quarta-feira, 19 de novembro de 2014

For Ex Lovers with Dear Eloise - An Interview



Semana dos chineses no TBTCI, ontem apresentamos o Forsaken Autumn e agora é a vez do duo Dear Eloise, cultuado nos meios iniciados, os caras tem dois álbuns bem legais no currículo, The Words That Burnt de 2011 e Beauty in Strangers de 2012, ambos seguem a mesma temática, noise pop ruidoso lembrando Black Tambourine, Velocity Girl e as guitar bands do início dos 90´s.

Pena que não toquem ao vivo, porque seria um deleite ficar pulando sem parar enquanto a parede ruidosa do Dear Eloise fosse entrando pelos tímpanos.

Dear Eloise é pra dias ensolarados como hoje, pra colocar nos fones e sair dando um rolê pela cidade, e feliz da vida.

***** Interview with Dear Eloise *****


Q. When did Dear Eloise starts, tell us about the history...
----The project starts at late of 2008. But the idea of doing a project like this was in our mind for many years. At that time Yang Haisong got some money from a tour with his main band P.K.14, so it seems be a good time to start Dear Eloise. At the end of 2008 we bought a home recording system and found out an empty space to move in and record all tunes.

Q: Who are your influences?
----Both of us love Jesus and Mary Chain for many years, that's the biggest inspiration.

Q. Made a list of 5 albums of all time…
----Television
Gastr Del Sol
Jesus and Mary Chain
John Coltrane
Кино

Q. How do you fell playing live?
---We don't play live, that's the 1st agreement between two of us even before we start the band. We all agree that Dear Eloise should be only on recording, even not on internet and in an interview, actually your interview is 2nd one in last 6 years.

Q. How do you describe Dear Eloise sounds?
----I guess simply say "noise+pop".


Q: Tell us about the process of recording the songs ?
----We like to try different way to record the albums, sometime we finished the songs before we went to studio, sometimes we wrote only part of music, or some chords, and sometimes nothing but a rough idea or conception. Usually we spent a week or 10 days in studio with an assistant engineer and see what's gonna be happened, mostly we got good result when we 're out of studio, sometimes it's not very good.

Q. Which new bands do you recommended?
----We like to introduce some of Chinese new bands, like Fallacy, The fuzz, Hiperson, and birdstriking.

Q: Which bands you love to made a cover version?
----We did cover version of "you're my mirror" by Velvet Underground, and we have an ideas to cover some of songs from local scene by the end of this year, that would be a lot of fun.

Q: What´s the plans for future....
----New recording is on the road.

Q: Any parting words?
----Thanks !
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thank you

terça-feira, 18 de novembro de 2014

Taste The Floor with Kill Your Boyfriend -An Interview




O italianos Matteo Scarpa e Antonio Angeli formam o duo Kill Your Boyfriend, onde qualquer semelhança com Suicide, J&MC e SY não é mera coincidência.

O debute homônimo lançado ano passado é um ataque bombástico de ruído branco e ao mesmo tempo com momentos altamente dançantes, lembra em determinados momentos o Crocodiles em início de carreira, só que mais podre e sujo.

Xavier umas das músicas do álbum é épica marychainiana até a medúla, Dexter é onde se aproximam do já citado Suicide, curiosidade é que as canções do disquinho todas tem como título um nome próprio, uma obsessão? Talvez, bem como o lado B.R.M.C. que permeia todo o trabalho.

Mais um belo trabalho da efervescente cena italiana.


***** Interview with Kill Your Boyfriend *****



Q. When did Kill your Boyfriend starts, tell us about the history...
M.S.: The band started in 2011. At first it was just me and former member Marco Fontolan, just synthbass, guitar and drum machine. We decided to record five songs right away, trying to reproduce the rough and noisy sound we got during our sessions, a sort of mix between post punk/no wave and shoegaze. For the live set Roberto Durante joined us playing the synthbass and I started to play as second guitar. In 2013 the three of us recorded our first album "Kill Your Boyfriend", out by Shyrec label. Then Roberto quit and we changed the live set introducing a real drummer, Antonio Angeli, and using a sequencer to play the bassline. In August 2014 Marco decided to leave the band; next December we are releasing a 10" split with two songs. Antonio and I are currently recording the new album and it will probably be released in 2015.

Q: Who are your influences?
MS: We are post punk lovers but we are also influenced by psychedelic and noisy band such as The Velvet Underground, Sonic Youth, The Jesus and Mary Chain and all the shoegaze scene in general.

Q. Made a list of 5 albuns of all time…
The Velvet Underground - The Velvet Underground & Nico
The Jesus and Mary Chain - Psychocandy
Sonic Youth - Daydream Nation
Suicide - Suicide
PIL - Metal Box

Q. How do you fell playing live?
MS: It's the best part of our job! We love to play live, especially in small clubs where you are strictly connected to the audience. Even if our album could sound "dreamy" in some parts, our live show has got more of a punk attitude. We can say it's very physical, if you know what I mean.

Q. How do you describe Kill Your Boyfriend sounds?
AA: It's like a tornado during a grey winter day.

Q: Tell us about the process of recording the songs ?
MS: Sometimes I come up with parts of a song, often just a bass-line plus simple drums, or even with almost finalized songs but anyway everyone in the band is involved in the creative process and we define the whole structure and arrange the songs all together, according to the mood of the moment.


Q. Which new bands do you recommended?
AA: In Italy we're facing a moment of real effervescence in the underground musical scene and there are almost too many names to be all written down here; anyway we want to name a couple of friends you should check out, such as New Candys, with whom we share our next split album, a really cool psychedelic band from our hometown, and His Electro Blue Voice, powerful guys from Como.

Q: Which bands you love to made a cover version?
We don't usually do covers; we recorded one for our first ep ("The living end" by The Jesus and Mary Chain) but there isn't any plan for making another in the future; for now we just like to play our own songs..

Q: What´s the plans for future....
Right now we are totally focused on recording our second album and we can already say it's going to be very intense and cold, and it's probably coming out in 2015.

Q: Any parting words?
KILL YOUR BOYFRIEND!!!
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Thanks guys

https://shyrec.bandcamp.com/album/kill-your-boyfriend-s-t
https://www.facebook.com/kyboyfriend

Visions Of The Past, Present And Future with Het Droste Effect - An Interview



De Eindhoven, Paises Baixos, vem a insanidade brutal chamada Het Droste Effect, algo como uma colisão em alta velocidade de White Hills e Hawkwind.

A pancadaria fuzzística lisérgica é comandada por um duo Hermann Blaupunkt e Thompson Dubé e não há muito o que fazer, ou se entra na paranoia dissonante dos caras ou cai fora.

We are all Hallucinating é o disco dos caras, em meio a uma cacetada de eps, só que a profusão esporrenta dos caras fica explicitada no disquinho.

Para freaks e iniciados de plantão.


***** Interview with Het Droste Effect *****


Q. When did Het Droste Effect starts, tell us about the history...
Well, I (Hermann Blaupunkt) hade some ideas for some songs hanging around after a few years not being in a band and running my studio (Casa Cassette). So I asked my friend Thompson Dubé -who is actually a percussionist- to come over and jam a few times and see where it would go. We clicked immediately and set out to record some rehearsals and put it out as an EP. We invited friends to play stuff on the EP and that's the way we still work more or less. This was about 3-4 years and 3 EP's ago.

Q: Who are your influences?
Pff, this question is a little too hard. We listen to so much music, from Touareg desert music from Mali to old Queens of the Stone Age, to modern psych music. Bands like Cave, Hills, Neil Young, shit like that.. But aside from music, painters like Pollock and Rothko influence me a lot in making our instumental tracks. Kind of the same thing actually. It's painting a picture and you hope people are affected by them in some way or another.

Q. Made a list of 5 albuns of all time…
haha, not possible. Sorry. Although buns are cool ;).

Q. How do you fell playing live?
Well, I love it but we rarely play live. In 2015 we want do do some more shows though!

Q. How do you describe Het Droste Effect sounds?
Trancy, sexy, psychedelic,. Haha. What do you think?


Q: Tell us about the process of recording the songs ?
As I said I run a studio, so we have lots of time to fuck around with sounds and structures. But the actual recording is always as live and quick as possible. We record to tape, with a maximum of 8 tracks and we always leave the mistakes right where they are. No editing involved (I have no computer).

Q. Which new bands do you recommended?
Pfff, the ones everyone likes for themselves. New, old, whatever. I am looking forward to the debut by a bands that's called Viet Cong.

Q: Which bands you love to made a cover version?
None, we don't do covers, never will.

Q: What´s the plans for future....
At the moment we are recording new songs, which are taking the band in another direction, more synth based. Not sure yet what it will become. We hope to do a couple of live shows in 2015 and at the minimum do 1 release. For the rest, Het Droste Effect is famous for having no plans.

