logo
We've always wanted to be a big band, but we stay the right side of the fine line between cool and sad, says Sports Team

We've always wanted to be a big band, but we stay the right side of the fine line between cool and sad, says Sports Team

The Irish Sun22-05-2025

THERE is always a political angle to Sports Team's songs but it is delivered with energy and humour.
With their third album Boys These Days, the six-piece set out to make something that was all that — and more — delivering a satirical take on everything from social media to our obsession with nostalgia.
Advertisement
3
There is always a political angle to Sports Team's songs
Credit: © Julianna D'Intino 2025
3
With their third album Boys These Days, the six-piece are delivering a satirical take on everything from social media to our obsession with nostalgia
Credit: © Julianna D'Intino 2025
Sometimes it's a critique, at other times it feels more like an endorsement.
'It's not Modern Life Is Rubbish, it's more like modern life is OK,' says rhythm guit­arist and vocalist Rob Knaggs, name-checking Blur's 1993 album.
Singer Alex Rice adds: 'Three albums in, we're finally at a point where we have the confidence to make the record we want to make. It's maximalist and hedonistic — a big sound that's in your face. We've been inspired by ­people like Bryan Ferry, Prefab Sprout and Joe Jackson.'
It's a busy morning when I meet Rice and Knaggs at their North London HQ — a hybrid of their management company and record label.
Advertisement
READ MORE ON BANDS
Libertines frontman Carl Barat pops in for a meeting, promo plans are being thrown around for upcoming releases, and in the middle of it all Rice is proudly showing off photos of his newborn daughter, just a few weeks old.
'It's organised chaos and that's how we like it,' says Rice, settling into the sofa, ready to chat.
Out of control
'We actually had more time with this album,' explains Knaggs, after the first two records by the band — which also comprises lead guitarist Henry Young, bassist Oli Dewdney, drummer Al Greenwood and keyboardist Ben Mack — were made amid non-stop touring.
Knaggs jokes: 'We could have hit that old, bloated, egotistical stage and thought, 'Do you know what? Maybe I'll make Tubular Bells now'.
Advertisement
Most read in Music
'With the first records, we were constantly playing live. Nobody knew who we were, and we had to win over cold crowds.
'But with this third one, it's different, we're not the 22-year-old kids we were when we started.
Iconic 70s rock band announces lineup change as frontman quits and replacement is revealed
'Our lives have changed, our music taste has changed, and you don't want to end up a parody of yourself. You want to make music you genuinely love. Otherwise, what's the point of doing this?
'We've always said we want to be a really big band, and it's a fine line between very cool and very sad, and you want to pull the right side of that.'
Advertisement
The album is a journey through all the events, all these other things that come into your life
Rice
With that in mind, Knaggs says: 'At the start, because of our band name, we'd be asked to do silly sports-theme ideas. 'Hey, we've got a photoshoot idea. We are going to dress you as pins from ten-pin bowling, and we will bowl a ball at you down the lane.' No thanks!'
Rice adds: 'The album is a journey through all the events, all these other things that come into your life.'
Boys These Days kicks off with the catchy sexy sax song I'm In Love (Subaru).
Knaggs says: 'It was fun to do songs with an '80s palette, with really corny saxophones — so yes there is a saxophone on there.
Advertisement
'And Subaru was the most '80s song we'd written. It was us consciously trying to write a Prefab Sprout song. And then it spiralled out of control from that point.'
"Humour is a key ingredient in Sports Team's songs, and the title track Boys These Days is no exception. That one is meant to be taken ambiguously,' explains Rice.
'It's about how the generation before you always think you've lost your way.
'I've always been fascinated by nostalgia culture. There's a Facebook group called Who Remembers Proper Binmen that really got us thinking about this idea.'
Advertisement
'It's like boomer memes. Or nostalgic phrases like Who remembers chippy teas? Who remembers playing on bombsites? And everyone nods that they remember,' says Knaggs with a laugh.
Rice adds: 'Boys These Days is a phrase that whatever the side of the political spectrum you're on with gender, you take it in a ­different way.'
There's a line in Boys These Days about 'now it's all vaping and porn' and the topic turns to the rise in the number of students using the platform OnlyFans to fund university costs.
There's a weird divide between older people who expect you to do certain things because you're in a band, like have groupies. It's weird
Rice
Knaggs says: 'We were actually approached by OnlyFans in the early days of the band — I think they were trying to get artists on board to give them a good image.
Advertisement
'I guess
'And Lily Allen makes money selling photos of her feet. I'd do hands and feet stuff on OnlyFans, if my feet weren't so grotesque!'
