I've just the read the NME feature and it's a rum old do. Essentially, James Oldham goes up to Glasgow and finds that none of the band particularly wants to be photographed and they're even less keen on being interviewed. The article details the journalist's growing exasparation, concluding as follows: "From afar, their success looks like a triumph for principled actions, up close it looks like an accident of bad behaviour. After all, here is a band who seem to object to doing interviews and photographs simply because they can't be bothered rather than because of any radical manifesto. It's hardly punk rock is it? Still it's their prerogative." I don't think the band come out of it particularly well, and it seems like this kind of thing is likely to happen more and more as they become increasingly successful. And if the band don't want to do interviews, the press is going to run the articles anyway, rehashing all this stuff about them being truculent, un-cooperative gits. Is there any way out of this ? I remember Dexys used to take out adverts instead of doing interviews, but it does seem to smack of paranoia... Stephen ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------ The Poetry Society Website http://www.poetrysoc.com ----------------------------------------------------------------------- . This message was brought to you by the Sinister mailing list. . To send to the list please mail "sinister@majordomo.net". . For subscribing, unsubscribing and other list information please see . http://www.majordomo.net/sinister . For questions about how the list works mail owner-sinister@majordomo.net . We're all happy bunnies humming happy bunny tunes. Aren't we? -----------------------------------------------------------------------