Zoe likes beeps.
Sophie likes strums.
They both like the Decemberists.
Two best friends on a mission to make the world a better place for music.
4.12.08
I don't believe in the new year anymore!
To be honest, I am pretty disappointed with the selection of good albums this year. Maybe it's just because last year was so incredible; not only were there several albums that I have listened to enough for them to become part of the very fiber of my being (Hissing Fauna, The Stage Names and Night Falls Over Kortedala to name a few), I also listened for the first time to several artists that I now consider among my favorite. This is not to say there weren't albums that I enjoyed this year, there were many. However, when I was deciding on this list, it was only difficult to pick which albums made it because of my apathy to even most of the albums I like. To put it a different way, there aren't any albums this year that I feel vastly improved the quality of my life. I know that discussing what albums came out in the last 365 days as opposed to the 365 before that is largely irrelevant, and I am happy that there are albums that I am that attached to. But I feel compelled to complain about it anyway. What else are blogs for?
Though this year may not have been great for albums, it was AMAZING for concerts. In the last few months I've been able to attend some of my favorite concerts of my life, and more importantly got to see Kevin Barnes ride a white horse in only tiny gold shorts. That experience alone easily makes up for any deficiency in good new music. Seeing Okkervil River live was also an unforgettable experience, and has sparked an obsession that now rivals my devotion to The Decemberists or The Mountain Goats.
One more note... there seems to be a lot of confusion about Bon Iver and whether to count his record as a 2007 or 08 release... lets just say that if For Emma was released this year, it would be number one, no contest. But I'll leave it off my list.
In other news, some of these albums are really great, and they are all 100% worth checking out
1. Fleet Foxes - s/t and Sun Giant EP (Also wins the award for "album I most wish was preformed in one of my school's a capella groups")
2. Bonnie "Prince" Billy - Lie Down In The Light
3. Born Ruffians - Red, Yellow and Blue ("I Need A Life" wins the "Hardest Song to Get Out of My Head Award")
4. Vampire Weekend - s/t (I know it's super overplayed and everywhere but I still love it.)
5. Shearwater - Rook ("Best Band I Discovered This Year")
6. The Dodos - Visiter ("Best Album with the Worst Cover Art")
7. Plant and Animals - Parc Avenue
8. Why? - Alopecia ("Other Best Band I Discovered This Year")
9. Dr. Dog - Fate
10. Ane Brun - Changing of the Seasons (why are all Swedish people so awesome?)
The last few on the list could be totally interchangeable with Department of Eagles, Miles Benjamin Anthony Robinson, Okkervil River's The Stand Ins and several others (my newest obsession being a few songs by MGMT, yeah I know I'm super late on this).
Thanks for reading, stay tuned for more news from the Super Awesome Squad soon!
Back With A Vengeance!
Love
Zoe
Interview: the Octopus Project (10.22.08)
The sheer number of bands coming out of Austin these days scares me sometimes, especially because I know that for every group that gets recognition outside of the city, there’s like 100 that do not. I wonder just how many great bands get passed over each year. Luckily, for those of us who like our beats eccentric and danceable, The Octopus Project is on the national circuit for keeps. Composed of husband and wife duo Yvonne and Josh Lambert, friend Toto Miranda, and beloved newcomer Ryan Figg, the band produces a unique blend of wordless electro-pop with crazy instrumentation and a whole lot of reckless abandon.
I sat down with all four of the band members in October at their show at the Black Cat in DC, discussing their history and their music. Though devoted to their music, they find time for quite a few silly things, including a love of Riverdance and a propensity for mask-making.
---
Yvonne, how did you learn to play theremin? That’s a pretty rare instrument.
Yvonne: Josh and I saw a documentary on Leon Theremin in 1999, and we both found it very exciting and liked the instrument’s history. We bought one on the internet, and I just happened to be the one who took to it. When we started playing together, we brought it in just to make weird noises. It took me two or three years for me to become comfortable playing melodies. I spent a lot of time with a tape recorder and headphones trying to mimic classical pieces that I was familiar with.
Your live show involves a lot of switching instruments. Did you all come in playing your instruments, or did anyone learn a new instrument to make that switching possible?
Josh: Everyone came in with their instrument, but Yvonne learned how to play guitar.
Yvonne: Still working on that one!
Toto: It’s also a product of our songwriting process. When we play a new song, it could be one person with a little snippet of music and an idea about where to go with it, or it could be a lot of people playing a lot of instruments. When we tour, the four of us, we have to work out the logistics of reproducing that sound. The switching really grows out of necessity — if in a song we want two guitars in the beginning, but a bass at the end, one of us has to run over to the other corner of the stage so we can do it.
Did you all grow up together or did you meet because of the music?
Josh: We’ve known each other since high school. I met Yvonne on my 18th birthday.
Yvonne: Toto and I grew up in the same neighborhood. We went to church together. Actually, we went to Sunday school together.
Toto: Well, we were both present when Sunday school was occurring. I wouldn’t really call it “going” or anything like that.
Yvonne: We weren’t particularly close then. I suppose we were as close as any 11-year-old boy and girl can be. Toto’s like my brother. But we all grew up in Houston. Ryan’s been with us for about a year now, and he’s the only true Austinite.
Toto: He gives us cred. That’s how we get into all the cool places in Austin.
Austin can be, for lack of a better word, sort of a clusterfuck of music. How did you break out of that bubble and into the national circuit?
Toto: For me, it really came from wanting to tour. When Peek-A-Boo decided to put out our first record, our producer was like “We’d love to put it out, but you guys would have to tour” and we were like “Have to? Golly gee, let’s go! Sounds like fun!” It’s something that we’re motivated to do for its own sake. It’s a boundary-expanding kind of adventure. Touring nationally did a lot for us as a band and helped us to focus our sound. All those different environments night after night really force you to figure out what’s going on specifically in your music.
So, touring is a highlight for everyone.
Josh: Definitely. It’s really cool to meet all these different people. When people come to shows and like it, we feel really good.
Your collaboration with Black Moth Super Rainbow came somewhat soon before your latest album. Do you think it had any influence on the record?
Toto: Maybe, just in the sense that we were part of it. We did those songs in a very similar way to how we do our songs. We take a bunch of different elements and layer them together, so in the case of the Black Moth stuff, it might be some of their music rather than one of our members playing something. Black Moth sent us a bunch of bits of their songs and we sent a bunch of our bits. When it came to actually doing the songs, instead of reaching for a guitar or drums, we would reach for a piece from Black Moth and stick that in the song. It was neat to use that to expand the palette of songs. I think in that way it certainly whetted our appetite to experiment with some new sounds.
So the entire project was over the internet; you never sat down together to make songs?
Yvonne: Completely. We didn’t even meet them until after the record was done. Technology is amazing.
As both an isolated phrase and a song title, I think “Copying Soup Onto Sexy Birdy” is one of the best combinations of words I’ve heard. How did that name come into being?”
Toto: It’s really a boring story. You would be disappointed if I told you. It’s better if you imagine it as being mysterious or something.
Josh: It’s not that bad! It’s pretty funny, I think.
Toto: Okay. There was a computer with a hard drive named Sexy Birdy. There was a song called Soup. When we dragged the song onto the hard drive, the little status window popped up and it said “Copying ‘Soup’ onto ‘Sexy Birdy’.” So that’s the story.
What do you think the absence of words in your songs adds to the music?
