Morning peeps... or should I say good afternoon coz it's almost 11 now. One more day to jingle bell jingle bell!!! Merry Xmas guys!! ;-)
I'm gonna warm your Xmas mood with an interview that Mark is just done with popjustice. So enjoy it guys. Our funny, chubby & hottie Mr. M is gonna warm u with his answer...
*My Mr. M like Nutella too...it is yummy & so chocolate.. Feel like it's melting in my mouth now.. Well, he is has weight problem. If u pay attention to him all this years, u'll notice that sometimes Mark looks thin & sometimes he looks chubby. But he's still my fave guy!!
Have fun with the interview...
[Peter Robinson] How 
are you?
[Mark Feehily ] I am good thank you.
[PR] Exciting. What's been happening 
apart from your band - the only band I ever really loved - splitting 
up?
[MF] Erm, well this week we've been doing loads of promo but it actually 
hasn't been crazy busy. Apart from that we've just been sitting 
around...
[PR] Is it a bit like when you know you're leaving a job and 
you're working your notice period so you're not really working as 
hard?
[MF] Well there have been moments like that, I have to admit. Let's just 
say we didn't take Lorraine Kelly as seriously as we might usually have done. 
[PR] Perhaps in your final moments as a band you'll experience the 
carefree abandon you missed during your living years. Maybe it will all make 
sense far too late, a bittersweet glimpse of what might have been. 
[MF] Well 
there's definitely a feeling that a weight has been lifted, in a sense, and I 
think that there have been many moments throughout our career that would have 
been more enjoyed if it was that way. There was a pressure that we put on 
ourselves and maybe it was a pressure that we should have tried to hide a bit 
more. With the business side of things and the boring side of things it's 
important to be driven, but maybe that came through a bit much in the music. But 
since we announced the split and it's been done, I've felt that it was a bit 
like coming out - now it's over, you feel a big weight off your shoulders and 
you can begin to enjoy yourself. 
[PR] Blimey. So are you relieved it's 
over?
[MF[ I think everybody's relieved that we've got to where we are and 
it's all amicable. Nobody really knew exactly what was going to happen and that 
created this tension. Nobody quite knew how it was going to unfold, and how we 
were going to manage the end of the band. But all that's gone now because we've 
done it, and we got there. When we were away in China and South Africa on tour 
and even before that we were worried about saying we were splitting up and 
nobody giving a fucking shit! But we've just found out that our tour is - bar 
none - going to be our biggest tour we've ever done. So thankfully people, well 
our fans, give a shit. It is bittersweet because the reaction has been 
fantastic but we still have to face the unknown which is scary. You're walking 
into the darkness. We've got no idea what's facing us. Ultimately people are 
going to look at whatever we do as either complete flops or massive successes - 
nobody cares or everybody cares. You just have to be positive with yourself and 
try to do something good, but of course you also hope that whatever you do is 
going to justify itself with a bit of success, you know what I mean? 
Nobody sets out to make an amazing album nobody listens to. Nobody sets out to 
make a flop.
[PR] Speaking of flops - what about the single? What did 
Barlow do? Take That torpedoed Westlife at the last minute!
[MF] Ah - well, 
the song that I'd written, 'Beautiful World'...
[PR] ...which is the best 
of the new ones on your Greatest Hits...
[MF] Great. Well that was the one 
that when Nick Gatfield our A&R man came to see us in the studio, that was 
the one we played him because 'Lighthouse' wasn't even in the picture at this 
stage. And 'Beautiful World' was the one Nick Gatfield was like, "this is a 
smash, it's amazing". And he had months to live with it and at the last minute 
'Lighthouse' came in, and it was written by Gary Barlow, and, you know, people 
were very quick to assume that whatever he writes is going to be 
massive...
[PR] Did you think the song was any good though?
[MF] I think 
that as a band we have to be a unit and we have to stand by our decisions and we 
all went and made the video and we released it and...
[PR] Mark you seem to 
be talking yourself away from the question slightly.
[MF] Look, when I talk to 
my friends and stuff, I think... Well, on paper, it's a stereotypical Westlife 
song, but to me there's something about it which is also unlike anything we've 
ever recorded before...
[PR] It's got a rubbish tune?
[MF] (Laughs) 
Now you said that, not me... But anyway we have to stand by every song we 
release. It's definitely not our best song ever, and it's definitely by far - by 
a million miles - our worst chart position ever. But the album's been doing 
well. But as I say, a lot of people were charmed by the idea of the song. I mean 
we all have to stand by our decisions. It's been our least successful song ever. 
There you go. Anyway we're doing a video for 'Beautiful World' and that's 
technically our last ever song, so...
[PR] When you say it's 'technically' 
your last ever song, are there more to come? I'm a bit worried about this whole 
split thing being a long goodbye that never really ends. 
