In House With Paul Weller: The Modfather on Not Giving a 'F---' What Others Think and Aging -- Exclusive Video
- Posted on May 24th 2012 4:05PM by Kenneth Partridge
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Gino DePinto, AOL
He's come a long way since the late '70s, when he emerged with the Jam as punk's answer to Pete Townshend, but even now, he carries himself with an air of mod cool. Stopping by Spinner's New York City offices for an In House visit, Weller sports slim trousers, a fitted black T-shirt and a well-manicured mop of gray hair. He's the father of newborn twins -- the excellently named John Paul and Bowie -- and when they're old enough to play soccer, he'll be the best-dressed dad on the sidelines.
The Modfather is in town to play three shows in support of Sonik Kicks, which comes two years after his acclaimed Wake Up the Nation. That album put him in the running for Britain's prestigious Mercury Prize, and while the XX took home the award, the nomination brought Weller renewed critical attention. It may have seemed like a tough act to follow, but he wasn't sweating it.
"If anything, I felt more inspired to try to take it further," Weller says. "The very positive response to the last two records make you want to see how far you can go with it -- how far you can go with the music."
On Sonik Kicks, he goes pretty far, opening the disc with the robotic synth-pop sprint of "Green," one of several nods to the '70s German band Neu! As with Wake Up the Nation, the album features its share of punchy, Jam-like rockers, but whereas that last record was meant to be hard and direct, this one represents a broader vision.
"It's in the title," Weller says. "I saw it more as a sonic journey, really, to excite people, to do something different, to incorporate a lot of the things I've been listening to."
Among those joining Weller on the voyage are Graham Coxon of Blur and Noel Gallagher of Oasis, former rivals from the Brit-pop '90s. Asked whether he's felt competitive with other bands, Weller says he has -- just not in a while.
"When I was younger, everyone was a competition to me," he says. "Which a lot of the time is born out of your own insecurity, to be that competitive. But these days, the competition is internal. I'm competitive with myself. My so-called peers are long gone. Most of them are doing cabaret. Some are dead. And I don't know what the others are doing. They've got different jobs."
- In House With Paul Weller
- In House With Paul Weller
- In House With Paul Weller
- In House With Paul Weller
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- In House With The Hives
- The Hives, Live in New York
- The Hives, Live in New York
- The Hives, Live in New York
- The Hives, Live in New York
- The Hives, Live in New York
- The Hives, Live in New York
- The Hives, Live in New York
- The Hives, Live in New York
- The Hives, Live in New York
- The Hives, Live in New York
- The Hives, Live in New York
- The Hives, Live in New York
- The Hives, Live in New York
- In House With Firehorse
- In House With Firehorse
- In House With Firehorse
- In House With Firehorse
- In House With Firehorse
- In House With Firehorse
- In House With Firehorse
- In House With Firehorse
- In House With Firehorse
- In House With Firehorse
- In House With Jimmy Cliff
- In House With Jimmy Cliff
- In House With Jimmy Cliff
- In House With Jimmy Cliff
- In House With Jimmy Cliff
- In House With Jimmy Cliff
- In House With Jimmy Cliff
- In House With Jimmy Cliff
- In House With Jimmy Cliff
- In House With Jimmy Cliff
- In House With Gotye
- Gotye
- Gotye
- Gotye
- In House With Chairlift
- In House With Chairlift
- In House With Chairlift
- In House With Chairlift
- In House With Chairlift
- In House With Chairlift
- In House With The Naked and Famous
- The Naked and Famous
- The Naked and Famous
- The Naked and Famous
- The Naked and Famous
- The Naked and Famous
- The Naked and Famous
- In House With Dum Dum Girls
- Dum Dum Girls
- Dum Dum Girls
- Dum Dum Girls
- Dum Dum Girls
- Dum Dum Girls
- Dum Dum Girls
- Dum Dum Girls
- Dum Dum Girls
- Dum Dum Girls
- In House With Two Door Cinema Club
- Two Door Cinema Club
- Two Door Cinema Club
- Two Door Cinema Club
- Two Door Cinema Club
- Two Door Cinema Club
"I'm in a very fortunate and unique situation where, when I'm with my touring band, we're very much a group, and when we're not doing this, we're free to do our own thing, which suits me," Weller says. "Once you get to a certain age, and you've been doing it a certain amount of time, it's really hard to form a democratic band and start from scratch."
Gino DePinto, AOL
"It comes out of a certain amount of privilege you earn if you live to a certain age and carry on working and don't give much of a fuck what other people think," Weller says. "You're free to do whatever you want to do, you know? That's the only place I can really think it comes from."
"I don't feel there's any kind of boundaries or restrictions on what I do with music anymore," he says. "It's free to go anywhere. I think as long as I keep my melodic sense, the music can go anywhere."
Watch a Video About Vintage Mod Fashion Accessories




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