logo
Gavin Rossdale on the new Bush album, cooking, and staying away from social media

Gavin Rossdale on the new Bush album, cooking, and staying away from social media

Global News20-07-2025
This past Friday, July 18, Gavin Rossdale and Bush released the group's 10th album, I Beat Loneliness.
I connected with Gavin at his home in Los Angeles.
Alan Cross: The new Bush album is entitled I Beat Loneliness. You look at that on the surface, and it seems like the most autobiographical title of all time, is it?
Gavin Rossdale: Yeah, I think so. I forced myself to ask what was important to me. It led me to re-evaluate myself, what I thought would be satisfying to investigate. I just went on deep dives, every song is a different experiment, sonically, musically. I still keep myself 25 per cent madly ignorant of music. I just hear things differently because I'm just feral like that. But a little bit of spill gives it the source, gives it the blood.
So yeah, this record is very autobiographical. What's wild is when you reach the inner caves of your sick mind, you start saying things that resonate with other people who have sick minds, which, by the way, is everyone.
Story continues below advertisement
Everyone, I believe, is dealing with their sort of madness. And it should be commended for finding a way through and being positive and returning the next day to continue where they left off the day before. I think that's why I'm writing records for regular people who bash through lives, good days, bad days, in different ways, and just bash on regardless.
I don't like this aspirational life. I hate social media; everyone's got a better life than I have. I hate that I look at it and I'm like, is my life good enough? And I'm like, your life is great. Stop looking at that BS.
AC: I have exactly the same problem. Yet I am completely compelled to go back to social media and doomscroll several times a day. It's not that I feel that my life is terrible. It's just that I think it's almost a desire to make my life worse by seeing exactly what's going on in the world.
GR: What feeds into your inner paranoia is not having your act together when it's impossible to have your act together completely, comprehensively, day in, day out. It is an unfair burden that we place on each other.
Comparison is a thief of joy. So, I say don't compare. My life is amazing, but all I've got to do is think of Coldplay, and I mess myself up for the whole day because I'll never have their life.
Story continues below advertisement
I think life is miserable enough without being miserable in it. Life is endlessly magical and endlessly infuriating. It's just a balance, and you find your way through it, I believe. It's really great to write a record that feels somewhat confessional, as to say, hey, this isn't easy, but it's so worth it. It's so worth it.
AC: Years ago, you told me that you start writing songs on a bass. Is that still the case?
Get daily National news
Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy
GR: It can be. But with the advent of studios, I can also put some nice atmospheric keyboards. All these songs were different experiments in me and my studio, just seeing what could be interesting and what could be fun and how to entertain myself.
The last three records have all been super detuned. I was like, the old Bush is back, but no, it's actually completely different music. And I think that across this record (I Beat Loneliness) there's no wasted space.
Story continues below advertisement
AC: How was the Canadian tour?
GR: Incredible. I had to play Kelowna, Victoria…I have nothing to compare it to. The expanse of the land is just awe-inspiring, jaw-dropping, amazing.
AC: The '90s seem to be the decade that is immortal when it comes to music. People just cannot get enough of music from the 1990s. What do you attribute that to? It's not just people who grew up at that time, but also Millennials and Gen Zs who are just discovering music today.
GR: The innocence, I suppose. The innocence of making music that was actually going to last through time. It was — as always, it had a sense of revolution to it. It was somewhat the music of complaints. Railing against authority, railing against people, standing up for your rights, the end of misogyny.
There was a time when I was really daunted. I never got Zeppelin. Musically, I love them, but the lyrics never got me. I was a young kid. They were the next generation. So I never related to them. So, I needed a role model, and the role models I had of the guitar music I liked, My Bloody Valentine, all a bit introverted and a bit shoegaze-y.
When I saw Jane's Addiction, when I saw Soul Asylum in London, all this energy on stage, I was like, wow! All the Britpop bands, all trying to outshine each other, but no one was giving the performances that I connected to. It was a new culture, and things needed to shift.
Story continues below advertisement
It was like a revolution. Everybody heard all the music. The songs were played on MTV, and they played on the radio. And then people went to see you live. These three powerful entities created these huge records. It was all about that community.
Today is pure pop. That's what is connecting with people in the masses. So, we — us '90s bands — went underground.
AC: Do you ever go back to listen to those earlier albums and pass judgment on them?
GR: Yes! There are times when I think that I went on a bit too long and could have done with a little editing. At the same time, nothing is ever perfect.
AC: I hate to bring it up, but you're going to be 60 in October. That's a lot of experience as a human, as an artist.
GR: It sure is. I have to confront this. Biology always wins in the end. But I think this is a very creative time. I'm in a hurry to express myself and deal with my chaos. Songwriting is like a root canal of my emotions.
AC: Let's talk about cooking and your show on Flavour network, Dinner with Gavin Rossdale. How did that come about?
GR: I always aspired to be on TV, but then I found it was hard to make TV. I thought about this cooking show before the advent of podcasts. I was tired of being a somewhat characterless musician beyond being in a band that was massive in the '90s. I was also tired of touring and wanted to stay home more with my kids.
AC: Having someone into your home and cooking them a meal is a very intimate sort of thing. People will tell you things during a meal that they won't tell you otherwise.
GR: I've always been attracted to food and cooking. Making a dish is very much in parallel to writing a song: tempo, spice level, the five flavours — the alchemy of it. I'm having a laugh and loving it.
AC: Do you have a signature dish?
GR: I don't. I've always tried to stay away from a signature dish, but I suppose my English roasts are pretty fun. I can make really good pasta. My feeling is, 'How can I treat you best?' I recently cooked some cauliflower in garlic-infused milk/cream, and then blitzed it, added salt and nutmeg, and it blew my mind. With a bay leaf in there, it's just nuts.
I've been obsessed with miso — a chicken jus with sake instead of wine.
Story continues below advertisement
AC: How about baking or pastries?
GR: I love it. Lots of little cakes and pastries. I can make the best cheese Danish, meringues, ice cream, crème brûlée.
AC: What's coming up for you?
GR: A North American tour, a European. And I have to start thinking about the next record. I have to ruminate on where I go from here.
This interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.
4:05
Gavin Rossdale trades his guitar for heartfelt conversations with celebs
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘They're real people': Mob focus of JFK assassination flick filmed in Winnipeg
‘They're real people': Mob focus of JFK assassination flick filmed in Winnipeg

