By Joe Sheridan
May 19, 2016 12:25
Whether you’re a multi-million-selling artist performing to tens of thousands of people each night, or you’re in a local band scrabbling together the petrol money to get to the next toilet circuit venue, you’re equally susceptible to the detrimental effects which can arise as a result of living with mental health issues.
In fact, the more successful an act becomes, the harder it can be for them to find a sympathetic ear when discussing such issues. When we hear of musicians whose public images epitomise the excesses of rock’n’roll fame talking frankly about depression or anxiety, we might struggle to understand how someone so idolised could possibly be unhappy. And that in itself is a problem.
According to a 2014 survey by the charity Help Musicians UK, mental health issues affect around 60% of musicians. That figure may seem high at first, but when you consider the context – increasing costs and decreasing incomes, weeks at a time away from home, friends and family, finding oneself in a new city each day – it really shouldn’t be that surprising.
While we all surely have our own share of ‘sad’ songs which we love, it’s often the case that lyricists hide the darkest and most emotionally wrought lyrical matter behind an upbeat melody. This is particularly true for music we might consider to be ‘radio friendly’, or even ‘pop’. Where some bands wear their their despondency on their sleeves – the sadly-defunct Hindsights (tagline: “Sad Since ‘11”), for example, or Tellison, who self-describe as “sad indie rock” and whose 2015 album ‘Hope Fading Nightly’ was a lachrymose tour-de-force (a tear-de-force?) – other bands hide it so well that we might not hear the melancholy behind the melody.
Consider Fall Out Boy’s ‘7 Minutes In Heaven (Atavan Halen)’, which addresses bassist and lyricist Pete Wentz’s own battles with mental illness. Titular pun aside (Atavan is a benzodiazepine drug, similar to Valium), the song is so fast-paced and catchy that it has crowds of fans happily singing along to lines like “I’m having another episode” and “I don’t do too well on my own”. The juxtaposition of this lyrical content with the poppy, hooky structure shows how easy it is to see and hear people discussing their mental health issues without noticing.