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Tag: questions


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SXSW with Ginger & The Ghost

Posted on March 20, 2013October 8, 2013 by Emily McBride

Ginger & The Ghost is one of my absolute favorite South by Southwest finds.

Not only were they some of the most friendly, personable people I’ve gotten to talk to, but they are also enormously talented.  Seeing them perform live feels like a privilege, almost as if the audience is being granted an exclusive chance to view them in their natural habitat.  Usually I feel the overwhelming urge to sing along when I see a live show – this is one of the only ones I have seen that made me want to hush and unblinkingly observe the artists in front of me.

Missy (“Ginger”)’s voice is not of this world, and as you listen to her, you can’t help but think that she was made for this…actually hand crafted to be doing exactly what you see and hear.  Her talent is real.

Dan,  “The Ghost,” manifests himself in a way that perfectly befits his title.  He stands beside Missy with a ghostlike omnipresence, but that by no means implies that he fades into the background.  He seems to be haunting the stage as he plays, and he is undeniably felt.

Only Ginger & The Ghost could make an audience forget that they are in a small, unassuming bar in the middle of 6th Street in Austin, Texas and transport them into an otherworldly galaxy (one that I’m eager to return to).

So there you have it. Amazing band. Awesome people. So before you bolt off and scoop up their EP (which came out March 15!!), go ahead and check out this interview first!

SXSW with D E N A

Posted on March 17, 2013October 8, 2013 by Emily McBride

“Cash, Diamond Rings, Swimming Pools.”  It’s catchy.  It’s fun.  It’s been stuck in my head for about three weeks.

I got the chance to catch up with D E N A, Bulgarian (Berlin-based) vocalist/songwriter/pop/hip hop artist/badass at South by Southwest for a quick chat.  Before we got to the official interview, we met up at a party at Icenhauer’s on Rainey Street (I may have creepy-fangirl approached her in the bathroom before meeting her professionally…it’s fine).

Once we met up, I went with her to grab a taco from one of the food trucks, followed by a cupcake and some coffee (thanks, Jonas!).

After geeking out for a little bit about going to see Icona Pop at their show at The Belmont later that night and how much we both love the show Girls, we got down to business.  So check out our interview below, and be sure to become as obsessed with D E N A as we are.

Vinyl Mag: Are you excited to be playing SXSW?

DENA: Totally! I’m super looking forward to it. We already played a gig last night that was kind of a warm up, so yeah I’m looking forward to playing Thursday, Friday, Saturday.

VM: So, how was last night?

DENA: It was great. It started a little bit with technical complications, of course.  Like we had a cable that had broken and stuff. It took us some time, but we found a substitute and rocked the show. It was cool.

VM: How was [audience] reception?

DENA: I was really, totally, stoked how it turned out, because it was a very short showcase, you know…twenty minutes, which is usually – for that time – crazy from the beginning. We played two tracks, and then from the third one everyone was super feeling it, and it was super crowded although it was super late already.  It ended like a crazy cool party.

VM: What people are you most looking forward to seeing?

DENA: I’m looking forward to seeing Icona Pop tonight and Charli XCX.  I’m going to see [Charli XCX] for the first time ever, so I’m excited.

VM:I know you’ve done some audiovisual work. What are some of your other creative outlets?

DENA: Audiovisual is a big term.  I’ve done some animation, some motion graphics, and vector animations, drawings, and video editing and photos…everything. But parallel to that, I was always writing and making songs and composing.

VM: Do you ever implement that other creative stuff into your musical career?

DENA: Yeah, well that’s very interesting, because sometimes I have the feeling that it’s totally working separately.  But in the end – always when I direct everything and have the last word and just create a vision and work with other people – I see that it’s a great mixture of everything I’ve done so far. The interesting part now is that I get to work with other people and just combine and join forces on projects and work together on ideas.  It’s more exciting.

VM: Do you have any collaborations coming up or do you have any collaborations that you want to do?

DENA: I currently have collaborations going on. Just actually last week, there was a track that came out where I’m featuring my friends, they are called LCMDF – two sisters from Finland and based in Berlin – and the tune was actually having to premier one day before my last video on Friday.  I don’t know if you saw it.  And then I also try to write right now for other people. It’s super exciting and great because I love words…like, lyrics. And I just wrote a tune for a German producer called Robot Koch, which is going to be his next single now coming out like on a major German label. It’s very exciting, because a lot of cool people are remixing the track, and it’s just so interesting to work not only on my own with what my own head is producing, but placing content for other people that I like.  It really is something that I want to develop and upgrade.