Global News

timea day ago

  • Global News

‘They're real people': Mob focus of JFK assassination flick filmed in Winnipeg

Nicholas Celozzi has spent much of his life revisiting the events leading up to the assassination of former U.S. president John F. Kennedy. Hushed stories filled his childhood home. Conversations with his uncle Joseph (Pepe) Giancana, brother to Chicago Mob boss Sam Giancana, later helped shed light on his family's possible involvement in one of the most debated moments in American history. After decades of film and television portrayals of Sam Giancana, Celozzi is reconceptualizing the 1963 shooting of Kennedy with a focus on the major players in the Chicago Outfit, a powerful Italian-American criminal organization. For Celozzi, his latest screenwriting endeavour is about more than telling another assassination story. It's about family. 'My family, my cousins, really got tired of people using our name, monetizing our name and telling a fake story,' Celozzi said in an interview. Story continues below advertisement 'These aren't fictional people … they're real people. They're vulnerable, they have nerves, they make mistakes, they are not quite sure about things.' Sam Giancana, head of the Chicago Outfit in the 1950s and 1960s, was widely known for his ties to the Kennedy family. He was gunned down in his home in 1975, and his killing remains unsolved. 2:18 JFK assassination files released on Trump's order Many have speculated the Mob group also played a role in Kennedy's assassination, and this is explored in Celozzi's 'November 1963,' which began filming in Winnipeg this summer. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Relying on Pepe Giancana's stories, Celozzi focuses on the 48 hours leading up to the assassination. Giancana, a fill-in driver for his brother, had been a fly on the wall in the days leading up to the assassination, said Celozzi, who is also one of the producers on the independent film. Story continues below advertisement Many conversations led to what Celozzi calls the 'Pepe chronicles,' a series of stories detailing the family's Mob ties. 'I was always aware of who they were. These aren't things that everybody just kind of goes home and talks about. It's an awareness. It's kind of a strange reality that you're born into,' said Celozzi. Pepe Giancana died in the mid-'90s, leaving his stories with Celozzi. 2:11 Local film industry questions Trump's proposed film tariff The writer said he knew he wanted to do something to honour his family's history without degrading them to caricatures often found in Mob flicks. So he began working with Sam Giancana's daughter Bonnie Giancana to craft the script. Over the course of several years and rewrites, Celozzi said they worked to ensure every detail was accurate. Story continues below advertisement 'I needed to keep that honest with the story Pepe gave me, or why do it at all? If I wasn't going to be truthful to what he gave me, there was no purpose in me doing it,' said Celozzi. He brought veteran Canadian producer Kevin DeWalt of Minds Eye Entertainment on board to produce the movie, which wrapped shooting in Winnipeg last week and goes into post-production in Saskatchewan. 'I don't think the family's proud of what happened … it was important for them to tell the truth before they die,' DeWalt said. The cast includes John Travolta, Dermot Mulroney and Mandy Patinkin and is directed by Academy Award nominated English filmmaker Roland Joffé. When it came time to pick a location that could mimic 1960s Chicago and the landmark Dealey Plaza in Dallas, where Kennedy was killed, producers chose Winnipeg over other major cities such as Atlanta and New Orleans in part because of its Exchange District neighbourhood. Producers decided Winnipeg was a perfect stand-in for the Windy City. Dealey Plaza, and the famous Grassy Knoll, was built from scratch at Birds Hill Provincial Park, northeast of Winnipeg. The film features 1,500 extras and 75 to 80 period cars to accurately portray the time period. DeWalt said he expects viewers will be blown away by the film's ability to bring a new level of authenticity and validity to the moment in history. Story continues below advertisement 'People will walk out of the theatre with their own impressions about what it all means,' he said. 'At the end of the day, at least we've given them the tools for one of these things that's been told, and they can make their own impressions in terms of how they feel about it.' When asked if he thinks the film might ruffle feathers with historians, governments or Mob members, Celozzi said that's not his goal. 'What I'm doing is just putting in that missing piece, not glamorizing, just writing it.'

