You’ll be performing six open-air shows on your Greatest Hits Forest Tour between June 11 and July 3. Will this be your first experience of doing gigs in British forests in the band’s 33 years, Jim?

“Yes, they seem very popular. I guess there’s quite a few of them in England. There doesn’t seem to be any in Scotland so it’s a bit of an unknown concept to me in terms of experience, but certainly among the fans, when we announced it they said: ‘Oh those gigs are great’.”

In the band’s early days in Glasgow, could you have envisaged how successful Simple Minds would become?

“We had no concept. We just lived for the next gig, and the next gig was exciting enough. When you’re 18, 19, 20, you’ve got no concept of time and you can’t see beyond the end of the week or the end of the month.

“As long as we had a new song and a couple of new dates we were okay.

“Although we didn’t have a meteoric breakthrough – it took some years – there was always the feeling of increasingly making the right steps and being appreciated and more importantly being encouraged, and that was enough.”

Don’t You (Forget About Me), the soundtrack song you did for John Hughes’s film The Breakfast Club in 1985, helped to push Simple Minds into a different league, didn’t it?

“That’s one where we literally had no idea, because it was done separately and done for a movie. We were wrong to say it was forced on us, but the record company were really hassling to get us involved, and our minds were in a different place.

“We were writing other stuff at the time. We actually saw the movie in a roughly edited form and we were a bit nonplussed. At that time we’d had a few albums that had done well and we were probably going through the door into the big league, but that song smashed the door wide open.”

What made you invest in an Italian hotel, the Villa Angela in Sicily, Jim?

“I first went to Italy with my school when I was maybe 14. I realised that the world was in colour after growing up at the end of the industrial age in Glasgow where the world was not in colour.

“Don’t get me wrong, I love Glasgow, but there was something about Italy. Then when I got to play there and tour it became a place that I wanted to stay. About 12 years ago I thought, ‘That’s where my life is going to pan out’, and Sicily in particular was a part that I loved.

“People really seem to enjoy being there [the Villa Angela]. I do a lot of work when I’m there ironically. I go there to rest, but when you feel good you’ve got energy and before you know it you’ve written a few songs.”

What’s happening with Simple Minds’ upcoming studio album?

“We’re not really due to start it until the latter part of the year. It’s a work in progress, but already I’m excited about it. The band keeps moving on. It’s nice for the group’s story and to be continually adding chapters.”

Will your fans hear any new songs at Dalby Forest?

“We always try to stick in something current, and I know we’ll play something new. We’ll go through the whole story really, touching on all the different chapters from the very start up until currently.”

• Simple Minds play Dalby Forest, near Pickering, on June 24. Tickets are available at £35 from the Forestry Commission on 03000 680400 or online at forestry.gov.uk/music Proceeds go towards the care of woods in North Yorkshire.

• ALL 5,000 tickets have been snapped up for Erasure’s Total Pop Tour date at Dalby Forest on June 25, the second of the Forestry Commission’s woodland shows next weekend. Dancefloor diva Sophie Ellis-Bextor will be the opening act, promoting her new album, Make A Scene.