The interviewer was the well known comedian and music fan Sean Hughes. He was employing his trademark humour here, and I'm sure Trish and James were aware of that.
I met Trish briefly on what ended up being their final visit on their final tour to my city, before her death. After the opening band had finished, people were just milling around, and I went to withdraw money from the ATM. I turned around and she was just hanging out amongst the people in the bar/venue they were playing at. I just kind of awkwardly said, "Oh - hey!" and she said "Hello" super warmly, to my lanky, awkward 20ish year old self. Anyway, not a very interesting memory, but I was and still am a huge fan, and was absolutely _shocked_ she'd died from the (Swine) flu, given her age. So, I'm glad I had that one brief moment of connection with her. RIP Trish + Broadcast forever :).
Unfortunately, this is quite a boring interview; I find that there were supoosed to be more interesting questions to do. However, it is still a treasure, because it is one of the few Trish's registrations currently on the internet.
IKR, (I'm giving away my age, but...), Dick Clark from American Bandstand was overtly accommodating to shoe-gazing, mumbling musicians, and was genuinely interested in what they were about, always with levity...no matter who they were...punk bands like X or PIL.
@@Gavin-w4r When I was a musician in the 90s, he interviewed me on his radio show and mentioned the fact that my father had abandoned my mother and me - both of us never seeing or hearing from him again - and he quite reasonably asked how much that had affected my writing. I well remember feeling quite raw at the time after a girlfriend had left me and so, deflecting, I replied that what you don't know, you don't miss. He gave me a strange look but left the subject until off the air. Then, he told me that my songs were packed with abandonment, whether directly or beneath the surface, and that while he well understood the need to sweep important personal issues under the carpet, eventually, you have to face up to the fact that they're better addressed. He was genuinely warm and even concerned. I felt touched that he'd listened to the whole damn album, let alone that he'd come to an appropriate conclusion.
Roj cowrote every song on TNMBP, but he left because people like you wouldn't give him due respect as the true genius of Broadcast. From Haha Sound on, their songs never had enough chords!
I can't really get the male members of this band straight. This guy doesn't look like the two guys that she's posed with of the live one set only song that you can find on TH-cam.
It's Roj Stevens! Their keyboardist and essentially the third member of Broadcast in terms of their lineup procurement. I believe he was active up until TNMBP, then assisted here and there on Haha Sound's "Colour Me In", "Valerie", and "Distorsion", as well as Tender Button's "Black Cat". If you mean you can't get his vibe straight, he's a seemingly intelligent and creative goat at his trade therefore doesn't acquire your understanding.
Sean Hughes was a very amusing (to me) comedian. But as an interviewer for a band such as Broadcast, this was a huge disappointment. I am glad that this was uploaded, but someone like Mark Radcliffe would have been SO much better at asking decent questions and eliciting worthwhile answers. (I think he had them performing live when he was doing the graveyard shift on Radio 1). The questions were rambling and largely pointless, and credit to Trish and Roj for at least trying to make it worth something.
Beautiful trish. We will miss you
interview feels like an interrogation lol
trish was so beautiful
Finally interview with Trish in motion not only audio record, thank you so much for this tape
Has Broadcast in the studio and the interviewer is like "lets talk about how you guys take a long time to record and aren't popular" what a dope.
The interviewer was the well known comedian and music fan Sean Hughes. He was employing his trademark humour here, and I'm sure Trish and James were aware of that.
@@decorativeed8032ahhh make sense now
It's amazing to hear her Brummie accent after listening to her divine singing voice for so many years.
She was a brilliant woman
Trish totally knew what she wanted from music, and was so honest.
She was so beautiful and graceful. x
This’s my first time seeing Terish talking. She’s badass.
I met Trish briefly on what ended up being their final visit on their final tour to my city, before her death. After the opening band had finished, people were just milling around, and I went to withdraw money from the ATM. I turned around and she was just hanging out amongst the people in the bar/venue they were playing at. I just kind of awkwardly said, "Oh - hey!" and she said "Hello" super warmly, to my lanky, awkward 20ish year old self.
Anyway, not a very interesting memory, but I was and still am a huge fan, and was absolutely _shocked_ she'd died from the (Swine) flu, given her age. So, I'm glad I had that one brief moment of connection with her. RIP Trish + Broadcast forever :).
Trish was very introvertid and smart, I love her
She was so talented
Unfortunately, this is quite a boring interview; I find that there were supoosed to be more interesting questions to do. However, it is still a treasure, because it is one of the few Trish's registrations currently on the internet.
