Black Velvet Interview – January 09
2008 into 2009: The Stone Gods
The Stone Gods have had a phenomenal year. From the ashes of The Darkness, the retro rockers have developed a live show which will ruin your hearing for weeks. Youll love it. Guitarist, Dan Hawkins mulls it all over.

What was your highlight of 2008?
The release of our debut album.
Whats the worst thing that happened to you in 2008?
Way too dark to tell you bastards. Crashing my car was up there though.
Who in 2008 deserves a good kicking?
Ashley cole for cheating on Cheryl Tweedy. Dickhead.
Who had the best comeback: Metallica, AC/DC, or Guns N Roses?
AC/DC – Metallica never really went away.
What are you most looking forward to in 2009?
Playing the summer festivals.
What band should everyone find out about in 2009?
White Ace.
What do you want for Christmas?
World peaceor some Pizza Express vouchers.
Who do you want to get under the mistletoe?
My missus!
Where will you be on New Years Eve?
Partying at my house with close friends. Dress code – smart Mexican.
Stone Gods will be embarking upon a headline tour of the UK in March 2009.
Toby Interview
Different singers, different personnel. Different songs. Different trousers.
Ross McGibbon finds out what happened when the Stone Gods stepped out of The Darkness.
With an album that teeters between cartoon rock fun and balls-out fun, Stone Gods are in a strange place. Add to that the history being shadowed by having partially formed from The Darkness and you have a band in transition.
Toby answers our questions.
How far are your tongues in your cheeks?
- Not as far as some might imagine. Rock music has always had an element of the “cheeky wink”, though, hasn’t it?
Tell me about writing Burn The Witch.
- I can’t, I’m afraid. The boys wrote that before I joined the scrum. What kind of dirt-digging answer were you after? It’s a song about a witch and the traditional method of dealing with them.
Don’t Drink The Water – I can’t decide, is it glam or metal? What do you reckon?
- I thought it was a punk-rock nod to The Who, but to be fair, I am a bass player.
How much fun is it being the Stone Gods?
- Much more fun than not being in Stone Gods. We all share the same sense of humor and we do an awful lot of giggling. Being in a band can be quite an intense experience so it’s terrifically important to add as much levity to it as possible, wherever possible.
How many milli-seconds was it from Justin’s departure to deciding to do Stone Gods?
- It was about thirty minutes, I’m told. I don’t have a calculator with me, but therein lies your answer.
What’s the difference for you with the Stone Gods, as compared with The Darkness?
- They are two different bands. Different singers, different personnel. Different songs. Different trousers.
Can an amp go louder than 11?
- Yes, but the Diezel amps that Dan and Rich have are so ridiculously loud that they rarely go above 2.
If you could dig up a dead musician to join the band as a zombie, who would it be? And what would you call your zombie band?
- Zombies freak me out. I wouldn’t want to be in a band with one. Having said that, though, getting John Bonham on the drums would be neat. I suppose we would be called Dead Zeppelin, or something equally droll.
Bleeping swearwords out of singles – a commercial necessity or artistic evil?
- Artistic necessity. We didn’t bleep, though, I think we’ve done things like turn words around backwards and things like that, on occasion. It all seems a bit silly in this day and age. Swear words are still seen to be more offensive than some of the other lyrical content in popular music around at the minute, which is a bit odd, in my opinion.
What are your favourite songs on the album?
- They are all our children and picking one or two over the others means they’ll all grow up twisted.
What are your favourite albums?
- Personally, Revolver by The Beatles, In Utero by Nirvana, Peace Sells…But Who’s Buying? by Megadeth, Fore! by Huey Lewis and The News, The Milk Eyed Mender by Joanna Newsome and the Oh Brother Where Art Thou soundtrack among numerous others.
Is it me or does the album get softer and more melodic as it goes on before a brief return to kick you in the teeth?
- I suppose so. It’s just a good journey, to my ears.
Heartburn – so are you guys old enough for acid reflux?
Yes, I’m afraid so.
What’s your poison?