Josh: It challenges us to make things that are interesting to people who like songs with singing. And at the same time it makes things very easy. None of us have ever been the singer of a band. Well, except Ryan.
Ryan: It was in high school. It didn’t count.
Josh: It’s nice not to have the dynamic of one of us being the frontman, that not-really-collaborative arrangement where it’s supposed to be equal but the singer ends up being in charge anyways. It was never a decision to leave out lyrics; we just never felt the need to put them in.
Why did you start using masks in your videos and shows?”
Toto: We just went through a mask phase. The first one came from a Perez Prado record that Josh and Yvonne had. The cover was just this picture of his face sort of like [strikes school portrait pose]. We thought it was pretty funny, so we made masks out of it. The next one was Josh Xeroxing electrical outlets and blowing them up to face size. Those were the most successful.
Yvonne: That one stuck with people the most, and people gravitated towards it. After all, it is like a little face, so people could relate to it. Last night, someone came to our show with a homemade sparkplug mask around his neck. It was nice.
Josh: Sometimes a whole group of people will show up with masks. It’s pretty amazing that people are paying any attention at all in the first place, let alone enough to take the time to do something like that. To see someone wanting to show that not only are they paying attention, but they really like our stuff and know all the details is pretty impressive.
Can you think of a band that you’d be willing to do that sort of thing for?
Josh: Lord of the Dance, definitely.
Yvonne: That white shirt!
Josh: I’ve actually never seen them. But I’d still do it.
Does this mean we can look forward to another collaboration? The Octopus Project scores Riverdance or something along those lines?
Yvonne: That would be so much fun! We could get some dancers for our shows.
Josh: I guess we could make it happen. We’d need Riverdance though; there’s that little problem.
Toto: Yeah, it takes two for that tango to happen.
Interview: Los Campesinos!
A lot of people here on this lovely planet of ours are simply mediocre. These are the sort of people who do the same thing every day, who never jump up and down with abandon, and who worry about embarrassing themselves in public. Gareth Campesinos!, the lead singer of Welsh band Los Campesinos! is not one of these people. It’s hard to be when you’re at the forefront of the so-called twee revival.
Los Campesinos! are unique in that they are music fans first and musicians second. They proudly flaunt their influences, and Gareth in particular takes pride in his unpredictable taste. We talked about the band’s formation, the necessity for fun, and why the world shouldn’t write them off as “the band with the glockenspiel.” Gareth was in fact so eager to talk about music that he started the conversation before I could ask him anything.
---
Is that an Architecture in Helsinki shirt you’re wearing?
Yeah, it is! Good catch, I don’t think anyone’s figured it out before. I noticed during sound check that Tom is wearing a Deerhoof shirt. And last time the band was here, you wore a Xiu Xiu shirt. Do you purposefully wear band shirts from San Francisco when you play here?
No, it’s just because all the shirts I own are band t-shirts. I think I have over 100, and at least ten of them are Xiu Xiu shirts. It’s a weakness and a little bit of trying to be more interesting by wearing interesting bands’ t-shirts. It cuts out need for conversation and just moves right to a mutual recognition of a shared interest. Not that it’s ever really worked for me, though.
You’re still a relatively new band, so would you tell me about how the group formed and started playing?
The seven of us came together about two years ago. Initially, it was Neil, Harriet, and Ellen just jamming together. I lived with Neil, and when he started the band, I didn’t expect much to come of it. He met Tom at a pub in Cardiff and overheard Tom talking about The Decemberists. They didn’t know each other but started talking about being fans of that band. Tom started coming to practices, and he’s a very talented songwriter. I heard the demos and changed my mind about the band not going anywhere. So I told Neil that I was going to go to a practice, and all we had were these post-rock songs, which needed something else. Harriet plays the violin, and we thought that, although it’s a bit cliché, it would be a nice addition. Ellen and Aleks were friends, and she joined the band even before we heard her sing. We got to seven and called it quits there.
What do you like about having seven as opposed to the more traditional three or four?
Songwriting is a lot easier, and it gives us so much more scope to work with. When you’re just guitar, bass, and drums, you can’t go much of anywhere. But adding the keyboards, glockenspiel, and violin gives us such a broader capacity. There’s also more sound to hide behind if you mess up, which is nice. And more people to talk to if you fall out with somebody. More is more.
Other than the scope you said they provide, is there anything else about the specific instruments the band uses that you think adds to the overall effect?
I’ve actually come to resent the glockenspiel quite a bit. To a lot of people, it seems that we’ve become “that band with the glockenspiel.” We went in to a radio program once to do an acoustic session, and the host goes (assumes cheesy radio voice) “I want to see the guy with the glockenspiel!” And I’m just like “Oh, god, not again.” I think the violin is key. When Harriet plays solos or leads on the violin, it’s a lot more interesting, rather than on the guitar.
We’re working on new stuff at the moment with more instruments. When we tour again in October, we’re going to have a second drum kit and proper keyboards. We’re excited about that.
Where did the band name come from?
Neil used to be fluent in Spanish, but when he got to Uni and started drinking more, he kind of forgot. It’s sort of a hangover from that, I guess. It’s phonetically nice and aesthetically pleasing, but the literal meaning is insignificant to the band. I wasn’t even in the band when they came up with the name, but don’t think we thought we’d get anywhere or that anyone would care about us. If we’d expected to get anywhere close to where we are now, we probably would have tried to come up with a better band name. But it does the trick.
Are you planning on legally changing your names, Ramones-style?
Actually, the night we recorded our demos we were really happy with them and we were a bit drunk, and we went to a pub and the DJ played our songs. People actually liked them, and so we got really happy and said “If we ever play a gig in America, we’ll all legally change our names to Campesinos!” We didn’t expect anything to actually happen, but lo and behold, it has happened, but we’ve not [officially] changed our surnames. Nor do we intend to. We overshot our aims, which is a really good feeling.
Bimbo’s is a bigger venue than Great American Music Hall [where LC! Played in San Francisco on their last tour.] Have you been playing to bigger crowds across the board?
Definitely. On the East Coast, we sold out both our shows at the Bowery Ballroom, which was really nice, and tickets have sold really well for tonight as well. I also think we’ve been getting bigger crowds because we’re playing more all-ages venues, which I really like. Younger people have no inhibitions, so they’re a much more enthusiastic crowd to play to.
Are there differences between fans at home and here in the U.S.?
I think we definitely like the U.S. better. People who like us in this country and in Canada have heard about us through college radio or the internet. Whereas in the UK, it’s more of an enemy type thing where you have different sorts of music fans who like one thing and they’re very antagonistic toward those who like other things. In the NME, we get lumped in with a lot of other bands, and we get lads coming into our shows heckling us and trying to start trouble. It’s because the base of our music is upbeat and danceable and they like the more intense stuff, so they feel sort of angry toward us and like they need to defend their music. But I’m the biggest snob in the band, so if you talked to someone else I’m sure they’d say something different.
Though as much as I like touring the U.S., I do get incredibly homesick sometimes. I live with my sisters and my mum, and I miss them a lot. There’s also something ever-so-slightly soul-destroying about the monotony of the days. It’s intense and you don’t get to see anything other than the bus.
Both the band’s music and lyrics make your influences very clear, a good example being the similarity in title of your song “Knee-Deep at ATP” with [Camera Obscura’s song] “Knee-Deep at the NPL.” Why is that — sort of name-checking the older twee culture — so important?