Rice says: 'There's a weird divide between older people who expect you to do certain things because you're in a band, like have groupies. It's weird.
'We're a mixed band where there's five guys. Music is still going through that transition but music for us has always been a positive masculine space.
Advertisement
'Small venues are where you find a lot of community. It was for us when we were young and we are trying to create that as well.'
The band — who formed while at Cambridge University — believe their privileged academic background has often been a double-edged sword.
Knaggs points out other acts, including
He adds 'Although I was always a bit annoyed, because we'd get branded as posh, whereas Rina Sawayama would be called an academic queen.'
Advertisement
Smiling, Rice says: 'I've always liked these fun little narratives, these beefs. Like when
Boys These Days was made in Bergen, Norway, where Rice and Knaggs say they made the most of the different environment.
Rice says: 'We loved it and worked Scandi hours, like 10am till 4pm which we'd never done before. And it was the end of January so had the heaviest of snow which was so beautiful.
'Me and Rob visited the Cold War bunkers there and walked a lot. We swam most days too. It was a great place to work.'
Advertisement
Knaggs says: 'But the Norwegians know how to live. We saw A-ha playing at a festival. Morten Harket is still a dish.
'We were backstage and he came straight off stage, got a ski jumper on and drove straight into the mountains. He's living very well that man.'
Rice says: 'We worked with [CMAT and Girl In Red] producer Matias Tellez who was experimental with the band and our way of working.
'He's so comfortable in the studio. There are no preconceptions about how music should be made. In the past we've thought everything needed to be played live, or it's not credible.
Advertisement
After robbery ordeal, song felt very personal
Sports Team
'Matias's methods were very freeing, the way he worked on the vocals and made us try things again and again. He made it spontaneous. He has a very sunny vibe and is incredibly energetic.'
Knaggs adds: 'Also he doesn't come from that guitar world. We love guitar rock and are super nerds in that sense. With that comes a weird set of rules to how you record guitars, drums and bass.
'Brutal welcome'
'But Matias is happy to do whatever. He's about Scandi-Norwegian pop, which has separate rules to the UK or New York or LA music scene.'
Other standout tracks on Boys These Days include Head To Space, a song about billionaires blasting off to the moon, and Moving Together, which includes a clever Coronation Street intro sample, (through copyright laws, the soap now own 20 per cent of that song).
Advertisement
Bang Bang Bang tackles the issue of gun violence — eerily written
The boys had been enjoying breakfast when two masked men stormed their rental van at gunpoint, forcing tour manager Lauren Troutman to the ground and stealing thousands of pounds' worth of equipment and personal belongings.
It left them shaken but deter­mined to carry on with the tour, with Rice describing it as a 'brutal welcome to America'.
He adds: 'We wrote the song months before and so the timing seemed strange.
Advertisement
'It went from being this song about how jarring it feels to go into bars in the US, where people would show you their guns, or gun holes in the wall, or in shops, weaponry would be next to other things, which felt odd. Then suddenly it felt a very personal song.
'What was weird though was having the media come out and to see the massively different angles on the gun argument. We were doing all these interviews and just describing what happened rather than the (pro-gun) political line that some people wanted out of us.'
Shaking his head, Knaggs says: 'It happened in a petrol station, so if we had a gun, we could have had a little shootout in the petrol station. No problem.'
The band began a record- store tour last night in ­Edinburgh before summer shows in London and Margate and festivals.
Advertisement
Being in Sports Team is about having fun and creating a narrative about life — we've grown up a lot since we started — but it's just given us more things to write about
Rice
Rice says: 'We are playing Truck, Y Not, Kendall Calling and Leeds. There's a few more to be announced, and a big autumn tour. They have also been supporting Supergrass during their ongoing I Should Coco 30th anniversary tour — and will perform at their Mexico gig in September.
'We are excited. I love Supergrass. We've played with a lot of bands now and they are the people you want to be like that. They are fantastic live and the nicest people.
'I'm just looking at how touring will work now I'm a dad.
'There will be a lot of time when I'm probably around way more than with a normal job. It's the balance you strike. And this year, we've taken it a bit easier than we would do normally and my partner has been great and is a great mum.
Advertisement
'Being in Sports Team is about having fun and creating a narrative about life — we've grown up a lot since we started — but it's just given us more things to write about.'
Boys These Days is out today.
SPORTS TEAM
Boys These Days
★★★★☆
3
Boys These Days is out today
Credit: Supplied by PR

