Tony Mantor's : Almost Live..... Nashville

Hue and Cry: The Evolution of Brothers in Harmony

tony@tonymantor.com (Tony Mantor) Season 1

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0:00 | 26:38

Pat Kane of Hue and Cry on New Single “Stronger,” Post-Post-Punk Authenticity, and Keeping Imperfection in the Music
Host Tony Mantor introduces his podcast Almost Live Nashville and welcomes Pat Kane of Hue and Cry, the late-1980s duo known for blending pop, jazz, and sophisticated songwriting, including the hit “Labor of Love” from Seduced and Abandoned. Kane discusses promoting the new single “Stronger” and an upcoming album (out March 29), describing it as an optimistic electronic departure that reconnects with the band’s earlier electric phase while keeping their “post post-punk” core.
He cites influences including The Human League, jazz, big bands, and classic soul, and reflects on unexpected success, the political-romantic metaphor and production of “Labor of Love,” and the intensity and intuition of writing with his brother Greg.
Kane shares lessons about empathy in the music business, moments of renewed visibility via Grand Theft Auto and TV, resisting commercial pressure, valuing authenticity amid AI, embracing machine quirks in recording, and where to find the band online.

01:51 New Single and Album
02:28 Post Post Punk Vision
03:21 Influences and Sound
04:21 Breakout Success Stories
05:41 Why Labor of Love
06:38 Brothers in the Band
07:27 Hard Lessons in Music
08:21 Pop Culture Comeback
10:53 Staying Authentic
12:31 Start With Stronger
13:43 Fighting for Art
15:13 What Keeps Fans Hooked
16:22 Songs That Heal
18:09 AI and Real Performance
20:20 Machines and Happy Accidents
23:34 Advice for Creators
24:28 Stadiums vs Intimate Gigs
25:25 Where to Find Hue and Cry
26:25 Final Thanks

INTRO/OUTRO: T.Wild
Mantor Music BMI

SPEAKER_00

My career in the entertainment industry has enabled me to work with a diverse range of my years of experience. I recommend to left industry professional fascinating stories. We offer a limp into the light in the evolution of the life story. We will delve into their journey to start them, discuss their struggles and successes, and hear from people who help them achieve their goals. Get ready for intriguing behind-the-scenes stories and insights into the fascinating world of entertainment. Hi, I'm Tony Mantor. Welcome to Almost Live Nashville. If you haven't already, take a quick second to tap the Famala button. It really helps the show reach more people who love music and entertainment. Thanks for being here. Joining us today is Pat Kane. He and his brother Greg formed Hue and Cry, which emerged in the late 1980s with a sound that blended pop, jazz, and sophisticated songwriting. They first captured international attention with their debut album Seduced and Abandoned, which produced the unforgettable hit Labor of Love. Their music has always stood apart, thoughtful, melodic, and emotionally rich. He has a great story. So before we dive into our episode, we'll be back with an uninterrupted show right after a word from our sponsors. Thanks for joining us today. Thanks for having me. Oh, it's my pleasure. I understand you're about to release a new single. Can you give our listeners a little update on the single and a little inside information on what they can expect?

SPEAKER_01

Uh well, we're promoting uh our new Hearing Cry single, Stronger, and there's an album out in on March the 29th, and um I'm having a great time chatting with people about it. It's it's a bit of a departure for us, so people are picking up on that, moving into kind of um, or not really moving into electronica, but recovering an electric phase of our past, which we started out with and which we're kind of picking up again.

SPEAKER_00

I think it's great you're staying true to your past. With that said, how have you seen yourself evolve from your humble beginnings to where you are today with your new album?

