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 Thursday, January 29, 2009
Here We Go Magic pushes the limits
Posted by peter
 The world, or shall we say Here We Go Magic, doesn't revolve around Luke Temple, no matter how distinctive and bewitching his high-pitched voice is. Tossing aside the cloak of the singer/songwriter he's worn through two solo releases — 2005's Hold A Match for a Gasoline World and 2007's Snowbeast — the genre-defying artist emerges in 2009 with a new name and an eponymous album that's a wondrous mix of afro-beat rhythms, aquatic sounds and kraut-rock innovation. It's a dramatic about-face from the earnest folk and widescreen pop of previous efforts, and the change in monikers reflects a bold new journey into strange, exotic musical territory. "The record turned out to be less centered around me in terms of any narrative or opinion I might have," explains Temple. "It seemed a good vehicle for an ensemble." Making use of analog synths, a cassette 4-track and an SM-57 mic, Temple recorded Here We Go Magic at home in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. The insular, womb-like nature of the record is a result, and Temple was keen on employing a minimalist recording environment. The sonic marvel of Here We Go Magic is anything but minimal, however. "I am a huge fan of limitations in terms of the creative process; it forces you to problem solve so the end result will be the closest to who you are," says Temple. "I worked in an especially simplified way for this record, just mic straight to 4-track. I have fancier gear, but I couldn't be bothered. I was working quickly, so I didn't have time to think about recording technique. I am more concerned with intangibles that aren't as obvious but are always the real reason people love certain records." Natural environments abound on Here We Go Magic, and the sense of swimming in amorphous sound is most fully realized on "I Just Want To See You Underwater." More alien is the soundscape found in — what else — "Nat's Alien," while the wistful, late-summer feel of "Tunnelvision" — with its disorienting layers of acoustic guitars and vocals, and its polyrhythmic pitter-patter — is a breezy piece of pop that sounds like a lost outtake from The Sea And Cake. Found also in "Only Pieces" and the seductive "Fangela," the polyrhythms employed by Temple create a hypnotic effect that leaves you utterly spellbound. "I wanted, and always want, to make something that I want to listen to first and foremost," says Temple. "The polyrhythms were little Steve Reich-ish experiments in having rhythms start at different points and allowing for them to converge randomly as they will. It was a surprise to me when I would listen back." Though it was recorded over a two-month period, the music of Here We Go Magic did, in a way, come flooding out of Temple. "It kind of did, obviously," says Temple. "It wasn't purely stream of consciousness. I needed to make very conscious decisions at times. I was, however, not editing myself very much. I was just letting myself respond in the most natural way possible, and I think it adds to a certain spontaneity." As for that amazing voice of his, on this record, Temple sinks his vocals into the instrumental fabric of this record. Putting them out front is not what he wanted to do. "I think of music in simple terms; the vehicle by which it is expressed needs not be fixed," says Temple. "It just happens that we have a categorization of vocal and non-vocal music. Why then is there no category for viola and non viola music? If you are a singer and a good one, you will be thought of as a singer above any other attribute you may possess musically. What people don't realize is that if Frank Sinatra didn't have an innate sense of time, melody and phrasing, his 'perfect pitch' would be sterile. I have always wanted my music to translate as a whole and not just about my voice. I guess with this one I succeeded in making that a little more clear."
Thursday, January 29, 2009 9:21:32 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Bobby Womack remembers Sam Cooke, talks Rock Hall
Posted by peter
 In a career filled with tragedy and triumph — one that will be recognized as worthy of induction into the hallowed Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame in April — one day stands above all the rest as being "the saddest day" of Bobby Womack's life. The date was Dec. 11, 1964. The R&B great's mentor, Sam Cooke, was shot dead in a Los Angeles hotel. Details of the tragedy remain murky, but for Womack, the memory of hearing the awful news is still vivid. He was on the road, having just pulled up to a motel in Houston when word of Cooke's death arrived. "I was getting everything out of the truck or whatever we were driving," recalls Womack. "I think we had one of [Cooke's] limousines and a truck that he used to carry the whole band in. And it was on the news that he had been killed. "That was the saddest day in my life — still today," Womack continues. "And I couldn't believe it because here was a guy that had so much life — so much life, and so much to give, and had given so much to the world. And I said, 'Man... amazing. I can't believe that.' A part of me died inside, and [pause] I'm still trying to recoup."  Womack would find himself embroiled in controversy after marrying Cooke's widow, Barbara Campbell, in March 1965. Many criticized him for doing it, and the fallout nearly ruined his career. However, to hear Womack today talk about how special Cooke was and what Cooke meant to him and his career, it would seem impossible to find fault with his motives. "I had learned so much from him, and I think the greatest thing, more than [anything] creative... He made you feel like you were the guy," says Womack. "And he admired you. And his spirit, the way he was, I say, he never complained. And I met superstars that forgot how they got there, and their attitude... They look down and they talk down to you. And Sam used to say, 'Bobby, if you're in a bad mood, go off outside and just lock the door. Nobody will know.' He said, 'When you come out of that [place], and you see people, and you're [supposed to be] giving those people inspiration,' he said, 'You can break their spirit just having a bad attitude.' And that stuck with me." On April 4, Womack will enter the Rock Hall with other new inductees Jeff Beck, Little Anthony & The Imperials, Wanda Jackson, Run DMC, Metallica, Spooner Oldham, Bill Black and DJ Fontana. This year's ceremonies will take place in Cleveland, home of the Rock Hall, for the first time. Cleveland just happens to be Womack's hometown, and he'll be the first solo artist from the city to be inducted. Of the honor, Womack says, "It's a great feeling. It's more of a feeling that I never recognized or took into consideration that one day I'll be in the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame. You know, one day I was making music and writing songs, and people were relating to it, and going all over the world and performing. It was a great thrill for me, and it still is, you know. I put that ahead of the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame. I'll go pick up that award and share it with the world." More of our interview with Womack — including his thoughts on the upcoming reissue of his classic albums The Poet & The Poet II, via the ABKCO label — will be coming soon in a feature story planned for our April 10 issue, which will feature stories on all the Rock Hall nominees. And, watch for a podcast of our interview with Womack coming to www.goldminemag.com in the coming days. To learn more about Bobby Womack, visit bobbywomack.com. And if you want to get into a discussion about the recent Rock Hall inductees, go to http://forum.goldminemag.com/tm.aspx?m=277&mpage=1&key=
Tuesday, January 27, 2009 9:00:03 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Thursday, January 22, 2009
A love letter to Willie Nelson from Phosphorescent
Posted by peter
 The dark Southern gothic alt.-country ruminations of Phosphorescent's early work practically had to shield its eyes from the diffused light and easy grace of 2007's Pride. A magnificent collection of folk hymns that grew from simple beginnings — soft melodies and delicately layered vocals — into spacious, crumbling mansions of earthy sound, Pride was a breakthrough record for Phosphorescent, the project of songwriter Athens, Ga., songwriter Matthew Houck. Not content to rest on his accolades, Houck reinvented Pride for the stage and from that experience, his confidence grew. Perhaps that's why he's decided to take on the songs of country-outlaw icon Willie Nelson on the upcoming Phosphorescent outing, To Willie, due out on the Dead Oceans label Feb. 3. A tribute record in every sense, Houck chose to tackle Nelson songs that have always held a special place in his heart. "I recorded probably my favorite Willie Nelson tune, 'My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys' a few years back on Phosphorescent's second album," says Houck. "I knew that I wanted to record more of these songs that had always meant so much to me and now have gotten the proper chance to."  Among the tracks on To Willie are "Reasons To Quit," "Pick Up The Tempo," "The Party's Over" and "I Gotta Get Drunk." A lot of the Phosphorescent versions feel "lived-in" in terms of mood and texture, and that's no accident. "I have lived with these songs since I was a little kid," explains Houck. "My Dad played Willie Nelson tapes when I was growing up, and these big sad old songs spoke to me deeply back then and I've carried them with me ever since. The songs themselves are pretty 'lived-in,' you know? That's their nature. They reveal themselves more and more to you as you get older. Certain things hit home more and more the older you get, and I expect they'll keep doin that." Expect to hear more of Phosphorescent down the line, and to read more about Houck's tribute to Willie Nelson in this blog. In the meantime, visit www.deadoceans.com to check out more about Phosphorescent.