VM: So you were in a [band before this]. What made you decide to go solo?

DENA: I was in a band a few years ago where…I played synth, and my friend played drums. We were like ‘do-it-yourself’ kind of.  It was like trying to combine instruments with drums and synths. It was a little bit of a funky approach to disco or house music or music to dance to…[very] ‘do-it-yourself’ everything. And then, at some point there were different things like had kind of separated us from the duel thing.  And then I started to program beats and work on my own ideas. I got this beat machine, MPC, and started learning how to sample and program and play chords and kind of produce home demos and bring them to a level where I knew that the structure was ready for it to be a pop song. It was kind of a natural process.

VM: So what are some of your major inspirations?

DENA: You mean music or life?

VM: Well, either one, you know. Music, but let’s get really deep and talk about life.

DENA:  [Laughs] Life, love, beats, and happiness.  Good vibes…I love definitely like hip hop, and I also like the way that hip hop was produced in the 90s…and I really adore everything that Neptunes has ever produced.  Right now, I realize how significant [Neptunes] is for my way of thinking structure-wise, beats-wise, and production-wise.

VM: So what is next for you besides what you’ve already told me?

DENA: Well, I just put out my new video [last] Friday…I have a lot of new tracks coming out and new videos that are now in the process to be made…I really want to put out my album during 2013, probably Fall. And it’s very exciting now to collaborate and just put out singles first with different labels.  I just had the Cash, Diamond Rings, Swimming Pools EP that came out in January…and basically I’m looking forward to putting all my music from the past three years out. 

VM: So everything is already written and everything?

DENA: Yeah! Well, I mean I keep on writing and stuff, but there is a lot of new material to come.

 

SXSW with New Madrid

Posted on March 16, 2013October 8, 2013 by Samantha Gilder

Upon first listen, I quickly realized that New Madrid would turn into one of my favorite SXSW finds. The music they make is powerful; it forces you into a trance-like state and transcends the boundaries of your mind far from worldly concerns. Each time I play Yardboat, I feel a little more free and lot closer to myself and the music. It’s definitely one of those experiential listens that you kind of want to share, but kind of want to keep to yourself all at the same time. Fear not, though, because we at Vinyl decided to share it with you. This four-piece Athens-based group has created something special, and we got the chance to meet with them during SXSW. Feast your eyes on what they had to say, and then I highly recommend you go listen to Yardboat, streaming now for free on their website.

Vinyl Mag: Is this your first year playing SXSW?  If so, are you expecting it to affect your musical career?

New Madrid [Ben]: Yeah, it’s our first year. And I hope so. That’s the plan.

VM: What sets would you like to catch while you’re here?

NM [Ben]: I want to try to check out Dive today; they’re playing right off of Sixth at 5:00. Unknown Mortal Orchestra- I really want to see them. Hopefully we will catch Futurebirds play.

VM: You have actually played shows with Futurebirds, right?

NM [Ben]: Yeah, totally, we’ve played with them a couple of times.

VM: Did David Barbe and Joe Lambert approach the band to work on Yardboat or vice versa? How was that experience as a whole? 

NM [Ben]: We hooked up with David in Athens just playing shows. We won a contest to get a session in the studio, and he saw us play a show and wanted to do some recording with us. So we set up three days and worked with him.

VM: Did you knock it out in three days?!

NM [Ben]: All of the instrumental tracking, yeah. We did the vocals later. Phil lived in Athens at the time, so he could just come in whenever David had a free hour or something. We mixed it over two weekends just trying to get it done.

VM: Phil- do you currently live in Athens?

NM [Phil]: I do, I live in Athens. The rest of them didn’t at the time.

VM: Was the move from Tennessee a professional or circumstantial move? 

NM [Phil]: We had all wanted to move the year before. We had done these demo sessions, and we were all like, ‘let’s just do it. Let’s just move to Athens.’  But we decided we needed to get something together first. So we finished the record and had something to be proud of.  We all moved together and we all live together. We live in a barn; it’s pretty awesome.

VM: What’s in store this year for New Madrid?

