You’ve played a decent amount of support slots. Do you like the challenge of trying to win over a crowd of sometimes ambivalent punters?
The crowd at someone else's show are a pack of pigs with crossed arms and it’s your job to unthirl them. I adore the challenge of giving a headlining performance at a matinee timeslot. The most important thing for performers to remember is that you're working for the audience, you're an entertainer, they want to love you, they just don’t know it yet. I’m not afraid to volley with the audience which is a skill you develop, if one tries, over many difficult performances.
The album title references Nietzsche. Do you read philosophy?
I spend a bit of time with philosophers and academics, they love me for whatever reason. I listen in at the bar and gleam certain notions here and there and turn them into poetry. I prefer to read biographies about rock and roll stars.
Who is an underrated glam rock band and why?
One glam artist I treasure is the Queen of Hearts himself Brett Smiley, who had glam thrust upon him quite disingenuously by his producer, Andrew Oldham. At 16 years old Brett wanted to be a model so he moved from New York to London in the late 60s to make it in fashion. There he met Oldham, producer of Marrianne Faithful hits, Oldham turned him into a 70s glam rocker and produced him a record, Breathless Brett. But after a terrible live TV appearance where Brett absolutely quite truly breathlessly choked, the record was canned and he lived in obscurity, dying of HIV in 2016. I suppose I love glam rock figures as they generally met tragic ends, crashing cars and crashing out never ascending past this era marked as a trend. I also love Alestair Riddel, a 70s glam rocker from New Zealand, listen to his song “Sea Bird.”