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Lighthouse Family

April 1996 Interview | November 1996 Interview | Discography

On November the 11th -96, Paul Tucker and Tunde Baiyewu returned to the Swedish shores, this time to perform at Gino, a club in Stockholm, the capitol of Sweden. The Lighthouse Family's album "Ocean Drive" has now sold double platinum (750.000 copies) in the U.K. and just keeps on selling. Their single, "Lifted", has topped several European charts, including the Russian (!), things which most likely would affect about anybody's ego. Tormented by a toothache -after having pulled out a wisdom tooth the day before- Paul may not have been as talkative as the first time I interviewed him, but he was every bit as affable and down-to-earth. My first question to Paul was naturally what he and Tunde had been up to, since we last spoke in April.

-Well, we've toured three times since then. We toured the U.K. in May and again in June with M-People, which was a stadium tour. We've put out "Ocean Drive" and "Goodbye Heartbreak" in the U.K. What else have we done? It's been bonkers this year, it's been mental! We just finished the tour of Germany last week, so we've been on tour for the last two months. We have about four or five dates left on this tour, because we're just playing capitol cities, Stockholm, Amsterdam, Madrid, you know? Next week I have to go to America, but after that I have a week off. That'll be my first week off since July and I really look forward to it.

You talked about "building the foundations properly in the U. K. and Europe" before going to the States.
-Yeah, the thing about America is, we're just setting up the promotional side of it and we've got a very strong springboard in the U.K. now, I guess. The record's now gone double platinum and that gives us a lot of cards in our hands for America, really. You can't expect anything, though. It's something you have to do a lot of work on. You can't just put a record out in the States and expect it to walk. We're starting on that now.

Has the album been released in the U.S., yet?
-
No, we're not gonna put it out there until next year. Obviously, you can get "Ocean Drive" on import, same way you can get American imports over here, but the singles were out in America and they've done well in the clubs in Miami, Los Angeles and New York. And all of the feedback is good. It's a question of time, but as I said, you have to have a plot for the whole place. When you're talking about fifty something states, you know? It's a big place.

So what are you up to after finishing this tour?
Sleeve of  the "Ocean Drive" single (1995).- Well, I've got a little bit of recording to do in December. I'm gonna be in the studio for a couple of weeks, tightening up some of the song writing for the next album. After Christmas we're gonna record the next album, until March. After that we're gonna be playing live and touring again and I think we're probably gonna spend a lot of time in America. That's the way it's looking at the moment. I can't see any daylight until 1998! (laughs).

The next question is rather silly, but I'd like to know if life has changed for you since you became successful?
-
Mmmm.. I'm an awful lot busier. The answer is yes. I can afford to get the equipment I need, you know, for what I wanna do, musically. I don't have to fight anymore. Obviously, you have to maintain the standard, but I don't have to struggle to get things through. When you have success, people pay a lot more attention to you, what you're saying and what you wanna do. But as far as the whole "rock'n'roll circus" and the money thing is concerned, we didn't want that to change, anyway. We were quite happy as we were. We're essentially the same people as we were before we got successful, except a few of the details has changed. And it's funny, after what I just told you, one of the things that I've always thought that success would buy you was loads of time. Well, it doesn't, it's completely the opposite. You don't have time for a lot of the things you wanna do. But you will have, in due course. I don't worry about it that much.

Well, I don't think it seems like fame and fortune has changed you.
-Aww, bless you. I think that's part of the spirit of Lighthouse Family, really. I mean, Lighthouse Family is about many things, but one of the main things is really trying to get the best out of life, independently of your situation. Both me and Tunde have both been in situations where we've haven't been that well off and we've been happy. For different reasons and at different times, we've had no money, but we've had a brilliant time. I know it's a bit of a cliché, but I guess if you can remember that, you'll be able to think that money and happiness doesn't necessarily relate. I think that's a large part of it and that's what Lighthouse Family is supposed to be about. Live life to the full and to sort of, people first. The people around you first, money second. Of course we need to be successful to be able to continue doing what we do, but we're not in this for the money or the glamour, we're in it because we love it.