First of all, you’re the only person to have caught that reference to Camera Obscura. But I guess it’s kind of inevitable for the band, because I write the lyrics, and most of what I do with my time and what I care about is listening to music, so I can only write about what I know and I only want to write about what I know. It’s inevitable that these reference points are going to come up in the songs. The whole movement with C86 and Riot Grrrl and K records is something I really wish I could have experienced properly, so I guess I’m trying to appropriate it for myself. It’s inevitable, but I think that some people don’t like it and think it’s a bit unnecessary. But it’s all I know, so it’s inevitable that it come up in the songs.
And in terms of the music, you really do like following them, as opposed to say Xiu Xiu, who I know you are a big fan of. I don’t hear that as much as, say, Tullycraft in your music.
That’s really the band as a whole having their say. I don’t have the ability to write music, and Tom [the band’s songwriter] isn’t as big a Xiu Xiu fan as I am. And we do certainly sound like those more twee bands, but the lyrics I write are often a lot darker than the songs might suggest. That’s certainly something that I’d like to develop more. A lot of the time we’re pigeonholed as being this ridiculously happy, upbeat, carefree band, which isn’t really the case. Hopefully the juxtaposition between the music and the lyrics is going to become more extreme. We’ll see how people react to it.
How do you hope people react to the music, or to seeing your live show?
Live, I think we make it a lot about enjoying ourselves. I guess we’re a bit selfish in that respect. We played a gig in Eugene a couple days ago, and although we didn’t play particularly well, we had such a good time. There were only about 40 people there, and Parenthetical Girls were in the audience crowd-surfing and moshing and fighting each other. I was really quite drunk, but I do remember being heckled to take my shirt off and I did. The set ended with me being led onto the dancefloor and Parenthetical Girls holding my legs and spinning me around and around. I have burns on my back. We really just want to have fun. If we were overly sincere, I don’t think it would work.
I don’t really know what reactions I’d like people to have to our music. I guess I’d like people to “get” it. If people that like the same bands that we like enjoy our music, it’s extremely flattering because it means we’re doing something right. There was a kid in a Xiu Xiu t-shirt in the front row in Eugene, and so I got really excited about that.
It really sounds like you all are friends and enjoy being around each other. How does that help the band’s dynamic?
Well, we’re touring the world, and it’s a massive holiday, and it’s nice to be doing it with people you love and have fun with. It’s incredibly cheesy, but it makes it a lot more enjoyable.
Interview: Los Campesinos! (6.6.08)
A lot of people here on this lovely planet of ours are simply mediocre. These are the sort of people who do the same thing every day, who never jump up and down with abandon, and who worry about embarrassing themselves in public. Gareth Campesinos!, the lead singer of Welsh band Los Campesinos! is not one of these people. It’s hard to be when you’re at the forefront of the so-called twee revival.
Los Campesinos! are unique in that they are music fans first and musicians second. They proudly flaunt their influences, and Gareth in particular takes pride in his unpredictable taste. We talked about the band’s formation, the necessity for fun, and why the world shouldn’t write them off as “the band with the glockenspiel.” Gareth was in fact so eager to talk about music that he started the conversation before I could ask him anything.
---
Is that an Architecture in Helsinki shirt you’re wearing?
Yeah, it is! Good catch, I don’t think anyone’s figured it out before. I noticed during sound check that Tom is wearing a Deerhoof shirt. And last time the band was here, you wore a Xiu Xiu shirt. Do you purposefully wear band shirts from San Francisco when you play here?
No, it’s just because all the shirts I own are band t-shirts. I think I have over 100, and at least ten of them are Xiu Xiu shirts. It’s a weakness and a little bit of trying to be more interesting by wearing interesting bands’ t-shirts. It cuts out need for conversation and just moves right to a mutual recognition of a shared interest. Not that it’s ever really worked for me, though.
You’re still a relatively new band, so would you tell me about how the group formed and started playing?
The seven of us came together about two years ago. Initially, it was Neil, Harriet, and Ellen just jamming together. I lived with Neil, and when he started the band, I didn’t expect much to come of it. He met Tom at a pub in Cardiff and overheard Tom talking about The Decemberists. They didn’t know each other but started talking about being fans of that band. Tom started coming to practices, and he’s a very talented songwriter. I heard the demos and changed my mind about the band not going anywhere. So I told Neil that I was going to go to a practice, and all we had were these post-rock songs, which needed something else. Harriet plays the violin, and we thought that, although it’s a bit cliché, it would be a nice addition. Ellen and Aleks were friends, and she joined the band even before we heard her sing. We got to seven and called it quits there.
What do you like about having seven as opposed to the more traditional three or four?
Songwriting is a lot easier, and it gives us so much more scope to work with. When you’re just guitar, bass, and drums, you can’t go much of anywhere. But adding the keyboards, glockenspiel, and violin gives us such a broader capacity. There’s also more sound to hide behind if you mess up, which is nice. And more people to talk to if you fall out with somebody. More is more.
Other than the scope you said they provide, is there anything else about the specific instruments the band uses that you think adds to the overall effect?
I’ve actually come to resent the glockenspiel quite a bit. To a lot of people, it seems that we’ve become “that band with the glockenspiel.” We went in to a radio program once to do an acoustic session, and the host goes (assumes cheesy radio voice) “I want to see the guy with the glockenspiel!” And I’m just like “Oh, god, not again.” I think the violin is key. When Harriet plays solos or leads on the violin, it’s a lot more interesting, rather than on the guitar.
We’re working on new stuff at the moment with more instruments. When we tour again in October, we’re going to have a second drum kit and proper keyboards. We’re excited about that.
Where did the band name come from?
Neil used to be fluent in Spanish, but when he got to Uni and started drinking more, he kind of forgot. It’s sort of a hangover from that, I guess. It’s phonetically nice and aesthetically pleasing, but the literal meaning is insignificant to the band. I wasn’t even in the band when they came up with the name, but don’t think we thought we’d get anywhere or that anyone would care about us. If we’d expected to get anywhere close to where we are now, we probably would have tried to come up with a better band name. But it does the trick.
Are you planning on legally changing your names, Ramones-style?
Actually, the night we recorded our demos we were really happy with them and we were a bit drunk, and we went to a pub and the DJ played our songs. People actually liked them, and so we got really happy and said “If we ever play a gig in America, we’ll all legally change our names to Campesinos!” We didn’t expect anything to actually happen, but lo and behold, it has happened, but we’ve not [officially] changed our surnames. Nor do we intend to. We overshot our aims, which is a really good feeling.
Bimbo’s is a bigger venue than Great American Music Hall [where LC! Played in San Francisco on their last tour.] Have you been playing to bigger crowds across the board?
Definitely. On the East Coast, we sold out both our shows at the Bowery Ballroom, which was really nice, and tickets have sold really well for tonight as well. I also think we’ve been getting bigger crowds because we’re playing more all-ages venues, which I really like. Younger people have no inhibitions, so they’re a much more enthusiastic crowd to play to.
Are there differences between fans at home and here in the U.S.?
I think we definitely like the U.S. better. People who like us in this country and in Canada have heard about us through college radio or the internet. Whereas in the UK, it’s more of an enemy type thing where you have different sorts of music fans who like one thing and they’re very antagonistic toward those who like other things. In the NME, we get lumped in with a lot of other bands, and we get lads coming into our shows heckling us and trying to start trouble. It’s because the base of our music is upbeat and danceable and they like the more intense stuff, so they feel sort of angry toward us and like they need to defend their music. But I’m the biggest snob in the band, so if you talked to someone else I’m sure they’d say something different.
