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Songwriter (2018)
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Oh, sorry. All right, let me hear it. You're already done? Motherfucker, I gave you two hours. Is this too happy? Right. I like that. - I do like the falsetto, though. - -What? The falsetto. Gonna get my laptop and write it down Yeah, yeah, yeah I was thinking of doing something like a modern-day "Mrs. Robinson." Or have you got anything going on? You just say... you can also... I feel like it should be about some real shit though. - Yeah, I know but... - Like... Is there any relationship shit right now? Nothing right now. Yeah. It's gonna be quite harsh. It's like the man version of a girl power tune. Yeah, I want Benny for that bit, though, 'cause I don't know. It just changes, man. When you're, like... When you're doing it ten years... You think I'm gonna lose my moment? No, you're just gonna think... you're gonna look at it differently. Like, right now, you're doing what I did. Just, like, push, push, push. And dude and just, like, you know, take care of your moment when you have these songs in you. And then like, you just feel like, and then you just feel like... "Wait, I'm always gonna have these songs in me, I can slow down a little bit." Taylor's been pushing on ten years, and she's pushing on. Yeah. You know what I'm saying, though but ? I don't know. Like for me, I feel it's a little bit different as a producer, but I'm like, "Okay, I'm only gonna do things... that inspire me and I don't care what the outcome is." - Yo, let me inspire you. - Let me inspire you. Oh, someone turned off the thing. This is what we got. It's gotta get a little harder, you know? A little less happy in there. Wow. Yeah, 'cause everything is set up so good until that point. If you love the way you look that much, you should just go fuck yourself. - Too much. - Edit. - That's dope. - -I do think that's pretty sick. It instantly becomes a classic if you say "love yourself." Like, it becomes less of a joke. Yeah? You should go and love yourself It kinda works, yeah. You wanna just drop it so we have it? You got something on your lens. I started filming Ed in 2008, but , we're cousins so we go way back. I have a lot of cousins, but he's probably the one I'm closest to. He's known me, from like, you know being a really weird little kid. When I first ever went to London when I was 16, he let me sleep on his sofa in Bethnal Green. I'd film his early gigs and stick them up on his YouTube or MySpace. He signed a record deal and he asked me would I come out on tour and capture everything? I mean we were, like best mates anyway, so we're cousins but we, kind of really , really bonded on tour. We went all over. UK, Europe, America, Asia. It was fun. The first time I ever saw Ed write, he had invited Foy Vance, who was a hero of his, one of his favorite musicians, to be on tour with him. At every opportunity, Ed would, like, pull Foy aside and find a place in the venue that they could go and kinda jam it out. Those jam sessions turned into writing sessions, and then I'd film all of that. I don't think it was until 2013 that I actually properly got in the studio and watched him do something from start to finish. I guess, this is the first time on camera you're gonna see a song being written bit by bit, so Murray, make sure you get all of it. I remember it was the first day I met Benny Blanco. We were in New York and Ed had an idea for a song. You know, I'd just been through something that I really needed to get on to a song. We made "Don't" in about two hours. I had like a vocal loop that went... We made a beat out of that, and he left me in the room. He let me write the story and then, yeah. I'm never like, in like a mood for longer than a day, but in that day if I write a song, that song exists forever. It's just such a cool thing. Something come from nothing and become the thing that people sing back to him at gigs or you hear it on the radio in your car. To watch that from start to finish is something special. I guess I just wanted to capture that more and more. Oh... He's... - Come on, Benny. Fucking hell. - Beep again, mate. - Hi guys. - Sir Benny Blanco. Does anyone want string cheese? Yeah. We are going... I don't even know where the fuck we are right now, but it's a long way away from LA. And we're gonna write a lot of song stuff. Put together all my favorite people, musicians. Foy, Amy and Johnny. What are you worried about? The thing that I'm worried about is that I work one on one with people. And this is like one on seven, all in different rooms and kind of... I