JP Saxe's North American tour cancelled over low ticket sales despite online appeal
JP Saxe's North American tour cancelled over low ticket sales despite online appeal

Global News

time2 days ago

  • Global News

JP Saxe's North American tour cancelled over low ticket sales despite online appeal

A Toronto singer-songwriter who was set to tour North America this fall says he's cancelled his series of concerts over sluggish ticket sales and the high cost of life on the road. JP Saxe took to social media this week, saying that if he didn't sell about 20,000 tickets to his upcoming Make Yourself at Home tour within 48 hours, it would likely be cancelled. In a follow-up video, he says 2,000 more tickets were sold, but it wasn't enough to save the tour. Saxe says he's grateful for the extra sales, that tickets will be fully refunded and he's looking to make sure similar cancellations never happen again. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy The Grammy-nominated musician, best known for his 2019 single 'If the World Was Ending' with Julia Michaels, was set to play more than 25 dates, including Toronto, Montreal, Edmonton and Vancouver. Story continues below advertisement The cancellation comes as live music faces mass pressure, compounded by a shaky economy, years of inflation and concert ticket prices that — in many cases — have skyrocketed by hundreds of dollars this year. 'Those 2,000 tickets were a reminder … of how wonderful it can be to ask for help and watch a community come together, and this really was the nicest the internet has ever been to me,' he said in a video posted to social media platform TikTok. 'I'm grateful to each one of you who bought a ticket, and I'm really sorry.'

Cécile Dionne, one of the famous Dionne quintuplets, dead at 91
Cécile Dionne, one of the famous Dionne quintuplets, dead at 91

Global News

time3 days ago

  • Global News

Cécile Dionne, one of the famous Dionne quintuplets, dead at 91

A family spokesperson says Cécile Dionne, one of the world-famous Dionne quintuplets, died earlier this week at the age of 91 following a long illness. Cécile and her sisters became an instant global sensation from the moment of their birth in the Ontario community of Corbeil on May 28, 1934 as they became the first quintuplets known to survive past infancy. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Carlo Tarini, a spokesperson for the family, confirmed the death this morning. An obituary Tarini shared says Cécile lived life with dignity, discretion and gentle humor despite the difficulty of living in the public eye. She is survived by her sister, Annette Dionne, who is now the last remaining quintuplet. A private funeral is being held for the immediate family.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store