Interview: The Invisible Orchestra

Photos: Ralph Barklam
Interview: Mike Atkinson
Thursday 21 March 2013
reading time: min, words

Like a giant ball of muso-attracting velcro, The Invisible Orchestra has snagged members of some of Nottingham’s top bands and singers - as well as from further afield - and shows absolutely no sign of slowing down. The man responsible: Royal Gala’s James Waring...

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How did the idea for Invisible Orchestra get off the ground?
It’s been a culmination of things, over the years - playing with lots of different people, meeting lots of different musicians who’ve been in their own bands, but wanted to get a bigger project together. Also, I have a lot of music written that doesn’t actually suit Royal Gala, the band I’m in, and that would suit a much larger band. I just kinda got obsessed with it. I’d probably got twenty people in the band by the time I booked the first gig, at the Arts Theatre. People were saying: “I think it’s a bit short notice, I don’t think we’ve got enough time.”

How far in advance did you book the gig?
I’d got about three and a half months, and we’d got about fifteen minutes of music together. So by having a date booked, it became a thing. I wanted a theatre, because I wanted to put on a proper event: a show, rather than a gig. 

There were a few people in the audience who were clearly Arts Theatre regulars, who looked a bit shell-shocked that their Am Dram venue was turning into this maelstrom of excess...
Yeah, everybody was wasted and dancing on tables and chairs in the aisles – literally dancing in the aisles. The girl behind the bar was crying her eyes out, because she’d got three hundred people in front of her, all wanting a drink, and she was the only bar staff on. I was telling them all along that it would be busy; it wasn’t going to be like Snow White and the Seven Dwarves.

You’ve got your pick of some outstanding vocalists. How did you go about matching your tunes to the singers?
I didn’t approach some of the singers until we’d got the tunes done. I try not to have anything to do with the lyrics - that comes from the singers. What I do is to instigate things generally. I don’t write everybody’s parts, although I’ll remember everybody’s parts, even if they forget them. I’ll perhaps write a loose rhythm, ideas for percussion, the main brass line. Then they’ll get together and write around the idea that I’ve got. With some people, I will write their complete lines. I might suggest something to Martin on the double bass, but he’s experienced enough just to know what it needs straight away. With Percydread, who’s been doing roots reggae for forty years, I asked him to do it, and he came along with a reggae tune. He’s been playing music for longer than I’ve been born, but I was getting him into the idea of doing a completely different style, but still in his own voice.

It was a very dramatic and unexpected start to your set. Everyone’s expecting Jools Holland-style good times from start to finish, and then Percy came on like this prophet of apocalyptic doom...
Percy’s a great guy, and he’s doing another song with us for the next show. A lot of people are guests, but Percy’s like a proper member of the orchestra. At the rehearsal studio, the gates are locked and people have to ring me from outside. But somehow, once we start playing a song at rehearsals, Percy will just turn up, every time. He’ll walk straight in and start singing. I don’t know how he does it.

It must have been a huge departure for another of your singers, Ed Bannard from Hhymn. It would have taken him well outside his comfort zone...
I’ve known Ed since I was about nineteen, when he was in Skinny Sumo, and we’ve always been around each other. I wasn’t quite sure if he’d do it, but I think he enjoyed it in the end. For that particular song, I wrote all the music, and then Ed came in. To be honest, it took him about two rehearsals, and then he nailed it. 

Does everyone in the band come from Nottingham?
We’ve recruited a few people from further afield, but most people come from in and around Notts. Justin, the Hammond player, tours with Bad Manners quite a bit. He’s got a Grammy. He’s also played for Lee “Scratch” Perry.

Was it a logistical nightmare, getting all these people in the same room at specific times?
It was, but then it wasn’t so bad for the gig, because we knew that we’d be loading at twelve, and we were paying the theatre from twelve. We’d not finished some of the tunes on the day of the show. The percussion section sorted out some of Hannah Heartshape’s tune while we were soundchecking. We only had about an hour with Natalie Duncan. She came to soundcheck, and we had a bit of a chat. So before the gig, we were as excited
as anybody else to see how it sounded.

How did it feel when you were actually up on the stage?
Great, to be honest with you. Everybody was hugging each other afterwards. It was a really fantastic feeling. Everybody put in such a lot of hard work and a lot of people had cancelled
gigs to come. After the show, I said that we should take a break for a month or so. That lasted about a week. Then people were asking: “when are we rehearsing again?” So we organised the next practice a bit earlier than we intended – and everybody turned up.

What’s the plan for 2013?
I’ve just booked a show at Nottingham Contemporary on Easter Sunday, 31 March. We’ve got the whole of downstairs: The Space, and the café bar. The line-up starts off with a barbershop quartet, then we’ve got Rollo Markee and the Tailshakers, a swing-blues band who I went on tour with. There’s also DJ Switch, who’s a three-time world DMC champion. He’s also the only DJ ever to play at The Proms, at the Royal Albert Hall. It’ll be like a family thing; we all know each other. We’ve had a lot of support from the Contemporary, and from Ste Allan of Dealmaker. It will be a lot easier than last time when we had no funding, no backing, and a shell-shocked venue.

Any plans to take it out of town?
We’re trying to confirm a show at The Scala in London at the moment, and there are a few more London shows in the pipeline. We’ve got a booking agent who has been looking for suitable festivals – and for realistic festivals, as this is not the sort of thing that we can go on tour with, unless there’s a lot of help and a lot of forward planning. And we’ve already recorded five tracks at Paper Stone, who backed us without hearing us. They just trusted us. There’s also a new Royal Gala album, which is coming out pretty soon.

Do people get you confused with The Hidden Orchestra, who are a completely different act?
Well, there’s thirty-two of us now, so if they want to meet us outside in the car park, we’ll batter ‘em.

The Invisible Orchestra, Sunday 31 March, Nottingham Contemporary.

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