

BIOGRAPHY
Since we last met, Delays have played
sold-out U.S tours, recorded, ‘Stardust’ style,
in a chateux in Spain, and found themselves a new home.
“The last couple of years have
been the biggest rollercoaster ride you’ve ever seen“
smiles Aaron Gilbert (electronics wizard and brother of
Greg).
“It’s been sad and beautiful
all at once. I’ve been rushed back from tour with
nervous exhaustion, the works. But I wouldn’t change
a minute of it.”
“Put it this way” smiles
brother Greg. “We’ve come a long way from playing
songs in a garage, dressed like The Sweet!“
Delays have long been British rock’s
best kept secret. A heady concoction of angelic harmonies,
beat-group hauteur and groove-based hedonism, they belong
to British pop’s most regal bloodline: (early) Floyd,
The Smiths, The Stone Roses.
Hitch a lift with them to North America,
however, and you’ll see their euphoric ballroom blitz
send fans into a frenzy. Head south of the border and it’s
a full on teenage rampage.
“We played a sold-out stadium
gig at this bullring in Mexico” says Aaron. “We
got a limo to the gig and they were selling bootleg Delay’s
t-shirts on the streets outside the arena. Not bad considering
we haven’t even released a record there.”
Sometimes a delay can be a good thing.
Had a brisk north-easterly not slowed the progress of the
Armada when it was bound for the South Coast in in 1588,
you’d probably be reading this in Spanish. Equally,
having formed a decade ago in Southampton as glam-rock reprobates
Corky –recruiting Aaron en route- the band have forged
a bond which trumps faddishness hands down.
Aaron: “We’ve known each
other from school. Because of that, we’ve got a really
deep connection, which comes through in the music. We’re
a proper gang, we grew up together, we just do what we feel
is right.”
Such togetherness has brought with
it a keen sense of purpose, as well as a pan-generic psychedelic
know-how covering all bases from Oz to Prince to the Aphex
Twin.
Having signed to Rough Trade in 2004,
they released their debut album Faded Seaside Glamour the
same year. A riot of page-boy haircuts, nifty riffs and
celestial harmonies, it boasted top Twenty hits ‘Long
Time Coming’ and ‘Nearer Than Heaven’
and prompted the Guardian to describe them as “the
first guitar band in a decade to lay claim to the melodic
guitar pop throne invented by The Byrds and the Hollies.”
Follow up You See Colours (2006)
saw their psych-pop blueprint delivered with added BPM.
A brooding mix of “Voulez Vous’ and ‘The
La’s’, it spawned alpha-pop hits ‘Valentine’
(NME Track Of The Week) and ‘Hideaway’ and brought
both an army of new admirers and a mutually agreed split
from Rough Trade.
“It was a weird situation to
be in” explains bassist Colin Fox. “We’d
be playing to huge crowds at Glastonbury and T In the Park,
all the while aware that we didn’t know who was going
to put the next record out.”
”In a strange way it galvanised
us” adds drummer Rowly. “We did a self-financed
tour with the last of our money, and those were best shows
we’ve ever done.The last date was at the Guildhall
in Southampton, and the cherry on the cake was that we signed
the new deal that night.”
“It’s a cliché
to say it,” laughs Greg, “but after all the
hassles, signing with Fiction was like that bit in the Wizard
Of Oz where it goes from black and white to colour.”
For a band so absorbed by pop’s
kaleidoscopic past -a quick straw poll of current faves
reveals a love of doo-wop, The Flaming Lips and Mogwai-
it makes sense that their new circumstances should be seen
as as an awakening into technicolour. But their journey
from darkness into light has also given Delays a hard won
perspective on the pop process.
Greg: “In the last year I’ve
come out of one really long relationship, met someone new
and signed a new deal. Inevitably, that’s all going
to end up in the music.”
All of which brings us to Everything’s
The Rush. Recorded over twenty days in Spain with producer
Youth (Primal Scream/Verve/Paul McCartney), it is the sound
of Delays striding confidently into the big league. The
tunes are brighter, the choruses are bigger, the need for
emotional rescue greater than ever. If the urgency can be
put down to a desire to make up for lost time, the super-charged
guitar sounds and soaring synths owe something to psycho-geography.
“We recorded at Youth’s
chateux in Grenada, which is high up in the mountains”
explains Aaron.
“The live room has got a huge window with panoramic
views over the Sierra Nevada range. When you’re staring
at a mountain in a room full of amps, you want to make a
sound that’s as big as the sky.”
From foot-to-the-floor opener ‘Girl’s
On Fire’ -think The La’s at Red Rocks- to neurotic
space disco “Friends Are False” to sky-scraping
strings-assisted stomp ‘Touchdown’ (key lyric:
“I’ll be calling on your radio!”) Everything’s
A Rush is final proof that Delays have the melodic nouse
to slug it out in Stadiumsville.
The music may be the musical equivalent
of a huge gulp of alpine air, but listen closer and the
lyrics reveal a darker aftertaste.
“One third of the album relates
to the detritus of us getting out of Rough Trade and our
private situations, and the other two thirds are about the
joy of discovering new things and the beauty of making music
again” explains Greg.
“We’re almost back to
the point we were at before we had a deal. We decided to
throw it all in there - take the soul of what we do and
explode it. ”
With Aaron providing vocals and an
acerbic lyrical wit on four tracks (not least on idlers
anthem ‘One More Lie-In’), it’s the sound
of a band scaling new peaks, tackling their personal demons
along the way.
“A song like ‘Hooray’
sounds really uplifting, but it’s actually about me
having O.C.D laughs Greg. “It seemed too easy to write
a maudlin song. For me, music is at it’s best when
it’s fragile and human; people crave that connection.”
Aaron: “For us, melody is king.
We want to make music which sends a shiver down your spine.”
It’s been worth the wait.
Turn up the speakers; join the rush.
Paul Moody
London, Jan 2008