FAT LES' new single
'JERUSALEM' has been adopted as the official FOOTBALL
ASSOCIATION theme for this year's EURO 2000
tournament and has been branded "one of the most expensive
records ever made" by the band's ALEX JAMES.
The song is an adaptation of the
William Blake poem which was set to music by Fat Les,
aka Blur bassist Alex James, artist Damien
Hirst and Keith Allen, whose 'Vindaloo'
single scored a Number Two hit during the 1998 World Cup.
Speaking exclusively to nme.com,
James refused to put a figure on how much the single
and video had cost to record (both feature a 75-piece
orchestra) but conceded: "It was a lot of money for a single;
more than Blur?s first album."
He continued: "We wanted to do
something posh after doing 'Vindaloo'. Roast potatoes
take longer than Vindaloo did!" he laughed.
"It sounded amazing. It was probably
the greatest studio moment ever...I think this really fits the
bill. It's stirring, it's got this historical majesty, it has
a spiritual dimension. I don?t think it works as a pop record,
but it works as a hymn. It's dignified."
James and Allen
approached the FA about making it the official theme and,
despite some worries from football's governing body, they got
the gig. James explained: "I think they were a bit
worried about us being loose cannons, so we scrubbed up and
went down there. But it suits their purposes as well. And
record companies are keen to have football records because
they can make money out of it."
But he added: "The FA have a
problem with football violence, and they are naturally very
cautious about any association with violence. We had a
Spitfire in the video, but thought it might be misleading, so
now there are kids rolling around in the mud, which they
liked."
Revealing that 'Jerusalem' was
his old school song, and that Fat Les hoped to send
arrangements of the single out to school orchestras, James
also claimed he would like it to become the new national
anthem: "It sounds like the new national anthem to me. It's a
new dawn, in terms of the calendar. New Labour. New.
The old one is a stodgy old pudding, it's just awful. Do
people really feel like they're the Queen's subjects any
more?"