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Primal Scream

Whether it’s a public image he’s created or just a day in the life, Gary ‘Mani’ MounfieldPrimal Scream’s riotous bass player – still exhibits a burning-the-candle-at-both-ends young man’s energy and wit. But the man at the centre of two of the UK’s most influential bands of the last 20-odd years has earned the right to play whatever hand he damn well wants. It was after all Mani’s smacked-out bass gave The Stone Roses their signature sound and has since 1996, rumbled through Primal Scream’s records. But it was while he and his Stone Roses buddies were enjoying what looked like start of a long, exciting career that a little Scottish band, who so far had little to crow about besides two lack lustre ‘60s influenced rock albums, dropped the biggest acid-rock record of the times. The fast-changing underground club music scene in Britain finally got the benchmark album in Screamadelica it had needed to set the bar high. Primal Scream had arrived and The Stone Roses suddenly appeared very wobbly indeed.

20 years on and Mani, who could in another reality have been discussing a Stone Roses ‘Don’t Look Back’ tour, is instead shooting the shit on his adopted band’s re-visit to a defining moment in music. While Primal singer Bobby Gillespie has continued to guide his band away from the warped psyche-rock of Screamadelica – Mani, who missed the wild, hedonistic ‘Scream of the early ‘90s, defies his leader’s wish to ‘chill-out’ with age. “I’ve been bugging the band to get stuck into the back catalogue for years and Bob (Gillespie) was dead-set against it.” He begins proudly. In his time as a member of Primal Scream, Mounfield hasn’t felt first hand the level of hype that was created by Screamadelica. He’s unabashedly in agreement with the media and the public that the album was their peak and in turn had the objectivity to convince the rest of the band to bring it back to the stage.

“Well I think I’m more enthusiastic about it than Bobby or any of the other guys who played on the original album.” He says, grinning, “I’m playing like a fucking juvenile you know, and seeing the sheer beauty in it. I mean I’ve been part of Primal Scream for the last 13 fucking year’s man, playing songs off this album but the difference now is we’ve put a lot of effort into keeping to its original sound by stripping everything back and building it back up again for the shows. We’ve kept a lot of (producer) Andrew Weatherall’s original stuff – and it’s been a grind – but I tell you what, when did a gig the other week it was such a pay-off to see 11,000 people going off at the Olympia in London.” He continues, “To me those songs on that album deserved to be brought to people who maybe weren’t old enough to hear them the first time around or weren’t even born yet. Playing to the festival crowds, like we have been recently, you’re not always playing to the converted you know like in the club shows, so I hope we can turn those people onto something they maybe wouldn’t have ordinarily liked or heard before. That’s the power of music, man.”

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