Martin Smith, frontman of DELIRIOUS?, gives an in depth interview to Mike Rimmer.
The lounge of the Hilton Hotel in Heathrow airport is a buzz of activity with efficient waiters serving drinks and taking orders. There's the constant tinkle of a water feature somewhere close by and the whole place has the feel of a minimalist meeting place with open spaces and comfy sofas. As I arrive Martin Smith and Tim Jupp are concluding a business meeting with some American record company executives before Tim has to fly out to the USA. Martin gives him a hug and then sits down to join me on a sofa.
"I know it's very posh here isn't it?" he says with a grin on his face. "We're having expensive cokes and lattes that we really can't afford but we're living the moment aren't we?" We are! And it's a good moment! We're talking a couple of weeks before 'The Mission Bell' is unleashed on the public. The single "Paint The Town Red" has done reasonably well as a mainly downloaded single but not charted as high as they would have liked.
However the band are upbeat as Martin shares, "It's always a big year when you're making a record. We went into the studio in February, so that was when we started the red light. But of course there's months before that - writing and trying to work out what the record should be. So by the time it comes out it's a good year. We're over the moon at the minute. This is our eighth studio record and we are expert tinkers.tinkerers I should say! The other side is we are quite disciplined in what we do. We know what we're doing when we're in a studio so we use our time wisely. We can't just go off on a tangent and lose ourselves in the esoteric air of creativity. As you know we've all got responsibilities, dad-wise and all that sort of stuff. So when we're in there we work hard but you can't just drift off into another world for three months."
In the past the band have organised a recording routine that fits in with their domestic arrangements. For the new album, they initially spent two separate weeks at ICC in Eastbourne. "We did a few late nights where we stuck some candles on." Martin adopts posh voice, "Stick some candles on darling!" He continues, "We got the atmosphere going, it was the right thing to do and we got the main stuff down at ICC. Lots of drums, bass and guitar parts. And we then went to the back of my house and finished off the whole record. That was a whole nine-to-six type of thing."
On "Love Is A Miracle", the band enlisted the help of a small group of gospel singers. Surely they couldn't have recorded them round the house. But they did! Martin explains, "We've got this lounge. One bit of our house was built in 1587 so it's this old country-type affair. So we did the strings in the lounge and the choir. But the choir was only seven singers. We grouped them up and we double-tracked them. That was courtesy of David and Carrie Grant who are great people to work with. We always manage to get that choral thing on our records. I think we've hit it the most powerfully on this record."
As well as producing their eighth studio album this year, the band continue to produce children. Martin shares, "In April we had another little girl - Ruby. Then Jon and Kristen have had a little boy in September - Jackson. So it's made it quite busy for Anna and myself because I get into the records when we're making them. So we've delivered a couple of babies this year." That makes the grand total of 16 children between the five members of Delirious? In the past the band have taken the whole entourage on tour with them when they have visited America. Martin explains how that still happens. "We try and do a month in America every year. We take them out of school for two weeks plus their Easter holidays. Other than that, we try and tour on our own. It's just easier and quicker and in the long run actually, it's more economic. Everything works. You've got six fly dates in a row and if you're going to fly to New Zealand and back in a week you can't really do that. So we try and consolidate the times to five or six days, 10 at the most, 12 if it's Australia, and spread it out through the weeks so that we're back for two Sundays a month - two weekends - and then we'll have time off to do other things. It's a good rhythm but I'm not saying it's always easy. We don't have easy lives but they're great lives! I think we're all aware of the privilege of what we're doing. But of course, you've got five families, lots of children, and it's a real effort to try and keep it all going at a great pace. Everybody struggles with different things at different times as you can imagine."
Away from the recording and the touring, the domestic lifestyle in the Smith household varies. Inevitably it's busy but Martin confesses, "When I'm at home, things are a little bit more relaxed. So we'll sit there late at night and watch Lost together! We love it! We love all those American programmes! We're busy though. We're busy people anyway whatever we're doing. Whether it's having the youth group round in the house, or speaking at some other event, or leading worship at church - as we did this Sunday, Anna running her dance teams at church. Our house is sort of a mini hotel so we've got people in and out all the time, staying. But we love it. That's the life that we've chosen and our children come with us on that journey. So life doesn't just switch off. We had some visitors this weekend. An older couple called Helmut and Elizabeth Kaufmann, who run ICC Studios. That was my last proper job! He was my boss when I worked there as an engineer. He took me on; gave me a chance!" And look where it led!
