deliberation could be mistaken for coldness of the heart
So many smiles, so many faces
And my home so far away
I lose some of me in all these places
And I can't help the way I'm changed
In an interview with Ed Sciaky from WMMR, 93.3 in Philadelphia, Steve Hogarth said:
"80 Days is quite interesting because it was an attempt to write a song which was not only for the fans, but about the fans. We have an incredible, cult following, but it's a big cult following. It's a cult of a few hundred thousand people around the world. And there is a cult mentality within our fans. The band is very precious to them. They turn up early for the shows, stand around all day, sometimes in the freezing cold, just for a chance to stand on the front row, they're usually there hanging around after the show in the street to talk to us afterwards, and we always go out and chat. And we're very close to our fans.
And through the developments now with the Internet, we're getting even closer to them because there's a technology now for us to communicate directly with our fans globally, really, from moment to moment. But, it was an attempt to write a song for the fans that was about the fans and to kind of acknowledge what they go through on our behalf, and also to talk about what touring does to me and how the travelling and the barrage of information and movement affects you over a period of time."
And my home so far away
I lose some of me in all these places
And I can't help the way I'm changed
In an interview with Ed Sciaky from WMMR, 93.3 in Philadelphia, Steve Hogarth said:
"80 Days is quite interesting because it was an attempt to write a song which was not only for the fans, but about the fans. We have an incredible, cult following, but it's a big cult following. It's a cult of a few hundred thousand people around the world. And there is a cult mentality within our fans. The band is very precious to them. They turn up early for the shows, stand around all day, sometimes in the freezing cold, just for a chance to stand on the front row, they're usually there hanging around after the show in the street to talk to us afterwards, and we always go out and chat. And we're very close to our fans.
And through the developments now with the Internet, we're getting even closer to them because there's a technology now for us to communicate directly with our fans globally, really, from moment to moment. But, it was an attempt to write a song for the fans that was about the fans and to kind of acknowledge what they go through on our behalf, and also to talk about what touring does to me and how the travelling and the barrage of information and movement affects you over a period of time."
thequietus.com/articles/12274-fish-marillion-fa...