Thursday, January 22, 2009 7:47:44 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Tommy James, the movies and the Mafia
Posted by peter
 It looks as if the Tommy James story is going to hit the silver screen, and none other than iconic director Martin Scorsese will be involved in the filming. That's according to James himself, who is going to be a busy man in 2009. In addition to the release of the two-CD retrospective of Tommy James And The Shondells singles titled Tommy James And The Shondells 40 Years: The Complete Singles Collection (1966-2006), James is prepping an autobiography — with significant attention paid to his years on the Roulette record label. "Well, you know, I began writing my autobiography about 10 years ago, really, in just sort of little drips and drabs, little pieces at a time," explains James. "And you know, I hoped someday it would come out as a book. Well, in the last few months, we did both the book, and we'd been approached to do a movie." The book, says James, is going to be put out by Simon & Schuster, and the publisher is shooting for an Aug. 9 release. The book has an eye-catching title. "The story got so involved with Roulette, which was really our label for so many years," says James. "About two-thirds of the book actually, the story actually concerns my relationship with Roulette. And Roulette was a pretty notorious place as far as wiseguys went, and New York. The bottom line is that Roulette Records, not too many people know, was a front for the Genovese crime family in New York City. And because of that, we were rubbing shoulders with some pretty notorious characters. And so, as we began writing the story, it got more and more involved with this stuff. So when we took the story, which was originally called 'Crimson and Clover,' to Simon & Schuster, they wanted to change the title to 'Me, The Mob and The Music.' So that's what it's going to be. A little more provocative title." Seeing as how gangsters and the Mafia were involved, perhaps inevitably, Scorsese — director of "Goodfellas," "Casino" and "The Departed" — came calling. "About three weeks later, we get a call that just blew our minds from Martin Scorsese's office," says James. "And we're going to be doing a movie with Martin Scorsese and Barry Rosen is going to be the executive producer from Triangle Pictures. And so, we're just as happy as we can be. And the movie, of course, is going to be about a two-and-a-half year undertaking, and we are signing contracts as we speak. And we will begin the casting and the screenplay right after probably the beginning of March. That's how quickly everything is going to come together, so we're pretty happy about that." When asked what actor he'd like to have portray him, James joked, "Well, you know, I can tell you who I want to play everyone else but me. I'm just too close to it. I'm the worst one to ask that question (laughs). Walter Brennan? (laughs) I don't know. I'm the worst one to ask when it comes to that, but it's got to be somebody who can play guitar as badly as I do (laughs). Let's put this in context: I'm the guy who took the solo on "Hanky Panky." You know what I'm saying? So let's just get real here for a minute (laughs)." As if that weren't enough, James said he and the original Shondells (Mike Vale, Eddie Gray and Ron Rosman) are going back to the studio. "This year we're going to start by recording singles," says James. "We're going to have a single out this year with myself and the original Shondells just about the time we'll make the announcement for the movie and the book, which we're going to do that on television — actually do it at B.B. King's, we're going to be performing at B.B. King's Feb. 10. And we'll make the announcement, but we're gonna, when the book comes out this summer, go make the rounds of all the TV shows, and I'm going to have the group play. And, you know, I'll have the both groups of Shondells — the touring band that I'm with now and the original group — Mike, Ronnie and Eddie — will all be onstage together. Be about nine of us altogether. I feel like Captain Kirk." In other Tommy James related news, of course, many know about Prince's cover of James' psychedelic mind-bender "Crimson and Clover." The timing of it is interesting. "You know it's amazing... well Prince, for example, released 'Crimson and Clover,' released it digitally. I don't even know if he's aware of this or not, the very... [it was] 40 years to the day that the original was released. Is that amazing? To the day... it was the same week. And maybe he planned that. He does that sort of thing. But I'm not even sure he knew it." There will be more on Tommy James in an upcoming print edition of Goldmine and look for a podcast of our interview to be posted soon at www.goldminemag.com. In the meantime, go to Tommy James' Web site, www.tommyjames.com. In the meantime, let's get a discussion going on what your favorite Tommy James song is.
