Appearing on a computer screen from his home, hard by the Yorkshire Dales, for the first time in a while, Ginger doesn’t look like a man overburdened by life’s tribulations. His slimmed-down form, he explains, can be attributed to exercise and the daily routine of taking Maggie, his Border Collie, on rambling walks on the hills of God’s Own County.
In a stroke of geographical good fortune, his dwelling in the boondocks, miles from an off-license, mitigates against the temptation to pop out for a bottle or two of hooch. For a man whose photograph once appeared in Kerrang! above the caption ‘hands up if you’ve taken every drug in the world’, today, his sole concession to grape and grain is a glass of wine with a nice steak.
In the last version of The Wildhearts, though, things did get sketchy. “My life had spun out of control and I was definitely going to end up in a box or behind bars, and it looked as if it was imminent,” he says.
Out on the road, bad habits had muscled their way back into the realm. His behaviour became worryingly unpredictable. Crack rocks deposited into pipes were set aflame. Once again, as the chorus in the mesmerising The Jackson Whites warned us, the apocalypse was in his sights. To put it quietly, for a man hurtling towards his seventh decade, the view was unedifying.
“I was the most frightening person in my life,” he says. “When you’re in a band like The Wildhearts have been, where it’s the black water of chaos, then you’re just basically batting things away from you instead of looking inside of life and asking, ‘What the fuck is this all about?’ It’s the sort of band where in the past I haven’t tried not to court chaos. I found a comfort in chaos. And that was something I really had to look into: Why am I” – pause for comic effect – “such a prick?”