- Funny. That was my other suggestion for album title! My poison is White Russians. Or Brandy Alexanders.
Interview with the guys during the Airbourne Tour in Newcastle
from Bad Robot
British heavy rock band Stone Gods, formed from the ashes of the Darkness, recently played an excellent show with Airbourne at the Carling Academy, Newcastle.
Bad Robots Jamie Thomas spoke to Toby MacFarlane (bass), Dan Hawkins (guitar), Robin Goodridge (drums) and Richie Edwards (vocals, guitar) just before they went onstage.
Jamie: Toby, people will know you from your time in JJ72, but more recently youve been working with Graham Coxon. Hes a creative guy, but always comes across as very quiet. Whats he really like in person?
Toby: Yes, hes a strange boy (laughs). Everyone has a character they put on sometimes, so although he is pretty quiet, perhaps some of the mannerisms you see when hes on stage are slightly exaggerated, because thats how everyone expects him to act. Jamie: Do you think youll be working with him again in the future?
Toby: At this stage I dont know, it all depends on how peoples diaries line up. It would be nice though.
Dan: Weve stolen Toby from him, but we might give him back!
Jamie: Moving on to you, Robin, youve recently been drumming for Spear of Destiny, now youve joined Stone Gods does that bring your time with them to an end?
Robin: Again like Toby said, it depends on diaries. Spear have some dates booked for next year, but they have a bit of a revolving door policy when it comes to their line-up, it seems to change all the time! I think Im actually their longest-serving drummer, because I was in the band for about three years.
Jamie: Youre best known for your time in Bush. Can you see a Bush reunion happening in the future?
Robin: Gavin (Rossdale, Bush lead singer) has got a solo album out at the moment, so thats keeping him busy, but who knows? Some day perhaps. Reunions are best left until everyone really wants to do it. I had a great time in Bush but Im concentrating on Stone Gods now.
Jamie: As everyone knows, Stone Gods came about after The Darkness split. Do you guys get sick of journalists asking you about The Darkness?
Dan: No, not at all. Im very proud of my past. We achieved some great things with The Darkness, had a lot of fun, and for me it was a great start to my career. If some people dont like talking about their old bands, maybe its because they were in shit bands! The Darkness was my band, and Im proud of what we did.
Jamie: I recently spoke to Justin (Hawkins) and he was very positive about what you guys are doing with Stone Gods. Have you had a chance to listen to Justins new band Hot Leg?
Toby: Are they really called Hot Leg?
Dan: I have to say I havent really heard them yet. Do they have an album out?
Jamie: Im told theyre hoping to release it early next year.
Richie: Ive heard some of their tracks. I thought it was good stuff. Its healthy that people are moving on with their new bands.
Dan: Obviously what people are doing now reflects what theyre really into. I think thats one of the things that brought down The Darkness, in the end. We had different priorities in terms of the kind of music we wanted to make. Hopefully Justins now getting the chance to do what he wants to do.
Jamie: Youve recently been championed by the rock press, with the likes of Classic Rock and Kerrang! giving you a lot of support. How does that feel?
Robin: Its ok being on the periphery, as long as youre enjoying your music, but its really good to feel youre actually appearing on the radar straight away. And well prove them right.
Jamie: Your debut album is an interesting mix of styles. A song like Burn the Witch is very different to, say, Magdalene Street. Did you deliberately set out to make an album with a wide range, or did it just happen that way?
Richie: There was no real agenda. We all got together, wrote a whole load of songs I think 28 in the end and then whittled it down to the 14 or so we thought were good enough for the record. When youve got four people working on an album, youre going to get lots of influences coming together, and weve ended up with a pretty diverse record.
Jamie: And how are you enjoying being on tour with Airbourne, do they party as hard as their image suggests?
All: Its fucking awesome.
Dan: You can print that fucking awesome. The tour is going very, very well. Theyre a great band and were having a really good time.
Robin: And once this tour is over, well be looking forward to hitting the festivals next year.