Q: Any parting words?
Farewell and muchos gracias!
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Thanks

When You´re Sleep with Forsaken Autumn - An Interview


A saga do TBTCI continua, diretamente de Shanghai, os chineses do Forsaken Autumn ainda não lançaram absolutamente nada, somente um duas músicas soltas pela rede, mas me impressionaram, um shoegazer clássico, melódico, lógico que MBV é o deus maior para os caras, não há como negar, mas existe uma beleza inserida no Forsaken Autumn que me cativou, é possível que seja a voz belíssima Ecke, sei que Wallow uma das duas canções que a banda mostrou ao mundo é deslumbrante, um sadcoregazer lindo e melancólico.

Vamos ficar de olho no Forsaken Autumn acompanhando os próximos passos.


***** Interview with Forsaken Autumn ******


Q. When did Forsaken Autumn starts, tell us about the history...
Forsaken Autumn was established by the start of 2011,I found Shanghai Slowcore singer Ecke,then asked whether she had interest to make a shoegaze band together,then she said yes~ But we also ran and stopped several times by various reason, like after last year's The First East Asia Shoegaze Festival, ecke had to rest for her new baby born,so we just restart fromOct,2014.

Q: Who are your influences?
My bloody valentine, Slowdive,Medicine,Swallow,Autumn Grey Solace,etc...

Q. Made a list of 5 albums of all time…
My bloody valentine 《Loveless》《Isn't Anything》
Slowdive《Souvlaki》
Swallow《Blow》
Autumn Grey Solace《Over The Ocean》

Q. How do you feel playing live?
I love live,and think it's more dreamy and vivid for shoegaze tone and sounds if soundchecking is good

Q. How do you describe Forsaken Autumn sounds?
The core is under the white noise, there is still the alienated, dreamy, gentle, narcissistic, chilly & tepid, escaping and nihilistic state of mind.


Q: Tell us about the process of recording the songs ?
In fact,we just finished 2 songs recording, all instruments were done by ourselves, there are still 4 songs left to be recorded, it's a big pressure for me because we don't have premium equipments

Q. Which new bands do you recommended?
The Earth Earth from Japan

Q: Which bands you love to made a cover version?
Of course a lot of shoegaze bands, but the first is MBV

Q: What´s the plans for future....
The album would be done by the start of 2015. We'll release it, hoping more people and us loving it so much!

Q: Any parting words?
If having chance,we'd like to play in Brazil!
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Thanks Brit Lululu

http://site.douban.com/forsakenautumn/
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Forsaken-Autumn

segunda-feira, 17 de novembro de 2014

Let’s Get Killed with HIGH & DRYs - An Interview



Psych por um mundo melhor!!!!

HIGH & DRYs é Nenad Djordjevic e seu desejo maníaco e destruidor de criar sônicos psicodélicos e ruidosos sem haver tempo para se respirar,

Lowest Fidelity Demos de 2013 abriu as portas e Corpus Momentum deste ano seguiu a trilha. Estilhaços hipnóticos do mais simples e lo-fi psych feitos por one man band.

É psicodelia, é garage, é blues, é pra se embriagar e manter o dogma sexo, drogas e rock´n´roll a flor da pele. Literalmente HIGH & DRYs.


***** Interview with HIGH & DRYs ******


Q. When did High & Drys started, tell us about the history...
A: Well, officially, High&Drys began in early 2012, as a fortunate consequence of disbanding my former band, with whom I've been playing for at least last ten years. It was fun while it lasted, but I just couldn't express myself in a manner that is natural to my own musical visions, and the boys just couldn't follow. They were too close minded, saying “all good music is already played in 70’s and 90’s, why bother with this new cheap shit ?”. I just couldn't get past that, seeing such statement as utterly blasphemous, and personally insulting – for what I see, the culture and the music of today are at it’s historical and evolutionary peak – the culture is more alive than ever, and I enjoy contemporary music so much, that such statement was the end of me leading my band. Even before we broke up, I was saving pocket money so I could assemble my own ‘home studio’, in late 2011 – cheap gear but everything included. I became my own band and it was my artistic salvation from the sludge and misery of non – existent local music scene, and it’s utter ignorance of contemporary vibes and all these blessed revival waves. The original idea was to make an act that will cover all the fresh stuff I love, but it turned out that I had so many original songs up my sleeve, so at the end, I went that way, and so here I am !

Q: Who are your influences?
A: A tricky question, for an egomaniac like myself, but I’ll try to be as honest as possible. I was coming to an age through turbulent 90’s, and grunge music was the only cultural reflection the resident youth could use to identify themselves with. But grunge came and gone, and all the trends that followed. Basically, grunge led me back to blues, which is the root of all my music, in a way. The only thing I extracted out of grunge and fossilized into my heart were The Screaming Trees, which are, if we’re about to be honest, acid rock / punk rock / solid rock band. I was never into music that was older than my own date of birth, I don’t believe in possibility of enjoying it in it’s true totality, any of the music that predates ourselves, and that was played out of the context of the times we’re living in. So I didn't know shit about psychedelic music at that point. Then, late 90’s, early 00’s, Brian Jonestown Massacre happened, The Black Keys happened and the game changed, at least for me. I found that generally appealing yet utterly uncompromising psychedelic pop fusion, and heavy blues rock revival, which became a kind of a role model for High&Drys sounds. Meanwhile I was additionally influenced by so many new bands, keeping my good ear open for anything that might come my way and get me hooked. And I listen to equally the same amount of electronic and techno music, which influenced me in tribal, ontological way.

Q. Make a list of 5 albums of all time…
A: Uh, super tough one, especially for musical megalomaniacs ! Having to pick so very few from so many ... But according to my today’s horoscope :

1. Screaming Trees – Dust 2. Pixies - Doolittle 3. David Holmes – Let’s Get Killed 4. Sleepy Sun – Fever / Embrace, both. 5. Driftwood Drones – Magnolia Manor EP, the fresh obscure gem ...

Ask me tomorrow and the list might transmute into something completely different !


Q. How do you feel playing live?
A: Unfortunately, I’m pretty short on stage experience. Technically, I don’t have a band to bring out with me, and the people here in Serbia are deaf for fresh, contemporary music. Culture being late at least 15-20 years, according to what’s been playing out there in the clubs. I don’t go to my hometown gigs, I’m sick and tired from tribute and cover bands, and from all the kids playing punk / HC / metal like there’s nothing else, all the way, it was the same when I was a kid, and now, 20 years later, it’s identical. No culture in my hometown, or my country. I play for small circle of friends, stripped down and naked version of my songs, and it’s always a different experience, as songs follow my mood and morph in real time, as I play ‘em. Eyes closed all the time, so when I play, I am lost, and when I’m done, I don’t know what happened. I guess I’d be bad stage act anyway ! I plan doing live webcasts from my home studio, or wherever, and it will happen eventually.

Q. How do you describe High & Drys´ sounds?
A: Hmmm, if you allow me to paraphrase my own words : organic, lo-fi, free and easy psychedelicized bluesy pop, spiced up with subtle, evil dose of smoke infused rock'n'roll. High&Drys sound is all about general appeal, delivered through the means of underground art expressiveness, in terms that I am not seeking fame or recognition, nor trying to hit some high quality standards, nor to fit in any ‘scenes’ out there, I just don’t give a damn about it ; It’s only about the opportunity to share some of these personal flashes of visions that are multilayered, multifaceted, yet honest and direct, universally applicable. High&Drys music is simple, little music, no big production, no pompous arrangements, no complicated compositions, no pretentious lyrics, it is basically endless recycling of those 3 chord mantras that are the foundation of both pop and rock music. No radical experimentation, everything sounds familiar and generally appealing. I have no definite genre I’m trying to fit in nor I’m targeting some particular crowd – it’s all up close and personal, delivered so it could be universally enjoyed, on most intimate levels. Sweet paradoxes of art. I see myself as the worst trans-genre whore of all the acts I know of, and I shamelessly steal everything I love and admire, soundwise. At the end, I always seem to get that lo-fi mess, that ‘central mass of sound’ which is the only cohesive attribute that links each and every of my songs. But basically, it’s pop music – both musically and philosophically.

Q: Tell us about the process of recording the songs ?
A: I’ve spent a great deal of time meditating and contemplating on the method that will work best for me, since I’m doing it all on my own – arrangements, lyrics, drums, guitars, keyboards, percussion, harmonica, vocals, I even learned to play flute (a bit) in the meantime. And I ended in total abstraction. You see, I’m left handed, and musically illiterate, like, completely. I don’t even know what chords I play, what are their ‘names’, I really don’t. And I play guitars upside down, like Hendrix did, leaving the strings as they are, for the right handers, so I could play ‘em all, and not just my own. No tabs or notes whatever hieroglyphs could help me make the whole process easier. So, I would never make any music if I was to do it in an orderly fashion. It’s all in my heart, and comes into my hands through my mind. Raw, organic, spontaneously delivered. Only lyrics are written down on paper, everything else is made up out of thin air, in the moment. I have only one simple rule about music making, and it’s regarding moods more than music – if it’s a good day, just play. Don’t think about it or work on it, just play – what you need, will come your way. When it is a bad day, don’t waste your time and nerves playing, for nothing will come – but do all the tech and engineering stuff, mix, think, remodel, permute, transmute, fine tune it. So it ends up in months of playing without turning my gear on at all, while most of my songs are recorded and done in a single day of creative massive eruption of inspiration.


