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Mani: The Stone Roses, Primal Scream & the Resurrection (#256)

The XS Noize Podcast

Release Date: 11/02/2025

Paul Draper on Mansun Retold: revisiting old songs with new perspective (#267) show art Paul Draper on Mansun Retold: revisiting old songs with new perspective (#267)

The XS Noize Podcast

In this episode of the XS Noize Podcast, Mark Millar sits down with Paul Draper to talk about Mansun Retold — a project shaped by distance, perspective, and the strange experience of meeting your younger self through song. Watch the full video conversation. Releasing on 20 February, Mansun Retold sees Draper revisit and reimagine key songs from the Mansun catalogue, rebuilding them from the ground up as full-band, acoustic unplugged recordings. Rather than revisiting the past for nostalgia’s sake, the album is about clarity — hearing familiar songs anew, stripped of urgency, ego, and...

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Alexander Wolfe on 'Everythinglessness' and confronting masculinity through music (#266) show art Alexander Wolfe on 'Everythinglessness' and confronting masculinity through music (#266)

The XS Noize Podcast

In this episode of the XS Noize Podcast, Mark Millar sits down with Alexander Wolfe to talk about his deeply personal new album Everythinglessness. Watch the full video conversation. Written after a period of intense personal reckoning — including time spent in a mental health rehabilitation facility in 2023 — explores masculinity, mental health, and emotional survival. Drawing on experiences of depression, anxiety, and ADHD, Wolfe turns vulnerability into something raw, intimate, and quietly powerful. Raised in 1990s Woolwich, Wolfe blends observational grit with cinematic songwriting,...

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Callum Beattie on new album INDI and trusting his instinct (#265) show art Callum Beattie on new album INDI and trusting his instinct (#265)

The XS Noize Podcast

In this episode of the XS Noize Podcast, Mark Millar sits down with Callum Beattie to talk about a pivotal moment in his career and his forthcoming album INDI, released January 23rd. After landing two consecutive #1 albums on the Scottish Albums Chart, breaking into the UK Albums Chart with 2023’s Vandals, clocking up over 50 million streams, and selling more than 100,000 tickets in Scotland, Callum Beattie’s rise has been steady, earned, and unmistakable. That journey reached a major milestone with his sold-out headline show at Glasgow’s OVO Hydro, his...

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Sleaford Mods’ Jason Williamson on Planet X, cultural decay, and the evolution of the band (#264) show art Sleaford Mods’ Jason Williamson on Planet X, cultural decay, and the evolution of the band (#264)

The XS Noize Podcast

In this episode of the XS Noize Podcast, Mark Millar is joined by Jason Williamson, the fiercely articulate frontman of Sleaford Mods, to explore the band’s most ambitious and unflinching record yet: The Demise Of Planet X, out 16 January 2026 via Rough Trade Records. Created with long-time collaborator Andrew Fearn, the album expands the Mods’ sound both musically and emotionally, featuring rare and inspired guest appearances from Sue Tompkins (Life Without Buildings), Aldous Harding, Liam Bailey, and Nottingham grime MC Snowy. Their single “The Good Life” introduces a striking new...

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Oliver Murray on completing “The Beatles Anthology” and bringing Episode Nine to life (#263) show art Oliver Murray on completing “The Beatles Anthology” and bringing Episode Nine to life (#263)

The XS Noize Podcast

In this episode of the XS Noize Podcast, Mark Millar is joined by acclaimed filmmaker Oliver Murray — the British writer–director redefining modern music documentary through his bold, cinematic approach. Following his 2023 short film Now and Then, The Last Beatles Song — made in collaboration with Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Sean Lennon and the Harrison Estate to celebrate the release of the Beatles’ final single — Oliver continues his creative relationship with the band by directing the brand-new, final chapter of the legendary Anthology series. First...

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The XS Noize Podcast

In this episode of the XS Noize Podcast, Mark Millar is joined by legendary producer Steve Lillywhite — the Grammy-winning studio mastermind behind iconic records by U2, The Rolling Stones, Talking Heads, The Smiths, The Killers, Peter Gabriel, and many more. Steve talks about the release of a brand-new 4-track EP featuring a completely unreleased live version of “Fairytale of New York” — recorded at Glasgow Barrowlands in December 1987. This historic performance captures the first time The Pogues ever played the song live, and the first time Kirsty MacColl performed it onstage with...

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The XS Noize Podcast

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The XS Noize Podcast

In this episode of the XS Noize Podcast, Mark Millar is joined by Pearce Macca — frontman of Birmingham indie-rockers The Clause, a band whose rise has become one of the most inspiring new stories in modern British guitar music. The Clause have just unveiled their long-awaited debut album Victim of a Casual Thing — a record built on pure graft, unshakable friendship, and more than a decade of refusing to give in. What started in a cramped school practice room in 2011 — with Pearce Macca, Jonny Fyffe and Niall Fennell learning their favourite songs before Liam Deakin completed the...

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Roland Gift: 40 Years of Fine Young Cannibals & New Christmas Single (#259) show art Roland Gift: 40 Years of Fine Young Cannibals & New Christmas Single (#259)

The XS Noize Podcast

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The XS Noize Podcast

In this episode of the XS Noize Podcast, Mark Millar is joined by — the Dublin-born indie-rock artist and former Emmy-nominated audio engineer whose raw, heartfelt songwriting is making serious waves across Ireland’s indie scene. From his breakout singles “Dirty Tricks,” “All Because of Love,” “Perfect,” and “How Do You?” to sold-out shows at Whelan’s and The Workman’s Club, ALKY has built a growing reputation for pairing widescreen anthems with brutally honest storytelling. Now, he’s stepping into a defining new chapter with the release of his debut album Rinse...

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More Episodes

In this episode of the XS Noize Podcast, Mark Millar is joined by Mani — legendary bassist of The Stone Roses and Primal Scream, and one of the most influential figures in British rock history.

From the euphoric rise of The Stone Roses — the band that defined a generation and changed the sound of British music — to the wild creative freedom of Primal Scream, Mani’s journey has been nothing short of iconic.

In this conversation, Mani looks back on the moments that shaped him — from the late-’80s Manchester underground, when The Roses’ mix of psychedelic swagger and dancefloor groove ignited the Madchester movement, to recording their classic debut album and riding the wave of euphoria that followed. He opens up about the frustration of losing momentum during the long and bitter legal battles with Silvertone Records and FM Revolver, a period that tested the band’s spirit but ultimately forged their defiant edge.

He recalls the band’s rebirth with Second Coming, his explosive years with Primal Scream, and the emotional highs of reuniting The Roses for the monumental Heaton Park shows — one of the greatest comebacks in modern music. Mani reflects on the brotherhood, the chaos, and the transcendence that came with it all — and what it means to live through those storms with joy still intact.

“The four of us. Boom. There it is. The power of four. And it was beautiful.” – Mani (on the magic of The Stone Roses’ reunion)

Mani also shares personal memories of the Beautiful Thing sessions, the deep connection between groove and spirituality, and how he’s carried The Roses’ sense of defiance and soul into everything since. With trademark humour and honesty, he talks about surviving the highs and lows of fame, the secret to keeping the spirit of rock ’n’ roll alive, and why music, at its best, still feels like a resurrection.

Listen to the full episode and join Mani as he reflects on a lifetime in music — from Manchester to the world — The groove, the chaos, the resurrection.