Though as much as I like touring the U.S., I do get incredibly homesick sometimes. I live with my sisters and my mum, and I miss them a lot. There’s also something ever-so-slightly soul-destroying about the monotony of the days. It’s intense and you don’t get to see anything other than the bus.
Both the band’s music and lyrics make your influences very clear, a good example being the similarity in title of your song “Knee-Deep at ATP” with [Camera Obscura’s song] “Knee-Deep at the NPL.” Why is that — sort of name-checking the older twee culture — so important?
First of all, you’re the only person to have caught that reference to Camera Obscura. But I guess it’s kind of inevitable for the band, because I write the lyrics, and most of what I do with my time and what I care about is listening to music, so I can only write about what I know and I only want to write about what I know. It’s inevitable that these reference points are going to come up in the songs. The whole movement with C86 and Riot Grrrl and K records is something I really wish I could have experienced properly, so I guess I’m trying to appropriate it for myself. It’s inevitable, but I think that some people don’t like it and think it’s a bit unnecessary. But it’s all I know, so it’s inevitable that it come up in the songs.
And in terms of the music, you really do like following them, as opposed to say Xiu Xiu, who I know you are a big fan of. I don’t hear that as much as, say, Tullycraft in your music.
That’s really the band as a whole having their say. I don’t have the ability to write music, and Tom [the band’s songwriter] isn’t as big a Xiu Xiu fan as I am. And we do certainly sound like those more twee bands, but the lyrics I write are often a lot darker than the songs might suggest. That’s certainly something that I’d like to develop more. A lot of the time we’re pigeonholed as being this ridiculously happy, upbeat, carefree band, which isn’t really the case. Hopefully the juxtaposition between the music and the lyrics is going to become more extreme. We’ll see how people react to it.
How do you hope people react to the music, or to seeing your live show?
Live, I think we make it a lot about enjoying ourselves. I guess we’re a bit selfish in that respect. We played a gig in Eugene a couple days ago, and although we didn’t play particularly well, we had such a good time. There were only about 40 people there, and Parenthetical Girls were in the audience crowd-surfing and moshing and fighting each other. I was really quite drunk, but I do remember being heckled to take my shirt off and I did. The set ended with me being led onto the dancefloor and Parenthetical Girls holding my legs and spinning me around and around. I have burns on my back. We really just want to have fun. If we were overly sincere, I don’t think it would work.
I don’t really know what reactions I’d like people to have to our music. I guess I’d like people to “get” it. If people that like the same bands that we like enjoy our music, it’s extremely flattering because it means we’re doing something right. There was a kid in a Xiu Xiu t-shirt in the front row in Eugene, and so I got really excited about that.
It really sounds like you all are friends and enjoy being around each other. How does that help the band’s dynamic?
Well, we’re touring the world, and it’s a massive holiday, and it’s nice to be doing it with people you love and have fun with. It’s incredibly cheesy, but it makes it a lot more enjoyable.
Interview: Cloud Cult (5.14.08)
Cloud Cult are one of those infectious bands that you constantly listen to, and before too long, you realize you know all of their songs. The genius of what they create sneaks up and sucks you into a world of both breathtaking beauty and unbearable pain. I sat down with four of the members: Craig and Connie Minowa, the band’s singer/songwriter and artist, respectively; Sarah Young, their cellist; and Arlen Peiffer, their drummer. At heart they are Minnesotans traveling around a world that is overdeveloped compared to their scenic home, but their tenacity and honesty force the inhabitants of that unnatural world to reconsider the destruction we create.--
---
Unlike the other Cloud Cult albums, all the songs on the new album have consistently positive lyrics. Was that intentional?
Craig: Yes. When I was writing the album, I was really focused on rebirth. The message is more intentionally positive, because I’m at a time in my life when I’m realizing the power of perspective and the necessity of looking at negative things in a positive light.
The album is also a lot shorter and composed of full songs without any of the interludes that other albums had.
Cr: We really wanted to do something shorter and more succinct, even leave our fans hanging a little bit more. Our time to finish the album was also shorter, which rushed it. There were other songs I wrote for it that I thought of including at one time or another, but when all was said and done, the complete project felt like it needed to be a little shorter.
“Story of the Grandson of Jesus” is a unique Cloud Cult song in that it carries a third-person narrative and is sort of a complete story. Is that something that you’re finding yourself doing more, as opposed to the more personal songs that comprise most of Cloud Cult’s repertoire?
Cr: I have a friend in San Francisco who met this homeless man who actually claimed to be the grandson of Jesus. The friend believed him for awhile and followed him around. It seemed like an interesting story and a good vehicle for the messages that we usually like to have in our songs. I really just found the character very interesting. The album was actually going to be called “Stories from the Pleides,” and every song was going to be a narrative. But after writing a couple songs, that changed right away.
What do you like about having such a large group?
Sarah: I like the people! It’s been an evolution into this current group, and I really like the dynamic. We’ve got everything covered for touring too — some of us are strong, some of us are good drivers. Some of us are sassy also.
Arlen: It’s really fun, too. Lately we’ve been having these band-wide laughing fits. They’re not really triggered by anything in particular, but they go on for about 20 minutes. The giggling fests are awesome.
The aspect of environmentalism is really important to the band. How do you balance that with the music?
Cr: We try to incorporate it as much as possible into our business model, though lyrically not so much the music. I do write most of our stuff on our farm in Minnesota, though, so it’s impossible to ignore the beauty of that in the music. It gives it a sort of organic feel, which I like a lot.
Coming from such a small town and a natural place, was it a hard adjustment to start playing in huge metropolitan areas?
Cr: Definitely. The first few tours were really grueling. The demand of being on all the time and going directly from the van to a show and then back to a van and doing it all the time was really hard. We got sick almost the whole tour. We really wanted to go home.
Co: For a lot of us, it’s still like that, but we know what to expect. A couple of the members live in Minneapolis, so they’re used to it. We also have day jobs working for environmental nonprofits, so it’s hard to not feel like we have to get stuff done all the time. We do like being homebodies, and we want to spend some more time working on the farm so we can get off the grid.
Your music is often very intense and cathartic. How do you keep the energy up?
Cr: Because the music is so intense, we have to get deeply involved in it. The best performance is when you can have a personal catharsis. It’s tough to do that a lot without feeling you’re going to turn into ash.
A: This is my first tour ever, and I’m really starry-eyed. It’s a dream come true, so being able to do this is inspiration enough.
S: it’s just an honor to be able to play this. I like 98.9% of Craig’s songs, and he writes a lot of songs!
You write a lot of songs that don’t make it to albums, then.
Cr: It varies album to album. They Live On the Sun was 100 tracks, and it’s only 21 on the album. Usually there’s one track ditched for every song that makes it onto an album.
With all that unreleased material, do you ever think about making a B-sides album?
Cr: Yeah, actually. We want to work on starting a family and having a baby, so we have a lot of songs saved up that could take the form of an album while we’re doing that. I think we’re going to take a break from these long tours and start being more strategic about where we play.
S: That’s really awesome for me, because I have two kids and I travel with them, so I have to pace myself. It’s hard.
