"It's cool to have two different times in life, rather than having one time in life and dragging it out for as long as you can," Gaz Coombes says as we talk about his successful reinvention from leader of frothy britpoppers Supergrass to his new role as an acclaimed indie singer/songwriter.
"To sever that time in an extreme way and move on with a separate thing was really important to me," he continues. "It also keeps Supergrass frozen in time as a cool thing."
Coombes plays Auckland's Tuning Fork on Monday to support his fantastic new record The World's Strongest Man, his third solo album. Away from the band dynamic, Coombes' songwriting is more experimental and moody, the fuzzy guitar work of his songs draped in curious atmospheres and noises and propelled by loops and grooves he samples from his own drumming.
"The records have turned out better than I ever thought, so it's a case of taking that live," he says, when asked about the show's vibe. "Playing the pubs and doing old Supergrass songs is not anything I really wanted to do, to be honest. I've got too many ideas I want to get across. The response to the new songs has been so good that I haven't really thought about delving too much into the old stuff."
He cites the different approaches Beck has taken to his live shows over the years as an inspiration for how he put his show together. To that end he wanted to present the songs how he wrote them, without "all the production tricks and fairy dust".