"I got hooked into music by watching Later with Jools Holland with my mum and dad. I was allowed to stay up late and watch it with them. That was my introduction to loads of bands that I'd never heard of, obviously because I was a little kid. I've been a kind of lifelong fan of them ver since. That was my first introduction to a lot of really great music.
My dad had a guitar, a really difficult to play acoustic, which he used to occasionally strum. Then he bought my older sister a guitar for her ninth birthday, and she didn't really use it, so I just kind of took it, and my dad showed me the rudimentary tools and yeah, that was it. I just started playing, and then I got an electric when I was a bit older, and started playing in bands at school, and never put it down.
It's weird. I think especially when you've started writing music, the lines between all roles, producer, artist, engineer, become very blurred. Because when you're in a band you want to play guitar, so you learn how to play guitar, then you want to record yourself so you have to learn the basics of engineering. How to place a mic, how to set up to record, you start from there, figuring out the nuances of production. Once you can set up it's like, 'Okay, well, how do I make it sound the way I want it to sound, like the way that I've heard this guy make it sound? Or the sound that's in my head?' That kind of weird fusion of writing music to engineering to producing becomes one awesome symbiotic journey. I'm definitely just a guy in a band. I'm a guitarist who loves to write, produce and record his own music. I wouldn't back myself as an engineer if someone put me in a high-pressure studio environment or told me to, to mic up the kit, I'd be out of my depth."