Co: Craig, I’m going to remember that. On the next tour, I’ll remind you of when Sarah talked about how hard it is to keep a kid with us on tour. And you’ll have to listen to me. Sarah and Craig and I have all been on the road for five years, and we’re ready to slow down. The newbies are like “Gotta go gotta go!” and we just sit here and say “Nuh-uh, we’re tired!” We’re the geezers of the band. The energy has shifted, and the driving force has changed. It’s nice to have the new energy to keep us going. Arlen is like a new set of eyes to look through.
“The Ghost Inside Our House” has a line about starting a family. Is that song about what you two are trying to do right now, then?
Cr: Yeah, it is. The ghost in the house is Kaidin [Connie and Craig’s son who passed away when he was two]. We always feel like he’s around, and there’s a desire to see that ghost because we want to have that tangible experience and say ‘Yes, he’s still alive, the other side exists and he’s there.’ We have a need to believe he’s with us and still in our family.
Connie, your painting is really unique to the band. What do you like about doing it?
Co:Well, I love painting period. It adds a unique visual element. I went to art school and have been doing it all my life. I’m also huge music buff, and it’s nice to combine two of my biggest passions. It’s a visual expression of the music that’s being performed. Craig and I are celebrating our 10-year wedding anniversary. We’ve been doing this relationship for a long time. He’s a musician and I’m an artist, and it’s nice that we can combine our art forms and be creative together. That’s what I like most is being able to be with my honey. A lot of it is also inspired by the journey we go through on tour.
Cloud Cult has been making a lot of music for quite awhile now. Craig, how do you feel you’ve progressed as a songwriter?
Cr: I focus a lot more on lyrical content. Early on, whatever came could be, and it was more freeform. Knowing that that there’s radio play now and that a larger audience is hearing it means that I feel responsible for what I put out there. It needs to be positive because I want to propagate something good.
This album was a process of sorting through lyrics very meticulously, making sure that every line had something positive and empowering and helpful. If you go back to Who Killed Puck?, it’s a very dark album and was reflective of what I was going through at the time. There was no intent for people to listen to it. It was more for me, because I had the need to vent. They Live On the Sun was the same way. It can be good music, but I feel like if I’m doing this for a living, I want my career to be something that’s positive.
29.9.08
Band Plug: Jukebox the Ghost
They have a comedic song about the apocalypse, and several songs involving handclaps. How could I resist?
Get their music before you hear it blasting out of the nearest Urban Outfitters.
Sounds like: Pale Young Gentlemen, Born Ruffians, Vampire Weekend
11.9.08
Noah and the Whale Interview
"Last night, I had a dream
We were inseparably entwined
Like a piece of rope made out of two pieces of vine
Held together, holding each other
With no one else in mind
Like two atoms in a molecule
Inseparably combined"
make the lyrically obsessed fangirl inside me nearly cry with happiness. Noah and the Whale are a fun and clever band with unmeasurable potential. I would recommend them to anyone who enjoys love, The Lucksmiths, color coordinated outfits and/or joy. I was able to have a brief phone interview with Noah and the Whale's Charlie Fink yesterday thanks to my new amazing friends at WBRS (thank you so much to Andrea Fineman)!
Noah and the Whale's US tour starts next week, I advise you to check it out.
-----------------------------------
In several interviews with you that I’ve read, you seem to take offense to being labeled as twee. Do see twee is a negative term?
I do think it can be a detrimental term, I don’t think it has to be, and if that’s something you aspire to then maybe it’s not. I just don’t think it’s true [about our music] and in terms of what we are trying to do perhaps it does slightly undermine it. In England now that comes up less and less and I think people have got their heads around it now just about.
What is your songwriting process like?
Usually I write the songs and then I bring them in and sort of when I bring it into the studio is when it comes out, and kind of evolves, you know? So it’s a staggered process perhaps.
So is the songwriting mainly your responsibility or do you start with an idea and then the rest of the band helps out?
No, it’ll come in fully formed, but it will develop.
How did you get involved with the Take Away Shows?
I’m not really sure actually. We sort of bizarrely met them for the first time at South by Southwest, and they did some filming around us, which I’m not sure has come out yet. Then they sort of invited us to come to Paris and do some filming while we were out there. It’s amazing, we just think that they are like, the best thing. It’s incredible the films they make, we love it.
How did you feel about that experience?
It was honestly one of the most fun experiences of my life, doing that filming, it was great.
I noticed your take away show was a lot longer than many others I have seen, which was cool.
Yeah, they told us we’re the only band they have ever filmed twice, which was pretty exciting.
On one of your takeaway shows there is a brief clip of you playing the song Black Cab by Jens Lekman. What do you like about his music? Is Jens an influential songwriter for you?
Yeah, definitely, I think when I first started writing out the songs we were going to play he was a big influence. I think that album [Oh You’re So Silent Jens] is just a phenomenal album. I could tell you specifically what I like about it… his lyrics remind me of Jonathan Richman, they both can be quite funny and poignant at the same time.
Obviously when you do things like the Take Away Shows, it’s in a very intimate setting, and it seems you work well as a band in that setting… but do you prefer playing shows like that or do you more enjoy the festival-type experience of larger shows?
I personally prefer the more intimate shows. But obviously it’s just a different thing, right now in England we’re starting to get dragged out to play for bigger crowds or whatever. I saw Bonnie “Prince” Billy play at a 3,000 capacity venue in London and he manages to make that venue feel like he’s playing to 300 people. I think everything is what you make of it. I think it’s more in how you approach it. I think honestly there are some challenges to playing both, they have different limitations.
Your song 5 Years Time has gotten a lot of airplay and popularity in the UK, but in the US most people still haven’t heard of you… this seems like a common phenomenon. Do you have any ideas about why the culture in the UK is more accepting of a wider variety of music?
I wouldn’t say that in England there is a bigger acceptance of a wider variety of music… I think where we sit on the charts or the radio or whatever, the bands we sit next to aren’t really anything like us. I don’t know, I think it’s the same, I think there are some great bands that get only sparse coverage and a sparse fan base, I think it’s just like your artists, but I’m not really sure. I guess the one difference is that radio is a bit more diverse and a bit more powerful in England than in America. I think that getting on the radio here is a bigger deal.
Yeah, definitely, whereas here it’s becoming increasingly unpopular to listen to the radio.
Yeah, and from what I understand it’s only a small selection of bands that get played on the radio [in America].
What artist would you love to play a show with? Why?
Uh, tough one. I mean obviously Bonnie “Prince” Billy would be good, wow, that’d be unbelievable, quite tough though, I mean if they didn’t like you, what would you do? Maybe if we could get Neutral Milk Hotel to reform and play a gig…
What is the favorite show of the ones you’ve played so far?
Some of the festivals this summer have been really special. I think for me one of the best gigs I’ve ever done was this gig we played in London at this venue called Bush Hall, which is only 300 capacity, and at the time we’d never brought in a big crowd, just for us, you know? And it was almost Christmas, and it was just amazing, it was just really special, you know like seeing your music connect with people for the first time, properly, that was a very special gig.
What kind of music did you grow up listening to? How did you get into playing music?
Well I guess my mom used to play a mixture in the car, between pop and folk, so it would be like Buddy Holly, The Beach Boys and Dylan. I think when you take them out it’s like the instant hook of the melodies of The Beach Boys and Buddy Holly, and the rhythm when you are a kid. And I think that Dylan has the melodies that even when you are a kid you can appreciate, but honestly, the lyrics didn’t really have the same effect back then. But I think from that came some kind of like accessible rhythm and melody that is in our music
What direction are you going to go in for your second album (musically)? Will it be a departure from the style of the first?