dunno, I've never done it before. It'll be fun. So I got this, it goes... Yeah. I'll have a think and a smoke. We'll play the track before we start. Wait till you hear it. That's the, like, we had the... We had something like that. Yeah, but when we were talking about it lyrically, but flipping it around so now, it's our turn to look after them like they did for us when we were young. Yeah. But I prefer this kind of Springsteen-y, sort of, you know. -I'm gonna finish this song. -Work away. I'm gonna come back, and then come here. Bit of a mindfuck. What are you thinking? I tell you what, it's too many ideas. What do you want to do? Do we finish the song or keep the idea and then finish later? -No, let's finish the song. -Alright, come on. This is really good. - Do you wanna hear the song? - -Yeah. How's it sounding? This shit is fire. Yes, yes, yes. Gonna get my laptop. And write a song. It's really fucking early. No one's awake. I'm really jet-lagged. How did yesterday go? Yesterday was good. Quite confusing. Yeah. I don't know if it would work better as, like, three weeks of individual sessions. Probably. I think if loads of ideas are started, that would be great. Could just write a song. That'd be a good one. - Yeah. - Yeah, yes. Let's just write it. Another one? Songs are weird things. How so? They just come and go. They never give you any warning. I've been up since 5:00, Amy. - Oh, my God, oh, my God. - We wrote a song, though. - Very good. -Come down, we'll write another one. I'm coming down now. You dick. - What is this? - Just coffee. -I can see right through it to Australia. -Well, it was in the pot. What's your future? -That was yesterday's coffee. -Oh, who cares? It's basically gravy. Alright well, you can put it off. I'll fucking take it back then. Give it to me. Wait, I'll play the other riff. -I like that. -Lovely. That's great. One more time? It's gonna be fun. That's it. And there's some kind of riff there, maybe? Then it has different sections. Okay, should we put that bit down? Can you play the chorus? - So "The Ramblas"? - "Ramblas, I'll meet you, we'll dance around La Sagrada..." That is so good. Yeah, let's do that. So... Like, "Ramblas, I'll meet you... Oh, yeah. Yeah, good! All right, let's write this. Let's write this. This is really good. - Sagrada familia... -Everybody get their Spanish out. -Let's just do it. -"Te amo mi caria." Te amo mi caria. - Ed would like your opinion. - -Oh, great. What've you been working on, Benny? - Bullshit. - Bullshit. Where are you guys? All the way down there? Let me get my shoes. That's the best. I love the Spanish. That's amazing. What's up, homie? Raise the roof. Good morning. It's like, it goes... I like that idea of, like... I'm guarded. - Yeah. - Like... You know. Yeah. Benny? Benny? Benny! Benny! - Yeah? - We got the next bit. - Oh, what is it? - I'll sing it. All right. I do think it should go, "Don't tell me you need me." - "...you need me. " -I might have to move it down, then. - Let's get Foy. - Oh, my God. Can we please? Let's get Foy to riff. Are you serious? I would be so excited for that. - So we need to write that again. - Yeah. I want food so bad. - Peace. - Benny, let's fu... Benny! - He said, "Oh, peace!" - Sorry. Did you hear me? Peace! - Wait. - I'm eating food. Food is ready. I worked up an appetite. - Oh, shit. Holy shit. Whoo! - I'm waiting for you. Are you OK if it wasn't a gypsy melody, but everything in the music was? We'll do it with a dancehall beat, like... Most of it's about grandma and granddad. And about my grandma and granddad were Protestant and Catholic and couldn't get married. One point of that is that granddad made the wedding ring out of gold that he stole from a dentist. No way! That's such a cool story. Murray, just set up the camera and come write with us. -Right. -That's cool. Yeah, it's really good. Should it be "I met her at Guy's in the 2nd World War, blah, blah..." And the next bit is "they're from a farmer's town in Belfast town". And then, in the next bit, the second half? Maybe. 