Rick Johnston, lead singer of Irish rock team HALCYON DAYS talks us through the tracks on their new album
"Please Don't"
When you are Christians in a rock
band and you get tracts given out (by people from your own church)
while you are playing at a Youth Mission you'd be annoyed, right? We
were (just ask S'dance - they were there as well), so we wrote a song
about it. "Please Don't" is like Jesus when he stands up and cries
"Woe to you Pharisees" who, in the first century, tied people's hands
in dogma and piously pronounced them free. A song for those with
quashed enthusiasm whether young or old.
"Verbal Danger"
Words are the cheapest currency
of love. I can say anything to you, tell you anything just to make you
feel better. Mere words, mere sentiment are nothing if I don't speak
the truth. Many of us whether on stages or in pulpits are in danger of
verbalising things that we dangerously do not live out in practice.
"Rocket Fitter"
A rocket fitter is a man from
the Belfast shipyard who fits things together. Normally he should be
fitting boats but instead he builds himself a rocket to escape a world
he can no longer bare. The metaphor is about wanting to escape not
only from a cheesy TV world, the evolutionary "we are just pieces of
matter" belief or the "ugly dark cocoon of days" but also from the
dirt in my own soul.
"Too Much To Dream"
So many times the purveyors
of religion tell us things, which are designed to comfort us yet they
turn out to be just tickling our ears. This is a song about the Monday
morning reality after the Sunday night hype. So many people are given
"too much to dream" sermons - they are told that with God they can be
materially prosperous or that they will be healed with just a little
more faith. If I was being theological about it all, I would call it
"over-realised eschatology" but then I'm only a humble rock musician.
"Inside Out"
When the props are all taken away,
if we didn't have a believing family or a church round us, or if our
companions changed to those who were not believers what would remain?
When the externals' are stripped away I want there to be something
solid inside which doesn't depend on how things are going on the
outside. Don't dare sell me any hope based on anything less, no cheap
assurance that will not stand up to the rigours of life. The style
reminds me of Radiohead and I think the band's controlled outpouring
of emotion at the end is a truly beautiful thing.
"Come What May"
Basically a like it or not
"we'll keep on going" song. A brilliant flash of confidence from one
of the band members who we normally laugh at for being more of the
cynical variety. Clearly this boy has faith that "Come What May" he'll
keep going (it's the quiet ones you've got to watch!).
"Taberna"
This is one of our most musically
experimental tracks - really heavy, energetic and industrial. It suits
the subject matter, which is basically a rage against consumerism and
a media, which adheres to the philosophy of the chorus "Tabema ergo
sum" (which, being translated, comes out approximately as "I shop
therefore I am"). If Hello magazine is our idea of heaven then winning
the lottery is a personal revival and the luck of the numbers is the
way of salvation. Yes indeed! Let's shout about these ridiculous
notions!
"No Need To Run"
If you thought the album's been
a bit caustic and harsh so far don't worry, here's a song about grace.
So often we try and earn God's favour in spite of our professed belief
in justification by faith (alone). This song assets that with God
there is "no need to run", no level to reach to attain his favour, we
need only humbly accept and enjoy his offer of love.
"Speaks My Name"
Things were beginning to get
happy there for a while but this song takes another nosedive into the
"alkaline times" in which we live. The song includes the dilemma of
the pleasure seeker who "drinks on to stop the thirsting and avoid the
bitterness", the atheist who destroys his lover to remove any notion
of transcendent things that should not exist according to his world
view and the pious who repent and find grace that burns away their
proud little egos. It is a song about pain and lives that slip away
under the noses of society and the Church. Probably the most
"alkaline" song on the whole album.
"Moonlight"
One of the most mysterious songs
we've ever recorded (apart from covering "New York New York" at a
party!). The groove is dark, the vocals light, the whole mood is
twilight and when the backing vocals come in with "Love rushes over"
at the end I can truly say it still sends shivers down my spine!
"You Surround Me"
I think this one is a psalm -
it is so similar to the laments of the psalmists at their own
condition and waywardness yet whilst affirming their confidence in
God's invisible protection around them. My favourite line -"a prayer
at the gallows is still enough and will always be...".
"Halflight"
A really trippy song, chilled and
melodic. At the end of the album it contains our summary of the
shadowlands existence this side of eternity, the halflight. The last
repeating lyric summarises - "It's a sign of the times, the alkaline
times/Looking for love in the miracle rhymes." Music to dream alkaline
dreams to...