Stone Gods Interview – Norwich UEA 23.11.08
Optimum Impact – Norwich UEA 23.11.08
Apologies for the slight distortion in sound in a couple of places – I think the soundchecking was vibrating the recorder! And, for the distortion in the interviewer. I was NOT a well bunny! – Jo/Sixsister/Priestess/emilystrange and whoever else I was being at the time…
Black Diamond Radio
Mad Dan interviews Stone Gods Richie, Toby and Dan on tour in Scotland in June 2008
Band interview – Nottingham
eGigs talks to the Stone Gods at their recent gig at Nottingham’s Rock City on Thursday 20 November 2008
After being escorted through the weird and wonderful backstage corridors to the rock city dressing rooms, I am greeted by a friendly “hello” and made to feel at home as the band members of Stone Gods take precious time out of their warm up time to speak to eGigs…
After playing festivals and arenas in your former project (The Darkness) what is it like doing a support slot?
Dan: To be honest, it’s a lot less pressure in some ways. You’re the underdog. You’re like…
Robin: …The bonus from an audience point of view. The fans know what they are getting with Airbourne, we have got a few hundred of our fans here, I haven’t done a support slot for twenty years, it’s a good experience, forty minutes- go smash the hell out of yourself, and then get off, you can reach maximum velocity early and stay there for the whole show, whereas if your doing an hour and half, you have to back off a little bit.
Dan: In my career, I’ve supported bands more than I’ve headlined, in the previous project we supported Alice Cooper, Def Leppard, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Rolling Stones, Metallica, Whitesnake, the list goes on and on.
Robin: you’re a veteran…
Dan: Yes I’m more experienced at the support slot gig than the headline gig.
Robin: if the billing is right, its okay.
You played the Download festival earlier this year, how do you feel that went?
Robin: I thought it went really well? That’s was our first festival. That was my first gig.
Dan: We were thrown in to the deep end at Download, we had about two days to rehearse with Robin.
After that festival slot, would you consider playing any festivals next year?
Dan: We would like to play every festival.
Robin: Every one.
Dan: We can go out and do our own headline tour at low level, but the main aim of this band is to get out in front of people who haven’t seen or heard us before.
Toby: It’s no good preaching to the converted is it?
Dan: I think we will do well at festivals, we really do suit a bigger stage.
Where did the title for your debut album ‘Silverspoons and Broken Bones’ come from?
Dan: Toby came up with that…
Toby: I made it up out of words I found in the air (laughing) It was just a nice phrase that came to mind. Then I sort of thought of a meaning to them, ‘Silverspoons’ is the perception of the big glitzy thing that people think being a rock band is, whereas ‘broken bones’ is the truth underneath that, the reality of that, revealing the gritty truth, there’s a lot of honesty on the record.
‘Silverspoons and Broken Bones’ has a lot of sounds similar to the legendary bands such as Metallica and Megadeth to name a few, was it your intention to sound like these bands? Did you want to create a more rocky, darker sound than your previous band?
Dan: It’s a different writing process, we all write together, the resulting sound of that is your band sound, and so the people in this band listen to heavier stuff really, so I think that’s where it comes from, if someone’s playing a riff and someone’s goes that sounds great, we will work with it. It wasn’t a conscience decision. It was enjoyable to get really heavy as it wasn’t something I had a chance to do with my previous band.
Robin: Its just a natural sound, it like the equivalent of shaping a balloon, when you blow a balloon up it becomes the shape it is, you cant look at it an d try to put an extra bulge in, you just cant do it.
‘Silverspoons and Broken Bones’ doesn’t seem to have been given much exposure, why is that?
Robin: Its still early days yet, don’t forget its not been a major release from a major label, there’s been no massive campaign, everyone is geared up to the idea that next summer everyone will start to warm to the album.
Even though the album will be a year old, that’s irrelevant, your album could be two years old before anyone really cares about it, If it was the second album we would be dead in the water by now, but because its our first album people haven’t gone “I’ve heard that and I don’t like it”, they simply just haven’t heard it.