SPEAKER_01

Well, it's interesting. I don't think we've evolved that much at the core because we sort of describe ourselves as post post-punks, you know, so punk is three chords and the truth, post-punk is all the chords and all the truths, and post-post punk is how do we make a hit record out of all that authenticity and possibility. So that's the kind of principle that's kept us going for the last sort of 40 odd years. And so we we came back to doing this new record called Everybody, and we thought, how do we, how do we not so much how do we revive our sound, but how do we recover a certain optimistic, futuristic vision, which turns out to be exactly what people need in these slightly grim and contestive times. So we have happened to have made uh an optimistic electronic record, which we're very pleased about.

SPEAKER_00

It's always good when you're happy with your completed project. So tell us, who were some of your early influences?

SPEAKER_01

Well, it's it was interesting because of the post-punk thing, it was a lot of you know quite experimental synthesizer bands that then became pop bands. Preeminently, that was the kind of human league, so that's been a big inspiration in the new record. But we also come from a very jazzy background. Our father was a great lover of of uh big bands and and Belcanto singers. So we we mixed that in with an appreciation for classic soul, Steve Stevie Wonder, Temptations, Sly Stone. But even something like Sly Stone, if you listen to Um It's a It's a Family Affair, or you listen to There's a Riot going on, is using drum machines at the very core. Stevie Wonder famously using moaks and synthesizers and Kurtzwell keyboards to kind of make his great records. So there's been this kind of debate between the organic and the and the mechanical for a long time in pop music and do it how do you get passion through technology? And so we're we're just picking up on that and taking it forward with this new record.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, I think that's awesome. When you released your first album and it turned out that it was a huge breakout album for you, did you sense that this album was going to connect so widely and expand all over the world? And then did that ultimate success take you by surprise?

SPEAKER_01

Um I think when you try to make the quirkiest, more idiosyncratic record you can and that pleases you rather than necessarily pleases anyone else, then when when other people come to appreciate it, it's a delight. I mean, I'm famous with Inhume Cry because our a big hit, big top ten hit, Labour of Love, I didn't want it to be out because I thought the bass drum was all over the place, no one could dance to it. It was far too radical, a lyric, far too political. And of course, you got to number six and sold hundreds of thousands of records. So I've never been allowed anywhere near the decision-making process to choose a single or a track ever again because clearly I'll get it wrong. But we have always we've just been inspired by idiosyncrates, you know, people who just have a unique vision and we've always tried to follow that. But we've also had a belief that it could be popular music as well, that you to follow your nose deeply enough is to connect with something universal and to connect with people's tastes. If you're absolutely individualistic in your taste, you might get to somewhere that appeals to other people's tastes in a universal way. So yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Now, you just brought up your song Labour of Love, which was a huge hit for you. What do you think made that song so timeless?

SPEAKER_01

Um, I think it's got a big metaphor at the heart of it. Uh, and I think it took it on a journey. So the idea of a labour of love is a great concept.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

You know, the idea that love is itself a labour is is quite challenging. But I decided to stick the old political language onto it, which so the full the full chorus is withdraw my labour of love. So it's it's occupying two different worlds, the world of romance and the world of politics, and it's trying to kind of talk about the power battles within each one of them. And I think also the production is incredible. Uh, we we worked with guys, there was a guy, Harvey Goldberg, who had worked with the Rolling Stones and Stevie Wonder as an engineer, and he really made it kick through, it punches through the radio whenever it plays, whether it's 1987 or 2027, it will still punch through to people.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, yeah, that makes total sense. Now, as brothers, how has that relationship affected your creative process? Has it made it easier or sometimes more intense?

SPEAKER_01

Certainly, intensity is the default, and then when it's easier when we're telepathic with each other or near telepathic, and it means that when you're in the writing situation or in the performing situation, you very quickly agree on something that's good and you very quickly agree on something that's bad. So there's an awful lot of intuition there, and it's but it's best with writing. I mean it means that when when something's really working, we instantly know it and then we focus on that, and that we keep chasing that that feeling of intuition between us. It's helped us be writing songs for four. The process is obviously good because it's been helping us writing songs for 40 years.

SPEAKER_00

That's a great test of time for sure. Now, as younger artists always do, they have a creative process to learn. Looking back, what lessons did you learn while you were evolving with your career?