Q. Which new bands do you recommended?
A: You sure you want me to answer to this one ? I recommend A TON of stuff, let me see what pops onto my mind effortlessly ...

ELI POP, The Spyrals, Chatham Rise, Flavor Crystals, Grease Arrestor, The Citradels, Hollow Mirrors, Ancient Sky, Rancho Relaxo, First Communion Afterparty, Jesus On Heroine, Celestial Bums, Dead Rabbits, Black Market Karma, The Altered Hours, The Drug Purse, Psychic Ills, The Auras, Orange Revival, Sleepy Sun, Troubadour Dali, Venture Lift, The Underground Youth, The Love Explosion, VOYAGEURS, Brimstone Howl, Saddhu Saddhu, Psychic Ills, Neon Violets, Herbcraft, La Hell Gang, Different Skeletons, Holy Wave, Helicon, Haunted Leather, Iowa, Bungalow Bums, Driftwood Drones, Tamaryn, Cult Of Dom Keller, Ganjas, Zelienople, Holy Science, Mercuryfur, Valet, Verma, Laurels, Listen, Juleah, 6 O’Clock Phantoms, The Face, Squared Circle, Time Hitler and Assholes From Space, Causa Sui, My Brother The Wind, Knall, Atomic Simao, Oresund Space Collective, Papir, Royal Baths, Tales Of Murder And Dust, Amen Dunes, Ghost Box Orchestra, Niden Kolev, Plantains, Nightworkers, Travelling Wave, Youngteam, White Glow, Pink Mountaintops, Brujas Del Sol, Desert Mountain Tribe, The Third Sound, Moaning Cities, Wheat Fields, Graceful Slicks, and many many, too many more. I must stop or I’ll write down a bible of bands I’d recommend.

Q: Which bands you love to made a cover version?
A: None. And at the same time, most of the new bands forementioned in previous question. I would cover songs, not bands, if I was about to cover anything. Bands come and go, emerge and get forgotten, but songs are eternal. Fossilized genuine and honest expressions of us being able to reach to the bottom of the wishing well, where our pure souls reside. I play a lot of covers for fun, I even released a few, but I don’t really believe in cover bands. I guess I’d cover acoustic stuff mostly, or make an acoustic covers out of full band tunes, like, Stevenson Ranch Davidians, BRMC, House Of Fire, The Sky Drops, The Ganjas, Asteroid #4, Solaram, Altered Hours, Dead Meadow, Mr. Airplane Man, and many many more ...

Q: What´s the plans for future...
A: Well, the only future I know of is The Now ! But for that more formal future, well, currently I’m preparing my next release, 14 track LP I’ll probably release on CD, all songs being done but yet have to be recorded when the right mood & moment come. Also, I plan to meet in person and jam live with my musical friends and comrades I’ve met on the net since High&Drys started, at least with ones in Europe. Other than that, I’ll just keep doing my thing, in free and easy manner, no pressure, no rush. After all, High&Drys are all about celebrating the majesty of the moment, both the dark and light facets of it, composing the glorious totality of life, and human experience of it.

Q: Any parting words?
A: Just a big brotherly hug to each and every loved and loving soul out there, including yourself, brother. Love and let be loved, let love flow freely and express it with everything at your disposal, hold no reserves. Art is the breath of the soul, and should be cherished as such. There is nothing more powerful, important, rewarding and contributing to the global and universal welfare, than honest expression of one’s soul, the most clearly and concisely delivered in the form of childlike, but not childish artistic endeavor, at least according to my efforts and experiences. Embrace everything, take it all in, all the shit and all the glitter, make most out of it, the best you can, and then give it all out, give it all back, express yourself and let your expression reach out for all the loving souls out there, waiting to be touched by truth and beauty. For how we reach toward each others, how we connect and dive into the moment in unison, is all we actually have. Just love and let be loved. Freely, unconditionally, no reserves. Making and sharing music is just one of many ways to do it. Just somewhat more cool and more appealing, and maybe most importantly, the easiest to be mentally and emotionally digested.
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Thanks

Unarian Dances with Drab Majesty - An Interview


Ouvir o Drab Majesty é entrar numa máquina do tempo e ir direto para o início dos 80´s, o pós punk mais dançante de gente como Comsat Angels a fase menos agressiva do Killing Joke, os new romantics e muito Bowie fase Berlin.

Um clima dance sombrio permeia a música do Drab Majesty e seu mentor Deb DeMure, com visual extremamente em Bowie e nos new romantics, o cara cria a partir da sofisticação e elegância a base para suas criações. muito longe de ser um pastiche, o Drab Majesty resgate algo que parecia ter se pedido no tempo e o faz com extremo requinte.

Unarian Dances sua estreia tem que ser apreciada imediatamente.


***** Interview with Drab Majesty *****


Q. When did Drab Majesty starts, tell us about the history...
Drab Majesty came as a response to the stimuli I've been exposed to growing up in Los Angeles. The name, in and of itself is synonymous with the city's infrastructure - a huge vast majestic urban sprawl, yet collectively very drab and haphazardly arranged. It was important that I start Drab Majesty as a solo project and let it blossom from here. The first recordings I made were turned into my first cassette ep, "Unarian Dances". A collection of songs, with lyrical inquiries about group thought, fringe cults, herd mentality, religious dogmas and other observations about spirituality as commodity and also practice.

Q: Who are your influences?
Musically I am influenced by the New Age meditative music of Iasos and the imagery he evokes. I like music that is very visually evocative such as Swans (early stuff), Psychic TV, Cocteau Twins, and The Durutti Column. Killing Joke's guitarist, Geordie Walker is someone I've always admired on so many levels. I appreciate his inventiveness and the risks he takes both sonically and harmonically.

Q. Made a list of 5 albuns of all time…
This answer morphs on a daily basis. Tomorrow my answer will be different and yesterday different than tomorrow's but today I would say those records are (in no particular order)
Human League - Dare
Felt - Forever breathes the lonely word
Van dyke parks - Song Cycle
Swans - Cop
Cocteau Twins - Victorialand

Q. How do you fell playing live?
I feel comfortably out of my mind.

Q. How do you describe Drab Majesty´s sounds?
I'd say my intention is to caress whilst leaving abrasions in the process - make sounds that soothe but also evoke mystery and pain. I like to use drum machines and keep rather loud and present in the mix. Guitars must be doused in delay and chorus but maintain that initial punch.


Q: Tell us about the process of recording the songs ?
All material is recorded in my home dungeon by me. I like to record early in the morning and very loud. Mostly all my songs are demo'd in a stream of consciousness kind of way working very quickly with the sole purpose of solidifying chord changes and melodies. This process has to be fast and fluid because the ideas really just come from the ether. I'm never responsible for what I am given, or for what I make, I just have to be present to capture them at that moment and later I go back and re-track my initial sketches.

Q. Which new bands do you recommended?
Here in LA I highly recommend checking out what Youth Code is doing as well as High Functioning Flesh. Both are bands with unbridled frenetic energy and exquisite song craft. Also in LA is a great band called Intimatchine that is meditative patient and dreamy. My new favorite shoegaze/space rock band is from San Francisco called Creepers. There are so many incredible bands right now.

Q. What's the plans for the future?
2015 will hold the release of my debut LP. Hoping to be touring in support of it at some point next year.

Q: Any parting words?
The world belongs to the silent ones.
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Thanks

Ecstasy Symphony with Pree Tone - An Interview



Pree Tone é um trio doentio de Kiev, Ucrânica, que neste 2014 soltou dois epzinhos independentes Brights e Wild Highs, e que ambos possuem entre si uma união, a predileção por ruídos e repetições de andamentos pesados e caóticos, tendo como força motriz os ensinamentos de Peter Kember e J. Spaceman e altas doses de kraut.

Música para alterar os sentidos e provocar insanidade interna, desespero e alucinações psicóticas são os ingredientes que serão encontrados e consumidos utilizando a terapia Pree Tone.

E vem mais doses dessa medicação, melhor pegar seu receituário e já se preparar.


***** Interview with Pree Tone *****


Q. When did Pree Tone starts, tell us about the history...
Pree Tone is: Sergio - bass, Kolya - Drums, Vlad - guitar. We started in the end of winter 2014. We decided to earn money for cocaine and finally loose virginity. The only way to do these things was to create a band.

Q: Who are your influences?
Sergio: Tim Taylor, Bradford Cox and the greatest pedal ever made - Whammy 4.

Kolya: Some old stuff, I mean instruments and music.

Vlad: My main infulence is guitar effects, such as Tremolo, Phasers, Flangers, Boss HM-2 (total worship) and the bands who use it properly. I guess Spacemen 3 was the main influence from the beginning but then we started to do things in our way.

Q. Made a list of 5 albuns of all time…
We are unable to do that, maybe you can recommend us 5 best albums on your opinion?!