Wednesday, January 21, 2009 5:23:32 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Monday, January 19, 2009
Midatlantic: Breaking the 'Silence' Part 2
Posted by peter
 If all Midatlantic had going for it was youthful passion and live-wire energy, this Boston/Dublin, Ireland quartet wouldn't be worth much ink. Luckily for them, its recent release, The Longest Silence, showcases the chiming melodies and post-punk dynamics that made early U2 such a sensation, while also engaging in the studied songcraft of Britpop artists such as Elbow and Travis. Enveloped in twinkling, atmospheric blackness, and featuring propulsive, New Wave dance grooves and emotionally charged lyrics, The Longest Silence is the perfect soundtrack for a late-night drive to contemplate life's possibilities or something tragic or sad that's overwhelming. On Friday, Part 1 of our interview with Midatlantic guitarist Barry Kelly covered much of the history of the band and touched on the new record. We continue with Part 2 in this segment, with Kelly (who is joined in Midatlantic by singer Mike Coen, drummer/producer Dave Franz and bassist Matt Diekmann) expounding on the group's influences, offering revealing insight into how certain songs on The Longest Silence were constructed and giving us a glimpse of the future for Midatlantic ( www.midatlantictheband.com). What initially hits me about your music are those guitars and how anthemic they are, and how it seems you're always pushing them higher and higher till they seem they can't go any further. There seem to be real emotional impulses behind that. How do you get the music to match the emotional outpouring of your lyrics?Barry Kelly: I have always approached the guitar from a different angle (As I mentioned, I was a drummer first). I didn’t learn conventional guitar playing so the “do some chords here and a solo there” method wasn’t a good fit for me. I just mix them all together. I feel the most important aspect is the melodic strain throughout. I listened a great deal to the Johnny Marrs and the Robert Smiths of the world. For me, it’s all about the guitar having a place that supports the song as a whole. Sometimes not playing is the best playing, or having the synth take on the lead. You’re also always refining and tightening up, especially when the lyrics arrive, which is usually much later in our case. I think on "Closing In" you really pull out all the stops. There is a sense that you're on this careening, dangerous joy ride that just keeps on going and going at the end, and you, as a listener, you almost feel like you want to jump out of this car, but you also want to see where it ends. Was that, in a sense, what you were going for?BK: Without a doubt, we also wanted to tip our hat a little toward the future and where we might go with our writing. This song was our first chance to really get out of the four-minute pop format that we write for so much. The tune was controlled chaos for a long time until we did some of the final mixes. Matt and Dave are so locked-in together, it was fun to have a little room to do what I liked on top. I am very proud of this song, and it’s probably the tune on the record I spend the most time listening to. At a few stages, you think it’s going to totally collapse, but it gains some melodic composure and continues. The dynamics on "Too Little Too Late" are really hard to keep up with. You change direction so often. But again, the ride is thrilling. Talk about how those dynamics develop.BK: This song I’d say it is one of the most raw on the record and definitely most fun to play live. We wanted to capture every drop of the live energy in the studio and think we did. It moves curiously between the verses and choruses but still manages to stay on track. We really enjoyed working on it musically; it’s simple but effective. "Damaged Goods" is a change of pace. It's slower, more acoustic and perhaps more atmospheric and starry. Was it important to show that side of the band on The Longest Silence?BK: Yes, we were very cognizant of tempo and tonal diversity for this record. Life Without Computers (the group's 2005 record, made at a time when they went by the name The Bleedin Bleedins) was galloping from start to finish with very little time for the ears to rest. We can be a melancholy bunch at times, and this song is one that just nearly wrote itself one day we were all together and feeling pretty rejected over something. The comparisons to early U2 are going to be made, but I hear ties to things like Joy Division and Franz Ferdinand as well, along with a lot of Britpop like Elbow and people like that. Is a lot of that the music that you found inspiring musically, and what, if anything, do you try to take from them and incorporate into your music?BK: Early U2 has this purity, and above the music, a nostalgia that you feel when you hear anything from War, Boy or The Unforgettable Fire. We’re influenced by the nostalgia in that respect. Elbow sounds like the kind of band that pores over their music in the studio for a great deal of time to get the best possible album. In this case, we are similar in our approach. All the bands you mentioned above are sonically interesting to me as a guitar player, and they maybe appear in some of our music thought that osmosis. We all have such different taste in music the common theme that keeps us all on the same page is melody; we’re slaves to it. What's next for Midatlantic?BK: Well, we’re going to continue to work hard promoting the album and playing as much as we can in Boston. We are hoping to do a few shows at SXSW and have a good deal of stuff lined up in NYC the early part of the year. There a few rumors of the album being released in Ireland before the summer, in that case we’ll be back over there for some summer festivals and shows. Who knows really? We’re going to work as hard as ever in 2009 and see what happens for us.
Monday, January 19, 2009 4:10:05 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Friday, January 16, 2009
Midatlantic: Breaking the 'Silence' Part 1
Posted by peter
 Hope and a defiant sense of optimism rush through the veins of Midatlantic's healing anthems like a drug that's somehow able to shock the heart awake after being dead for years. And the timing couldn't be better. Riding powerful, gripping emotions, this Boston-by-way-of-Dublin, Ireland, band seems capable of blowing the darkest clouds of gloom and depression out to sea on its latest LP, The Longest Silence, at a time in history when it's more imperative than ever that someone calls out, "Here comes the sun." Like U2 in the early days, Midatlantic (visit www.midatlantictheband.com to learn more) breathes in the chilly, dark, post-punk atmospherics of Joy Division and rings bell-like guitar that cuts through the air. Big choruses and crashing drums provide drama and violence, respectively, while singer Mike Coen's majestic voice is as comforting as a warm hand reaching out to hold yours in a desperate hour. But, it's the heart-pounding, dance-groove bass lines that drive this ship through tricky changes in melodic current, and make Midatlantic perhaps the biggest challenger to The Killers' dominion over '80s-inspired alternative-rock. Named after the ocean that separates its two homes, Midatlantic started out as a power trio known as The Bleedin Bleedins. Singer Mike Coen, guitarist Barry Kelly and drummer/producer Dave Franz formed the band in 2004, and its keen sense of labyrinthian dynamics and adrenaline-fueled, jagged guitar figures made their 2005 debut, Life Without Computers, a hit with critics and established a growing fan base. When bassist Matt Diekmann joined, however, the group's sound took on a more epic quality, and with the lineup change came a desire for a new name. Now complete, with an utterly appropriate moniker, Midatlantic is serving notice it's here to inspire with epics like "We Won't Stand Alone," the string-soaked beauty of "Love (Will Rule Your Heart Again)," the starry wonder of "Damaged Goods" and the go-for-broke closer "Closing In." In November, the band was invited to play pre-game at a New England Patriots game, and it appears bigger things are ahead for Midatlantic. Here's part 1 of our interview with Midatlantic guitarist Barry Kelly. Look for Part 2 on Monday. I thought it was an interesting choice having the close-up photo of speaker on the cover. This album, with the ringing guitars and the crashing drums, and the urgency of the bass, really feels like a call to