'Cause you're, like, setting up the relationship with her. Let's hear it. I know, but what I'm saying is the second verse, half of it sets off, and half of it is the end bit, whereas the last verse is all set up as well. And I don't want to end it going... "I met her in the Second World War" You should end it being like "From a Belfast boy in a Belfast town..." "And now we're sat here old and grey, blah, blah, with our kids." I think that works more. Oh! Oh, no, an hour. Cherry lands in an hour. Yeah, nice. Yeah. All the songs on this album have a thread that goes through it, and it's all family. - Oh, yeah? - Yeah. And it's all like... it's all family. - It's really fucking good. - -I'm glad you're feeling that. Really good. It's... yeah. I'm not worried about the album anymore. The thing is, we've got four more weeks like this. We've got... No, three more... yes. Yeah, no, we haven't got a lot, we got the boat, and then a month, and then another two weeks, so two months straight. But I imagine half of that we'll be recording, not just writing. And if it's the same as the last album, you get like three singles gone off at the very end. Like what was it? "Thinking Out Loud," "Sing" and "Don't" were after the album was finished, no? Yeah, but that's 'cause I was scrambling 'cause the album wasn't great. I don't think I'm scrambling this time. Now, if you could just get a big fucking creative drive just before. Yeah, I think there's got to be a point where you... Yeah, start the next one. Just don't tell Benny about them. It's great. Who's that? Who's that? There they go. - Hey, you allright? - Hey. -How are you doing? -Yeah, I'm good. -Are you? -And you?. Dave, Cherry. Cherry, Dave. - Hello! Hi, nice to meet you. - Nice to meet you. Play the... really quickly, the one about my grandma. - Oh, the... - "Nancy Mulligan." I love it. Right. Before we start, this traditional band's gonna play on it, like fiddle and everything. You think you'll have them on stage and shit? Mate, I think if you produce that up... I'll fuck with it. Oh my God, this food smells so good. Should we put your stuff in the room? -But, like, super soft playing. -That's easy. So you're like... Go to F. You see? - Then we can record it... - -I like "You seem happier." I'll record the piano. All right, you record. Nobody Talk! But record soft going into hard. Nice one, bro. On that section, I had had it going back to the F. Instead of A, G, C, I had it going A... So it's different. Something different. A, F, C. - Yeah. - That works? Okay. Can you hear that? Can you hear the sound of 4,000 label executives coming to you and being like, "Yo, we need another one of those, Benny"? -How many times has that happened? -A lot. But I always just... I already did that. I hate it when the labels try to get you to do the same song. I just go, "But I just did that song." Does the label ever tell you, they're like, "We need you to do another one of these"? No. Benny's been sending it back and forth, but we haven't touched it since... Malibu. So, yeah, we just begin on the boat. See, he's built this studio on a boat, it's not in a room, it's like a... It's like a room. It's like bigger than that. - No. - Really weird. I was expecting a cabin with, like, on the tour bus. Yes, same. So what's he got? Probably about twice the size of that. - This is my phone. - He does have a phone! Oh, my God. This boat is huge. Like in case something goes wrong, I don't want to be in that orange boat. Like, look at all the boats and then look at the little orange boat. Yeah mate, you can't get a fucking boat because you're scared of flying and now tell me you're gonna be scared of a boat. Oh no, I don't care. I talked to this guy yesterday 'cause I was so nervous. And he said there's only one transatlantic boat that has ever sank, and it was the Titanic. I don't fly because I was on a flight like seven or eight years ago and it was one of those flights where no one was allowed to get up. The whole time they were like, "Stay seated!" Like, people were like peeing their pants and it was like a big thing. And the lady was rolling the cart down before she shut everyone off and all of sudden the cart moved and she was like, "Ah!" And she, like, fell and rolled down the thing. You know when you look at the stewardess and you really... "You're really like. "everything's gonna be all right," 'cause they're smiling. On this one they're like... And I was fucking freaked out. And then I got off the plane and immediately got on another plane that was like a six-seater and we were in a thunderstorm and it was fucking horrible. And then I flew one more time and I was like, I'm not flying ever again. In my head, I know exactly what's on the album. It's like a 12-track album, I know like 15. For me, when I see them all together, I'll know how to produce certain things. It's a little bit hazy for me until we get it all together. We have 11 for the main, 'cause I don't know about "Happier" or "New Man," I have to finish "Happier" , I have to finish "New Man." [BennI would be a bad producer if we didn't work on those two songs. Let's think of a cool lick or something, or a way. Yeah, I'll do that. - Now, play it, play it out. - What? These lines I need