So the fact that we’ve got this tour and Black Stone Cherry tour, the two best tours this quarter, and we are on both of them means we get exposure that we haven’t had before. So by next summer we should be playing T in The Park, Leeds, Reading etc, and that’s when the album should land, and we will probably release ‘Burning Witch’ again.
It’s been a success in download terms but it hasn’t really been exposed to the general public in my opinion, and I know radio stations will play it if the punters like it, they play what people want to hear. Commercial radio stations are interested in getting people listening so they play what people want to hear.
Toby: So far it appears people would quite like to listen to us.
Dan: It’s a new band, people can talk about previous bands we’ve been in.
Robin: It doesn’t sound like the Darkness, doesn’t sound like Bush, so it’s not a natural migration.
Dan: It’s so different we have to find our fans, we expected it to be a journey, but you know we are happy with the way its going to be honest, I think people would have been really dismissive if we came out using our previous bands sound.
Toby: Look who we used to be (in a sarcastic tone)
Robin: It’s a longer path, but it validates you a lot more, if you play to people, and your exposure is universally accepted as great, that’s exactly our we prefer to work it, In my old band (Bush) we started at 240 in the American charts and worked our way to the top ten over a year, working and working, it didn’t matter how old the album was.
eGigs would like to thank Robin, Dan, and Toby from the Stone Gods for their precious time just before going on stage.
Temple Talks To Robin Goodridge
Interview with the band at the Carling Academy, Birmingham
5 November 2008
I cannot deny being more than a little excited about meeting what is undoubtedly the most promising new band in the UK at the moment, and perhaps I was a little nervous too. However, the moment we set foot in their dressing room, Richie, Dan, Toby and Robin were the perfect hosts and made James the photographer and I feel instantly welcomed. I scanned the room for diva style demands, and spotted Ploughman’s sandwiches and bottled water. When they asked after James’s son (whom they had met on a previous interview) I knew from his proud grin he would be good for nothing for the next ten minutes, and so I made a start.
Rock3: You’ve been quoted to say you are not interested in fame, power or being celebrities, but as The Stone Gods popularity increases, how will you, as a band, maintain the music as a priority?
SG: Given the fact that everyone has been there before we can see the pitfalls now and have learnt lessons and grown in maturity. The experience has helped us to say no to things now whereas first time round you’re finding your feet really.
Rock3: You had high drama with Ed Graham leaving as you did your first headline tour. Robin stood in temporarily, and Stuart Cable too for the Kerrang! gig and then Robin joined you officially. Was this a natural progression? Were dynamics and ethos the main considerations for you?
Robin: A previous employee of Bush knew these guys well and knew my style musically and so he thought it would fit the band. You never know until you play together really, but as a musician he knew it could work.
Richie: We had a few days rehearsal before Donnington, and before we got to the chorus of Burn the Witch we were all looking at each other like ‘it’s going to be alright’. In fact for me one of the best moments so far was when we played Donnington with Robin. It just felt right and we were tighter than we’d ever been even though we’d only had a few rehearsals.
Dan: For me it really helped with the confidence when we were on stage that it all seemed to fit so well.
Rock3: Toby, your Cable Guy diary on the website had me in bits. I see you’re also doing a tour blog. You write to entertain and informatively, is this going to be a side line for you? Can we expect more, or a side line into children’s books?
Toby: Nah, Mills and Boon. Ha ha. We might do a podcast though. I’m going to try and do it (the blog diary) every few days. It’s good to do it.
Dan: On the previous project they asked me to do it and it wasn’t as informative as Toby’s. They usually started off with “Woke up really hungover”.
Rock3: Do you find it difficult to shake off the shadows of The Darkness?
SG: Initially when we’d dusted off the glitter and started this band all the interviews were asking about it, but when you come from a successful band it’s going to happen really. But now we’re finding the questions are less and less about how it was and more about if we feel we’ve shaken it off. Its not something we shy away from, to be honest. Every band has a history, and what a history to have. But its not something we’ve ever used. It was very difficult to get deals but we knew from our previous project who we could actually trust so we were really very lucky, although we were starting from the grass roots up, just like anyone else. One of the worst things was that you put so much work into an album that if the first track has bad reviews the whole album can get shelved. That thought was very scary for us.
