| “Once  I started writing, I felt that if it can be sung in a pub and also sung in a  big venue, then it’s a really good song. It’s a very singalong album.” Shane  Filan   If you’ve sold 50 million albums, had 14  No 1 singles and been a multi-platinum pop star for well over a decade, what do  you do? If you’re Shane Filan, you forget about the gold discs and start all  over again. When Shane’s old band Westlife amicably  ended in 2012, he knew he wanted to go solo – but he wasn’t sure if he knew how  to do it. “All my life, I’ve said I’d love to keep singing for as long as I  can,” he says. “But when Westlife split, I thought ‘Oh, OK!, I’m going to have  to do it on my own.’ To be honest, it was something I was never looking forward  to. I wasn’t comfortable with the idea of being solo, but I was 32 when we  ended and I didn’t want to retire. I want to sing for a living and I’m lucky  I’ve got another chance to do that.”   For six months, Shane didn’t do  anything. He had well-documented financial problems after investment deals went  wrong and admits: “I was in a very nervous and scary place.” But he had the  support of his wife Gillian and wanted to provide for their three children.  It was that steely determination and  realising what’s important in life that provides the backbone for Shane’s album  – a record Shane has written himself, and the most accomplished, heartfelt and  above all celebratory debut pop album in years.
 “People don’t want to hear about your  problems,” Shane states. “Everyone has problems, lots of people are struggling  financially at the moment and it’s not something to harp on about. What I got  out of my situation is that I’m so lucky to have three healthy kids, a healthy  marriage and an amazing wife. That’s what the album is about – trying to tell  people not to worry. I’ve been there and it’s not worth it. You get through it  and you try to stay positive, so I’ve tried to keep the songs positive.” For anyone who had Westlife pigeonholed  as balladeers, it’ll be a shock to hear just how euphoric Shane’s itional  Irish music.
 “I love banjos and ukuleles,” Shane  nods. “When you’re in a pub with a pint of Guinness, watching music that makes  you stamp your feet, that’s what makes me happiest.album is. There  are only a handful of ballads on a record dominated by uptempo and mid-tempo  songs that will slay the radio for years to come. It’s a reflection of Shane’s own  record collection, mixing pop with folk, soul, country and even a hint of trad “But some songs that work in pubs don’t  work in bigger venues. In the studio, I’d think ‘Could I sing this to a big  crowd? Will they react to it?’ The songs that stood out were the ones I think  will work in both.”
   Shane co-wrote a handful of Westlife  songs, but his solo album sees him emerge as a pop writer to be reckoned with.  He signed to Universal partly because they were the most encouraging in  persuading Shane to write songs himself. The very first song he wrote, the  irresistibly catchy Everything To Me, is his first solo single. “I got off to a really good start,” he  laughs. “Everything To Me felt like beginners’ luck, but I didn’t know how good  it was. Then the label were phoning, going “This is great!” I’d shown to myself  I could do this and that took the pressure off. I was flying in those first two  weeks and then suddenly I was in Nashville with really famous songwriters,  partly thinking ‘WOW!’ but also ‘Right, let’s do this.’  The fact I have a blank slate as a solo artist  helped, as I wasn’t saying ‘Let’s write a song like this’. We’d just jam and  see what happened.”
   Shane’s co-writers include his old  Westlife writer/producer team Steve Mac & Wayne Hector, plus Nick Atkinson  (Gabrielle Aplin), Nexus (Lana Del Rey), Paul Barry & Patrick Maskell (Enrique  Iglesias’ Hero) and Nashville songwriters Kylie Sackley  and Brandon Hood (LeAnn Rimes, Faith Hill). It’s produced by Martin Terefe (Train,  Jason Mraz) and Steve Mac. “Nearly every song is about Gillian, and  how amazing shes been to me over the last few years” says Shane. “Or the  positive outlook I have on life, which you might not see when you’re going  through the bad stuff. I’ve kept it universal, so that everyone can relate to  it, but it had to be about things which are important to me. Songs were flowing  through me and I couldn’t stop, I wrote about 40 songs. Me writing songs? It’s  been coming for a while.”
   Shane’s experiences are perhaps best  expressed on the stunning All I Need To Know, a soulful tribute to his wife,  destined to be a future classic. “Gillian is my rock, and that absolutely nails  how I felt while making this album,” recalls Shane. “Sometimes you have to cry,  not be afraid of reaching out to someone for help. Every time I hear it, it  gives me goosebumps. Every time I sing it live, it’ll be emotional.” Equally emotional in its own way is the  cheeky Everytime, a handclapping folky stomp reminiscent of Mumford & Sons  featuring the raunchy chorus “I feel my heart beating faster, I might need to  sit down after, it feels like we invented love everytime.” As Shane says: “We  had fun with that one! Me and David Sneddon from Nexus had a laugh with those lyrics.  There were a lot of lines that we had to take out because it was a bit too  much. There are a lot of serious songs on the album, so we needed a fun one.  Everyone’s had that ‘first kiss’ feeling.”   Marital bliss is also celebrated in the  bittersweet Coming Home (“It sounds a bit Christmassy as I’ve always wanted to  spend Christmas in New York. I don’t know why, probably watching Home Alone too  much”) and rattling country foot-tapper When I Met You (“I was friends with  Gillian for ages before we fell in love. It’s about the night I realised she  was the one.”) Writing the likes of the anthemic About  You with his old Westlife mentors Steve Mac and Wayne Hector brought home to  Shane how far he’s already progressed on his own. “It was like going back to my old school  and trying to work with the teachers,” he grins. “I went to the loo at their  studio, and there was a disc on the wall celebrating Westlife selling 45  million albums. You just think ‘Hopefully we’ll achieve something here, then…’  There’s such a history of pop with those two guys, and to this day Steve pushes  me to get the best out of my voice for each song, and every song has a  different energy.“
 “Some of the original demo vocals, ive  kept for the final mix of the album. The day I wrote those songs I captured  something in those vocals, it was the way I felt that day, so I kept them for  the album. Its hard to recapture a feeling.
 Not that Shane isn’t ambitious for the  album. That includes winning over people who had dismissed his old band.“The album is definitely not like  Westlife, but I think Westlife fans will like it,” he muses. “It’ll shock a few  people in a good way. It’s not totally leftfield and I think the melodies are  amazing, which is what Westlife songs were all about. The songs are more  international – they could work anywhere.
 “I’m ready to be judged. I’m nervous,  but that’s good, because if I didn’t have nerves it’d mean I don’t care.  The most important thing to me is that my fans  like the music, that’s what drives me every day. Westlife was amazing part of  my life that I’ll never forget, but now it’s me on my own, proving myself  again.”
 As Shane sings in All I Need To Know –  “Sometimes you’ve got to go back to the start.”   BIOGRAPHY BY JOHN EARLS |