to say something cleverer than those two. Okay. Oh, that you can't sleep at all. Like, it's like... Like it's late at night, you can't sleep, you're fucking chain-smoking in a room, deciding whether to fucking call the person or not or look through all your old shit and... I like something about smoking a cigarette or something. Or alcohol or something that... All right, mate. Should we come grab you a... in like... We're going to the casino, should we come grab you in like half an hour? That's that pain right there. Let's listen to it from the beginning. Yeah, bruh. I like that. -I feel bad for sending Kev away now. -Why? I don't know, I can't write when someone's just sitting there staring. -What, Kevin? -No, no, just anyone. Like, Murray's filming, but anyone who's just there, I just feel really, like, self-conscious. Murray was just like, we have to film somewhere. He's like: "Because we could literally just be anywhere." He's like, yeah, he's never been outside. You were literally outside one time. I don't like going outside. Just like you don't like flying, I don't like being around people. Bruh. - We're turning him into a sailor. - -I made him take it. I hate to fly. -Do you? Oh, that's brilliant. -I hate it. -And here's an alternative. -I know, I like it. -It's very relaxing, I think. -Yeah, starting to go a little crazy. Zebra! When are you gonna turn into a Ze-Bruh? Can you see me? Mean it Sounds like "Penis." Penis Only if you put a P in front of it. Penis Alright Benny, I want you to do me a favor? - Oh, God, this feels weird. - What? -It just suddenly went... -Whoa, look it. Want to stand on that to test it? Oh, my God, I'm gonna... Okay. -All right. -Benny. Benny, this is worse. This one's scarier? Oh, my. Okay, okay, you go first. That's it. Arms sideways just in case it breaks. Just in case. -That's the scariest... -Thank you so much for showing us around. So this is technically the last day on the boat, yet you will have no idea, because we've worn the same clothes every single day. So it looks like we've been on the boat for a day. But we haven't. Benny looks like he hasn't changed since 2006. 2007, please, thank you. Wait, who am I? -Someone I'm taking to the zoo tomorrow. -No, I'm you. I'm Ed. Look I have my hands just like him now. Oh, I'm so happy! Is this, like, up north or south? No, this is east, southeast. This is above London. But below, like, Manchester and stuff like that. I'll take you for a drive. I'll show you all the spots. You guys, it still feels like I'm on a boat. - What was it, five, six days? -Seven. Don't you feel like that? - Do you feel like you're on a boat? - -Not anymore. Oh, man, I do. Crazy. -What's that? -Bitch. So, this is the town. - So now we're in town? - -That's the village I lived in and this is the town, it's called Framlingham. This is someone going back to school. All right, boy. How ya getting on. I recorded my first ever song down there on Damford Drive with my old guitar teacher, when I was 11. What was the song? "Typical Average Teen"? Really rolls off the tongue. "Typical Average Teen." - Remember any more of it? - -I remember all of it, but I'm not gonna sing any of it. How does the chorus go? Is it a smash? - Wait, is it actually that? - -Yeah. I just guessed that. That was fine. Good. Want to spice it up a bit more? Well, when I spice it up, it sounds too cockney. Oh, should we put the vocals in so I know where they're... What? Yeah, we can. They said they might want to play with... - With me singing? - Maybe without it. Why don't you just sing? Why don't we just do it like that? Everyone happy? Here we go. Four clicks. Lovely. It's getting Irish today. It's getting very Irish today. Did you go to the C? That's nice. Do we have a song? -I hear that more as a chorus. -Yeah? That's why I'm thinking play through it there. Or whatever, somewhere else. Yeah. What's... Portlaoise Don't do Portlaoise, Jesus. Derry girl Derry girl? -Yeah, or... -Or pretty little Derry girl. It sounds like dairy girl. Oh, my pretty little Galway girl Oh, my pretty little Galway girl -But you can't say Galway girl. -I don't... 