By Paul Sexton
LONDON (Billboard) - The multiplatinum English band that was almost derailed by personal problems has relocated its mojo.
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"I've seen what it's like on the other side, and I don't ever want to go there again. This is a liberated record," Chaplin says of "Perfect Symmetry," released October 13 internationally on Island and the following day in the United States on Interscope. "When you sail so close to the edge and then come back, you learn to appreciate what it is (you enjoy) again. We didn't have that sense of fun for a while. We were pretty earnest."
Keane's 2004 debut, "Hopes and Fears," racked up global sales estimated at 5.5 million by Island. So a "mere" 2.5 million for 2006 follow-up "Under the Iron Sea" was something of a letdown.
"We've built up a huge live following in America, and the first record obviously did incredibly well," Chaplin says. "We toured there with the second record and the crowds got bigger, but (the album) didn't seem to impact as much as the first one. Whether the Americans get this record or not I don't know, but I hope the openness and poppiness of it will have a big impact."
"There's so much playing safe with bands these days," Chaplin says. "It seems a lot of them burst onto the scene and then for the next five years are essentially making the same record. We feel we've made a record that's been lurking in us for a long time. With this album it was, 'It's our band -- we can do what the f--k we like.'"
Reuters/Billboard
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