something. Was there something that motivated the band to make an album that inspired listeners to really make changes in their lives?Barry Kelly: The speaker was very deliberate. In fact, the original sketch was a series of large, mounted bull-horn speakers on tall poles on a cliff face similar to the white cliffs of Dover, all projecting out into the ocean — meant to depict the longest silence. I suppose the music juxtaposes that idea with urgency, projection, energy and immediacy. We feel very strongly about the urgency and needs of the world from environment, to society. We all sort of got our individual concerns voiced; it’s now just about getting someone to listen. Let's talk about the name change. You were a power trio at first called the Bleedin Bleedins, and then you added bassist Matt Diekmann. How did Matt's arrival change the band, and why did you feel it was necessary to change the band name to Midatlantic?BK: It’s hard to remember a time when Matt wasn’t in the band to be honest. He brought an enthusiasm to the outfit that’s remained, and it’s pure magic. More than being a super musician, he is a great personality and solid anchor in many ways for the band. He broke us out of some of our usual habits when we approached the songwriting. And having another person on the stage to feed off has just jacked up the overall live energy. I’m sure anyone that has seen us since he joined will agree. The name change wasn’t exactly connected to Matt’s arrival; it was more about our new sound, a fresh start, and a new focus. We wanted to find a name that better defined our band, something that was a common trait. The Mid-Atlantic is the halfway point between Ireland and the U.S., and we’ve always been drawn in one way or another to the ocean. So much of The Longest Silence has metaphors and such related to the sea. What is it about big water that you find fascinating and why does it seem to reflect so much about what's happening in our internal lives and our relationships, etc.? BK: The ocean is fascinating to all of us in the band, and we’re all connected to it in different ways. The ocean’s vastness, its power, its mystery … it’s almost too easy to use it a metaphor. Who knows, maybe we’re just lazy. Whatever it is, we seem to keep coming back to it as a theme when we write and conceptualize our songs. Your first album as The Bleedin Bleedins was called Life Without Computers. Is that almost a dream of yours, to live without computers? To me, they seem to get in the way of ... well, living. BK: Well to be honest it was very tongue-in-cheek. We used technology so heavily on the making of the record that it could not have existed without computers. We all created song ideas in our home studios, emailed MP3s to each other, and then we’d work on them in our practice space. At the time, Dave and myself took on all the bass playing duties and would re-amp the bass live using Pro Tools. By the time the record was done, we were laughing about how it would have turned out without computers, which evolved into a discussion about life without them all together. It stuck as the album title. You and Mike go back to 2000. How did you two meet, and what was the musical chemistry like initially?BK: I was in a band that was here from Ireland touring. Mike came to one of our gigs, and we met and became buddies. It wasn’t until the rest of the band moved back to Ireland and I stayed that myself and Mike started writing. I was really learning the guitar at the time (I was a drummer in the previous band), and we just jumped into the writing. We were best pals by then so it was more fun than anything. My guitar playing left a lot to be desired, but we got our creative ideas across. We’ve always had super songwriting chemistry. He’s got an incredible grasp of melody; it just streams from him. I love to sit down and write with him. When Dave turned up, it was a perfect synergy. We all write very well together. "Shine" has a real life-affirming message that's really matched by the music. It seems to be about finding what's true about yourself so that you can be support for somebody else through tough times. Talk about writing and recording that song.BK: It would really be best to have Dave talk about this song as he pored over this tune more [than] any other I can remember. It’s very personal to him and a total classic. So rather than steal his thunder I’ll talk about recording it. More man-hours went into this song than any other. It has been tracked multiple times and remixed just as many. The guitar parts came to me very quickly for this tune, and it’s one I’m most proud of. The chorus just erupts and its got that top-down, "summer in the air" feel. For me the song is about hope — that day in June when it’s all going to fit into place. Does that day ever come? We all have our personal story.
Friday, January 16, 2009 4:55:13 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Tuesday, January 13, 2009
The story behind Fire's 'Father's Name Is Dad'
Posted by peter
 It appeared on Nuggets II: Original Artyfacts From The British Empire, and in 2004, Will Sergeant, writing for the U.K. publication The Independent, included the song in his Top 10 Psychedelic British Songs of all-time. The track in question is Fire's "Father's Name Is Dad," the U.K. underground progressive/psych trio's debut single, and its guitar intro was mentioned in the article as being better than that of "Last Train To Clarksville" by The Monkees. Fire's penultimate song, revived on the 2008 album The Magic Shoemaker Live, a concert LP documenting Fire's 2007 well-received reunion shows (photographed at right by Les Cotton), has generated tons of accolades over the years, despite never having been a hit. And it's been covered to death. For Dave Lambert's money, however, no cover version of "Father's Name Is Dad" compares to what The Pet Shop Boys did to it for the B-side to their single titled "Flamboyant." It featured Lambert's riffs and — just so you don't think they took credit for something they didn't do — the electronic duo credited Lambert as a co-writer. In a recent interview, Lambert had this to say about the song, Decca producer Tony Clarke's role in it and how the song came to be: "I find it difficult to put into words how I feel about Father’s Name. I’m so proud, and I know the other guys are, of what’s happened with it over the 40 years since we recorded it. We have now lost count of the number of cover versions that exist, and there are probably more to be discovered yet. I recently unearthed a version by a Swedish band called The Kings which was recorded in 1968 so, probably, that has to be the earliest, and there are still versions being recorded today. The Pet Shop Boys sampled the riffs for the B-side of their hit single "Flamboyant," a song called "I Didn’t Get Where I Am Today." Although I’ve not heard a lot of their tracks, I was very impressed with that one; I might be a bit biased there though. "In early ’67 I still had a day job at Heathrow Airport and most day I would have to drive around the perimeter track in order to visit the various airlines. I would use those drives as songwriting time and I soon found that the drone of the engine and the rhythm of the road was inspirational. I wrote 'Father’s Name Is Dad' and 'Treacle Toffee World' whilst driving a green Mini. "'Father’s Name' and 'Treacle Toffee' are both about the same thing: equality. 1967-68 was a tense period of marches and riots against racial and social inequality; I used the simplest terms I could: ‘I’m the same as everyone else, my father’s name is dad just like yours’. "Tony Clarke came to a Fire rehearsal in late ’67, and we did a kind of audition for him. We played a couple of tunes and he immediately picked out 'Father’s Name Is Dad' and 'Treacle Toffee World' as the two we should record first. "Tony was a superb producer, recording was easy with him and he got things done quickly and effortlessly. Being a staff producer he would take tea-breaks and lunch-breaks, it was a very structured day. Backing-tracks where finished before lunch, vocals after lunch and mixing late afternoon." "In those days Decca would pay for the recording at their West Hampstead studios and later a panel would listen to the tracks and decide whether or not to offer the band a contract, we got our contract." Read the Jan. 30 issue of Goldmine to find out more about Fire, or go to www.myspace.com/2007fire to hear tracks and see what Lambert and company are up to.
