Peter Murphy

Peter Murphy is not dead. He is very much alive and enjoying touring, including a stop at the Trocadero this Saturday, Nov. 19. This time around, he’s promoting Ninth, his first solo album – due out this June – since the 2008 release of Bauhaus’ farewell album, Go Away White.
The A.V. Club caught up with the pleasantly polite Godfather Of Goth to chat about the creative process, the future of music, and that inevitable acting bug.
The A.V. Club: The lead single off of Ninth, “I Spit Roses,” is reportedly in reference to an incident with the Bauhaus band mates. Do you feel the recent Bauhaus reunion inspired the overall sound of Ninth in addition to lyrics?
Peter Murphy: Only one song was inspired by what I’ll call a shanty tale or the “interaction between us four Bauhauses.” Rather than arguing, I stuffed rose petals in my mouth and spat roses at them all—a lovely gesture. Kind of a shock, though. Then a negative spiral. But in essence, it needed to be captured—us playing together. I wrote that as a reminder of how important it is to bring people into the same space to capture a performance. I was writing a lot during Go Away White, which was very freeing. But the rest of the lyrics [on the album] were inspired after having met Sarah Fimm in 2005. She invited me to appear on her songs and I met David Baron. This is two years before we actually started to work together.
Peter Murphy – I Spit Roses [Single EP] by nettwerkmusicgroup
AVC: This is when you met David Baron, the producer you chose for Ninth?
PM: I met him through Sarah during that time, but then I lived three months in the Catskills because we’re up in Woodstock, you know. And these months living in the Catskills was me living in America for the first time, not just lying about in a hotel while on tour relying on movies and the TV in America—not to mention the news. Fox News is completely obscured and should be banned to another planet. Scripts manipulated and everything. I mean, I’m not one for conspiracy but…you know that’s not America. But the Catskills, Sara Fimm put me up in a house with a lake 30 yards away, a mountain view, and there were opossums, bears. Totally unreal. And then go down to New York in an hour and half. The East Coast is really wonderful. That’s what America is.
AVC: The creative process can often be a struggle between trying to make a record and trying to sell a record. How much of creativity at this point in your career is impulse and how much is calculated?
PM: I tend to always be uncalculated, but that’s why it is important for choosing the right producer. They can see what you can’t in your blind spot. They bring in that type of strategy. I like to keep myself completely off of that commercialized idea. The work is your work. I believe in eclecticism. You can have a 3-minute, beautiful, classic radio song, but four songs later, you have an epic, railing anthem. It can all work on one album. But you need the right producer to bring it together.