Q. How do you fell playing live?
Kolya: When playing in basement - feel like basement, when in the forest- like forest etc.

Sergio: Well, this is nice question. Live shows for me, maybe, is the best way for contacting with people. In my life I prefer better to make presents, than get presents. Thats why I think I lost all my energy and emotions on scene, playing live. I like life a lot, and I think this world is so excited, unpredictabale, peacefull and all this wraped in a big blue beauty. I want to share all this with people while playing live. I don't like to talk at the shows, cause I think listeners come to listen music, but not to hear my thoughts. Thats why I try to give a part of my energy, happiness, sometimes sadness. I want them to feel alive and feel in love with life. After every live show I feel a bit empty.

Vlad: I feel like i'm a guitar hero in the entry level of outsiders league, where all you need is to turn on and off the stompboxes in the right time and sometimes to grab the strings.

Q. How do you describe Pree Tone sounds?
Noisy and loud. Pretty good for altered states of mind.


Q: Tell us about the process of recording the songs ?
Kolya: We record it from marshall and matamp/orange sounding amp, sunn concert bass, ludwig/rogers/soviet drums and a couple of vintage soviet microphones.

Vlad: Well, we go to our rehearsal place, then we tune our guitars, turn on the stompboxes, plug it right into the fucking amps, then Kolya push the "record" button. It took about a few hours to record our EP's and about a few weeks to mix and master it.

Sergio: I can add to Vlad's story only one thing - after recording the instruments I sit like a fucking goblin on little chair with old chinese headphones in my ears and try to sing, combiing it with looper, delays and pitch tricks with vocal.

Q. Which new bands do you recommended?
Sergio: I don't listen to music.

Vlad: Bichkraft, 3AM, Camera, The Holydrug Couple. Almost every band released by Sacred Bones is good. Sadly I don't pay much attention to the new bands, cause it's impossible to listen all the new stuff when you always discover great old bands.

Q: Which bands you love to made a cover version?
Still can't find the good reason why cover-songs exist. Oh, maybe to flirt with a schoolgirl and play for her Avrile Lavigne songs on acoustic guitar.

Q: What´s the plans for future...
Sergio: go to clean my teeth after finishing the interview, cause I forget to did it before it

Vlad: Soon we'll record new EP and play few gigs in Ukraine. Hope to book a tour on Europe next year and make more records.

Q: Any parting words?
Forget all you've read last 2 minutes. Peace be with you and your family and friends.
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Thanks guys





sábado, 15 de novembro de 2014

Alone Again Or with The Chemistry Set - An Interview


Uma historinha, imagem uma banda que começou lá em 1988, fez uma barulho, chegou ao top 220 indie britânico, tocou no John Peel, apareceu no programa do Tony Wilson, e sumiu.

Pouca gente ouviu falar incluindo eu mesmo, e daí em 2008 os caras voltam praticando a mesma psicodelia byrdiana, com os dois pés enfincados no flower power torto de Arthur Lee e o grande Love, esses são os The Chemistry Set, história aqui não falta, mas o bacana é ir descobrindo pouco a pouco o porque passou despercebido por muita gente e agora os caras estão mais atuais do que antes, vide o EP Elapsed Memories que sai agora no final de novembro, uma bela peça loviana com cara dos novos tempos.

Música pra gente de classe.


***** Interview with The Chemistry Set *****


Q. When did Chemistry Set starts tell us about the history...
We first got together in London in 1987. Our first gigs featured covers of “Lady Friend” and “Renaissance Fair” by The Byrds. Our very first release was a cassette in 1988 on the Acid Tapes label. We then signed for the alternative Manchester label “Imaginary”. We got in the “Indie Top 20” in the UK and done a load of gigs in UK and Europe. We came over to New York for the College Music Journal festival in 1991 and our US manager went on to start the Rainbow Quartz label. John Peel used to regularly play us on his radio show and we appeared on Tony Wilson’s TV show.

We split in the 90’s, took a bit of a hiatus, remaining silent… until The Chemistry Set “MACH II” reappeared in 2008! Our return came about when our unreleased LP from 1989 “Sounds Like Painting” was uploaded onto numerous blogs and was downloaded over 10,000 times.

Q: Who are your influences?
Arthur Lee & Love, Jack Nitzsche, Syd Barrett, Neil Young, John Coltrane, Van Dyke Parks, David Axelrod, The Electric Prunes, The Byrds, The Beatles, Buffalo Springfield, Jimi Hendrix, Traffic, The Hollies, Moby Grape, Wire, Opal, Echo & The Bunnymen, The Clean, My Bloody Valentine and The Rain Parade.

Q. Made a list of 5 albuns of all time…
1. Forever Changes – Love
2. Mass in F Minor – The Electric Prunes (& David Axelrod)
3. Buffalo Springfield Again – Buffalo Springfield
4. Vehicle – The Clean
5. The Further Adventures of Charles Westover – Del Shannon
Q. How do you fell playing live?
Well when we reformed we had a huge challenge to recreate the sounds in the studio in a live situation. It would be impossible to do with a traditional 4 or 5 piece band so we left it for a couple of years and then a DJ from Barcelona; DJ Gato made contact with us and said he wanted to work on remixes of our songs. We got to know him and he had a real understanding of psychedelia as well as being a brilliant remixer, so we started to put a band together. We made our debut on 5 Feb 2010 in Barcelona and featured me and Paul on guitars, a drummer, 2 keyboards (Mellotrons, dulcimers, farfisas etc) and Dani on computers playing some strings, beats, bleeps and all kinds of magic. We also work with A VJ from Buenos Aires who does incredible videos. So the whole thing is a kind of UFO club 1967in 2014.

Q. How do you describe Chemistry Set´s sounds?
We are into creating a "Symphonic sound". Building multiple layers and using stuff like Glissando Harps, Timpanis, Dulcimers, Multi tracked Gregorian chants, Mellotron choirs, Spaghetti Western Orchestration, Strings etc to build up a big wall of sound.

We like to try and create a kind of "musical surrealism". The idea is to give the listener something interesting and different to listen to each time they listen, so that they can return again and again and hear new things in the songs.

We also like to sing in different languages and work with different singers. One example is a song "La Logica del Canvi" which we sing in Catalan. This song is like a kind of Catalan raga. Singing this in Catalan gives it a surreal quality. Another song "Regarde Le Ciel" is sung in French by a Catalan singer. It is exactly this kind of "twist" we like to do.


Q: Tell us about the process of recording the songs ?
The production of a song is as important as the actual song itself. We record all our songs in a recording studio on an island in the middle of the River Thames in London. That is our laboratory. We use all kinds of instruments; Mellotrons, Dulcimers, Farfisa's, Timpanis, Brass, but the most important thing is to make the song interesting to listen to and build layers and soundscapes. We never use production for the sake of it or trying to be clever but to make the song the most interesting possible for repeated listens.

Q. Which new bands do you recommended?
I absolutely love the Russian band Polska Radio One and The Sudden Death of Stars from France but there are so many good new bands worth exploring

Q: Which bands you love to made a cover version?
We like to insert a cover version inside a cover version and we first did this on Pink Floyd’s “See Emily Play”. We added the “Bicycle Rider” section of The Beach Boys then still unfinished “Smile” album inserted within the song. The cover was included in the 2013 3CD Box Set Tribute “The Many Faces Of Pink Floyd”

We did a cover of Del Shannon’s “Silver Birch” (Originally found on Shannon’s “The Further Adventures Of Charles Westover”, his cult 1968 LP) and added a section of “Sanctus” from The David Axelrod/Electric Prunes’ masterwork “Mass in F Minor”. We sent the cover to David Axelrod’s son and he played it to his Dad and his Dad said “Real Music! Finally music that makes you think and really listen to!”

Q: What´s the plans for future....
We have a new EP “Elapsed Memories” out at the end of November on vinyl (Fruits de Mer records) and Jan 2015 digital (Dead Bees records). We are working on a new album to be released in 2015

Q: Any parting words? Never forget the Good Vibrations!
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Thanks guys

https://soundcloud.com/dave_mclean/elapsed-memories-new-single

Sugarless with Teenage Daydreams - An Interview



Aidan Christopher Haughey é o one man banda Teenage Daydreams, que alimenta-se de toneladas de fuzz, distorções, vocais soterrados e muito wall of sound.

False Hope Syndrome é o último registro sônico lançamento em 01/01/2014, uma verdadeiro bom princípio para os amantes de Dinosaur Jr. J&MC e demais esporos sonoros das últimas décadas, o disquinho te pega de jeito, primeiro pelo barulhinho bom apitando segundo pelo apelo pop inevitavelmente criado pelas melodias e pelos vocais bubblegum. 

Além do False Hope Syndrome experimente também o outro petisco Romance Memories de 2013, igualmente barulhento e saboroso.


