'Sometimes the England side looks like a boyband'
Pop duo Duckworth Lewis talk about their new album and why the England team needs more characters
Neil: Apparently we did. I think the way we write about cricket, it's kind of limitless. Because we don't necessarily write about cricket per se, it's just the jumping-off point. So we kind of take these quite small ideas and elaborate upon them in various strange tangents.
Thomas: Oh, they were keen but we had to ask them because they're very busy people. Someone like Stephen Fry is never not working and never not being asked. It was very exciting for us but there was no way we thought we'd get him."
Neil: That's correct, Harry Lime and so on. We have written various songs where it's kind of about the ability to daydream while cricket it happening. But they're always good dreams and it's perfectly reasonable. And this was actually daydreaming while playing the game.
"I identified that the natural length would be about 20 years between both albums but because it rains a lot in Ireland we were faced with using the Duckworth-Lewis method and it became four years "Thomas Walsh
Neil: From the people we know who loved it, yeah, they were saying, "When are you going to make another one?" We always said, "Are you crazy?" And it turned out that we were crazy.
Neil: We're not planning anything - we do not plan. People don't believe us when we say it is kind of an accident [the albums] have appeared at the Ashes. Basically we did the first one, it accidentally came out at just the right time, and then we both went off to do albums of our own, and by the time we've come back to make another one, it was four years later. A happy accident.
Neil: Yeah, he's a fan, which is very nice. I don't know about any of the others. We're doing Swanny and Anderson's podcast, so that will be fun. I can't wait to meet Jimmy Anderson.
Thomas: It would be a lot more difficult than the people we did get.
Neil: I'm not sure I can pinpoint one that was really, really great...
Thomas: I think "Judd's Paradox", because of the way it came together, and it sounds so strong. It's quite beautiful in parts.
Still swinging
Forget T20, this is cricketainment. Neil Hannon and Thomas Walsh, two Irishmen with an affinity for the English summer game and an ear for a jaunty tune, have returned with the Duckworth Lewis Method's second album, after a four-year break - during which time, it is probably fair to say, the world in general has been largely oblivious to the relative absence of cricket pop.
Sometimes the most delightful gifts are the unexpected ones. Their eponymous debut offering oozed into the consciousness during the 2009 Ashes, delivering beguiling classics off a short run-up, and Sticky Wickets nimbly picks up the same thread. Divine Comedy frontman Hannon, and Walsh, of Pugwash, insist that the release ten days before the start of the 2013 Ashes is purely coincidental but few would begrudge them the association. Their mellifluous melodies seem destined to infuse a hotly anticipated cricketing summer.
Duckworth (Walsh) and Lewis (Hannon) may be friends of the Two Chucks but this time around they are joined by a few actual celebrities. "If you're gonna flash, flash hard," avers David Lloyd on "Boom Boom Afridi", a paean to the mercurial Pakistan allrounder, while Henry Blofeld's unmistakable tones adorn "It's Just Not Cricket". Elsewhere, the presence of the actor, writer and comedian Stephen Fry and Daniel Radcliffe (aka Harry Potter) provides further evidence of the game's enduring pull in entertainment circles.
Billed as a "cricket fantasia", there is plenty for both fans of the game and lovers of music to pick through. The songs are intricately layered, with playful lyrics and catchy hooks straight off the middle of the bat. The steampunk bombast of "Boom Boom Afridi" gives way to subtler ruminations on the lot of the umpire, and the spoken-word poetry of "Judd's Paradox". You might think "Chin Music" would go heavy on the drums but instead it floats along like a Victorian fairground instrumental. "Line and Length", meanwhile, transports you back to the '80s (though sadly without any references to Eddie Hemmings), sounding like a cross between Huey Lewis and the News and Yello.
In following up their original cricket-themed concept album, there might have been a danger that the Duckworth Lewis Method's unique charms would lose some of their shine. However, such is the strength of their songwriting that the conceit still seems to have plenty of life in it. The ball may be a little older but DLM are still swinging.
Neil: I think we'd say we follow England. They're very follow-able, their games are always on the telly, and you get to know all the players so intimately. I've kind of been willing them to win for years because they were so bad for so long.
Thomas: I think it's brilliant, in a way, because they're not good enough to beat England on paper, I don't think, but they could get inside their heads. I remember Steve Collins, the Irish boxer, psyching out Chris Eubank, and that was a sure case of someone using their mind over their talent. So I think the Australians could start trying to get at England. That's the only chance they have.
Neil: Thomas' is 3-1 to England, with one draw, and mine is 3-0.
Thomas: Is he!
Neil: It's impossible to know how these things will inspire creativity in the future. I think there will always be books written about cricket, because it's that kind of a sport, it has such depth. Songs I don't know…
Neil: Thomas likes it a lot more than I do. I find it slightly like eating a bar of chocolate compared to a three-course meal.
Alan Gardner is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. He tweets here