SPEAKER_01

Oh, bruised and battered lessons. Um, one of which would be choose your moment to be arrogant and choose your moment not to be arrogant. There's an awful lot of people who are in the music business for troubled reasons, but nevertheless, music the music business runs on a kind of uh relationships and empathy. So as the years have gone past, I've tried to sort of stand in someone else's shoes a bit more because I think the thing about rock and roll is that it's a kind of an institution for the for the broken and the and the battered, and they often come into rock and roll because nobody else will have them. So I've tried to remember that more and more as the years go by. When someone's evidently having a hard time or giving you a hard time, they're in rock and roll for being healed by the music. That would be my number one lesson, forget and forgive.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, those are great words to live by for sure. When you reflect back, was there a moment when it really hit you that Hugh and Cry had become part of the industry and people were starting to take notice?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, there was a funny moment. Uh some we we started to get phone calls um at some time in the mid-80s, sorry, the mid-20s. And I thought, why am I getting all these calls uh about Labour or Love? And we our track had appeared on the radio station of Grand Theft Auto, the video game. At that time, it was like the biggest selling video game in the world. I think it still is. And people started to say, I've just been listening to you as I'm driving around chasing gangsters and Grand Theft Auto. And I thought, okay, that's us at the heart of popular culture. Uh, we also did a show in mid-2000s called a TV show, Saturday night TV show called Hit Me Baby One More Time, which was a kind of a sh a show which was about acts coming back onto the scene having been away for a while. And we decided to do it just for a for a laugh, but it really re-re-started our career. And it was nice. It's nice to be, it's nice to bring your quirky numbers to the heart of the mainstream. So that was another great experience.

SPEAKER_00

Now, because you're brothers, this isn't just a musical collaboration, it's family. When you listen to some of your songs, those songs can be when you very first started or the ones you just recorded. Do you listen to them and feel like they're chapters of your lives together?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, very much so. Um, and it's interesting. What's what's delightful about me and my brother is that we began in a very polarized way. I mean, we were we were those broken souls that come into the music business and try and find a way to express themselves, but it's it's painful and we were painful with each other. And over the years we have sort of gravitated into this beautiful space where we both kind of generally agree with each other and take joy in that. So I would have I would have said that the one of the big hit early hits was a song called Violently, and that was very much about the kind of fractious relationships in my life, including with my brother. But we now are both on the same page, say, when it comes to approach to peace over war and public affairs, and we turn the same song violently into a peace anthem, and we're both completely on the same page when we're doing that. So it's it's nice for a for a brother to have been, you know, an enemy at one point in your life and a comrade at the other, and to do that by coalescing around these songs and uniting around these songs that we have both written. And certainly the songs in the early days are triumphs over our tensions, and the triumph just gets better as the years go by, I can tell you.

SPEAKER_00

That's just great to hear. There's a lot of artists out there that over the years they do everything they can do to stay relevant. Sometimes you will see that they are just merely following the path of what others are doing trying to stay competitive. It seems like over the years you haven't done that. You have simply followed your own instincts. So when you look at that, did you find that staying true to what your sound was, did you feel that was risky or just merely a path you had to take?

SPEAKER_01

Um, it's it's because we're because we're from the punk here. The idea that you have a right to authenticity and you have a right to experiment was just the basis of how we came into the music business, and that's sort of persisted all the way through to the present. We owe a lot to my dad and his eclecticism as a musical shaper and former of our taste. And I owe a lot to magazines like the NME, which I don't know if you know the about the NME, but it was a famous music magazine. Yeah. It wasn't just a music magazine, it was a curator of musical possibilities. They used to have cassettes on the front of the NME, which would be the most extraordinary collections of music, and they took completely shaped the way I wanted to how I valued pop and rock and soul and jazz. Virtuosity and s and and chops, musical chops, has always been a big thing for us. So that's been what the jazz legacy has kept us alive to. When someone's playing with soul and virtuosity and whatever genre, you want to be close to that source. So that's kept us interested and interesting. But we're willfully collectics, willfully clectics.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, I think that's great. Now, if someone is discovering your music today, what one song would you want to start them out with and why?