***** Interview with Teenage Daydreams *****


Q. When did Teenage Daydreams starts, tell us about the history...
1. Teenage Daydreams started roughly four years ago. I had been playing and making music for years as a kid and I wanted a name to put my music to, so I chose Teenage Daydreams. That was four years ago, a lot has happened--too much to say. But, I make records when I want to, I write music all the time on a bunch of different instruments, so I always have new songs and art,, and when I feel ready, I make an album. I've made one album per year so far, I've made way more music than that, but, releasing an album is special to me, so the collection of songs is important and highly selective. No one else has ever been in my band, sometimes I have friends help me play live shows, but, I do everything else. So Teenage Daydreams is really just me experiencing life and making music about it, and growing as a musician and a recording engineer and composer, singer, film maker, etc. I started it in Alaska, then lived in nyc for a while and played shows there and made an album. I'm in Alaska right now, about to make my new record, and I plan to go to nyc to do music and art there--in the near future, but I've been in Alaska for the past two years making music and playing shows, growing up and learning and studying lots of things. There really isn't a band history, because it's just me. So there isn't really any drama, and my life is too wild and varied to break it down into a history of Teenage Daydreams.

Q: Who are your influences?
2.I have way too many influences, so I'll just name a bunch and hope that gives an idea of my range of influence: My Bloody Valentine, T-Rex, Autolux, Mozart, Beehtoven, Chopin, St. Vincent, Elliot Smith, Luminous Orange, Jay Reatard, Biggy Smalls, Tu PAc, Wu Tang Clan, Animal Collective, Deerhunter, Arcade Fire, Nas, Nirvana, Death From Above 1979, Simian Mobile Disco- I really just love music a lot the list goes on and on.

Q. Made a list of 5 albuns of all time…
3.I honestly don't have a top 5 Albums, that's way too little, but, I'll make a list of 5 albums that are nice The Velvet Underground (self Titled), Sonic Youth - Rather Ripped, Autolux - Transit Transit, Rachmaninoff - Cello Sonata, The Wu Tang Clan, 36 Chambers of Death

Q. How do you fell playing live?
4.I absolutely LOVE playing live. It's crazy, my music gets to come alive through me, it's really pretty. And I LOVE singing, it's so pretty, my singing voice is high pitched and it feels really good to sing like that And then, I have a two way split (on my guitar) so I plug my guitar through two different amps, so I have this massive, beautifully distorted, two sound guitar coming from behind me, and I have all these pedals for looping and other effects, everything combines to make me feel very pretty and powerful. Like I'm some sort of art creature making this massive unbelievable sound. I also use a sampler to do a bunch of different things, my live shows are fucking nuts. It's interesting because with recording, everything has to be perfect, I spend so much time perfecting everything in terms of audio dynamics and placing and performance, but playing live leaves everything up to interpretation, so I can do crazy shit live and it's really fun. And my sounds are so intense and different but still cool, so it's really fun to play with other bands because my sound is so different, it's like interjecting this weird musical anomaly into a regular music show.


Q. How do you describe Teenage Daydreams sounds?
4. I would describe Teenage Daydreams sounds as my heart, really, that's what it all comes down. Teenage Daydreams, to me, is like letting people into part of my imagination, letting people to understand how I see/experience art. It's very warm, emotional, explosive, sincere, intimate, and honest. That's why I use the sounds I do, because I want people to understand what art really looks like, or what it can be, there are so many amazing sounds and forms within music that people will never know because they're too focused on remaining in what they already like. I want to change that, I want to show people the true depth of art, or at least part of it, that's part of why I use crazy sounds, I also choose my sounds, mostly I would say, because it's fun and I get bored using ordinary sounds.

Q: Tell us about the process of recording the songs ?
5. Recording Songs is an interesting process. I've been doing it a very long time, and through so many different mediums, that it has grown into a very open ended process. If I'm making an album I like to have a kind of studio, somewhere that I can set up a drum set and mic it properly, and then I just need amps and instruments. I grew up recording music, so I spent a lot of time experimenting with recording and mixing. So when I record it's a mixture of experimentation and getting the song done. If I just want to record something nice and quick, I know how to do that easily and it takes about ten minutes to record and write everything, and then like an hour or two of mixing and mastering. But when I'm working on an album I always like to push things, I like to experiment with recording and mixing methods so I can do crazy things with songs. It's always a mix of experimenting with sounds and structures, how many sounds can I fit into this song? Which sounds take away from the quality? How much can I fit into this part?What is missing from this song and how do I make it more unique and interesting? It usually comes down to dynamics and structure, and often I'll write a bunch of different parts for one song, then get rid of almost all of them and use just a little bit of one, then repeat that process. The thing is, I can play so many instruments and know so many different aspects of music and recording and writing, that recording is really open ended. So, there are some constants, like, I always set up a timing device, so I know everything is in time, and generally there are rules for panning instruments/sounds, and I have rules for eq and compression just to make things easy, but everything is up for interpretation, anything can happen with a song, and I throw away a lot of songs. It really is just about, what do I want to make? How do I make it? And is it worth it?

Q. Which new bands do you recommended?
6.Unfortunately, I haven't been listening to any new bands A band has to be amazing for me to listen to, and I don't really find a lot of new bands that are amazing, and, there are a lot of old bands and music that are amazing, and I listen to a lot of classical music so new bands are competing with hundreds of years of amazing music. BUT, I want to find new bands, and become friends with them so I'm sure I'll find some amazing new bands to listen to soon enough.


Q: Which bands you love to made a cover version?
7.There are sooooo many songs I would love to cover. I want to make a cover album of all the songs I would love to cover one day: again, way to many songs to name my top favorites to cover. I will say, a few songs that I will always want to cover would be, Last Dinosaur - by the Pillows, After Hours - by the Velvet Underground, Just Like Honey - by the Jesus and Mary Chain, and Sonata in C k. 545 - by Mozart, and Sugarless - by Autolux.

Q: What´s the plans for future....
8.My plans for the future are BIG I want to change the world to be a better place and make amazing art that changes people's perspective and helps expand art and culture In more concrete news, I'm making a new album which should be done in a few months and setting up tours, very small tours, and I've been working on my website to try and make it something special, I love programming!

Q: Any parting words?
9.My parting words are, THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR LISTENING TO ME AND PLEASE FOLLOW YOUR HEART AND BE HONEST WITH YOURSELF.
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Thanks Aidan

Darklands with Des Roses - An Interview


Des  Roses é um trio francês de Nantes, que seguindo as profecias do TBTCI, ainda não possui nenhum registro físico, somente o ep digital homônimo, e diga-se de passagem, que ep, mas que delírio sonoro emocionante.

O Des Roses começou suas atividades em fevereiro deste ano e mergulha profundamente na alma e no coração, uma doce e cândida melancolia vai tomando forma em cada uma de suas três canções, Old Mistake é o ponto crucial,, devaneios líricos e oníricos penetram os tímpanos trazendo a beleza do Des Roses.

Um início deslumbrante que nos deixa ansiosos pelo futuro. Des Roses, uma banda para se amar.


***** Interview with Des Roses *****


Q. When did Des Roses starts, tell us about the history...
Louis : We started to play music together in about February where we tried to find a direction which pleased the three of us. But the turning point was this summer in l'Ile D'Yeu where we've been working for a entire month. We worked on our songs and recorded an EP!

Q: Who are your influences?
Louis : Jesus And Mary Chain, Pond, Ringo Deathstarr...

Ana : The XX, Molly Nilsson, Slowdive

Suzanne : The Beatles, David Bowie and Tame Impala

Q. Made a list of 5 albums of all time…
Louis : Revolver- The Beatles , Misery Is A Butterfly – Blonde Redhead , Rocket Fire – Ceremony, Congratulations – MGMT, Darklands – The Jesus And Mary Chain

Ana : "The Fool" by Warpaint, The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars by Bowie, Unknown Pleasures by Joy Division , "Coexist de The XX" et "Taiga " de Zola Jesus

Suzanne : Let it be - The Beatles, Stoned and Dethroned - jesus and mary chain, warsaw - joy division, blood visions - jay reatard and electric warrior - T-Rex.

Q. How do you fell playing live?
Louis : The first gig was a great moment for us. We worked in a such intense way this summer and we were very impatient about this first show. All the memories going back in mind while playing. Emotional.

Ana : It's huge to see people in front of you, listening to your music that comes from your bedroom. The work is really rewarded when you're on stage, when you can transmit the emotion you try to put in your songs.

Suzanne : It was both exciting and stressful. We were really happy to unveil our new project. It's a great memory.

Q. How do you describe Des Roses´ sounds?
Louis : Pop and Dreamy.

Ana : Aerian

Suzanne : Melancoholic


Q: Tell us about the process of recording the songs ?
Louis : It was a very tough job because we don't have any professional recording gear so we spent a lot of time on this record, especially on the mix, in order to have the best sound we could have. But it was a very interesting moment for us.

Q. Which new bands do you recommend?
Louis : Maybe Tommorow Tulips, Ringo Deathstarr, Temples...

Ana : Lebanon Hanover, Tropic Of Cancer, Linea Aspera

Suzanne : DIIV, Von Pariahs

Q: Which bands you love to made a cover version?
Louis : French singers of the mid-60's...

