Transcript
A transcript of the tracks is provided below and in the archive as "transcript.txt", many thanks to Angelinda for her effort.
The interviewer is not heard; only the band's answers are heard. Keep that in mind when listening along to the transcript.
01. To promote the last album, "Songs Of Faith And Devotion" you embarked on a massive 1 & 1/2 year world tour . What effect did that have on you all as a band?
FLETCH: I suppose, after three years [of] being on top of each other - sorry , don't want to be misleading there - there was a sort of thing of not being in the room with each other , [which] was sometimes a bit tense, but it never got to actually fighting... yet.
MARTIN: At some point, obviously , we had to be in the same room together . And we did manage to actually carry that off for 14 months. It's just [that] at some point, separate limos were necessary .
DA VE: We didn't get to separate hotels, but I think it was on the cards if weF: -Separate floors, though!
D: We were "separate" everything: separate security , separate dressing rooms, and like Martin said, the room when we were together was on stage, and we functioned together well on stage. We all had our role and knew what we were doing. I think that was the most comfortable place. The rest of the day , when you're doing that 24 hours a day , seven days a week... The thing you have to remember is, it's not just band; there's a hundred people working with us altogether . It's everybody: it's everybody's emotions, all wrapped up there together , and sometimes there's gonna be conflict.
F: I think you learn from that, don't youD: -Y eah, I think now we can.
F: I think we took a lot on, I think we took too much on, and hopefully in the future now, we've learned our lessons.
02. Knowing bands on tour there must have been a party every night?
D: There was full, separate parties going on every night!
M: When it started off, it was separate floors, but then we realised that you could still be above or below somebody .
D: [laughs]
M: So we had to be on separate floors and opposite ends, like a sort of zigzag pattern. [laughs]
D: Because there would be: say someone was having a party , say that there had been, like, that kind of partying going on, [like] most nights, till you leave the next day . If someone had a particularly bad hangover one night and they wanted to rest, it was pretty much impossible, and you'd end up... I mean there was lots of times on tour I remember ending up coming out of my room and just following the noise, and ending up in Mart's room.
F: I sort of hung around with Martin, but the only thing was that we were on completely different timescales. I'd be up during the day and he'd be up during the night.
03. It was such a huge tour , did you ever think you weren't going to get through it in one piece?
M: Y eah I know, it was a total relieve to get home at the end of it. It especially got bad with about two or three weeks to go, because you feel... I personally feel, I made it this far , and it would be really ironic and sad to die at this stage.
F: When you had that incident on the plane? Was that near the end?
M: That wasn't that far to go before the end, yeah, when our plane nearly crashed.
04. My God! What happened?
M: I was actually going on a holiday , but I was in the same plane as Alan... Wilder , the one who left. We were on our way from Dallas to, I think it was San Juan. It was a big American Airlines plane, and it just started making this horrific noise and tilting totally sideways and plummeting to the ground. The stewardesses were trying to run around, but obviously it's difficult running around at that angle, [laughter] telling everyone not to panic. But they looked really panicked themselves, and at that [point] we thought we were actually dead. It took the pilot about ten minutes to actually make an announcement, saying that "We had a pressurisation problem."
05. What was going through your mind? Did your life flash before your eyes?
M: I thought about Nico, falling off a bicycle. [laughter]
D: That's it, that's a good description, you know. Because, I mean, we've been on a plane, every single day , our own plane, for about 15 months, and we went through... Y ou know, there was a couple of times, when you do that every single day , the law of averages is that you're gonna... What was it? "One in a million?", something like that? But, if you're flying every single day , the chances of something happening are a lot higher . I remember going home from the tour , I remember flying home from, eh... Where was it [that] we finished up? Was it Indiana, or something like that? [silence] I can't remember , but I remember being in a lot of pain, which wasn't that unusual, so I was drinking to cover it up. But as I was sobering up, and contemplating the end of the tour , and I had this pain inside of me and stuff, so when we got back, we got straight to the hospital, and I was examined and I had two fractured ribs and I was internally bleeding. And when I actually started coming down from that as well... So I spent six months after the tour being strapped up, and that was really when I felt a lot of pain, because when you've got a couple of fractured ribs, if you just cough lightly , or sneeze, or laugh, you can't move.
06. How on Earth did you break them?
D: What had happened was that I had stagedived a few days before the end of the tour somewhere, and had gotten to the end of the stage and then realised that the pit was about 20 foot but it was
too late, I had already dived off stage, I was like, "I ain't gonna make it", and I landed on the crash barrier halfway , and then was dragged into the audience, and I was like "Ahhhh!", you know.
07. The tour seems to have been the catalyst that placed a great deal of strain upon the band. Do you regret doing it?
F: There's a lot of good memories about the thing, but it was a long, quite big chunk out of your life.
D: Y ou have a tendency just to remember the hard times, as well, and the bad moments. I think that is often the way of life. And, like Fletch said, the rewards that you got from it were fantastic. I mean, we played a lot of shows to sell-out audiences, in I don't know how many cities, for a long while, and, we did it. We completed what we had set out to do. I just think it was really ... We didn't realise how insane it was till we were actually right in the middle of it and couldn't stop.