NM [Ben]: Keep on playing shows. Get back into the recording studio. After SXSW, we’re just going back home. We had about five or six shows down here, and we did a tour to get down here. When we get back to Athens, we’ve got a schedule for the last half of March and first half of April at this place called The Green Room.

VM: Who did the artwork for Summer Dream Sigh and Ghost and Fire?

NM [Phil]:Two different people; Summer Dream Sigh I did, and our friend Anna Dewitt, who lives in Nashville, did Ghost and Fire.

VM: How did the album writing process go for Yardboat? Was it instrumentals first or were the songs created around the lyrics?

NM [Phil]: It’s really all over the board, but some of the songs on Yardboat were songs that I had written in high school, and I matched the words and the guitar parts together. With other stuff the instrumentals come and in a stream of consciousness, the words just come.

SXSW with Wax Idols

Posted on March 15, 2013October 8, 2013 by Samantha Gilder

One thing I came to realize after being at SXSW was that my life-long battle with having no sense of direction (in navigational terms, of course) was going to be an issue. Growing up on a 10-mile long island has definitely spoiled me, as I have become accustomed to knowing every in, out, and shortcut to anywhere I needed to go; Austin definitely threw me for a loop in that sense. I quickly realized that knowing where you need to be is one thing, but getting there is the real battle.

Finally I stumbled upon Red 7, where Heather Fedewa (aka Hether Fortune) from Wax Idols, in all of her hot –leopard-pants glory, greeted me.  I grabbed a beer, and we headed outside to conduct what I considered one of my most personable interviews of the entire experience. This girl keeps it really real. How real, you might wonder?  THIS REAL:

Vinyl Mag: How do you feel the show went?

Heather Fedewa:  It was good; I’m really sick, so I was pretty like…’bleh,’ but it was good!

VM: How did you collaborate with Shaun Durkan (The Weekend) to do the album artwork for your past three releases?

HF: Well, that’s a great question; I’m glad you asked about that. Shaun and I have been friends for a long time, and when I was about to put out my first 7” I just wanted to work with him, because I knew that he was a really talented artist and graphic designer. We figured out quickly that we worked together really well, so we decided to create a ‘thing’ as partners, art-wise. So then he did the full-length record with me, No Future. He also used some of my collage work for their last EP, Red, and we just kind of went from there. Every time we do something, it gets a little crazier and crazier- it’s cool. He’s one of my best friends. I’m really excited to see him at SXSW, actually. He moved last year, and I never get to see him anymore, so I’m really excited to see them later.

VM: Are your musical influences actually drawn from the musicians that you seem to be constantly compared to?

HF: Yeah, I mean, sometimes they get it right. The thing is, I think it’s really easy for listeners and writers to kind of pigeonhole bands, because it triggers stuff that they’ve heard before, which is okay. Do I love The Cure and Joy Division, and have I listened to them since I was 14? Yes, absolutely.  But, I don’t know.  I don’t listen to The Cure and Joy Division all the time. I think I listen to Nick Cave probably more than anything else. He influences me in different ways, though, because I don’t write the same way that he does. He influences me to think differently lyrically.

VM: Is this your first SXSW?

HF: With this band, yeah.

VM: Who are you interested in seeing while you’re here?

HF: We’re trying to find Nick Cave. We won’t be able to get into his show, because we opted for the money over the wristbands, because we’re broke.  But it’s cool, because he’s playing in San Francisco soon, and I’ve already got tickets. We’re going to try to find him, though. I also wish I could see Prince, but we won’t be able to get into that one, either. I’m excited to see The Weekend at the Slumblerland Showcase, and Girls Names, as well.

VM: Do you personally keep up with your own social media? Who runs it?

HF: I do. I run all of it. I’m an internet whore. When it comes to how the band is represented visually and online, it’s definitely my thing. I totally push it- my Twitter is outrageous. I’m pretty outspoken, and people get mad at me a lot, but I feel like so many bands and artists are so pre-packaged with their responses; they’re trying to put on a façade of being a certain way. So with us and with me, what you see is what you get. That’s it. I don’t apologize for any of it.

VM: Do you find it helpful, hurtful, or irrelevant to be an up-and-coming band from California, being that California seems to just breed musicians?

