21-05-2025
My obsession with ageing rock stars
'The older male rock star isn't just my specialist subject, it's my obsession,' admits Kate Mossman in the opening pages of Men of a Certain Age. Over the 15 years she's spent interviewing ageing rockers such as Sting, Tom Jones, Ray Davies, Glen Campbell and Nick Cave for the Word and the New Statesman, she describes feeling 'something inside of me ignite… so excited, yet so at ease'. 'How is it,' she asks, 'that in the presence of a wrinkly rock star twice my age, I sometimes feel like I'm meeting… me?'
Having encountered my share of these guys myself, I know precisely what she means. Rock journalism is a field in which all the writers are fans, but, as Mossman notes, 'part of the art is pretending not to be'. Consequently, she bookends each of the 19 insightful and often funny interviews republished here with personal memoirish introductions and afterwords, making the book as much about fandom as about rock stars. I relished her honest analysis of the yearning for connection that interviewers feel when they meet artists who've set their hearts ablaze by the music they made – and sometimes the poses they struck– in their youth. As professional journalists, we're sitting with their older, sometimes wiser, incarnations and asking them to explain themselves and make sense of their impact on us.
It's often weird. My blushing 13-year- old self was somewhere in the mix while I was chatting with A-Ha's Morten Harket, utterly bewildered by the fact that the 45-year-old me was bonding with the 1980s pin-up over a shared love of houseplants.