Hello! I’m Carol Duncan - and welcome to the Lost Newcastle podcast. With more than 70,000 members, Lost Newcastle has become the online meeting place for generations of Novocastrians, sharing photos, stories, finding lost friends and loved ones, and learning plenty of new things about this place we call home.
Episodes
Wednesday Jan 10, 2018
Hugh Laurie
Wednesday Jan 10, 2018
Wednesday Jan 10, 2018
Despite his incredible success as an actor and comedian, Hugh Laurie now calls himself 'musician'. His leap of faith to pursue his life-long love of blues music is proving to be a great decision - both for Hugh, and for music lovers.
I was thrilled to be able to chat with Hugh in 2014.
Hugh Laurie has loved the blues since he was seven years old. (:supplied )
"I'm following a well-trodden path of English musicians, which is how I describe myself now, who have been entranced, hypnotised almost, by this extraordinary music of the American south," Hugh says.
Since hearing his first blues song at around age seven, Hugh has been smitten.
"It was like an electric shock that went through me," he recalls.
"I'm still shivering, still juddering even now, all these years later.
"It's never let me go."
Many people were suprised that after his great success in America with the hit TV show, House, Hugh's next move was to form a blues band and go on tour.
But he has no regrets.
"This is the greatest adventure of my life, and it's the greatest thrill," Hugh enthuses.
"This is a whole new level of visceral pleasure that I get from music."
He describes himself as "quite a self-conscious" actor who approached every scene as a technical problem to be solved.
And despite the huge popularity of House, many awards and critical acclaim for his performance as the brilliant but cantankerous doctor, Hugh was constantly doubting himself.
"I would always spend my evenings sort of beating myself up for the day before, which is a complete waste of time," he admits.
However despite being aware that launching a career as a blues muso could make him the target of ridicule, after 120 shows Hugh has a new sense of confidence.
"I know we put on a good show," he says.
Hugh is in awe of the blues musicians he's performing with, and sometimes during shows he loses himself in the pure enjoyment of their playing.
It's a sweet pay-off for a man who's taken such a big risk with his career.
"I'm almost ashamed of how lucky I am," he says.
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