Tuesday, January 13, 2009 8:53:35 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Monday, January 12, 2009
TAB The Band: Salvaging an interview Part II
Posted by peter
 Being the sons of a rock icon like Joe Perry has its advantages. Dropping that name on a few labels can certainly kick open a few doors that would be closed to other artists. And yet, for Tony and Adrian Perry, two thirds of the powerhouse, bash-and-pop, blues-rock trio TAB The Band, being able to stand on your own two feet and blow away crowds with your own furious racket — not your dad's old Aerosmith hand-me-downs — is probably more important. And then there's the matter of living up to your father's legend. That alone might have scared them off and prevented them from following in the family business. But, it didn't, and for Tony and Adrian, rock 'n' roll stardom is not a birthright. They see it as a battle for the souls of listeners, and it's one they're going to fight on their own. "We don't want to flaunt it... and we can't avoid it either," says Tony Perry, TAB's guitarist/vocalist. "We were born into it... I was never like, 'I don't wanna be a musician. I don't wanna be a musician.' And it just like kind of happens." Adrian adds, "Tony and I have this opinion on it. [You] kind of roll with the punches, and you know, we're just trying to show that we can do what we can do, and we'll either stand up on our own, or we won't and it's not going to matter." Now, anybody who has heard TAB The Band will undoubtedly find parallels between TAB and Aerosmith, especially on the band's debut full-length Pulling Out Just Enough To Win. TAB's sound is guitar-oriented, meat-and-potatoes rock with dirty, gutbucket grooves and a wild streak running right through it that harkens back to the Rolling Stones and smashed headlong into punk rock. And you'll notice Tony's proficiency with slide guitar. "I never had any formal slide training or anything," says Tony. "I just kind of came up... [it's like] oh, put in like an open G, and put the slide on the my finger and start playing. I definitely like the more reckless, live sound, with a lot of dirt on top of it. I'm a huge fan of like punk music and like The Ramones and The Misfits and stuff, and I try mixing a lot of that like simplicity with like the rock idea. You know, when I play slide, and I play a lot of straight chords... you can slide in and out of them." To hear what all the hot fuss about TAB The Band is, visit www.myspace.com/tabtheband or www.tabtheband.com to read about the group and hear a few of their tracks.
Monday, January 12, 2009 4:08:34 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Thursday, January 08, 2009
TAB The Band: Salvaging an interview
Posted by peter
 Technology is wonderful, but even the most advanced equipment craps out from time to time. Such was the case when Goldmine tried last spring to interview TAB The Band, a sweaty, swaggering blues-rock, power trio that features Tony and Adrian Perry, the sons of Aerosmith's Joe Perry. Phones kept cutting out and there was so much echo in the final recording that it was difficult to make out much of what they were saying. However, I've noticed recently that a lot of you seem to have taken an interest in TAB The Band. As well you should. TAB is a lot like Aerosmith and Exile On Main Street-era Rolling Stones, only dirtier and perhaps even more brash, with a punk edge to their sound. I went back through the MP3s I had and tried to salvage some of it to give you a little taste of what TAB is all about. So, here goes: When asked about the inevitable comparisons to their father's band, and how TAB seems to take early Aerosmith and rough it up a little, Adrian, TAB's bassist, said, "I don't know if we had like a goal initially on where we wanted to take things. We just kind of got together and this is what comes out. So, you know, I mean we definitely... the influences are there. I mean, before this record we were listening to a lot of Stones stuff, and you know, that kind of comes through, but ... so I guess some of it comes out heavier, you know, but some of it will, you know, will come out lighter. We just kind of let it naturally occur. We don't try and force anything." TAB's debut album was titled Pulling Out Just Enough To Win, and there's a song on it called "Chuckles" that is as sinful and gritty as anything on Exile, which the two brothers talked up as being an influence on the record. As for how the band formed, Adrian dismissed any notion that there could be some trepidation about playing in a group with his sibling. "The thing just came about spontaneously," Adrian says. "I mean, I'd been playing in my own band for a while, and writing songs and Tony had his bands and was doing his thing, you know, and we just kind of got together, with (drummer) Ben Tileston, and just kind of .. it just kind of happened. There was no like thought process like what are we getting into. We just kind of started playing and jamming, you know. The only real writing we'd done together before TAB had just sort of been like fun one-off songs, you know... (Tony interjects) "... like parodies of rap songs. We were just messing around in the studio kind of thing. Adrian: "And like Tony's a really good engineer. He's engineered my old bands and old songs, and we just got together and starting jamming with Ben, it was kind of like, 'Oh, we should really... let's do a gig, you know.' Now let's see what happens, and it just kind of started from there, so I guess we've had to learn on the job the things that like go with playing in a band together and you know, but it's been pretty fun, you know." That's it for now. I'll see if there's anything else worth saving. In the meantime, head on over to www.myspace.com/tabtheband or www.tabtheband.com to find out more about TAB.
Thursday, January 08, 2009 11:01:57 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Wednesday, January 07, 2009
Martin Bisi: A conversation Part 3
Posted by peter
 Among the many artists producer Martin Bisi has worked with over the years is one Ginger Baker, who, of course, is known far and wide as the wonderfully talented drummer for Cream. In this, the third and final installment of our conversation with Bisi, who recently released a strikingly original solo album titled Sirens of the Apocalypse, he talks about working with Baker on the legendary skins punisher's solo album, Middle Passage, and touches on his experience with Brian Eno, before taking us inside the studio that's been the site of so much groundbreaking experimental recording over the years. Talk about your work with Ginger Baker on his solo album, Middle Passage. Martin Bisi: Yeah, well that was an interesting concoction. I think that was at a time when ... that was my first reforming with [longtime collaborator Bill] Laswell, because we kind of had our falling out, and then we sort of reformed again a bit. And then, when we reformed, he was like balls-out world music, you know. It’s funny because early, early material with Bill... my early stuff was almost like New Wave pop-rock. And then he slowly, slowly started going more blatant into like world music. Anyway, so that was part of that reforming the first time we got back together. He was being very prolific. At that time, he had a label deal with Island, and I remember, specifically, we were just kicking stuff out. It was almost just more about recording ideas, and it was all very Laswell oriented, and there was a lot of experimentation and weird sampling and stuff, and we would just get guests. And I think the problem with that was, it was hard to know what anything was. Like we would just record things, and we would go, “Well, what is this?” I remember it was starting to be a little improvised as to what things were, like he would go, “Well, maybe this could be material?” And