Rock3: ‘Don’t Drink The Water’ reminded me on first listen of The Little Angels. Were they amongst your influences?
SG: There’s stuff we all like collectively but we also have a mix of music. It’s like making a cake, the stuff we like collectively is the foundation, but you can decorate it any way you like. If any of us have any suggestions we’re all open to different stuff. It’ll be interesting when we go into the next stage and are writing with Robin to see how that influences it. But we’re very open to each other’s suggestions and ideas because we’re four people that really like music.
Rock3: You are on a very intense touring campaign to promote Silver Spoons and Broken Bones, but what do you plan to do at the end of it?
Richie: The goal is to register on the Rock Richter scale. We hope to get the festivals in the summer, but early next year maybe overseas. We’ve started to get interest from the US and Europe so we’ll see what happens. As far as taking a break goes, it’s not going to happen.
The twenty minute slot flew by and I could have happily sat chatting to them for hours. They were polite, amusing, and pleasing company. During the Airbourne performance SG came over and said hi, asking if we’d enjoyed their set. Then they happily chatted to and posed for photos with some of their fans on the balcony, which will have made the night of a young girl in a wheelchair. Their naturalistic attitude is endearing and refreshing. Their music is addictive. The Stone Gods will go far and we at Rock3 love them!
©Meriel Flavell 2008
Interview with Dan
Dan’s delight to be back on the road
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| Dan Hawkins performs with the Stone Gods in Gorleston later this month. Picture: Angela Sharpe |
17 October 2008
LOWESTOFT rocker Dan Hawkins has played at some of the biggest venues in the country, but later this month he moves another step closer to performing in his home town when his latest band play at the Ocean Rooms in Gorleston.
The former Kirkley High School student first shot to fame in 2003 alongside his brother Justin and close school-friend Ed Graham. Five years on, The Darkness is just a distant memory to Dan as he co-runs a successful recording studio and prepares to tour the UK once more with his band the Stone Gods.
The Darkness were Suffolk’s most successful ever rock band but when Justin quit in October 2006, Dan wasn’t prepared to stop performing. Soon he and band mates Ed Graham and Richie Edwards had been joined by Toby MacFarlaine, and they had formed the Stone Gods.
Together they toured the UK, but in July it was announced that Ed had left the band due to health problems. The band had to cancel a couple of performances, but managed to recruit ex-Bush drummer Robin Goodridge for the rest of their tour.
“He did a great job,” said Dan. “It was so last minute we had to cancel two dates and only had two days to rehearse before playing in front of thousands at The Download Festival. But he has played massive gigs before with Bush, so didn’t seem remotely nervous.”
Former Stereophonics drummer Stuart Cable also filled in for one performance, but earlier this month it was announced that Robin would be Ed’s permanent replacement and the band will soon be on the road again as they tour the country in support of Australian rock band Airbourne.
“I can’t tell you how much I’m looking forward to it; I’ve been going crazy as I haven’t played for a while,” said Dan.
The tour will see the band play across the UK in November, including at the UEA in Norwich, but before that they will treat their local fans to an extended set at The Ocean Rooms in Gorleston on October 30.
“Gorleston is one of the many places I’ve lived in and around Norfolk and Suffolk,” said Dan. “I’m gradually edging closer to Lowestoft, maybe we’ll be able to warm up in Lowestoft next time.”
On October 27 the band release Don’t Drink The Water, the second single from their album Silver Spoons and Broken Bones, which was recorded at Dan’s studio Leeders Farm in Spooner Row.
The studio, which Dan runs together with producer Nick Brine has proved a big hit, with the Arctic Monkeys and KT Tunstall amongst the artists to have used their facility.
“It always been a dream of mine to have a recording studio and the first year couldn’t have gone any better,” said Dan.
So with a UK tour on the horizon, a busy recording studio, talk of another support tour in December and writing already underway on new material for the Stone Gods, Dan is certainly not short of work.