The interviewer was an idiot and she didn't want to talk to him. Rightfully so, you should know the band before you interview them,
she was so lovely :’)
They should have walked out on this interview
Miss you (from Oslo) Trish❤❤❤❤
She is such an angel. I'm only now discovering this group. I was always into Warp Records, but only the very electronic side.
Ughh this interviewer was really antagonistic for some reason...could use more curiosity and good vibes man..
IKR, (I'm giving away my age, but...), Dick Clark from American Bandstand was overtly accommodating to shoe-gazing, mumbling musicians, and was genuinely interested in what they were about, always with levity...no matter who they were...punk bands like X or PIL.
Sean Hughes had a lot of issues. Was an alcoholic with a very bitter outlook on life.
@@Gavin-w4r Weird watching this now knowing that both Keenan and Hughes are dead. They look too young to have such a short time left to live..
He was jealous
@@Gavin-w4r When I was a musician in the 90s, he interviewed me on his radio show and mentioned the fact that my father had abandoned my mother and me - both of us never seeing or hearing from him again - and he quite reasonably asked how much that had affected my writing. I well remember feeling quite raw at the time after a girlfriend had left me and so, deflecting, I replied that what you don't know, you don't miss.
He gave me a strange look but left the subject until off the air. Then, he told me that my songs were packed with abandonment, whether directly or beneath the surface, and that while he well understood the need to sweep important personal issues under the carpet, eventually, you have to face up to the fact that they're better addressed.
He was genuinely warm and even concerned. I felt touched that he'd listened to the whole damn album, let alone that he'd come to an appropriate conclusion.
love these guys
RIP Trish.💓
This interviewer giving major Super Hans vibes… from Peep Show.
They are certainly not the Hair Blair Bunch.
Just got Spell Blanket. Trish you are very much missed.
Great Trish.
Rest in peace broadcast
Glad to see anything broadcast related, even when the interviewer is a complete tool
nobody seemed to have noticed that the interviewer was kind of a knob lol
british press especially back then were real cunts
Thank you!!
He was a well-known British-Irish comedian at the time who was also very knowledgeable about music and had his own TV show.
@@loratadine921 He didn't have to be such a bleedin' arse about it though. Somebody should have given him some decaf, or Quaaludes.
Trish ❤
Why did this station hire this interviewer? He’d make a better gas station attendant. Interviewing artists is not his forte.
From the comments below I understand that Trish has passed away. It really makes me sad whatever the circumstances. I liked Broadcast. Sad.
“Well for some reason that’s what we’re gonna play now.”- Interviewer…wtf man lol
so weird how the interviewer subtly defers to Roj. Like dude, he's not the core here. Trish is the heart.
Roj cowrote every song on TNMBP, but he left because people like you wouldn't give him due respect as the true genius of Broadcast. From Haha Sound on, their songs never had enough chords!
Why is this creepy guy putting his hands on that dude? You catch hands when you try that over here.
Trish laughing at a lowly impish demon in pity just gets me smiling.
Is Trish wearing Jordans?
I can't really get the male members of this band straight. This guy doesn't look like the two guys that she's posed with of the live one set only song that you can find on TH-cam.
It's Roj Stevens! Their keyboardist and essentially the third member of Broadcast in terms of their lineup procurement. I believe he was active up until TNMBP, then assisted here and there on Haha Sound's "Colour Me In", "Valerie", and "Distorsion", as well as Tender Button's "Black Cat". If you mean you can't get his vibe straight, he's a seemingly intelligent and creative goat at his trade therefore doesn't acquire your understanding.
He's Irish.
This dude has a huge lisp like a lot of English men. I wonder why so many of them can't say S.
Sean Hughes was a very amusing (to me) comedian. But as an interviewer for a band such as Broadcast, this was a huge disappointment. I am glad that this was uploaded, but someone like Mark Radcliffe would have been SO much better at asking decent questions and eliciting worthwhile answers. (I think he had them performing live when he was doing the graveyard shift on Radio 1).
The questions were rambling and largely pointless, and credit to Trish and Roj for at least trying to make it worth something.
🤯😠😤
Interviewer is just neurotyical. Poor thing can't help it
Man this particular type of UK music journo/interviewer is the worst.
I liked Sean Hughes but this kind of irreverent and slightly infantile ‘wacky’ style is difficult to watch.
All these music shows were like this in the 90’s/early 2000’s. used to annoy me.
gone were the "BBC Accents" and in come the "MTV editing"@@trship6274
I cant stand this interviewer, how obnoxious