then there was some other songs where one of his collaborators, Nicky Scopalitis — who plays a lot of like, you know, near-Eastern stringed instruments, like Utes, and Bazukis and stuff — and if Nicky played a lot on that song, basically, Bill would be, “You know what, this could be a Nicky. This could be part of the Nicky record.” And then he’d go, “Well then, maybe Nicky should throw in another couple of songs.” So, then we have a Nicky record. So, really, it wasn’t even clear what things were. Strangely enough, the Ginger Baker record was a little like that. It was like, “Oh, we’ll have Ginger Baker come in and play.” And he played, and then, suddenly, it was like, “You know what? Hey, this could be a Ginger Baker record.” So, I know that sounds a little odd, but that’s kind of how it went, and then we told... well, you know, we, I wasn’t at that conversation, but I guess Bill told Ginger, “Hey, you know what? We’d love to make a Ginger Baker record,” after it was half recorded, and he played the drums on everything. So, that was actually really funny because they arrived, and it’s funny because I knew, and Bill was like, “Don’t say anything.” But, that’s what I’m thinking about. And I’m like, OK, and they arrived after having that lunch, and then Ginger was just like totally making fun of us, like (imitating Ginger), “OK, can I hear my record, then? Would that be OK? And if I have an idea for my record, would that be OK, too? And what’s the artwork going to be for my record?” He was totally like making fun of us. It was pretty hilarious. So, I’m not trying to denigrate it at all, but you know, it is... I think it’s legitimate as a Ginger Baker record, but that’s kind of what happened. A lot of work has been done over the years at BC Studio, the recording space you’ve owned since the early ’80s. How has the space evolved since the early days, and what kind of environment did you want to create with it?MB: Yeah, it has physically changed quite a bit actually. Initially, it didn’t have the bottom floor. Initially, it was just two floors, and I guess the top floor doesn’t really count, because that’s kind of where I live, and that’s sort of the lounge area and stuff. But, initially, it was just the two floors. So, I actually recorded everything in the control room. In other words, the board and the speakers were right there, and then there was like a large space in front of the board, and that’s where people recorded. Also, one thing that’s kind of significant is, with me, I didn’t really start envisioning a big career as an engineer or producer. It was literally something that I felt I could do and contribute, and I enjoyed it, but there was no big, long-term plan. I sort of started dabbling with it when I was 17, but that was more so, because there was like no place I felt I fit in musically. And I played drums at the time, and it didn’t seem like... I mean, for some reason, everything I played sounded very like funky, and it just didn’t seem like there was anywhere for me to fit in. Also, it seemed like drumming wasn’t really... I mean, even though I related to it as an instrument, it didn’t seem like it was involved enough in a way. I mean, drums, it’s just play the beat. It seemed like recording and being involved with producing, it was actually more creative in a bigger sense than actually drumming. I don’t want to put down drumming, but that’s how I was feeling. Like it seemed like, unless I was going to be an unbelievable drummer, there was something more exciting that I could be doing. Also, what’s funny is, I just had a very strange, incredibly confident attitude. I can’t believe how confident I was. I actually believed that I was so the man that I could walk into any recording situation, without even knowing anything, and just do something just because I was me. I mean, it’s unbelievable when I think about it, because I don’t definitely don’t have those kinds of balls now, I think. I don’t ... I assume if I don’t know about how to do something, it’s not going to fly. Then I figured I don’t even need to know. I just go in, and I just start touching things and things are just going to happen. I totally believed that, and sometimes, it worked, and sometimes it didn’t. In fact, when I worked with Eno, I think I had that kind of attitude, and it was fine for about a day, and then he soon realized I didn’t know anything. But, what’s so funny is, I completely presented myself like, “Yeah, I can do this.” So, I don’t know how you want to categorize that. I guess it’s just youthful folly, youthful overconfidence, maybe just ignorance. I really believed there was nothing more to know about it. So, my point is, is that the studio was pretty bare knuckles. And, because I just thought I was doing this just at the moment, yeah we’re going to record next week, yeah, maybe we can get some stuff and record a few records, you know? I really wasn’t thinking... I wasn’t making plans for 10 years or anything like that. And, I wasn’t making any plans in terms of like great recordings. I wasn’t even thinking... that’s maybe why my attitude of recording was that way. I wasn’t really thinking along the lines of sessional recording. I wasn’t even suggesting that I was getting anyone a professional recording. In fact, I was almost against professional-sounding recording. I would hear them and go, "Yeah, you can just totally tell that’s some professional stuff." You know, and I would just be like ... in fact, the thing I really despised at the time was like fusion. There was a lot of very clean, very separated sounding recordings of like fusion of rock and jazz ... like Jeff Beck kind of stuff. And that’s the stuff I was like, “you can hear every single thing. How boring is that?” So, I had this attitude, I would just go in there, and it would just be right. So, anyway, with the studio being totally ... not a sort of, you know, well-honed situation ... you know, that’s just kind of how it was. The board and the monitors were right in front in the same room, and eventually I acquired the space underneath. And that’s when I started getting a little more serious. I mean, the space underneath me was just available, and I thought, “Maybe I should get this.” And then it occurred to me, maybe I could be a little more serious and actually think about acoustics and stuff, and then that’s when I started really going into a different place. That took a little while. What’s next for Martin Bisi?MB: Honestly, I’m just trying to focus on me, as an artist. I must admit I’ve gotten a little disillusioned about ... a little disillusioned, I don’t want to make it out to be a very negative thing, but I’ve got a bit disillusioned about recording and engineering and producing. And basically, most of my creative output belongs to someone else. It has someone else’s name on it, and in a big way, it’s very hierarchical in a sense, you know? It’s like... and I know it’s hierarchical, but what’s been stunning to me is, how extremely hierarchical it is, not just that the artist’s name is at the front. It’s just that that’s all anyone really cares about. It’s a very tiny niche of people who really care who recorded a record, even though the whole process of recording, of anything really, is very collaberative, but really, it’s like this hierarchy. It’s not just hierarchy. It’s like, winner takes all in a sense, you know. So, I guess I’ve just been feeling like engineering and producing is not exactly the best deal in a way. It’s almost like the more successful stuff becomes — I mean honestly, not to be too negative, because I’ve gotten a lot of good from all this — I’ve felt almost a little ripped off at times, you know, and it’s consistent. It’s not like one or two times. It’s like it’s just the way it works, so not to be too negative, but I’m trying to be me, me, me.
