Collect Call From: Guy Garvey of Elbow
The Britrockers have embarked on a rare U.S. tour behind their 2008 release, The Seldom Seen Kid, and lead singer Guy Garvey will be checking in periodically to let us know how it's going.
By Mike Errico
VIDEO: Guy Garvey and Pete Turner discuss their odd band name and their exceptional new album, The Seldom Seen Kid.
Day 1
April 29, 3 P.M.
Now in Chicago, Garvey rings from the green room at the evening's venue, the Park West.
I would say after New York, Chicago's my favorite city in the U.S. It's got the same sort of ethic as New York, a little bit of the community vibe — I would imagine being part of a city like that. We've been before, and Mark [Potter] and Pete [Turner] did some DJ'ing with friends of ours at an afterparty. I'm not a DJ, you know, and wouldn't be ideal at selling dance floors. Depending on the dance floor, of course. Maybe a 1930s dance floor...
Yesterday we had a day off in Cleveland, Ohio. It's Mark's birthday today, so we started a little bit early: We got the tequilas in and it got a bit messy. Not to sound too Mariah, but different songs are harder to sing than others, so despite the fact that I can drink more than anybody in the band or crew, I actually behaved myself in the name of our art. My drummer [Richard Jupp] is particularly a pussy when it comes to drinking. That's because his body is a temple. Yeah.
The set that we played in Washington [two days earlier] was in a historic synagogue, which was completely seated. We did more of the gentle tunes, "Scattered Black and Whites" (from 2001's Asleep in the Back) and "Switching Off" (from 2004's Cast of Thousands). It's been different every night, and to be honest with you, we've yet to have a conversation about what we're going to do tonight. You can change two songs in a set and change the atmosphere of the concert quite dramatically. And different places have different traditions when it comes to responding. In Germany, for instance, they fold their arms, expectantly it seems, as they do in Manchester. But what I realized was that in Manchester it's rudeness, while as in Germany they're giving music the same respect as they would ballet or theater. The audience's response here has been incredibly enthusiastic. Despite the soft ending, "The Loneliness of a Tower Crane Driver" is getting the biggest reaction.
I'm listening to: "Alley Flowers" by Jolie Holland
I put it on this morning. I've got a little unit for my iPod with its own little case, like a vanity case or something, and you stick your iPod in the middle and it fills the room with music. This morning we listened to Bill Evans and Catalpa by Jolie Holland, and "Alley Flowers" is the song that jumped out. She's got an exquisite voice.
I'm reading: Everyman by Philip Roth
I like reading American authors when we're in America, and Philip Roth I think is the best living one, though he doesn't write women very well. He's like this sort of doomy social analyst in his novels, and I found out he's got a bad back and writes all of these books stood upright at a fucking lectern, like he's writing the word of God because he can't actually sit in a chair. So, with all this venom about American culture sort of spewing forth, he's actually stood at a lectern. Fantastic.
Read Guy Garvey's entry from Day Two: CLICK HERE
Read Guy Garvey's entry from Day Three: CLICK HERE
Read Guy Garvey's entry from Day Four: CLICK HERE