'Cause there's a song called "Galway Girl." Cadence wise it feels good, though. I think that song works better than Galway Girl. -I think this idea of having... -Rap on a trad song? Yeah. It's so unique. - I like it. - I do, too. The album's missing one of these, I need to get the verses right. I don't like the end of that. Like changing that... I don't know, I'll find a different end line for that. So it goes... There you go. Like an accordion? Can you get on the fiddle as well and do that... I fucking love it. Would it sound too busy if it had a fiddle in the verse? We'll soon find out? The chorus is the same chords as well and everyone joins in on the motif that you would do on the verses, if that makes sense. So, if you had a motif for the verse, the kinda rappy verse, - and then when it gets into the... ... - everyone comes in with the same motif. Would that sound good? - I think so. - Wanna try it? F sharp. That's nice! That would be pretty sick, though, if we just fused them. We just changed the last phrase. One more time. Chris, do you reckon I can stand up? Yeah, sure. Can't believe you're sitting down. I can't believe it too. Chris is an amateur, man. Good, let's get that on film. - So good. - That's good. So sweaty. So, we're going to Thomas Mills High School now, and I'm gonna teach some music. It's the high school I went to. This is the award I got at school when I was 16 for Most Likely to be famous at the prom. And we're gonna see Mr. Hanley, who's a lad, a really cool guy. Trip down memory lane. My music teacher at school was a guy called Mr. Hanley. And every time I speak to him now, he always maintains that he didn't do that much. But he really did. He wasn't like a rigid music teacher in the sense that he was like, "You have to learn music theory or do this." He knew from a very young age that I liked playing guitar and liked writing songs. And he didn't necessarily know about the sort of music that I was into, but he could see I was passionate about music and him as a teacher just encouraged that, to the point that he'd let me leave school early on a day to catch a train to London to go play a gig. Look at that. Here we go, there it is. Is that my handwriting? Oh, no, there I am. Look at the little paw and everything! Oh, that's nuts. - Hi. - How are you? This is Ed Sheeran. There were a lot of teachers at my school who, I think, didn't quite get it. And a lot of my friends as well just didn't get it. I remember like dropping out of school and moving to London "What are you doing? This is not gonna work out. You want to be a famous musician, do you?" And I think Mr. Hanley never had a doubt. Yeah, he's really cool. I kinda view songwriting as like a dirty tap in an old house 'cause you switch on the dirty tap, I'm gonna swear, sorry. You switch on the dirty tap and it spits out shit water for about kind of 10 minutes and it's just mud and grit and just all sorts of messiness coming out. Then it starts flowing clean water, and then little bits of grit still come out, but after a while it's just clean. When I first started writing songs, they were terrible. And that was the mud and grit coming out, and I was unplugging it. And I tried to write two or three songs a day for a while, just unplugging. Now and then you'd get the odd good song, the first clean water coming out. And then once it all... Once all the bad songs have gone, the good songs start flowing. Now and then, I'd write a bad song, but the key is when you know you're writing bad songs, make sure you finish it, just so you can get it out of you, because if you don't, your next song will have a bad part in it. So just view it as a constant stream. Try and write a song a day, even if it's terrible, just get it out of you, because the best songs that you write will be five years from now. I have notes on my phone and every time I see something or get something that rhymes. I remember, the way that I wrote "A Team" is, for a month, I had a... I'll tell a bad story. I had friends that sold cocaine from just skating to people. And just selling it, and my initial thing was "Johnny is in the Class A Team," that's the first thing I wrote down in my notes. Then I went into in a homeless shelter I met this girl called Angel who was on a lot of drugs. And, like, the next thing I wrote down was "Her face crumbling like pastries." And so I wrote down all these kind of, "A Team," "daydream," "pastries" "they scream". All these rhymes in my phone and one day sat down and the song happened in 20 minutes. But that was like three months of stocking stuff up... My self-belief came from... I wasn't good at anything else, so, as soon as I started excelling, and I was in a very small pond as well at my school, so I was one of maybe three people that plays guitar and wrote songs. Thank you. - Nice to meet you. - Check this out. That's me when I was 11, with Steve of eighth grade. -That would be Ben. -He's here? Yeah. Hello. What's up, man? Should we go in the main studio and play songs? Yeah, sure. Or we can do it over there. Do you want to play "Perfect"? Yeah. It'll sound much more unified with an actual orchestra because