HF: I don’t know. I don’t pay attention. I don’t care or think about it. I would be doing what I’m doing no matter where I was; California is just where I kind of ended up. I grew up in the Midwest, so I grew up always being like ‘f*ck Californians, spoiled brats!’  Blah, blah, blah. But it’s home, now. Well, Oakland is. Not L.A, not San Francisco – definitely Oakland. It reminds me of Detroit. I’m not sure whether it hurts or helps, but I think probably my attitude and my big mouth hurt us more than anything at times.  But can’t do anything about that!

VM: What do you see in store for Wax Idols in 2013?

HF: We’re going to be touring a lot. My plan is to make two back-to-back EP’s that like, everyone will hate. And I really enjoy doing that. I don’t like to repeat myself. I’m really looking forward to making some records that a lot of people will really not like at all- I’m excited about that. I’m excited to tour and play. We have this new drummer, Rachel, who is phenomenal so I’m excited to grow with her in a live setting because it gets cooler and cooler every time we play together.

Q&A with A Rocket To The Moon

Posted on March 4, 2013October 8, 2013 by Kate Foster

A Rocket To The Moon has been around since 2006, and the band is only just now dropping its second album. A little taken aback? We were too, until we gave the new album, Wild & Free, a listen. This band has matured a lot in their seven years, developing a very folksy angle to their usual pop punk sound – it’s no wonder that they needed a little more time to unleash their potential.

We caught up with ARTTM’s lead singer, guitarist, and founding member, Nick Santino, about everything from the group’s inspiration for the new album to touring with bands like fun. and Motion City Soundtrack. Check it out below!

VM: So, you guys have been a band for about seven years now. Where do you think you’re at right now in your musical career?

NS: I think we are still learning and still growing. There’ve been some changes over the last four years in our band, and I don’t think I could have predicted them if you asked me then. I think that’s the most exciting thing about music – and the most frightening. It’s always changing. You never know what’s happening next.

VM: Who are your major musical influences?

NS: Anyone from Tom Petty to Katy Perry. A good song is a good song no matter how it’s performed. I like to keep an open mind when it comes to music and try to not discriminate against certain types.

VM: What do you guys typically write about?

NS: We write songs about real-life situations. We want our music to be relatable to anyone who listens. We’re big on musical storytelling.

VM: You’ve played with some pretty big bands, such as the Maine, the Cab, Motion City Soundtrack, and fun.. What has that been like?

NS: It’s always great touring with people that enjoy what they do. Touring’s half of the band’s existence so you need to have fun with it. Every so often you’re on a tour where you don’t see eye to eye with another band or band member. But I always look at it like we are all here doing the same thing for the same reasons. And if you’re here for a different reason, go home.

VM: Your next album, Wild & Free, is set to drop March 26. How’d you choose the album title?

NS: Wild & Free was something that I typed into my notes app on my iPhone three years ago in the middle of the night while sleeping in the van on tour. I wanted our album to be very youthful and fun while keeping a mature side. When it came to writing songs for the album I remember digging through my notes and finding “Wild & Free” from a couple hundred days before. We wrote that song and it later ended up becoming the title of the record. I guess I kind of knew in the back of my head that it would be the title of the record before we even wrote it. The record reflects the title pretty well.

VM: To me, the new album has a more mature, almost country sound. What do you think caused such a shift?

NS: Natural growth and touring. We’ve been on the road for four years straight now. Our musical influences have changed and expanded. Our live playing has improved. We never set out to write a country album. I don’t think that is what we have here. But we just played from our hearts and what you hear on this record is the sound of live hearts beating.

VM: What do you think are the standout tracks on the album?

NS: They are all so different. That’s what makes our band “A Rocket To The Moon”. We will play a few pop rock songs then jump into a Garth Brooks cover. You never know what you’re going to get with our band and I think that’s what sets us apart. There’s a track called “Wherever You Go” that stands out most because it’s the most country-sounding song. But it’s also my favorite song on the record, both because of the story and because of the music.

VM: What are your touring plans concerning Wild & Free?

NS: We’re gonna hopefully be on the road all year. I can’t wait to play more of these songs.

VM: In your wildest dreams, which bands would you want to tour with?

NS: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers for sure.

VM: Where do you guys see this album taking you?

NS: Hopefully, somewhere that I can’t even begin to predict. Fingers crossed.

Q&A with Brazilian rock group MindFlow (currently opening on the Take Action Tour)

Posted on February 11, 2013October 8, 2013 by

I’m sure some of you music lovers have heard of – or even attended a show for – the Take Action Tour. I just got off the phone with guitarist Rodrigo Hildago from Brazilian rock group, MindFlow (quite a chill dude with a fabulous accent), who was kind enough to chat with me on the band’s day off in Jacksonville, Florida.