Ana : yes ! Old songs like that, they're filled with memories for us.

Q: What´s the plans for future....
Louis : Do the best we can do.

Ana : Play as much as we can, as far as we can

Suzanne : Keep working and sharing our music.
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Thanks

sexta-feira, 14 de novembro de 2014

Ocean Rain with Lower Heaven - An Interview


Quando o Lower Heaven surgiu com seu debute em 2008 é aclamado Ashes, já havia me conquistado logo de cara, sua mistura de psicodelismo com pos punk, com influência dos Bunnymen principalmente mesclado a aquele shoegazer introspectivo do Ride na fase Nowhere e psicodelia moderna, o amor foi imediato.

Os tons cinzentos na psicodelia do Lower Heaven passaram de Ashes para o segundo álbum Today is All We Have, ficando mais explícito e acinzentado a ambiência das canções mais atmosféricas e hipnóticas.

Nuvens cinzentas permeiam o Lower Heaven, e fazem deles verdadeiros cults da música moderna, prediletos da casa facilmente.


***** Interview with Lower Heaven *****


When did Lower Heaven start, tell us about the history...
The original line up on our first album (“Ashes”) in 2008 was me (Marcos Chloka) on autoharp, guitar and synth, Christina Park on bass, Tommy Danbury on guitar and Stephen Swesey on drums. We all knew each other from Los Angeles. The name came to me approximately a year before the recording of “Ashes” while listening to an Echo and The Bunnymen song. By this point, I had already written some of the songs that would end up on the album (songs like “Lose It All At Once”, “Fruitless” and “Rain”). While I was doing Lower Heaven though, I was also involved for a while with two other Los Angeles bands (Spindrift and The Warlocks) but eventually I decided to dedicate all my time to LH. It was around this time when we opened up for Black Rebel Motorcycle Club at the Wiltern Theatre and we played the second installment of Psych Fest that the Black Angels put together in Austin Texas. By 2010, Tommy and Stephen left around the time when we recorded our second album “Today Is All We Have”. Brandon Sciarra and Jon Engelhard joined the band on drums and guitar. With this line up we played a festival near the Joshua Tree desert that some friends of ours from LA put together called “Clean Air Clear Stars”, our second Psych Fest appearance and the Bootleg Theater in support of Black Mountain among many shows. Jon left the band in 2012 but Brandon is still around. I am now married to Christina Park and we have a lovely daughter named Stella.

Who are your influences?
Echo and The Bunnymen, Joy Division, MBV, Spiritualized, Dead Meadow, BJM.

Make a list of 5 albums of all time…
These are just a few that come to mind… I could probably pick five different ones at any other time, but I do love these five albums.

Cosmic Jokers 1974 - Cosmic Jokers
Clear Spot - Captain Beefheart
Goo - Sonic Youth
Shivering King - Dead Meadow
Wolf Flow Peel Sessions 1987-1990 - Loop

How do you fell playing live?
On a good night, I enjoy the energy we create, the crowd gets into it and it’s a lot of fun. Sometimes I get a little anxious though, I’m not really one who interacts much with the audience so sometimes I wonder if the crowd is having a good time or if they’re just being nice. Overall, I kind of miss it, we haven’t played in a while.


How do you describe Lower Heaven sounds?
We try to create a rich and atmospheric sound by running the guitars and vocals through heavy effects, sometimes we also use synths. We often keep the drums and bass simple and repetitive at times to add a hypnotic element to the music. Since growing up in the late 80s early 90s I gravitate a lot towards Post Punk and Shoegaze. I also love music from the 60s and 70s and I’m constantly listening to all kinds of stuff that I can incorporate to our music. For example, I’ve been listening to a lot of Reggae and Dub lately (King Tubby, Rockers, Lee Scratch Perry) and we might include some dub techniques on our next album.

Tell us about the process of recording the songs?
“Ashes” was recorded live at our friend’s studio in Hollywood (Rob Campanella who plays in Brian Jonestown Massacre). “Today Is All We Have” was also recorded live at another friend’s studio (Steve Kille of Dead Meadow). Our two most recent releases, the full length “Pulse” and the “Home and Away” EP were recorded at home, I used Pro Tools to edit. The process this time was a little different, I recorded a lot of tracks myself and later on we went back to Rob’s studio to do more overdubs there. “Pulse” also has guest appearances (Dan Allaire of BJM plays drums on a few tracks and Jason Simon of Dead Meadow plays lead guitar on one track). In the studio we like to use additional instrumentation even if we can’t reproduce every bit of it live we still like to add an arrangement here and there played with “studio” instruments like Piano, Mellotron, Autoharp, Sitar, Harpsichord, Moog, Harmonium and stuff like that.

Which new bands do you recommended?
Some of these bands may have been around longer but I discovered them in the last two to three years, so that’s as “new” as it gets for me. DIIV, Regal Degal, Soft Moon, Tame Impala, Washed Out, Cut Copy, M Machine and Oliver.

Which bands you love to made a cover version?
“Hurricane Fighter Plane” by Red Krayola or anything by Lee Hazelwood. I thought it’d be cool to mention here that we actually did a cover of “Fire Engine” by the 13th Floor Elevators which came out on a Rocky Erickson tribute compilation.

What´s the plans for future....
Band members come and go but I continue writing and recording music. At the moment Lower Heaven is taking a break from performing live but that can change. Our full length “Pulse” and “Home and Away” EP came out recently, more new music will follow next year probably.

Any parting words?
I’d like to thank Renato and The Blog That Celebrates Itself for the interview. I appreciate your interest in Lower Heaven. Hopefully people passing through can find out about the band and get into it. Cheers.
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Thanks Marcos

Song to Learn and Sing with Ronan Conroy - An Interview


Ronan Conroy é um trovador nato. Discípulo de Dylan, Bowie, Cohen, Cave, seu álbum Discontent é para se ouvir como relaxamento do corpo e alma. 

Melodioso e relaxante, Discontent é uma bela prova que nem só de barulho vive o TBTCI, existe sim momentos de introspecção e intimismo, e a música de Conroy tranquiliza e pacifica as dores de outrora.

Aplausos para Mr. Ronan Conroy.


***** Interview with Ronan Conroy *****


Q. When did you start? Tell us about the history.
I grew up listening to the music of my older brothers - David Bowie, A-Ha, Duran Duran, the Cure, New Order. I started playing guitar when I was around 15 years old, learning songs like "Wild Thing" and eventually moving onto the 12-bar blues while listening to John Lee Hooker records. A high school friend introduced me to the Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, Cream. College friends introduced me to indie and grunge - Dinosaur Jr, Bob Mould (Husker Du, Sugar), Sonic Youth, Nirvana. Later, when I moved to New York, people turned me onto Pink Floyd, Frank Zappa, Stravinsky, Boulez, Bob Dylan, Warren Zevon, Leonard Cohen. Sometimes I even discover new music myself! But if I really think about it, most of the music I love came to me through friends and family.

I started writing songs right away when I got into the guitar, and I still remember some of the earliest songs. But something happened to me between 2003 and 2005: I had been living in New York for three years and had just moved back to Ireland. I had gone through a break-up that broke my heart, and I was deep into tracing all the albums of Bob Dylan's career. I had made it as far as Blonde on Blonde, and on a recent road trip through Nevada a friend had played me Dylan's live 1970s album "Rolling thunder" where Dylan played old songs with new arrangements. Something about the combination of heart-ache and song-writing/arrangement education from the master songwriting - these things clicked into place and I realized some new things about songwriting. That began a new phase of songs, and some of those songs are on the series of albums I'm working on these days.

I've played in a couple of bands over the years - The Listeners was an indie folk-rock three-piece, and Oh Halo was a gothy dark-pop outfit with female vocalists. But my current solo phase is much more freeing - I don't have to worry about suiting a genre, I can just record whatever songs I want to work on next.

Q: Who are your influences?
Bob Dylan is a huge influence - he's a songwriting master. His lyrics and his melodies are so memorable. Bob Mould is another huge influence - his emotional intensity really resonates with me, and I love the sound palette he paints with. The Cure is a massive favorite - I learned a lot about guitar soloing from listening to Jimi Hendrix, but I think I learned a lot more from listening to Robert Smith. I like all the major singer/songwriters - Cohen, Zevon, David Gray, Nick Cave
90s Indie music is really big for me, too.

Q. Give us a list of your top five albums of all time…
Impossible! So many great albums. I'll try, and it'll break my heart to leave out so many:
1. The Cure: Disintegration
2. Sugar: Copper Blue
3. Whipping Boy: Heartworm
4. Aphex Twin: Selected Ambient Works (cheating here because there are two volumes and 3 CDs, but....)
5. Bob Dylan: Blood on the tracks

Q. How do you feel about playing live?
I love it. I always get extremely nervous and worried before I play, very scared. But as soon as I hit that first note I'm ok. I'm in another world. I'm another person. Gigs always go by too quickly.

Q. How do you describe your sound?
The current body of work spans a large amount of material and a long period of years, but when I started to record these songs I saw that they roughly fell into three categories, with a few exceptions.
On one end of the scale I had a lot of acoustic guitar ballads, very Dylan-esque, or trying to be. I even had harmonica solos on some of them.