Wednesday, January 07, 2009 9:10:35 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Tuesday, January 06, 2009
Martin Bisi: A conversation Part 2
Posted by peter
 Throughout much of Martin Bisi's career, John Zorn and Bill Laswell have served as his co-conspirators in furthering musical experimentation and pushing the envelope to its tearing point in the wild, lawless world of the avant-garde. There were also dalliances with Brian Eno and his ambient-music projects along the way, and then came perhaps his most important contribution — helping Herbie Hancock unleash the robotic funk-jazz fusion of "Rockit" on the world. In 2008, Bisi, known primarily as a producer, released the completely unconventional Sirens Of The Apocalypse LP, a highly literate album of original music that dealt heavily with gender issues and did so with Bisi's usual flair for experimental recording and creating unique melodies. In Part 2 of our interview with Bisi, he talks about his relationships with Zorn, Laswell and Eno, and the genesis of Hancock's "Rockit." Look for Part 3 tomorrow, and do check out www.martinbisi.com to learn more about one of the most original, innovative musical svengali's of this age. Around 1979-80, you fell in John Zorn and Bill Laswell, two pioneers exploring the frontier of musical experimentation. And later, you met Brian Eno and participated in recording sessions that produced material for Eno’s ambient series. What did you find you had in common with these musicians?Martin Bisi: Um, well, it’s really kind of hard to answer, because it’s hard to really know. In fact, I’m still discovering that. I sort of fell out with... I fell out with Zorn and Laswell, and I’ve just recently, like in the last year, sort of reconnected, and it’s funny because we’re all of us still sort of discovering what it was, what social chemistry drew us together, made us create together, what we had in common. I mean, we’re still discovering it. I think the whole chemistry of it is very complicated, and it’s definitely hard for me, because I was 17 and 18 then. For me to give you any real analysis of what was going on, I think it’s impossible because I just wasn’t sophisticated enough or wise enough to understand all the things that were going on. I think a lot of it was instinct, you know, something instinctual just — and social — kind of brought us together, because when you think about it, we’re very different, you know. Laswell doesn’t ... he told me the other day, he was like, “You know what, I don’t like jazz,” for instance, and Zorn is totally, like, “jazz.” Bill is totally into this like dub thing. I don’t think Zorn likes dub, you know, terribly much. And look at me. I’m like trying to make, you know, catchy melodies and create like little, you know, catchy choruses. Zorn is definitely not into that. You know, I remember sometimes using the word “hook” around him, and he’d go, “Oh God, hooks. What are you, trying to be like R.E.M.?” You know what I mean? And I’m like, “Yeah, maybe a little.” So, in terms of what drew us together, in a way, we’re all coming from completely different kind of places and perspectives. I think a lot of it, very simply, is we communicated. That’s what I meant by the social chemistry. We probably communicated well, and there’s something to be said for that. Also, the energy. We communicated well, and we’re all willing, and we’re all very eager to work and to be industrious and produce things. So, it’s just the fodder for creativity in that... it’s almost like action, you know. It’s like, if we communicate and use some of the same language, and there’s respect, like we respect what each other does and [are] sort of fascinated by it... like Zorn was always a little fascinated by some of the rock stuff I was doing, like Live Skull or Foetus. And it’s nothing like what he does, but he always had a little, kind of a side respect for that. And you know, I really did love his avant-garde stuff. Although it’s funny, for me, being a musician, you’ll notice I never once tried to be in one of his games. I never once tried to be in one of his avant-garde game performances like at all. I mean, I’m happy to be in the audience for that stuff, but it’s just not what I feel like doing. So, I think, yes, it’s just communication — very personal all that kind of stuff. That’s also what I said before about working with stuff that’s grass roots, you know. That there’s something, rather than people just call me because they’ve read the bio or something. People that I’ve met that’s, just over a little bit of time, start thinking, “Oh, maybe there’s something here,” or they realize we communicate well together or have fun together, and that’s sometimes when the good stuff happens. Your partnership with Laswell’s Material project eventually led to the world of hip-hop and your work with Herbie Hancock on “Rockit,” a track that won Hancock a Grammy. Take us through the recording process for that, and the inspiration for it, and what are your reflections on it all these years later?MB: Well, that’s a song that’s really given me a tremendous amount of satisfaction, you know, to have been involved in. I think, because it did so much for hip-hop, I think it really just did a lot for the country, even, because it was sort of the first song to really identify urban, I think, as a mass market; as a sort of, you know, national market, as opposed to strictly just something that just happened in their city. So, that gave me a lot of satisfaction. Occasionally, maybe this is going a bit far on that, but sometimes I even think that song saved lives, because that time was also very violent, very, very rough, you know, in the cities. I mean, there was a lot of crime — lots and lots of crime, self-destructive and very dangerous, very gang-oriented, and you know, somehow, hip-hop, despite the gangsta rap sensibilities and all that other stuff, it led to a lot of health in a way. There was a lot of young people with more self-respect and a lot less of an interest in crime. Like, I didn’t have to walk down the streets of Brooklyn scared of every group of teenagers I’d see on every corner, like I used to, you know. But, anyway, the song itself, interestingly enough, was initially supposed to be a demo. We didn’t really know that we’d be working on the Herbie Hancock record. Herbie told Bill that... well, he said that he wanted to do something like “Buffalo Gals,” which was a song that Malcolm McLaren had done, which was a bit of a club hit, you know, and it was sort of hip-hop oriented. It’s funny because Malcolm McLaren... he was the first one who sort of did something in hip-hop, you know, that was sort of not just in the Bronx, you know. He did something in England that started getting played in New York in the clubs, and Herbie said to Bill, “I want to do something like that.” And we’d already been going to like the hip-hop nights at this club called The Roxy, which was amazing, and like, you know, everyone was down there, whether it was Sonic Youth or Madonna. That’s where you always headed on a Friday night, and all the break dancers would come out and everything. So, Bill said, “Oh, we know a lot of these people. Why don’t we throw something together.” And so, in the studio, at my place, we just started throwing [stuff] together as a demo, with a drum machine, and we got a little more sophisticated with it than just the demo. We added some Baata percussion, which is like this Afro-Cuban instrument that’s always played in threes, but it’s like three instruments that are always played together. It’s very odd. It’s nothing like Carribean or Cuban music that you normally will hear. It’s very odd percussion, no time signature... it’s very interesting. But anyway, that’s the stuff you hear through “Rockit” and in the background all these sounds that go, “bum bum ba, bum bum bum ba”... you know, that stuff, and it’s like three Bataas. We did that. That was recorded at my place. We did the scratching. The funny thing about the scratching, by the way, was ... because Bill kept giving the DJ records to scratch, and the DJ couldn’t find anything — and Bill was giving him stuff like world music stuff; he would give him some Gamelon stuff or some stuff from India or Jujuca, or something — and the guy was like, “I don’t know. I’m not finding anything to scratch.” And then, it was funny, because there was a pile of records that I’d recorded just kind of sitting there by the side, and I just picked one up off the top, because we really weren’t getting anywhere, and I said, “Why don’t you see if you can find something on this?” And I gave him this other hip-hop record and on the record, which is recorded at my place, he found a little vocoder break with the guy where there’s like... a vocoder is like a synthesized sounding voice, right? And the voice goes, “This stuff is really fresh.” And so he goes and he finds this and goes, “Oh, you know, maybe this will work — ‘fresh.’” So, then that worked. So, I mean, what’s funny to me is that on “Rockit,” the record that’s scratched [was] also recorded at the studio.