Inevitably, the recording of 'The Mission Bell' was preceded by the usual round of band soul searching, discussions and praying as the theme for the new album emerged. "We've been saying that 'World Service' was about grace and I think that theme permeates that record. But this record is about mission, stirring the pot again and to quote a line from 'Now Is The Time' - 'I want to follow but what does it mean?' I think it started with asking myself that question, 'I want to follow God but actually let's get real, what does that really mean in this world that we live in? Does my Christianity actually change anything for me, for the people around me? Does it change the world?' Just big questions, 'Actually, let's not kid ourselves here. What am I doing in this world to really make a difference?' And really asking all the questions again like, 'What am I doing with my days while I am here?'"
He continues, "So that spilled over into the songs. I actually wanted to nail a few issues as a band. We've been going a few years now and wanted to nail our colours to the mast a little bit saying, 'We're a band on a mission.' We've dabbled in a few things; the mainstream thing, singles.none of which I regret at all. But our heart really is to touch the world with great music and see people stirred and motivated and changed."
Most people looking at Martin Smith's life would observe that, of
course he's making a difference! Think of all that the band have
achieved so far. There are thousands of people that have come to Delirious? concerts and
been inspired. Is that not enough? Evidently it isn't and Smith is
still spiritually hungry. He observes, "It always comes back
to home doesn't it? Anything you write about or say from the stage, it
always has a habit of coming back and biting your bum as they say.
Because those are the things that come out of your mouth that God
always holds you to. So if I'm going to say, 'We're going to be
history makers in this land. Come on people, let's go for it!' For me,
that's a daily challenge.still.
And I've got another 40
years left to live, God willing, that I would still like to be that.
Every day is a challenge and there are new things, new steps of faith.
There're bigger things that God is calling you to that require bigger
leaps of faith than 10 years ago. So it never ends does it? And I'm
excited about that. Lots and lots of things buzzing around."
I observe that there aren't that many pure worship songs on 'The Mission Bell' that could be sung by a church congregation. Smith immediately disagrees and states, "Well actually in church we've been doing 'Now Is The Time', 'Paint The Town Red' and 'Miracle Maker'." Cue Cross Rhythms journalist with puzzled expression on his face! "Paint The Town Red" is so NOT a worship song?! But apparently I am wrong. "We've been rockin' it out! I mean, if you read the lyrics and then imagine them on a screen in church it's just a revival song. 'We're going to take this city'..that's probably what most churches in this country are saying in conversations, 'How are we going to take our towns? We're going to storm the gates of hell.'" So I wonder, is he saying it is "Revival Town: Part II?"
Apparently it is! "We often confuse people," he observes, "with the style and the production. Probably in a year's time people will start picking these songs up and actually read the lyrics and say, 'We'd like to be able to sing that.' 'Miracle Maker' we actually did on Sunday. It's just a church song." Excuse me while I butt in here and again look at Smith a bit sceptically! Maybe I'm just being very narrow-minded but I always think of church songs as being the kind of thing where a worship group somewhere can pick it up and play it and everybody sings along in church? Isn't that a worship song?
Smith agrees, "Yeah I suppose so," but then offers evidence to disagree! "'History Maker' was never like that. In the early days people never did it. It came out of seeing us play it live and now people do that in church. I think in 10 years that has changed a little bit. Okay admittedly not in some small Anglican church with an organ but I think time changes things and people get a bit more adventurous. But maybe I've just 'lost the plot!'"
Hmmm. now wouldn't that make a great banner headline. I can see it now! "Martin Smith Admits: Maybe I've just lost the plot!" He laughs, "Yeah, I've forgotten how to write a worship song!" Somehow I doubt it's anything to worry about. I encourage him that it'll all come back to him.
greatly impossible to have a band like delirious again : missing it very much.....i don't have words to describe how they inspired me and ofcourse the whole world.
my sincere thanks to the team.