The Enemy frontman Tom Clarke has said that the band are in no rush to release the follow-up to their debut album ‘We’ll Live And Die In These Towns’.
Clarke said that like U2, who often taken an extended break in between albums, there was no need to think that they had to “strike while the iron’s hot”.
“If you make good music, people will buy it whatever time of year it is or how ever long it’s been since you put out an album,” Clarke told the BBC.
"And U2 have made an entire career of having an amazing massive huge selling album and then disappearing for about a million years and then coming back with another massive album.”
The Enemy, who topped the album charts with the debut last year, played new song ‘Sing When You’re In Love’ during a gig in London last night.
The show, at the Bloomsbury Bowling Lanes, was in support of the V Involved campaign.
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