SPEAKER_01

That's a great question. Um I would I'm tempted to say the latest song that we've got out called Stronger, and I know that would that seem like an obvious promotional thing to say, but it's actually a great distillation of the spirit of Hue and Cry. It's a very confessional lyric. The lyric is about resilience and personal strength in the face of public crises. So the whole tension between why do I feel too tired to save the world, save the world has been a big Hue and Cry theme for many years, and it's sounds like it's turned up again on this record. So there's a very sensitive soul at the heart of this record, but the record is very powerful. It's driving, it's rhythmic, it's ambitious, it's reaches for the sky. So that's to me, you work your way back from the current single stronger, because that's very much the essence of what Hue and Cry is about. And there's a crucial line in it which says, Let the softest kind of power make me stronger. Uh and that's very much a statement about philosophy.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, that's a great statement. You just mentioned you have a great infusion of soul, pop, jazz. Was there ever a moment in your recording career that a label head, AR, producer, they just said to you, You have to be more commercial. Did you fight that battle at all?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, there's a f there and we won the battle. We did fight that battle, and we won that battle. Um, there was a famous moment in uh when we were recording our hit record second album, Remote. There was a song called Sweet Invisibility, which was a kind of funk Latin song. And we had found a guy called Angel Hernandez who did Latin horns for Talking Heads and David Byrne, and we brought him in to do a chart, to lay down a chart and lay down this horn chair. We hadn't heard it until the day, and it was the most ornate, beautiful, borough, exploratory, experimental Latin horn track you've ever heard. Our producers immediately made moved in to say, okay, we'll take that tiny bit and we'll take that tiny bit and we'll just repeat it. We went over our dead bodies. This is what we're here to make music for. And we literally threw ourselves across the mixing desk and said, leave this piece of music alone. And we kept winning those fights. But the thing is, Ray Charles put it best, you know, you use jazz musicians and you depart from jazz because jazz musicians have the chops for everything. They have the chops for folk, they have the chops for blues, they have the chops for soul, for pop, for whatever. They always have the capacity for it. So we we always used to make that case to people that when we have our jazz element and what we're doing, it's keeping things flexible and open and keeping things new and fresh in a kind of deep sense.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Now, if you could step outside yourself and look at Hue and Cry as a fan, what do you think is the thread over the years that has kept your music connecting with everyone, especially those that have followed your career?

SPEAKER_01

Um I think we're trying to connect with them in a powerful, popular but complex way. You know, that the lyrics are always operating on several different levels, and people sometimes say, I it took me 25 years to figure out what you were singing about and what you were trying to say. To me, that's a result because it means that people are pondering over what you're doing. We always shot for the moon. I mean, our idea of a of a pop gig is all the guys in Steely Dance standing with their backs to the audience blown away, so that's our idea of what a pop gig is. But my brother's a consummate arranger and a consummate producer, and he was always don't bore us get to the chorus, but on the way to the chorus, be as complex and as rich as you could possibly be, but also try to be hummable, popular, memorable, and striking. So that's what I would say is the consistency of Hugh Cry. It's complex pop.

SPEAKER_00

Nice. Now, your fans, they've followed you for years. When you have someone that will come up to you and tell you that your songs help them through difficult times, how does that make you feel, especially since you are the one that wrote the song?