[MF] No it's not 
that, don't worry. 'Beautiful World' isn't technically going to be a single, but 
it'll be serviced to radio and there'll be a video so it'll be a bit like 'When 
You're Looking Like That' where it was never released but it was still 
promoted.
[PR] Thanks for bringing that up Mark because despite being your 
best song 'When You're Looking Like That' seems not to be on the standard 
edition of your Greatest Hits. 
[MF] I know. We were doing some signings the 
other day and they were playing the deluxe version of the album, which does have 
it on. 'What Makes A Man' is on that second CD as well. It was difficult, we 
wanted there to be a balance. I mean to be honest we kind of left it to the 
label. They went off and did all this research and I don't know whether to 
listen to a second of it...
[PR] What did the research say?
[MF] Some of 
it was more obvious - 'Flying Without Wings' was people's favourite song or 
whatever - and there's other bits I can't even remember. We went in one day to 
sit down and listen to the results of the research. They went through ten or 
fifteen pages' worth of research on a big projector - then left about about two 
hours' worth of stuff I think they didn't want us to know about - but the whole 
point of it was to show us what songs should go on the Greatest Hits. 
[PR] What do you think they didn't want you to know?
[MF] I would love 
to know that. 
[PR] It would be useful for you to know now you're doing 
your solo stuff.
[MF] Definitely. Maybe it's a bad habit but when I write 
songs these days I tend to think of who I'm writing for. That's something that I 
got into because of Westlife - you've got to think to yourself, 'what's the best 
Westlife song I could write?'. And...
[PR] Well, 'When You're Looking Like 
That'. 
[MF] Well yes but when I'm doing my solo stuff I think I need to get 
away from that a bit. I think it needs to be believable and real or there will 
be no point. It's exciting for me because I have no idea how good or bad it will 
be. I'm excited about the idea of having no rules - if it's a shit song, it's MY 
shit song. 
[PR] What was that stuff you were saying the other week about 
everyone in the charts being boring? And then the interview came out and 
everyone went 'oh fuck off Westlife you can't talk about people being 
boring'?
[MF] Did I say that? 
[PR] It was about people in the charts not 
being original enough, or something.
[MF] Sometimes we might do an interview 
and we might give an answer and people turn it into one big blunt fucking... You 
know what I mean? The thing is though, just because I'm in Westlife it doesn't 
mean I can't have my own opinion of music, and the music I'm into isn't always 
relevant to the fact I'm in Westlife...
[PR] So are you saying as well as 
being in Westlife, you are also a fan of music?
[MF] (Pause) Yes. 
(Laughs) I like the way you twisted my words. I also like Westlife music! 
[PR] You like Ed Sheeran quite a lot don't you?
[MF] There are a lot of 
exciting artists out there but Ed Sheeran's album in particular is very fresh 
for me. When it's next to everything else that's out there I find it really 
fresh. But you don't like it do you? Don't you call it The New 
Boring?
[PR] In the sense that Westlife are sort of The Old Boring, and 
Sheeran represents boredom for the next generation.
[MF] We were years ahead 
of the market! 
[PR] But the interesting thing about Ed Sheeran boring, 
Adele boring, Birdy boring, and that sort of boring, is that it's credible 
boring. Whereas Westlife weren't ever really very cool. It's like The Great 
British Bake Off - five years ago, if you were in your twenties and said that 
baking was a hobby you might be seen as being a bit eccentric or whatever. But 
now it's cool. 
[MF] Maybe it's something to do with the economy? A few years 
ago it was all 'oh let's fucking fly to the moon' and maybe all people really 
want now is a log fire and a freshly baked cake. 
[PR] Can you 
bake?
[MF] If it's in a readymade packet, I can. I can follow directions 
pretty well. 
[PR] Sometimes being able to follow directions is all you 
need in life. Tell me where I need to be, tell me when, I'll see you 
later.
[PR] Not everything in life comes with instructions, unfortunately. 
[PR] If only life were more like a shake and bake pancake mix. 
[MF] I 
know. I can get through one of those and a jar of Nutella in half an 
hour!
[PR] Diet tip: when you're preparing for your solo tour, lay off the 
Nutella. 
[MF] I know. When I'm more in control of my life I naturally become 
fitter as a person. As you may have seen on the year off. I don't know if you 
were paying attention.
[PR] Will your solo stuff be all kind of 'ooh 
everyone fuck off I used to be in a band and now I'm not' or will there be more 
to it than that?
[MF] I'm not sure. Coming out of fourteen years with Westlife 
there was a very specific formula and I could go off and experiment for a year 
and still only scratch the surface. More than anyone else in the band, I think, 
I need to experiment. It's scary. Music is such a massive spectrum. It's 
daunting! But it's exciting. 
[PR] What does make a man?
[MF] A 
cock and balls. 
Westlife's 
hits collection is out now (here it is on iTunes).
Interview by Peter Robinson
Read more: pop justice
xoxo

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