It’s pretty different; I mean it’s hard to tell now. I mean the funny thing is when bands go in a different direction often the songs aren’t that different, the melodies aren’t that different, they’re just playing around with soundboard or whatever. The funny thing about Dylan going electric is that a lot of it was just his acoustic songs readapted, like Baby Let Me Follow You Down and stuff like that. So I think we did play around with sounds we haven’t used yet, and the lyrics are a lot more personal, the first album is quite broad. It doesn’t feel unnatural, and it feels like a pretty straightforward move for us, but it’s definitely different.
Ok, well thank you so much, I’ll see you at your show in Boston!
Brilliant, looking forward to it.
7.5.08
Interview: Le Loup (4.5.08)
Last year, Le Loup released their debut The Throne Of The Third Heaven Of The Nations' Millennium General Assembly, one of 2007’s criminally underappreciated albums. The band’s frontman, Sam Sitkoff, wrote it long before he had a band, not knowing it would become a public work.
Since then, Le Loup has become known for their bombastic live performances and incredible energyy. Before the band’s show in San Francisco on April 4, I sat down with Sam and discovered a great deal about the story behind his project’s unusually cohesive album.
---
The album’s very long title shares its name with a piece of art in DC (where Le Loup is based). What is that piece of art, and why did you choose it as the album’s namesake?
It’s a piece of art by a man named James Hampton who never really intended it to be a piece of art. He was a janitor, and he would collect bits of trash and broken furniture and take them back to his garage. He would spend all night covering them in gold tin foil and assembled them into a very delicate shrine. At the end it was over 140 pieces. He died before he finished it, but it was intended to be a testament to the return of Christ to earth.
There’s a piece of it in the National Portrait Gallery in DC and it was first thing I saw when I went there. To me it was the most compelling piece in the museum, especially because it’s part of a beautiful kind of story. This man was buoyed by his faith and worked tirelessly for fourteen years until he died. It was a complete labor of love, but there was a very fine line between his artistic genius and flat-out insanity. On a very simple level, I could really relate to what he’d made because when I started the album, I wasn’t expecting it to become a big thing. It was pure luck that someone noticed it. And I was making it from things I found-instruments that were lying around and my computer and some other stuff. It was personal and something I’d made for myself.
The band was initially just you. How did you form a recording and touring group?
Well at the beginning it really was just me and my best friend. I would come up with songs on my computer and then send them to him over email. I wasn’t planning on making anything of it. I put it up on MySpace on a whim one day and it got a really good reception-the people from Hardly Art and Sub Pop contacted me, at which point I realized I wouldn’t get any farther if I didn’t have a live show.
I put up a Craigslist ad. All it said was that I was looking for a band and I needed it fast. A bunch of people showed up to the first audition, and by audition I mean “Come into my living room and talk about shit.” Those are the same people who are now in the band. We had about two months of practice until we realized we needed a bassist and a drummer, so we sent out another ad. A month later we had our first show and two weeks after that show, Hardly Art signed us.
Bigger bands seem to be more numerous these days. What do you like about having a large group?
It’s very much about theatricality. A live show should be visually arresting and overblown; that’s why you go and see music. When bands just sit there and play what’s on the album, I’m left feeling that I could have stayed home listening to their record and felt just as satisfied. Being up on a stage is theater, and I think I should act like it. So getting that many people on stage is a very easy, kind of quick and dirty way of achieving kinetic energy and making it captivating.
The other element is that the album was super-layered. Every song had thirty or forty tracks. I knew that if I wanted any sort of fidelity to the original music in the live show, I would need a bunch of people. Originally I wanted fifteen people but seven people showed up initially, and it turns out that organizing practices for seven people is about as much stress as I can handle. I would not wish a fifteen-person band on anyone.
One thing that’s very evident on the album is a theme of apocalypse. Where did that come from?
It’s funny because I didn’t even intend for that to happen and still, to a certain extent, I don’t see it as much as other people do. There are definitely a few songs where it’s apparent, the most obvious being “Outside of This Car, the End of the World.” That song is actually based on a very simple experience I had driving through this really industrial town late at night and feeling kind of alone. It wasn’t supposed to be a very literal translation of the world ending, so much as an interpretation of something I saw.
Those themes do crop up, though, and it’s due in a large part to how personal the album is. I was dealing with a huge transition – getting out of college and into the real world – and not really knowing what to do or where to go. So my way of dealing with it was blowing it out of proportion in my head and hyperbolizing it. The music was my way of turning it into a form I could handle.
Another things about the album that’s very apparent is how cohesive it is, both lyrically and in how the songs are ordered. Was that intentional?
Most of the songs were written spontaneously-I’d feel the need to write something and it would just come out. Once it became clear that it was actually going to be an album I got more deliberate about bringing back themes and variations. A few musical and lyrical phrases come up throughout the album. It’s mainly because I think an album ought to be more than a collection of songs, even if they’re really good songs. It needs to be a cohesive unit. My favorite albums are the ones that bring back certain ideas and play around with them a little.
What are some of the albums you think fall into that category?
Smile by Brian Wilson is one of the main ones for me. Yellow House by Grizzly Bear. Pretty much everything Sufjan Stevens does. Animal Collective is probably the band that most consistently impresses me in that way. And of course In the Aeroplane Over the Sea.
Do you look to take inspiration from that music?
I try not to. When I was younger, there were times when I would hear an album and I’d say “I want to make something that sounds exactly like that.” But then I realized that you can’t be creative with that attitude because it invariably ends up sounding like a crappy version of the original album-at best. At worst it just sounds like shit. But I can’t say that I don’t draw from that, everybody does. I try to keep an objective stance. Listen to it, love it, but try your damndest to go your own way. That ends up being a lot more validating. Unfortunately I can never hope to be as weird as Animal Collective. But that would be so awesome. It would probably take pounds and pounds of mushrooms and constantly talking to God.
Are you classically trained in music, or has it mostly been something you do for yourself?
I studied classical piano for thirteen years, but I don’t play it much onstage because I like to be mobile when I’m performing. I spazz out and jump around, which is impossible to do if I’m stuck behind a keyboard. Instead I sing and I play banjo very poorly.
Do you use your classical training consciously when you’re writing music?
I can’t really escape my training, so I still approach music the way I was taught. But I also haven’t practiced piano or read music or had lessons for seven or eight years, so I’ve been able to get away from the classical approach a little. It helps when I’m writing songs on instruments I’m unfamiliar with.
So you write all the parts for the songs.
For the album, I wrote all the parts because I had most of the songs already finished. But with the new stuff, the process is more collaborative. What I’ll do now is take a very rudimentary skeleton of the song to our practice and I won’t give much direction. The band messes around for a while with rhythms and atmospheres and we see where it goes. It’s a lot more spontaneous.
How’s the news stuff coming along?
Very slowly. We quit our day jobs to go on tour, which feels great. You should try it sometime.
Unfortunately, right now I don’t have a day job to quit!
Oh! Well, then what you should do is get a day job and then quit the next day just to know how it feels. It’s amazing. Going on tour, we get to see all these amazing places and meet new people. It was also nice to play in Portland, which is where I grew up. But…what were we talking about?
The new stuff, quitting day jobs..