Tuesday, January 06, 2009 7:28:58 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Monday, January 05, 2009
Martin Bisi: A conversation Part 1
Posted by peter
 The list is a long one. Herbie Hancock, Afrika Bambaata, Brian Eno, Ginger Baker, John Zorn, Bill Laswell, Sonic Youth, Swans, the Dresden Dolls ... all have worked with the gifted producer/engineer Martin Bisi. Known best, perhaps, for the work he did with Laswell’s Material project that resulted in the recombination of hip-hop and jazz DNA in Herbie Hancock’s Grammy-winning single “Rockit,” Bisi’s first real recording session was with Eno in the early ’80s. It was Eno who helped Bisi and Laswell construct a recording space in Brooklyn — BC Studio, which was originally dubbed OAO (Operation All Out, from William Burroughs’ novel “Naked Lunch”) that has served as a sort of sound lab for some of the major artists making provocative avant-garde and indie-rock music over the last few decades. It was Bisi’s explorations of early hip-hop that landed him a job as producer of early Sonic Youth records Evol and Bad Moon Rising, and after Bisi severed ties with Laswell and Material, he helped Cop Shoot Cop, Foetus, Live Skull and Unsane — to name a few — develop their own revolutionary aesthetic. In 1988, Bisi got back with Material and the production team found itself in demand, with artists like Iggy Pop, The Ramones and White Zombie vying for their services. Forays into world music included work on a Ginger Baker solo album, Middle Passages. Coming out from behind the boards in 2008. Bisi released his fourth solo album, Sirens of the Apocalypse (visit www.martinbisi.com to learn more about Bisi and the LP), an exploration of experimental-pop that draws inspiration from a variety of female characters. In part 1 of our interview with Bisi, we explore his new album, his work with Sonic Youth and his interest in graffiti art. While Sirens of the Apocalypse is sort of all over the map musically, veering from shoegazer to punk-cabaret (“Goth Chick ‘98”) to psychedelia to straight-up indie rock, the overall production harkens back to the frenzied, burned-out beauty of the Sonic Youth recordings you worked on. Is there anything in particular you wanted to draw on from your experiences recording Sonic Youth for this record?Martin Bisi: Well, I think we kind of have a common sensibility. So, it wasn’t really ... I mean, the sensibility was probably just there in my personality and maybe by complete coincidence, you know. I don’t think that they really sought me out because I’ve had a lot of ... I actually know for a fact that they didn’t seek me out because I had experience with the kind of stuff they wanted to do. I think at that point things were pretty unsophisticated. They weren’t really thinking, “Oh, this person has a lot of studio experience with this kind of music.” There really wasn’t such a thing as someone with an indie-rock track record in recording — certainly not in multi-track recording. It hadn’t really gotten to that level. I think a lot of that music hadn’t really gotten to that... hadn’t even gone into a multi-track recording studio. So, they came after me really because I’d been doing a lot of hip-hop. And they were pretty fascinated by that whole thing, and then it turned out that I think a lot of our common experiences with... I mean, there’s definitely a lot of noise and a lot of abstract sonic stuff happening in New York and from different fields, you know. There was like No-Wave. Even punk rock was sort of noisy and chaotic, you know, even straight-up punk rock. And then there was avant-garde... well, avant-garde was kind of an old story at that point, but it was sort of being reinvented, and even though Sonic Youth sort of were disassociating themselves with the avant-garde, they actually did not want to seem too arty, although that seems to be a little ironic at this point. It does, yeah.MB: But, they really wanted to draw the distinction. I mean, they were trying to be a bit more punk rock. And I think that’s why they were drawn to hip-hop in general. You know, that was sort of... that had a lot of street cred at the time, and I guess people didn’t want to be too highbrow. At least, I know they didn’t want to be too highbrow, and you can definitely see that in some of the lyrics. And people don’t really talk much about Sonic Youth’s lyrics, but a lot of their stuff is pretty much like... you know, kind of low brow, in some ways. Yes, celebrity obsessed in some tracks.MB: Oh, yeah, that too, for sure. But definitely with a detached irony.MB: Yeah, that’s in my stuff, too. Like in Sirens, it’s also... because all creativity is sort of reactionary, you know. I get flooded with a lot of highbrow, heady stuff. That’s the stuff that usually gets all the props, anyway. And then part of me is like, well, you know, there’s something to be said for low-brow, you know. I like Tone-Loc, or whatever — “Do The Wild Thing” or something. There’s another side to creativity. And what’s funny is, ’cause someone had commented about like three months ago, they were just like kind of dismissing Sonic Youth a little bit, saying, “Well, some of those lyrics like, you know, it’s pretty much like let’s do it in the back seat.” There’s literally Sonic Youth lyrics that are like that. You know, and I thought, well, that’s funny. No one ever talks about that. And I was like, yeah, that is in there. And I was thinking, that’s funny. That’s like me also. Gender issues are addressed heavily on this record. Where do you think relations between the sexes sit at this juncture in history, and why did you want to explore in such detail how women live?MB: Well, um, it’s funny because in the past I always thought the idea of singing about girlfriends and loves and all these things I thought was sort of trite and maybe not very exciting in terms of songwriting. And I think maybe it was a time when I was young where I really didn’t care about, you know, songs about relationships or whatever, but I guess as it’s worn on, as my life has worn on, I’ve realized that that’s where really so much of the passion is. And as I’ve gotten older, and I grow more skeptical about other things, you know, whether it’s politics or the like, there’s no ... a lot less of my passion is invested in other things. You grew up in New York City in the ’60s and early ’70s into a musical family that wanted to instill a full appreciation of formal, classical music. But you fought against that, and as a teen, you did a lot of graffiti art. Was that just the usual sort of teenager rebelling against what his parents thought was important, or was there something about the avant-garde that attracted you on a deeper level?MB: I think a lot of it may be as simple as the usual teenage rebellion, you know. But I do think it might have been a good fit. You know, there might have been, in some other era, maybe it wouldn’t have been. Like I wonder, if I was that age now, whether I would have fit into anything, and whether I could have quote “succeeded” in a sense... because I’m still a bit of a late-’70s person, you know. When you talk to me about my views on art or politics and stuff, it’s kind of late ’70s, so would I be ... that’s kind of one of those questions that’s impossible to answer. It’s sort of like, if we could go ahead like 40 years and have the same 47-year-old version of me, you know, 40 years from now, would I be the same person with the same viewpoints? I kind of think maybe I’d have the same viewpoints, but maybe things wouldn’t have panned out. Basically, there was a place for me, and there’s a lot about graffiti that kind of resonated. Also, I think like you could just say it’s art. And you could say, that’s art, and there’s other art forms and other expressions now that sort of... you know, it’s still creativity. I think there are certain underlying sort of philosophies and attitudes that are kind of different. I mean, maybe these things go in cycles, but graffiti sort of resonated because it was very... one thing I did like about graffiti is that it had a very yin-yang kind of attitude. One thing I liked was, to really be considered graffiti, a graffiti artist, and not a "toy" — that was the term, you know, or dilettante or whatever — you had to have skills, and you had to get up, which means that it wasn’t enough to draw on your personal notebook. You had to actually be out on the street. You had to be in people’s faces. You had to be in public view. And in a way, that’s still kind of how I feel. I’m a little shameless in feeling like that things need to be kicked out there. And I kind of feel like to me art is... it should be heard, it should be seen. You know, sometimes it seems like I’m shamelessly into self-promoting and making sure that things succeed or get out there, but it’s just sort of an ethic. It’s a bit of a yin and yang. Like with graffiti, if you weren’t putting it out on the street, if it wasn’t visible, publicly visible, it wasn’t even considered graffiti.
Monday, January 05, 2009 3:45:15 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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