Anger is people thinking something should be one way in their mind versus the reality they are confronted with. Loads of people have it and approach it in different ways. Your anger is focused and helps people – a force for good. Other people are on there just battering out hate. The algorithm is feeding it to them.
I think people are starting to step away from it and being more internal as opposed to sharing every second of their life on it.
Definitely. You see it now with Facebook. That’s like a graveyard. I don’t think a lot of people use that particularly.
Ironically, it’s probably one of the least threatening sites now, but it’s just so horrible. It’s like going into a second-hand shop and there being nothing in there of interest, just things that remind you of some bleak time in your life or whatever. Or nosy at someone’s holiday snaps. You’ve got to curtail it.
How does it work now for you? In terms of when you’re writing material. Has the method changed or do you just kind of get inspired and do it? Or do you have to put yourself in new situations now to try and to get in a creative space?
No, it just comes along. I put my ears in different situations. I listen to a lot of music, try and be inspired by other artists, which always helps. It’s the most obvious thing you do when you look for inspiration, but a lot of people don’t do it. Surprisingly, a lot of people don’t listen to music in our game. It’s weird, but I try and listen and try and be inspired, but also culturally, politically, that always seeps in and those things combined and just. It feels like you’ve got to constantly win the platform again. Which I don’t think there’s anything wrong with. It’s important to write interesting stuff. I always like to listen to interesting stuff. It’s inspiring. And I’d like to think that we constantly do that in our world.
What are you listening to at the minute? That’s inspiring you, or is new to you as well?
I hate to say it, but David Bowie. I fucking hate Bowie sycophants. If I see another person with that fucking lightning going on his face…But I’ve been listening to “Station to Station” a lot. Brilliant. Then “Low”, back down to “Hunky Dory”. Yeah, and “Scary Monsters”. What he’s good at is giving you an idea if you’re lacking in inspiration. It’s weird. It’s like a manual. Back in the day if your car broke down, you buy a manual and the engine bits would be in it. These clear diagrams and it’s like, oh, fuck. It’s that. That’s what his music’s like even though I don’t always like what he’s saying.
He was almost like the ultimate curator, wasn’t he? He could just select things, and he knew what was going to work next.
What the fuck is that? It’s just like, how the fuck are you doing that?! You know? So that’s interesting. I’m listening to some classic hip hop. Bit of Fred Neil. A real mix mash of stuff. Tim Buckley. Even though I’m not necessarily approaching vocals like that, it’s really nice to just listen to stuff that I don’t think I can use.
It still probably touches it in a certain way and you absorb it?
I think so, yeah, it encourages a bit of melancholy, sometimes I think that’s a real powerful emotion for songs. Definitely as Sleaford carries on, you know.
Yeah. Have you ever actually heard. Have you ever seen that David lynch movie lost highway?
No.
They use “Song to the Siren” really well. A Buckley cover by This Mortal Coil. There’s loads of Bowie in that movie too, actually.
I’m gonna search that out and watch that later.
I like how when I saw you At All Points East, the Aldous Harding crowd must have not been expecting you to come out and sing with her.
I really wish I could have done more shows with her. She asked me to do a few more. I just couldn’t do it because I was gigging. I love Anna to bits. She’s wicked, you know what I mean?
She’s so compelling. I love that she does this thing with her face when she sings. It’s almost like she’s living it out. It’s genius.
I was blown away when I saw her first time, Tasmania. I met her afterwards and we talked and, you know, sort of kept in touch, you know.
Do you think you’d try and get her on a Sleaford’s track as well?
It could be a possibility, you know. Nothing’s come up that I thought, oh, she’ll sound great on that. Yeah, but, you know, never say never.
So, your writing process hasn’t really changed. You don’t feel like you have to consciously kind of, I don’t know, put yourself in new things?
Yeah, I’ve never done that. It’s whatever comes. I think there’s more opportunity to create an idea of resistance in just being, rather than pairing yourself with a role of absorbing emotion.
Like some sort of magpie, you know.
People ask, “How do you prepare for a show?” And I’m like, well, “I don’t. I just walk on stage”. “But don’t, you know, don’t you start, you know, winding yourself up”. What for? This isn’t theatre. Well, it kind of is theatre, but it’s also not. You gotta let it grow inside. As the gig starts, it starts stirring. So, yeah, I don’t look for. I don’t, go out and sit in a job queue or something. I think it’s a bit disingenuous innit. I think people work like that – fine. But I find it a bit…It’s not natural. You know what I mean?
It’s just some people do, don’t they?
I think Sleaford was built on absorbing things around me. The way people spoke, the language people used, the slang. They were never from a different part of life than mine. It was always friends or people I worked with who I knew. It was never anything, anybody out of my social group, to be honest, because I found anything outside of that less interesting. So yeah, I do find that a bit disturbing, people doing that. Things should be real. I know that’s a bit of a cliche, but I think things should be au naturel. Do you know what I mean?
Yeah, definitely. I think that’s what resonates with Sleafords. It’s obvious that it is real. A lot of the time these days within half a minute you just know if a band is a load of shit. They’ve cobbled together a few influences. They look a bit moody, but it doesn’t ring true of anything. They just look like some students who’ve, absorbed a few influences and are now playing a role and that’s it. They’re doing a music video and they’ve got those serious faces on.
Yeah. The age-old thing, innit? What’s also very sad about that is a lot of these bands become massive, you know, and you’re almost. You almost kid yourself into thinking they’re all right. It’s like a Stockholm syndrome thing. It’s weird. It’s like you’re being held captive by mediocrity.
Are you guys already working on new stuff, then? New album “UK Grim” only just came out last year.
Kind of, but new album 2026. I think we’re gonna have next year off, so we’re gonna spend most of the year doing a recording and a doing a new album. Taking our time. This is the first time we’ve not kicked out an album every other year, so it would be a bit weird having a year off, but I’m knackered. Just. It’s been a full ten years. 12 years nearly. Full on. Full on. It will be interesting to see how that pans out.
Do you reckon you’ll get restless or just go on more car exhaust forums?
I don’t think so, you know, I’ll just clean the car twice a week and do the garden. You know what I mean? I quite like doing the garden, so, yeah, I’ll do that as well.
This is delivered with a slight glint in the eye. Jason’s sheer love of music really shines through every element of the interview. In the way he appreciates and respects other artists. One thing’s for sure. We need Sleaford Mods and their time off is only going to enable them to come back stronger. Divide and Exit is well worth revisiting in the meantime.