Paul and TundeAnother thing we talked about last time was Linslee Campbell, the guy who remixed "Ocean Drive", "Lifted" and the new "Goodbye Heartbreak" single. I still can't get over how different his street-orientated, funky and vocoder-laden remixes of the songs are, compared to the album versions. Doesn't it confuse a person who may hear the Linslee remix on the radio and then buys the entire album, thinking that it sounds like the remixes, all the way through?
-(Laughs). The thing is yeah, OK, Linslee's mixes has got a street sound, but the album's really got a soul sound. It's funny that you should say that, because I was talking to some people at Kiss FM in London, which is a black station, and a few of them said that they got into the album via the Linslee mixes, which is exactly what they're for. I've heard this from other people as well and it's really a good thing. It's kinda like taking the music into a territory, where it might not have got otherwise, just letting people know about it. And there's another remix. We're just about to release "Loving Every Minute" in December in the U.K. and C&J, Cutfather and Joe, did the mix and it's absolutely superb, really great. But the thing about the C&J remix is that it's more in the middle, sort of a cross between the Linslee radio-street type sound and the Lighthouse Family sound.

Tunde and Paul.So, does this mean you won't be working with Linslee again?
- Well, we thought that we've done three tracks with Linslee and we don't wanna be looked to, kinda, churning out the same thing, you know? It's not that we don't wanna work with Linslee again, it's just that, at that point, we thought it was time for a bit of a change. We'll probably do some more work with Linslee on our next album.

Speaking of which, I understand that you're nearly finished with the pre-production of the next album and that you're looking for producers? You mentioned Arabella Rodriguez in April, is that still on?
- Last time I spoke to you, we had just done some tracks with her and we've done some more tracks with Arabella since. We've got about ten tracks together for the next album and we're gonna do about another four or five. We won't use all of those, we'll probably end up with another ten track album. But the other tracks will probably end up as extra tracks. We've worked with Bella a lot and what we're gonna do is just put the best team together for the album, at the time, and take it from there. So if it's Bella, it's Bella, if it isn't, it isn't, you know? I'm good friends with Arabella, so she's gonna be cool one way or the other, I think.

Are you talking to anyone in particular?
- Yes, but I'm not going to tell you,.though (laughs). Not because I don't want to, but I don't wanna spoil the surprise and there's always the possibility that these things don't happen, so... I'm always like that. My mother used to say to me "don't break the spell". When we got offered a record deal, for instance, I never told anybody until we signed it. That way you don't end up with egg on your face. So until it's cast in stone, I'm gonna keep my hat on it.

Tunde and PaulWhat will the next album sound like?
-What everyone that's heard the stuff has said so far is that you can tell straight away that it's the Lighthouse Family. And that you can tell it's the second album as well, that things have moved on from the first and that's what we wanted. It's the same Lighthouse Family hallmark, but we wanna make a better record, if possible. I really like the first album, I'm proud of it and there's nothing on it that I would change, but we wanna make a better record and move on. I'm excited about it, there's a lot of stuff on it that I love.

How do you cope with the pressure of trying to come up with a platinum seller like "Ocean Drive"?
-
I don't worry myself too much with things like that. I think that might rock the boat a little bit. I'm more interested in just making a record that I love myself. If I do that, then I'll be all right, you know? It worked for us the first time and we haven't changed from the way we were then. And we've tried to avoid that whole "rock'n'roll circus" thing, I don't think that's very inspiring. But it's easy to get wrapped up and forget what you're there for, but we've tried to just protect our lives, as normal persons. It's all about enjoying the benefits, but remembering who you are, I suppose.
  

The Lighhouse Family's second album "Postcards From Heaven" was issued in October '97. The ten tracks were all produced by Mike Peden.

 

  

 

April 1996 Interview | November 1996 Interview | Discography

       

© Maria Granditsky November 1996.
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