there's different string samples from different libraries depending on how good that they are, I think, like tremolo and stuff. I think we're just gonna pull it all and make it one tight piece. It's gonna be good. - It'll fit in with the rest. - Yeah. It's gonna be sick. -Where will you record? -Abbey Road. -It's gonna be cool. -Not bad. Have you seen it yet? Chez. Thank you. Drop. Exquisite! - This will be a lot louder. -It's really good. -It's in time now as well. -Yeah. Can you think what's been done in this room? -Thank you. -Very good. There's edges to it as well, you know what I mean? Lovely arrangement. -Yeah. Matt's done all right. -He smashed it. Yeah, I'm really glad my mom came. Yeah, 'cause her mom's ill... she's just been there. So she really hasn't gotten out of the house. Lovely stuff, and... He can be here. Guys, if you want to come in the room when they're doing it, I'm sure that's fine. That was fantastic, um... This is Benny, the producer of the album. Okay! Let's give it a shot, then. Thank you, see you guys soon. All right. Couldn't have gone better. Really good. -You love it? -Yeah. Thanks for singing with them. I think it's a good idea. Yeah, I think it's a good idea. Really fun. I enjoyed it. Is it all about you then? Maybe he's got a piece on the side that he's singing about. -Exciting. -How many months' work? Two years. What was the first one you wrote? I think it was "Perfect." "Perfect" must've been the first one on the album. And then... "Castle on the Hill." I think. And is this the last one that you wrote? No, the last one I wrote you haven't heard yet. - I'm gonna wait til a good time to play it to you. - -Okay. It's the one that will make Mommy cry. They all make Mommy cry. - No, this one really will. - Really? Can you pull up "Supermarket Flowers"? So have you written this in the last few weeks? Oh, what? "Supermarket Flowers"? Yeah, that we wrote it when Johnny was here. I don't think it's the time to play it to Mommy yet. I think we gotta wait a bit of time. Wow, that was utterly beautiful. Yeah, definitely don't play that for a while. No. So this song that they reckon is missing. I've got an idea of a song in my head that I think will sort it out. Cool. That's my one little thing I'm clinging onto, being like, everything's gonna be all right 'cause I've got this idea. Either than that, if I didn't have that idea, I'd be fucked, when they asked, "Yeah, one more song." I'd be like, "I have no ideas anymore! You've run me dry. You run me... you run me down." "You run me down." They just want it to be a classic, but... And so do I. And I do agree with them that it needs something that is kind of like "Don't" or "New Man" or "Bloodstream" that's just kind of a bit to the point, but that isn't a throwaway. Out. I like that. The whole song feels, like, high, and then when that kicks in, I like it. Can you take out that one part? Whatever new bit you put in the "Oh I, oh I, oh I" of the old one. That needs to go, 'cause it's wrong. And then take out the other thing that's put in. You guys put in so much stuff. Just... I don't know. So much stuff that wasn't there, that shouldn't be there. I thought we were just mixing it. Just let me do it, it'll sound good, I promise you. It's just there's a reason why it comes in and comes out, 'cause if there's something there, then by the time the "Oh I, oh I" comes in it doesn't lift at all. If you want it to lift and drop, and do all of that, then keep it the same way it was. 'Cause the point in it was the chorus is a step back, and then when it kicks in, it kicks in. And if it just kicks in through the whole song, it just gonna sound shit. I promise you it will sound better this way. We'll have a listen in the car later. This is the best way, though. Can that kick in more when it comes in? All this one? No, that's cool, there's a jangly guitar. I know exactly where that is. That's good. I like that. No, there's like a really high jangly one. That... That one. Those need to come down a little bit. Or they need to be not as high frequency. Just a bid more mid. Might have to re-sing that last line. I need to go through those original BVs with you just to make sure I've got the right ones, and make sure we don't need to add any to it. -Just to make it more powerful. -That's why I liked the lower ones. Yeah. So you're saying the new low ones won't work with the original? No. But I don't particularly like the original. Right. Because on Steve's version, right? The newer vocals really kick in for me. Why don't you like those ones? I don't dislike them, but I think the old one has the higher part, which I think is