breathed a sigh of relief! The musical is political in its way, but I’m never going to write a finger-wagging, soapbox song. They don’t work. I write about how socioeconomic bollocks affects ordinary lives. I write songs about people.

Do you shy away from politics personally?
I’m compelled to keep abreast of it. Almost nothing really shocks me now – you know, I’ve lived a life – but I’m horrified by the divisions I see between people today. It feels like civil war. The B-word will not give anyone what they want. My fear is that it’s part of an agenda to start economic meltdown. Then they’ll axe the BBC, privatise the NHS, and everyone’s fucked. That’s the good news!

Further is a cheering record, though – but your first album in 16 years not to be named after part of Sheffield. Why?
Doing something different, again. I wanted to see if I could still write pop songs without 19-minute guitar solos – a real challenge, as you can disappear up your arse quickly as you get older. I’m an obsessive collector of seven-inches, and like getting something nailed in that amount of time. We do have one track with a harmonica solo that encroaches on four minutes, though – that’s our prog track [laughs].

You also cover personal subjects. My Little Treasures is about two of your dad’s oldest friends, who you went drinking with after he died. Not Lonely was inspired by your kids gradually leaving home, and about being alone. Were they hard to write?
My Little Treasures took 12 years. People think I’m as soft as a bag of tits, but to sing songs like that every night, you’ve got to be hard. Not Lonely is about being able to live on your own, which is becoming this mythical thing for some kids, because they can’t afford to move out. Everyone needs their own space where they can stand in their pants and fry an egg. Being alone anywhere, without anything distracting, is really important. I’m taking the dog out soon, turning my phone off. That’s when I get my best ideas. We can come up with the most beautiful things on our own.

Watch the video for Richard Hawley’s Off My Mind.

Contributor

Jude Rogers

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
The week in theatre: Standing at the Sky’s Edge; Downstate; Richard III – review
A new musical with songs by Richard Hawley is set in Sheffield but richly resonant for all

Susannah Clapp

23, Mar, 2019 @4:00 PM

Article image
Richard Hawley: Further review – all swagger and croon
(BMG)

Emily Mackay

02, Jun, 2019 @7:00 AM

Article image
Richard Hawley – review

Crooning takes a back seat as Sheffield's sharp-tongued raconteur lets fly with a new grittier sound, writes Kitty Empire

Kitty Empire

06, Oct, 2012 @11:05 PM

Article image
'Richard Hawley gets it!' Park Hill residents praise Sheffield musical
The giant housing estate has seen highs and endured lows, as captured in the new show Standing at the Sky’s Edge, which has impressed those who know the place best

Ammar Kalia

15, Mar, 2019 @3:54 PM

Article image
Richard Hawley - Standing at the Sky's Edge: exclusive album stream

Be the first to hear Richard Hawley's new album, and – once you've read Sean O'Hagan's interview with the man – tell us what you think

28, Apr, 2012 @11:05 PM

Article image
Richard Hawley | Pop review
Grand Opera House, YorkSheffield's favourite teddy-boy mixes tough talk and velvety vocals in his live show, finds Dave Simpson

Dave Simpson

05, Oct, 2009 @8:30 PM

Richard Hawley: Truelove's Gutter | CD review

Richard Hawley is rather keen to invites you inside his world, writes Gareth Grundy

Gareth Grundy

05, Sep, 2009 @11:02 PM

Article image
Annie Get Your Gun review – out of time and short on ammo
The songs still hit their mark in Irving Berlin’s musical western, but 1940s stereotyping leaves the show creaking with age

Clare Brennan

01, Jan, 2017 @8:00 AM

Article image
The Producers; Kiss Me, Kate review – rousing goose-stepping and toe tapping
Mel Brooks’s classic musical about two swindling impresarios gets a risky reprise, while a brilliant cast carry off Cole Porter

Clare Brennan

16, Dec, 2018 @7:59 AM

Article image
The week in theatre: Phaedra; Sylvia; Standing at the Sky’s Edge – review
Lyttelton; Old Vic; Olivier, London
Janet McTeer is mighty in Simon Stone’s electric remaking of myth; dance, not speech, powers Kate Prince’s suffragette musical; and Richard Hawley’s paean to Sheffield finds a home from home

Susannah Clapp

19, Feb, 2023 @10:30 AM