SPEAKER_01

It feels fantastic. I mean, I I I love the fact that songs have journeys into people's lives that you can't control and you can't predict. Um, that happens a lot when we're out playing small venues and people come up and just say, You got me through this, or you helped me to achieve this, which is even just as nice when people say that the songs helped them aspire to a but higher and better state of affairs to try to study for a degree or to try to go for a project or an entrepreneurial opportunity. Very, very pleased to hear that. Um, because and and we we even wrote a song about it called Ordinary Angel, which is a big track from the second album Remote. And that's all about the way that pop music can inspire you, give you wings. And I I mean I don't think there's any there's any greater functionality for for popular music than that. It's to inspire inspire people to stretch for a goal and get there. It's fantastic.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, it is. Now, sometimes you're sitting down, you're writing a song, you have an idea and a perception behind it. Then as time passes, sometimes things will change. Is there a song that has a little bit different interpretation now than it did when you first wrote it?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Yeah, that's a good that's a that's a good question. Um the the obvious one I just talked about was violently, which is which was about personal tensions that became a kind of a kind of a peace song. I'm struggling to think of one that's obvious at the moment, to be quite honest.

SPEAKER_00

That's not a problem. Like you said, your music has always been sincere. It's been emotionally honest. Do you feel that audiences now are looking for more authentic songs than they ever have?

SPEAKER_01

I think so. There's something about AI that's driving people to the human and the authentic and the live performance. I think people are more into flaws and honesty and a certain crackedness faced with the kind of the perfections of artificial intelligence or the coming perfections of artificial intelligence. Artificial intelligence can't tell a heart-rending story where you might actually believe it. Um whereas if I'm standing in front of you and you can see every reaction of me, um, I often say when I'm playing live, this is therapy, I'm getting paid for, you know, rather than having to pay for it. So I I think it's I think we're going to have a lust for live uh to riff off the old Iggy pop song. I think we're going to have a lust for the live and the authentic, and it's only going to increase. And I think it's good news for people like us who have defined themselves by live performance all throughout our career. So yeah, I think there's a time the more the the smarter the machines get and the smarter the people think that they are who control the machines, they're ultimately not smart because they're not going to defeat the human.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, I am so glad you brought that up. I've been here in Nashville for over 30 years, producing people, helping them get started in the industry. I'm always bringing up, if you go back to the 50s, the 60s, the 70s, and if you listen to those songs, there's a lot of things they all have in common. They had a distinct passion for their music, and they did not try to have a perfect recording. If you go back and listen, sometimes the guitar is out of tune, the piano's out of tune. There was always an imperfect recording, but that is what made the recording perfect. Now in today's world, they're trying to get that perfect recording and they forget we're human, we're not perfect. Sometimes it is that imperfection that makes it really resonate with the listener. I'm sure you have seen that change right along with the rest of us. The beauty of what you are doing is that you are staying true to your sound. Have you seen that create any issues for you with everything that's changed over the years while you've been recording your same way?