the most important part of all to me, that's the hooky one. You should maybe do an ad-lib on that final chorus as well. Cue. Spike, do you want me to try doing "Oh I, oh I, oh I" the low ones? If you want that massive, that'll really help. -See, I love the new ones you did. -Yeah? Cause they sound like that. They got that rich, thick... What? I don't understand what their... Do you get this a lot from labels? -I know. -And that's a rare fucking thing. - Sounds great, man. - Yeah? That's sick. That fucking final chorus is incredible. - Well done, mate. - Thanks. - Teamwork. - -Teamwork makes the dream work. So, this is Spike's mix that I did when I went down to Spike's house. Of it. That's... Use that as a reference and have everything the same volume. And then in the solo, take out everything but the guitar and Pino's bass and my acoustic guitar, and then keep the ride in. And take the "chun, chun, chun" piano out and put the "ding, ding, ding" guitar in the verse. What song is that about? That was "Perfect," which is the last song to be finished for the album. We did an orchestral version with my brother which was a bit too orchestral, and then I did an acoustic version on my own, which is a bit too acoustic. So, we've now fused the two and they sound great. Yeah, the last song to be done on the album and then we're mastering it. -Tuesday. Thanks, man. -The struggle is real. Oh, I'm done by the way, I'm all done. No, you're good. You're good, you're good. Yeah, we're mastering it Tuesday and then sending it off to be printed. - Are you excited about that? -It's the album! I keep listening to the radio and being, like, really like my competitive side's coming back. And I just can't wait to put some music out so I can get... I've had to... I've had to sort of keep my competitive side on the low this year. You know, I did a couple of singles for other people, which sort of kept me going. My main target's Adele now. I think if you don't want to be bigger than Adele, then you're in the wrong industry. Think she's the target for everyone. I don't want to be the male Adele, I want to be Adele. Wanna just... overdo that, so gotta sell 30 million. That's easy. Is this on? One, two, oh, hello. - Can I explain the bank to you? -Yes. -The bank button. Basically... -What's the bank button? This will light up and it will give you five, six, seven, eight. For the moment, we just put a distorted guitar on key. Then we put a reverb. And then two more vocals. So it's just a demo mode, but you know how you're in five, six, seven, eight by the light. That's the only difference. And when you record a loop, these will give you undo layers, so you can see the layers with this one here. Undo them, basically. -Yeah. Couple of little new things, but... -This is cool. I think that's self-explanatory. That just needs tightening. I agree. I always thought that "Castle on the Hill" would be the opening. -It's the obvious... -No, I know. But "Eraser" just sounds so good on the album. I don't know if "Eraser" is gonna sound... good. Doesn't feel like it, right? -No, doesn't, but I don't know if it's... I don't know if it fits in the set yet. I don't know. I'm not super confident about all the songs yet. All right. Yeah, I'm rehearsing. Rehearsing the live show. Just having a year of not really picking up a guitar and playing those songs, It just kind of, it's all gone away. But, yeah, I'll just have to practice them. The album is done. Finished, mixed, mastered, handed in. And it's first time I've ever had an album and looked at the track listing and be, like, I could never do better than that in my wildest dreams. It's the peak of my songwriting and musical ability. And it might be the peak, it might be that I never get this again, but I know that when I'm 70, I'll look back and be, "That's my finest bit of work." I just have a weird sense about this album that's gonna be the career-defining album, much more so than "Plus" and "Multiply". You know, the last two albums were building up to something, and I feel like this is the payoff. This one, it definitely feels... feels magical. Can't think of a better fucking way to spend it. - We got one minute. - Drumroll, drumroll! Five, four, three, two, one! Ed! Ed! Ed Sheeran! Why do his guitars get this messed up? I never actually planned to bring Benny, he just invited himself. He's like, "Hey, yo, I'm coming. I'm coming on the road with a studio bus." And now he's here. Have a good day, sir. This is the guitar I learnt on. It's a Christmas present from Clapton. Granddad would be proud. "Subtract," maybe? |
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