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

30 years ago this week: Van Morrison released Days Like This
30 years ago this week: Van Morrison released Days Like This

Extra.ie​

time4 days ago

  • Extra.ie​

30 years ago this week: Van Morrison released Days Like This

In 1995, Britpop was in full flow thanks to the Blur-Oasis feud, as well as Supergrass's memorable hit 'Alright' and Pulp's classic album Different Class. Meanwhile, following on from Massive Attack's international success, the Bristol trip-hop scene threw up another genius in the shape of Tricky, whose debut Maxinquaye was an innovative and daring masterwork. In Ireland, one of our greatest ever artists offered a stunning reminder of his enduring brilliance. Van Morrison's place in the rock pantheon had long been assured thanks to the Them classic 'Gloria' and his '60s opus Astral Weeks, the lyrical depth of which drew comparisons to Bob Dylan. With the title track of his 1995 LP Days Like This, Van hit another creative high point: a sublime soul effort underpinned by a moving sense of hard-earned celebration. Adopted as an anthem of the peace movement in Northern Ireland, in a symbolic moment Van would perform the track before a massive Belfast audience during Bill Clinton's Presidential visit in November '95. – Paul Nolan Praying to his higher self, mentioning Belfast and the town called Paradise. Another meditation in the line that stretches from as far back as 'T.B. Sheets' up through Astral Weeks, 'Listen To The Lion', side one of Veedon Fleece, 'In The Garden', and all his other hymns to enlightenment. Morrison Moment: When Van goes beyond language for the last minute, growling, then singing at the top of his range, then blowing into the harmonica, then stabbing at the Hammond organ, all at the same time. Probably. – Pat Carthy Back in 2020, Hot Press celebrated Van Morrison's 75th birthday with a special YouTube series 'Rave On, Van Morrison' – featuring some of Ireland's most acclaimed artists performing songs from across Van's career. Watch Eleanor McEvoy perform 'Songwriter' from Days Like This: And watch Brian Kennedy, who contributed backing vocals to the original recording, performing 'Days Like This':

Pulp don't mess with winning formula with album that honours their past while not being enslaved by it
Pulp don't mess with winning formula with album that honours their past while not being enslaved by it

Irish Independent

time4 days ago

  • Irish Independent

Pulp don't mess with winning formula with album that honours their past while not being enslaved by it

All are very much with us today, with a reformed Oasis set to play the most anticipated shows of the summer. Blur's The Ballad of Darren and subsequent tour showed they're far more than just a heritage act pushing nostalgia (a charge that can justly be levelled at Oasis.) And, now, 24 years on from what many thought was their swan song, Pulp have returned with an album that rolls back the years in scintillating fashion. Jarvis Cocker has released good solo material without ever reaching the highs that Pulp managed on a spectacular run of albums, from 1994's His 'N' Hers, 1995's Different Class to 1998's This is Hardcore. More, the Sheffield veterans' eighth studio album, may not quite be at that high-water mark, but it comes close enough. It's the sound of group honouring their own past while not being enslaved by it. It showcases many appealing Pulp hallmarks, including an unerring pop sensibility, artful and engaging arrangements, witty and knowing lyrics and a spirited delivery from Cocker. He's one of the few frontmen who can get away with spoken-worded deliveries, a ploy that works beautifully on the lush, tender Farmers Market. It should also be noted that anyone who was allergic to Pulp back in the day — and there were several — will find little here to convert them. For the rest of us, More is a delight from start to finish. And what a start: Spike Island is inspired by the legendary 1990 gig (in the north-west of England, and not the prison island off the Cork coast) headlined by the Stone Roses in their pomp. It's not the first Pulp song to be written in its honour: Sorted for E's & Wizz was inspired by the phrase that an acquaintance of Cocker's recalled from that Spike Island show. Ultimately, it's a song about Cocker's own need to perform. 'I was born to perform/ It's a calling/ I еxist to do this/ Shouting and pointing.' Relationships have been at the heart of many of Pulp's most enduring songs and so it is with Background Noise, a touching appraisal of what happens when love disappears. It may be a commentary on Cocker's divorce. He has subsequently remarried. The marvellous Tina — as quintessential a Pulp song as you can get — laments missed opportunities, especially that with the titular woman, an old flame from decades ago. On their last studio album, 2001's We Love Life, they called on the legendary Scott Walker as producer. This time, it's the turn of James Ford, one of the most in-demand studio alchemists of his generation, best known for his work with another big Sheffield export, Arctic Monkeys. Ford doesn't mess with Pulp's winning formula and the result is a comeback album that burnishes, rather than detracts from the band's legacy. It's dedicated to Pulp bassist Steve Mackey, who died in 2023 just as these new songs were starting to take shape.