Then on the other end of the scale I had heavy full-band songs with lots of distortion, bringing in my influences like Bob Mould, The Cure.

In the middle, the songs are a mix of the two styles.
It's hard to describe it, but I suppose I'm a cross between the Bobs: Mould and Dylan. Indie folk-rock, perhaps.

Q: Tell us about the process of recording Discontent album?
I first worked with producer/engineer Charlie Nieland when I was playing guitar and doing some vocals in Oh Halo. We ended up recording a full album ("Ghosts can't be buried") with Charlie when he was working under the "Super Buddha" moniker. Later, I approached Charlie to see if he'd be interested in working with me on some solo stuff. Originally I was just thinking it would be nice to record an album of solo acoustic songs.

Charlie was happy to work with me, and when I brought him my demos, he was really excited about a lot of them and had such great ideas about how to record them, extra instruments to bring in, equipment to use. The project really took on a life of its own and I began to remember older songs, and find demos I hadn't heard in years, and each song we worked on came out sounding amazing.
We started working on this project in March 2013, and before long I was referring to it as my "never-ending album" project, borrowing from Dylan's "never-ending tour" concept. As the songs piled up, I looked at what I had and saw that they were falling into three rough groupings.

The first grouping is "Discontent." The second is a new album called "The Game" which we're going to be mastering this week. There's a third album called "Not a part of anything" due out next year. And we're already moving into new material.


Q. Which new bands do you recommended?
I always seem to be late to the party - I discover bands long after they've come and gone. Although in the last few years I've liked bands that are still a bit more current. I like Lana del Rey, though she's not that new.

I really like the Boston band Mean Creek. I saw them a few times when they were playing really small venues, which was pretty cool. I'm sure they'll be huge. I like Wye Oak, too. Good solid songwriting, though I'm not as excited about their latest keyboard-driven album.
Chelsea Wolfe is definitely worth listening to.
There's a local New York group called Creation Myth that I like - they remind me of a beautiful gothy ethereal band called Love Spirals Downwards. In fact, Love Spirals Downwards was kind of what I was looking for when I joined Oh Halo. I've written some new songs that are a tribute to LSD, and am looking forward to a future album that will feature those songs.
My brother-in-law releases electronic albums as Demonic Sweaters. I think he released about 8 albums this year. He's incredibly prolific.


Q: Which bands you love to made a cover version?
I play lots of Dylan and Nick Cave songs. They work well as covers for me, I think. I'd love to record a cover of Derniere Volonte's "Nos Chairs." There are a few songs on Paul McCartney's incredible album "Memory almost full" that I'd love to perform or record, like "Mr. Bellamy," "Every Present Past," "You tell me," "House of wax." I was never a huge McCartney fan, and had grown into the idea that he was not at the same level as Lennon in the Beatles, but that album really shattered all my preconceptions of McCartney - it's a truly amazing album.

Q: What´s the plans for future?
More albums! "The Game" should, I hope, be released in November. "Not a part of anything" should be out early/middle of 2015. I'll have other albums after that.

I'd love to keep finding fans and reaching new listeners to share the music with.

Q: Any parting words?
Music is King. Always the music. Always the music.
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Thanks Ronan

Treasure with Savage Sister - An Interview



Uma verdadeira aula de sofisticação, candura e refinamento, um passeio por terras límpidas, cruzando com os anjos, dialogando com as estrelas, um caleidoscópio de imagens fascinantes, adentrando a caminhos antes viajados por Cocteau Twins, MBV e Slowdive, assim é a música do Savage Sisters, trio de Chicago, que permeia as mentes dos amantes do shoegaze e dreampop.

Seu debute lançado em 2013 é aterrorizantemente encantador, escute Walk With a Porpuse e encante-se.

Lançaram este ano o single Huge Moves tão lindo quanto seu álbum de estreia e o próximo esta a caminho.

Os anjos agradecem.

***** Interview with Savage Sister *****



Q. When did Savage Sister starts, tell us about the history...
A: Savage Sister formed in the early summer of 2012 in St. Louis, Missouri. It was initially a project that my childhood friend Nick and I created after many years of anxiety and soul-searching. We always wanted to do some kind of band thing, but didn't have the nerve to go for it until our lives aligned correctly. So, we finally went for it in 2012 and Savage Sister was born! It was a culmination of our long-standing love for ambient, dream pop and shoegaze. I moved to Chicago in early winter of 2012, then eventually re-formed the band with its current members, Caitlin and Chloe, by summer 2013. We released our debut, self-titled album that June, then really dug into the Chicago music scene for the rest of the year. We felt really lucky to be embraced by so many folks in the scene. We started this year off releasing our second EP, Wild Sleep, then in the summer made a 7" called Huge Moves.

Q: Who are your influences?
A: I remember I would drive around St. Louis with my friends in high school, listening to Souvlaki by Slowdive, Loveless by My Bloody Valentine and Treasure by Cocteau Twins, just being totally blown away by the endless reverb and shimmering textures. Slowdive and Cocteau Twins are huge influences on the band's sound with a bit of MBV loop texturing thrown in for good measure. Scott Cortez's Lovesliescrushing (also leader of Astrobrite) project has had an influence on our more ambient pieces. One of the newer bands that has really influenced my songwriting is Sleep Over, a super hazy trio out of Austin, Texas that combined huge beats with detuned, distorted, effects-laden synths and endless female vocal overdubs. Also, Grouper has made a lasting impact on me, the way Liz Harris weaves such gorgeous melodies in swaths of degraded recording quality, reverb and delay.

Q. Make a list of 5 albums of all time…
A: That's a tough one, but I'll give it a shot!

1. Forever - Sleep Over
2. Alien Observer - Grouper
3. Scream - Siouxsie and the Banshees
4. Chelsea Girls - Nico
5. Treasure - Cocteau Twins

Q. How do you feel playing live?
A: That's an interesting question, which we've discussed recently. The short answer is that we enjoy it, but aren't obsessed. We like testing out the energy of different songs and how they'll translate live, but we aren't looking to play gigs all the time. Ultimately, we're a studio a band above all else. Our live setup is a bit convoluted and relies a lot on a venue's sound system, so we have to take time to get ourselves excited and willing for that next show. We've had really awesome shows and not so great shows like all bands, the bad shows tend to be a blow to our morale.

Q. How do you describe Savage Sister's sound?
A: It's a mixture of ambient looping guitar, dream pop funkiness, detuned/distorted shoegaze textures and vocals with tons of reverb and delay. We are a fan of creating this kind of hazy, romantic atmosphere, whether it's dark or yearning - Savage Sister is about being moody!

Q: Tell us about the process of recording the songs?
A: I record all our songs from my home studio through an audio interface to my computer. I have a fascination with streamlining the recording process as much possible, so I like to keep it light. Since we rely on drum machine and looping textures, this is the easiest way for us to get things done. Once I have a song fleshed out, I throw it over to Chloe to consult on vocal melodies and possible overdubs. We come up with ideas together and go from there.


Q. Which new bands do you recommend?
A: Over the past two years I've learned of many fantastic new bands in the dream pop, shoegaze, ambient and dreamwave spectrum. Honeyslide was an awesome shoegaze band out of London with heavy hitting guitar and drums, Lubec is a fantastic noise/jangle pop band out of Portland that are akin to Sonic Youth and early MBV. Tashaki Miyaki is a great lo-fi dream pop outfit along the lines of Velvet Underground, Jaguwar is a new band out of Dresden that delivers fiery shoegaze similar to Isn't Anything-era MBV. Day Ravies is a fun and adventurous dream pop/shoegaze band out of Australia. Earn is a very luscious ambient project. A few locals to Chicago are worth checking out as well - TALsounds, Sister Crystals, Landmarks, Lightfoils, Panda Riot and Cinchel. Other than that, the more popular groups I love these days are Tamaryn, No Joy, Echo Lake, Beach House, Grouper, Sleep Over, Melody's Echo Chamber, I Break Horses, Blue Hawaii, Pink Playground and Pure X.

Q: Which bands you love to made a cover version?
A: We've done a bunch of covers over the past year and a half from Beach House, Magnetic Fields, Low, Kate Bush, etc. Chloe and I were discussing doing a cover of Pink Floyd's "Comfortably Numb". That may be the next thing we do after our new album is done.

Q: What´s the plans for future....
A: Right now we are currently recording for our new album, Speechless, which is due out in the first quarter of 2015. Once the album is finished, we'll continue to play shows and make covers. The rest is up in the air at this point!

Q: Any parting words?
A: Just that our new album will be out on vinyl thanks to BLVD Records here in Chicago. If folks like our stuff are interested, be sure to pick up a vinyl when it drops in early 2015!
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Thanks

https://savagesister.bandcamp.com
https://www.facebook.com/SavageSisterBand

quinta-feira, 13 de novembro de 2014

Forever Alien with Sula Bassana - An Interview




Sula Bassana ou o alter ego de Dave, o mentor do Electric Moon, verdadeiro patrimônio vivo do psych moderno, tem por seu alter ego um verdadeiro oasis fantástico de lisergias doentias e viciantes.