SPEAKER_01

Well, I I would say there's obviously things like, you know, auto-tune and and you know, there's ways in which things can be manipulated, the waveforms of things can be manipulated, and I've seen them done. I resist it myself, but I wonder, I wonder whether there's going to be a bit of a division opening up in rock and roll between people who who want to sort of just lay it on the line as a physical being, a sweaty mammal in the world, you know, trying to articulate things only songs can articulate. And one branch. And then another branch will be people who maybe like a machine aesthetic and want to see things become a bit like um athletes who take steroids competing in their own form of games. We had a very odd we've got a very odd relationship to both of those extremes with this new record. Because my brother, as he's been saying over the last couple of weeks, he was given advice to switch off his computers, but switch on the arpeggiators and switch on the synths and have them have a conversation amongst themselves as physical machines, not digital possibilities. And so we would wake up in the morning, go get into the studio, and the arpeggiator or the or the MOOC would suggest something that we should play. I mean, that sounds a wee bit mystical and a bee bit weird, but it was hot, it was cold, it was malfunctioning, it was ready to go, it wasn't ready to go. And we wrote songs to these machines calling out to us, but they're not, it wasn't AI, it was a very it was almost like and we have this whole thing we're saying at the moment where if you go to the NASA sound library and you listen to how they've rendered the waveforms of the transmissions of objects in deep space, whether it be quasars or black holes or the or the background radiation of the universe, the universe sounds like Giorgio Moroda. You know, the universe sounds like a synth or a pulse or an arpeggio. So we think when what we've made is almost the ultimate folk record because it's all waveforms and it's all tapping into kind of a deep emanations, deep power forms, power waves. So but trust a musician. If you're worried about technology and you're worried about technology taking over humanity, give it to the musicians and they'll sort it out. They'll figure out a creative relationship, they'll test its limitations, they'll glory in its limitations, they'll humanize the problem of a technology. We're either embracing it heedlessly or we're resisting it in a Luddite fashion. I think musicians can show a third way.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, and musicians, I have seen them sometimes getting in the studio, they're immersing themselves into the project, and then all of a sudden, one of them makes a mistake. Yet the whole band follows the mistake, and everybody goes, Oh, we have to get rid of that, we have to get rid of that. And ultimately, it is the greatest sound, and you can't touch that flaw.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Again, this record, we would switch on the machines and they would do something we had not predicted, or they would resonate in ways that we couldn't predict. And the biggest fight I had with my brother, who is a bit of a perfectionist, is to say, Gregory, that's that's what happened in that moment. That's what the machines wanted to do. Let's go with it. And so if you listen to the record, you'll hear strange noises and strange backgrounds and strange foregrounds. And um, we've we fought to keep them in. And also because we are running our own label and we're funding fuel ourselves, you know, we we have that power and that autonomy to make those kinds of decisions. That's also important as well.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, exactly. Now, if someone's listening and they're following their creative dream, but wondering, man, should I do this? What would you tell them?

SPEAKER_01

I would tell them that um, well, I would tell them as an atheist that they only have us a limited amount of time to do beautiful, brilliant things. Um, and every moment is precious. And because it's precious, don't waste it on formula or cliche or the obvious or the inauthentic or the careerist. No time left. There's never any time left not to do the thing that you must do, the purest thing that you can do. Uh, whether you're sitting with a harmonica and a and a an empty bottle, empty glass bottle, or whether you're sitting with a wall full of arpeggiators, synthesizers, and simulators, you know, do the thing that you think is inimitable, cannot be copied. However old you are, you don't have time left to do anything less.

SPEAKER_00

Absolutely. Keep chasing that dream for sure. Now, over your career, you've performed in large stadiums, you've performed in intimate shows. What's your favorite to do? The large stadiums or break it down and do that intimate acoustic show where it's just unplugged, so to speak. Any preferences?

SPEAKER_01

I love both. I love both. The intimate stuff is amazing, but it can be overwhelming in terms of the audience. The passage of their soul is, you know, right across their face and their face is right in front of you. But that can be the most intense gig. But then when we're doing a gig, we're doing a tour in the U in the UK in October with a full band, full eight-piece, nine-piece band. And when everybody's on the dime, the Hammond organ is playing, the horns are playing, the backhand vocals are kicking in, there often can be no better experience. So I'm lucky that we have a career in both tracks going on both routines.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, it's always nice to look back and reflect and be happy with everything that you've done. Now, in closing, where can people find you so they can follow your music and follow where you are?

SPEAKER_01

Uh the best thing to do is to go to the web and find us in www.huincai.co.uk. Everything is there. All all routes lead from there. Roots and routes lead from there. And um you're we're very big on Facebook, so try and find us on Facebook as well. And we encourage you if you come and see us. Uh, we have very, very strict rules about using smartphones during our performances. If you don't use your smartphone to record your favorite songs, and if you don't put it up on social media, we throw you out of the building. That's very, very strictly enforced. So come and see us there, and we would love to see you. And thanks for the interview, Tony. This has been great.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, this has been great conversation, great information. I really appreciate you joining us today.

SPEAKER_01

All right, man. Thanks.

SPEAKER_00

Thanks so much. Thanks for joining us today. We hope you enjoyed the show. This has been Tony Mantor Production. For more information, contact media at plateau music.com.