UK band Sports Team robbed at gunpoint in US
UK band Sports Team robbed at gunpoint in US

RTÉ News​

time28-05-2025

  • RTÉ News​

UK band Sports Team robbed at gunpoint in US

The singer of a British band Sports Team who robbed at gunpoint while touring in the US has said he still thinks "America is the greatest country in the world". The band's van was broken into by masked thieves, who pulled out a gun, when they had stopped for coffee at a Starbucks in Vallejo, California, late last year, with the group's singer saying tracks they recorded for their latest album, which was released last week, predicted the robbery. Indie rockers Sports Team, who released their Boys These Days album last week, had personal items stolen but they did not lose any equipment. Singer Alex Rice told PA: "It was almost like a pretty wild coincidence. "We had a track, the album was all written and recorded, submitted well before we did that tour, but we did have this track, Bang Bang Bang on it, which we ended up putting out fairly soon after, which I guess was about this weird juxtaposition you always find in the US. "It's got lines in it like `Mickey Mouse and AR 15' kind of thing, it's side by side, the kind of bars that we were drinking in the US, and people will show you where their friends were shot, the kind of gun holes on the walls. "So, I think we've always found that element of gun culture in the US kind of a slightly odd element, like, I understand it, and when we go there, I think America is the greatest country in the world still, but I think it just seems such a blind spot. "And I think some of the politicisation around it just doesn't do anyone any favours." The band initially tried to stop the burglars, after a Starbucks worker had noticed their van being broken into, in December 2024, before the gun was pointed at them. Rice said the robbery quickly became "politicised". He added: "The interview requests come in, and we did a nice one with ABC, where it's like you talk about gun crime being awful, and you talk about charities involved and stuff. "And then immediately you get a request from Fox News as well, who kind of want to politicise it, make it about (California governor) Gavin Newsom defunding the police kind of thing. "It's how quickly kind of an event can be spun, (which) was quite interesting to us. "So, we were going to do the Fox interview and they were going to send the Fox mobile to this town we were staying in at the time, and they cancelled it as soon as we posted about an anti-gun charity." Rice said he and the band have yet to hear back from the police, having been asked to fill out an online form when they called 911. He said: "We haven't heard anything back since at all, I think there was probably a bit of scrutiny on the police department in Vallejo, which I know is a kind of particularly embattled police force. "I'm sure these aren't people who are not wanting to solve gun crimes, but I think it probably speaks to problems with funding, and the kind of pressures the police force are in, in that part of the world. "I mean, what would they deal with if they won't deal with an armed robbery, you know?" The band, made up of Rice, Rob Knaggs, Henry Young, Oli Dewdney, Al Greenwood, and Ben Mack, released their debut album, Deep Down Happy, in 2020, which was nominated for the Mercury Prize and went to number two in the UK charts. Their 2022 follow-up, Gulp!, was also well received and rose to number three in the charts. The group, who performed at Glastonbury in 2022, released their third album, Boys These Days, on 23 May. Source: Press Association More music news, reviews and interviews here

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store