Right. For now we’re musicians, which is an impressive way of saying we’re completely unemployed and kinda broke. I guess it’s a little rough. But I wouldn’t have it any other way.
Interview: Holy Fuck (3.1.08)
It’s unfortunate that people can’t seem to get past Holy Fuck’s name. If they learned to, they would find a band that makes great electronic music without the use of electronics. Keeping it old school is one of the many things Holy Fuck are good at. They’re also good at what they do-music-as well as being great friends and generally cool dudes.
After the band’s show at Bottom of the Hill on February 29 for Noise Pop, the four members (Graham, Brian, Matt, Brad) and I trekked upstairs to the green room and talked about a great variety of the things that keep the band going. Among them are friendship, spontaneity, and what they claim is the ultimate wonder food: pita and hummus.
---
You guys have so much energy on stage. How are you not dead by now after touring for so long?
Brian: Nachos, hummus. Hummus is the wonder food of the world. If we didn’t have hummus on this tour we wouldn’t get this far. Actually I have some on my table.
Graham: That’s the best thing about playing with tables. I used to play guitar, but with tables, you can keep a lot of stuff up there. Pencil holder, stapler-Brian’s doing his taxes up there. Actually, we’re playing a really long game of risk. Travel risk-you can get it.
Brian: I think we should bring Battleship up there. We can have the audience help us by yelling out positions.
How long did it take to get the chops down to improvise onstage?
Graham: This far? Three years. But it’s still a challenge every time. Tonight was pretty good, but I screwed up one song because my keyboard wasn’t in tune. I thought you were playing this note (makes gesture of fingers on fret board) as the root, but you were actually playing this one. So I got all messed up. I made it up.
Brian: Well, three years in and we still don’t know what key some of our songs are in.
Graham: You still don’t even know what the root note is.
Brian: I don’t know what a root note is at all.
Graham: It’s part of a plant. A musical plant.
So you do go onstage planning to work off specific songs.
Brian: Yeah. We’ve been doing that setlist long enough now that we need to start changing it up. But inevitably we’ll have to switch it up drastically which will make it worse because our drummer Brad - who is running around right now totally liquored up- that was his last show with us this tour and for the rest we have a new drummer. Our relief pitcher, Matt Schultz is coming in tomorrow.
Graham: This is where I should use some horrible metaphor about the “spice of life” or the “rich tapestry of colors” It’s going to be really weird because we play tomorrow with a different drummer.
Brian: Yeah, and we have a brand-new setlist. We’re going to have to make it interesting to cover up the fact that we’ll be screwing up a lot. Graham’s going to do some juggling, and our sound guy can play some surf music. Matt’s going to be like “I leave for six months and this is what happens?”
You must have to practice a lot, then.
Brian: Never.
So your practice is on stage?
Graham: We don’t have time to practice any other way.
Brian: Much to our chagrin. We’re so busy. I’ve got tons of dinner dates…
Matt: Brian actually has no dates.
Graham: Seriously, though, if we practiced it would suck. We would be boring. It would be frustrating, too-we would nail something totally cool during practice, but no one would hear it besides us.
Brian: We never want to have too much fun just making music with each other because the audience isn’t there to enjoy it. We don’t want to have too much fun playing for each other.
There were a lot of cameras tonight. Is the band producing a DVD or something?
Brian: No, that happens everywhere we go. (Long pause)
Entire band: Uproarious laughter.
Graham: We wish that happened to us! Maybe one day. For now, the marquees can wait.
When I saw you open for Wolf Parade last September, I remember Hadji (of Wolf Parade) came onstage and played with you guys. That seems to happen a lot, the band’s members changing-what do you like about it?
Brian: We like it a lot because we get a chance to work with some great musicians. The weird thing is that we haven’t yet gotten A Place to Bury Strangers to play with us yet. When we started “Lovely Allen” I was looking for James (of APTBS, who opened at the show)
Graham: I think the other thing is that if we didn’t get new faces constantly we might get kind of self-indulgent. There will be plenty of time for that later.
Brian: Hopefully our new drummer will help us prevent that, though we’ve got a lot of this tour left. I keep telling myself “May’s almost here” but it never is. So far away…
You’re going to need a lot of pita and hummus then.
Brian: Yeah, maybe a hummus gun. Our sound guy will stand at the edge of the stage and since we can’t really grab anything ourselves he’ll just shoot hummus at us.
Graham: But then we’d need something to catch it with-a pita hat. I think we should make those.
Are you looking forward to the rest of the tour?
Brian: Well, I guess. It’s been pretty good so far but when we went to Mexico I got bitten by a bunch of spiders. Or maybe it was just one living in my mattress. Hopefully that kind of thing won’t happen again.
Matt: We went to great lengths to preserve our safety on this tour. A lot of it involved complicated putting on and taking off of snow tires.
Brian: Actually I’ve got a cold right now. It’s gone through the entire band and I’m the last one. Maybe I got it from the candy Graham gave me the other day. I think they might have actually had flu in them. Little jelly candies filled with disease. We should call them FluJubes.
Graham: Yeah! Mucus-filled FluJubes. People would buy those, right?
Matt: Aw, Graham! That was unnecessary. Let’s never make those.
10.4.08
It's been a long time, long time now....
SO. Orders of business:
1. Muxtape is a pretty sweet site. Mine is here. Most of my recent favorite artists are up there.
2. More people should listen to/go see The Ditty Bops. Why they are not much more famous is one of life's great mysteries. Same with Jeffrey Lewis (track on my Muxtape).
3. Spring is the best time for listening to indie pop. Not that there is a bad time to listen to indie pop. Favorites at the moment are: The Lucksmiths (I cannot emphasize this enough), Vampire Weekend, Club 8, and Los Campesinos!
4.
21.1.08
Interview: YACHT (1.16.07)
Jona Bechtolt, aka YACHT, doesn’t like getting pegged as one thing or another. He’s a musician, a photographer, a general tech whiz, and much more. His last album, 2007’s I Believe In You. Your Magic Is Real. concerns everyday life, how we’re only human and at the same time have incredible potential. But that’s only one definition, and he’d prefer to keep things open to interpretation.
Jona is currently on a break from YACHT’s motto of “On Tour Forever,” working on projects in a supernatural town in Texas with his friend and his girlfriend. We spoke over the phone about magic, his live shows, and his super-chill vibe. In the process, we struck upon a genius idea for a TV franchise.
---
So you’re in Texas right now. What are you doing there?
On my last tour, these kids in Austin were like “You have to go to this place, Marfa, on your way through Texas.” They told me about this thing called the Marfa Lights, which is a supernatural phenomenon. They’re not like the Northern Lights-they’re completely unexplained. Basically it’s these weird lights that float around and look like they have life to them. It happens every night. We’re supposed to go out tonight and see them.
This town is in the middle of nowhere. Last night we actually had to knock on the window of a motel to get a room, and this woman – the owner of the motel – came out in her nightie. She seemed a little upset, but sort of happy that there was business. It’s a completely weird, surreal place. I’ve never been to a place like this before.
Me and my friend and my girlfriend [voices in the background]-oh well actually they just came back from Alpine, the next small town over -hey, I’m doing a phone interview right now! Anyways, we’re doing this project together that’s really exciting-
Jona’s girlfriend Claire: What are you doing? Stop!
Jona: I can’t tell her?
Claire: No!