A discografia, bem a discografia eu gostaria apenas de citar o último registro, o split com o 3AM, mas que não há como negar que o destaque é Sula Bassana com a estupefata Disappear, um exercício de deterioração dos sentidos. Calcada nas alquimias de Sonic Boom a frente do Spectrum, Dissapear transcende a mente, seus mais de 10 minutos de transe deixam claro o que é Sula Bassana.

Bom meus caros, voltando a discografia, ela é extensa e perigosa, mas se você frequenta estas páginas certamente esta acostumado com o perigo da música.

***** Interview with Sula Bassana *****


Q. When did Sula Bassana starts, tell us about the history...
I started with electronic music in the 80’s. Had my first gig in 1985 or 86. In 1994 we started with the psychedelic rockband Liquid Visions, where I played the bass. Then I founded Zone Six (Spacerock), played drums in the band Growing Seeds and made the debut LP of Weltraumstaunen. My first solo album under the moniker of Sula Bassana came in 2002.

Q: Who are your influences?
I first heard a lot of classic music, electronic music, and artrock. My favoured bands in the childhood were Pink Floyd, Supertramp, Alan Parsons Project, Tangerine Dream, Klaus Schulze, Kraftwerk, J.M. Jarre, Vangelis etc.. Later I had a period of searching (late 80’s and very early 90’s), heard a lot of EBM, Punk and Hardrock, and opened my mind for psychedelicrock, classical indian music, trance-music, krautrock... and again electronic music.

Q. Made a list of 5 albuns of all time…
5 are not enough!!!! But these albums for sure influenced me: Tangerine Dream-Rubicon Far Out-s/t Pink Floyd-Meddle Atman-Personal Forest Hawkwind-Do Re Mi

Q. How do you fell playing live?
I never fell off stage! Hehehe...

Q. How do you describe Sula Bassana´s sounds?
A mix of all what I experienced and loved what I heard. Let’s say a psychedelic mix of spacerock, acidrock, electronic, drone and experimental music.

Q: Tell us about the process of recording the songs?
UH! That’s total different! Sometimes I start with a beat, or with a bassline, or a guitar-riff. Sometimes I improvise (very often, hahaha), sometimes I have a complete song in mind, sometimes I just make noise...


Q. Which new bands do you recommended?
Papir, Farflung, Lamp Of The Universe, The Cosmic Dead, The Oscillation, Mugstar, Follakzoid, Grails, for sure some more! And all the bands from my label! hehehe! Giobia, Seven That Spells, Yuri Gagarin, Tracker, The Movements, The Spacelords etc.

Q: Which bands you love to made a cover version?
No idea! I made some Pink Floyd covers in the past. We just made covers of Eric Burdon (Hotel Hell), Tangerine Dream (Madrigal Meridian) and The Beatles (Tomorrow Never Knows) with Electric Moon.

Q: What´s the plans for future....
First will be the split-LP with 3AM, out in late November on dutch Headspin-Records. Listen to my songs here: https://sulabassana.bandcamp.com/album/disappear-split-lp-with-3am In 2015 my electronic-album „Kosmonauts“ will be released in a double vinyl edition on norwegean label Pancromatic-Records. Listen here: https://sulabassana.bandcamp.com/album/kosmonauts And I will release the our concert from Roadburn 2014 on vinyl and CD! Also I almost finished a new album, this time more into the electronic-krautrock-direction. And my spacerock album „The Night“ will be re-released on CD!

Q: Any parting words?
Peace!!!!
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Thanks 

http://www.sulabassana.de/
https://sulabassana.bandcamp.com/album/disappear-split-lp-with-3am
https://www.facebook.com/sulabassana







Lazer Guided Melodies with Closing Eyes - An Interview


A Noruega certamente não é a mecca do kraut ou da psicodelia torta,, aos iniciados talvez o nome que venha a mente é do seminal Serena Maneesh, só que aos leigos o assunto é bem diferente, tanto que a Creation dos tempos atuais,, estou falando da Fuzz Club Records,, jogou no mercado o ep enigmático e sobrenatural dos noruegueses do Closing Eyes.

Não sera o TBTCI que introduzirá essa esquizofrenia na sua mente, você tem o livre arbítrio de decidir, mas eu apenas gostaria de dizer/escrever, que su avida sera deveras melhor após audições ininterruptas deste clássico do submundo dos bons sons.


***** Interview with Closing Eyes *****


Q. When did Closing Eyes start, tell us about the history...
A: I used to be the main driving force in a band called Lovecult, but for various reasons we decided to call it quits just after releasing the debut album. I basically decided to continue Lovecult as Closing Eyes. I had invested too much artistic devotion in the project. We did an album I’m pretty happy with where a lot of great people were involved. Ådne from 120 Days and Emil from Serena Maneesh helped us record and produce it. Sonic Boom even did one of the mixes. Having been the main songwriter and visionary at the same time as being one of the songwriters in another Norwegian outfit Maribel, I desperately needed to leave democracy for a while and try to pull something off on my own. So this is sort of the continuation of Lovecult, but without the cult. Check out the album though, it’s cool!

Q: Who are your influences?
A: Too many to mention them all, I guess. Music I’ve listened to, art I’ve experienced, people I’ve played and recorded with. The usual. But if you want music that’s been important to me, I have to mention bands like Broadcast, Spiritualized, Stereolab, Air and The Dandy Warhols as very influential. I mean I just totally loved these bands, and they’ve all been sort of a point zero..

A reference point from where I obsessively tried to figure out whatever influenced them as well as other bands they’ve influenced. I’ve discovered so much fantastic music through my hang ups on these bands. I really love to dive deep into musical archeologic discovery trips!

Q. Made a list of 5 albums of all time…
A: That’s just too hard, but I’ve been obsessing over these records for very long, so: - Broadcast // The Noise Made By People - Spiritualized // Lazer Guided Melodies - Dusty Springfield // Dusty in Memphis - Stereolab // Dots and Loops - Portishead // Third

Q. How do you feel playing live?
A: So far with Closing Eyes, a bit stressed actually. I usually just really enjoy playing live, but I’ve got way more to keep aligned and to be in control of performing these songs. When everything goes the way I want, it’s great! It feels really fluid and loose. But it’s an awful lot more to think about compared to just singing, playing guitar or keys or whatever. Live shows with Closing Eyes is just me on vocals, synths, samples and drum machines plus a guitarist who adds a touch of beautiful organic flair. Occasionally there’s another vocalist as well. I sometimes miss the way a full band can influence you to change directions live, but then again I’m free to do whatever I want with this setup. You gain some and you lose some compared to playing as full band with lots of people, but it’s fun to be able to pull things in the directions I feel like going when I play.

Q. How do you describe Closing Eyes sounds?
A: Hypnotic, loopy, synthetic yet organic. Fluid, dreamy, rhythmic and trippy.

Q: Tell us about the process of recording
I try to get as much as possible down whenever I’m on a great creative flow. I can sort of hear it if the ideas came naturally to me, or if I had to labor them when I listen afterwards. There’s a magic in what happens when it just works. I don’t know what does that. I’m constantly creating loops and beats and small melodic lines, and I sort of try and collage them together. Whenever I get a feeling or a sense of the direction things are going I just sort of piece things together in an arrangement. But once stuff gets to that point I can get really obsessive and work for ages on every little detail..


Q. Which new bands do you recommended?
A: I’m not really the one to be on top off what’s new and happening. I sort go in all directions all the time. My current hangup is actually Bossanova. You know, Jobim, Astrud Gilberto, Chico Buraque and the sort. But of current stuff I’ve listened to and really enjoyed I have to mention stuff like Dean Blunt, Flying Lotus, Morgan Delt, Todd Terje, Peaking Lights, Tomorrow’s World, TM404 and Control Voltage Khomeini.

Q: Which bands you love to made a cover version?
A: Lately I’ve been thinking about doing a cover of Boadcasts “Long was the year”. I have some ideas on that one I’d like to explore, but I don’t know if it’ll pan out to anything good though. I’ve done some covers, but most often I find that I’m not doing the song justice. I have like a scrapheap of sort of failed cover attempts.. I’ve been working on a cover of The Telescopes “Silent Water” for a good couple of years now.


Q: What´s the plans for future....
A: Discover more great music, finish another single, finish another EP, finish an ambient release I’ve been working on and off with for ages, do more collaborating, remix more, play abroad, stay busy. Q: Any parting words? A: Closing eyes sound labs will demonstrate our way of sound. Of quarter-sounds and lesser sounds. Haunting melodies for the contemporary mind. Diverse instruments of any kind. Obsessive compulsive loops oscillating in and out of time. We do small sounds as well as deep. We make diverse trembles and warbles which we repeat and repeat. We also have strange and artificial echoes, reflecting the voice many times. Some shrill and some deep.. Tune in, fade out, repeat..

Thanks for the kind words and support!
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