Jona: Well, soon enough then. Hopefully we’re going to launch it tonight, but I can’t tell you now I guess. [Note: they did launch it, and it’s here .]We’re out here working, both together and independently. Claire’s writing for a new science show on the Sundance channel. I decided that I want to make two new records. I bought a drum set and a Kurt Cobain-y guitar and started recording. I’m thinking that one of my albums will be shorter than the other, like an EP. Albums are sort of dead anyways.
Listening to the last album a lot, it sounds like you have a lot of faith in people to make the right decisions. Is that something that you hoped people would take away from it?
I didn’t want to set up and right and wrong choices, but instead leave it kind of open to interpretation for people. It’s just my vibe, I’m super-positive and non-judgmental.
The song “It’s Coming to Get You” is so much more negative than the rest of the album.
Well, there was something really specific that inspired that, but I probably can’t talk about it in a public setting. It just came from…{a personal experience}… that didn’t work out the way I wanted it to. The song is actually about karma-that’s the “it” that’s coming to get you. I felt like it was OK to let dark things out in addition to the positive things, with the positive spin of it being karmic. I wanted to focus on it being OK for bad things to happen to people if those are things that are coming back and biting them in the ass.
And it also works really well that it’s a dance song-I didn’t notice what it was about until a couple listens in.
Yeah, I thought that it would be more fitting if the package that the negative message came in was pretty and sweet and easy to dance to.
The theme that pervades the album is magic. What kind of magic are you talking about?
It’s all different kinds of magic, open to interpretation. When the record first came out and we were fooling around with the imagery associated with it, I got really into researching magic. I watched DVDs about its history and went to some magic shops. But overall magic as an art form these days is pretty boring.
I did find a couple little cute things, though, that I used as a “one time only” trick in a couple of my shows. There were these confetti-type things that you conceal in your hand, and when you make a gesture that’s like throwing a ball, they shoot out of your hands and look like paper lightning. They were kind of expensive, though, so I only bought one set of ten. I figured it was pretty wasteful and kind of stupid. I don’t want people to think “That’s the guy that’s all about magic!” and be stuck forever in that persona and die after a lonely life. [Note: At this point it was very difficult for me not to make some sort of joke about GOB of Arrested Development.]
I run into the same problem with YACHT being the name of the band. I have to be really careful not to wear funny captain’s hats or sailor uniforms or anything. I have a couple things with nautical embroidery, and I almost feel like that’s pushing it. I try not to wear it too often.
But didn’t you play a show on a yacht once?
It was for the release of the album. It ended up being one of the best experiences of my life as far as shows go. People were just ready to do whatever; we weren’t in the stereotypical rock show setting where I have to be worried about looking cool or think about the super-high stage and the lights. It was mellow but totally crazy. And we were on a boat on a river. I just like to do anything that gets people out of the groove of how you have to act at a show. I want to make it easier on people.
When I saw one of your shows you came out into the audience for a bunch of songs and started a dance contest. That was a nice break as an audience member.
That’s exactly what I like to do, shake things up a little. I’ve been playing around with a couple of ideas for shows that I want to do this year. I’ve been really focusing on coming up with really different kinds of tours. Nothing is solid yet, so I won’t go into detail, but I’m working on making it better. I’m never satisfied with anything – recordings, shows, anything. I never want to do things the same way twice.
Like you were saying earlier about not wanting to get stuck in one thing.
Exactly. If I’m associated with anything, I want it to be fun stuff. That’s it.
Speaking of fun stuff, do you still have that penny suit from the [“See A Penny, Pick It Up”] video?
Actually I don’t! The guy who made it does. His name’s Matt McCormick, he lives in Portland. He likes to bring is friends in when he’s making stuff, and he brought in this guy who’s a set designer for big movies. The guy was really into the song, so he spent two days making that giant penny outfit. It had a whole wooden frame and a backpack frame attached to the wood. It was really heavy – I think 65 pounds. It was a huge chore to do all that running around, especially because I couldn’t really move my legs. I had to hop everywhere.
I thought it was funny how there are all these people walking around who are totally unfazed by you running around in this penny costume.
Well we shot it really early in the morning. I think it was on a Sunday, because there were people coming out of a church. They didn’t seemed to be super stoked about it.
I read that you’re writing a book to be published this year – a sci-fi novel with aliens and stuff.
Wow! I have no idea what that is! You’ll have to send me a link to it.
I will! But maybe there’s a doppelganger Jona Bechtolt who’s a sci-fi author.
I don’t think so, but we should totally perpetuate that rumor. Say something about how I’m writing a book about the Marfa lights and aliens.
And Claire could write a TV version, and it could have crazy spinoffs like “Law & Order.”
Yeah, CSI: Marfa! We’ve got gold on our hands here. Let’s do it!
17.1.08
More new music from Fishbear!
Here is a really shitty video of a recent gig of theirs that I took on my phone. This song is pretty sweet.
16.1.08
VERY IMPORTANT Band Plug: World Without Strangers
World Without Strangers is the name of the first side project of the Ben Weiner Music Collective, a group of musicians whose main studio is based approximately 10 feet from my room.
Ok, basically my younger brother Ben has finally finished fully recording his first song! The single, Isle Of The Automatons (previously known as "the robot song"), will eventually be on a meticulously planned out concept album he is hoping to release by spring of next year. The track is extremely catchy with really interesting lyrics and plenty of beeps. The songwriting is quite impressive for a 16 year old sophmore in high school (I am not biased whatsoever).
Go check out the song! It is fully downloadable here at Ben's myspace. And if you feel so inclined, message me and I'll give you my address, then you can mail Ben a buck or two and he'll mail you back a shiny CD-R with totally awesome robot drawings on it! You know you want to.
8.1.08
One day, you will live on your own.
And here in the real world where we speak with more practical diction, this time of year fucking blows. In a matter of months we'll know where we'll presumably spend the next four years of our lives, and yet (a) we as of yet don't know precisely where this mystery location is, and (b) our teachers continue as if this were not the case. I for one am finding progressively less motivation to bother with practically anything, opting instead to fantasize about the exceptional lineup of shows coming down the proverbial pipe. I mean honestly, what sane person would focus on calculating momentum when said person could instead imagine the sheer adrenaline that accompanies a Jus†ice show? Seeing as I am said person, and I am (arguably) sane, I am indeed focusing on the latter item, though it represents a short, distant event rather than something immediate. Then again, physics homework is complete drivel no matter how immediate, so I generally see no reward in persistence regardless of what other fantastic distractions there are to be had.
And writing this blog post? Why, this is what I'm doing instead of composing an essay on Death of A Salesman! In all seriousness, that overly adjective-laden previous paragraph is nothing more than evidence of my current state of mind: distracted, prone to tangents, and living mainly in anticipation of events that, while scheduled to occur, may in fact not take place. In "Soft & Warm," Voxtrot lament the agonizingly slow passage of time: "God shake the sickness, won't this decade ever end? It's been going on for years, been happening for years." While I can't manipulate that into a clever form applicable to my specific situation, I can say that I have similar sentiments: the closer I get to the end of school, the slower time passes and the farther away that end seems. It's going to kill me, but I am gonna make it through this year. In theory, at least. Fingers crossed-in case we die.
Awaiting silent Tristero's empire,
Zoe
Side note: today I discovered that the boy I admire from afar not only likes the Mountain Goats (possibly the biggest plus ever) but also raises goats. Double goats=double awesome? Let's hope so.