For those that haven’t heard of Mindflow, here’s a little history to fill in the gaps:
They are from São Paulo, Brazil, and they got together as a group in 2003.  Hildago told me in his interview that he simply started playing guitar because his friends needed some helping hands for their band.  After that fizzled out, he starting writing with their current drummer, Rafael Pensado, and everything took off from there.

After the band sent material to renowned producer Ben Grosse (Disturbed, Marilyn Manson, Slipknot, Megadeth, etc), he personally attended one of their shows and agreed to work with them on MindFlow’s third album called Destructive Device. From there, Nightmare Records got a hold of them, and the band combined their preferred songs with their released online tracks and birthed With Bare Hands.

So now you know.  Be sure to check out MindFlow on the Take Action Tour with The Used, We Came As Romans, and Crown the Empire.  But not before you check out my interview…

VM: First off, how’d you get the name MindFlow for your band?

RH: It was from the name of one of our songs called “When Minds Flow”.  It means there’s no real structure, that it’s just free.

VM:  What got you interested in music? Was it family, friends, or self-discovery?

RH: I am actually the only one in the family that does music. My friends in high school needed someone to help them out, and so I picked up the guitar and started learning. From that, I met Raphael our drummer.

VM: What bands influence you?

RH: I love Bon Jovi. It’s my favorite band, and I think Jon Bon Jovi is a great singer.

VM: So what influences your writing? What do you write about?

RH: We use everyday things to make music. We wrote 12 songs in 12 months, and they are all based on certain moments, like the corruption in Brazilian politics and natural disasters. People can relate to these things.

VM: How’d you guys team up with The Used on this tour?

RH:  We were interested in this project and in this awesome cause. We wanted to help out, and we believe in each other and the cause. We really wanted to be a part of it. The guys from The Used are so great, and they are super nice. This is our first big tour, and we feel really lucky and honored to be picked to be a part of this. It’s such a great cause.

VM: How has the fan reaction been since you’ve been touring with them and bands like We Came As Romans?

RH: Mindflow is different from those bands, and bands like WCAR are more popular, but I think we are well liked even though we don’t sound like them. People have been having fun and we’ve gotten good feedback.

VM: Have any crazy stories or hilarious moments from the tour so far?

RH: No, (laughs), we are pretty boring band. We’ve just been chilling out in Jacksonville on our day off.  We mostly play video games (laughs).

VM: What’s your favorite recently?

RH: We’ve been playing a lot of the new Resident Evil. It’s pretty fun.

VM: That’s awesome. What are your plans after the tour?

RH: We are going back home to Brazil to work on a new album, and then we’d like to come back for a summer tour.

VM: Maybe I can catch you guys next go around.  Would you like to say anything to VinylMag readers or have anything you’d like fans to know?

RH: Thank you. Definitely thank you. We hope you enjoy it and are having fun. This has been an awesome opportunity, and thank you for supporting it and the tour and the cause.

Words with Pinback’s Rob Crow

Posted on November 14, 2012October 8, 2013 by Emily McBride

Everyone should know Pinback.  They’re kind of a big deal.  Based in San Diego, California, the band is essentially made up of Zach Smith and Rob Crow.  They recently released their fifth full-length studio album, Information Retrieved and are currently on a US tour.

I got the chance to grab a few minutes of phone time with Rob to talk about their current tour, the album, Disney’s takeover of Lucasfilm, and what’s up next for the band.

So enjoy.  And be sure to check out of their upcoming shows.  They’ll be in Atlanta at Terminal West tomorrow – and so will I – so you should definitely not miss it.

What are your thoughts on Disney buying Lucasfilm?  What do you think that means for the new movies? 

I’m highly excited about it.  There will be a lot more possibilities now.  Lucas has been trying to ruin his own thing.  There are a lot of amazing directors and writers out there right now.  Looking at what they did through Pixar…things like The Incredibles don’t treat children like idiots.  The [Star Wars] prequels do treat children like idiots.  What’s great about the original Star Wars is that there is a hero.

I’m mostly hoping for someone to look up to in the films.  In the last three films, the closest thing to that is the bad guy.  I think it’s detrimental to bring up children with that.

You once said that Pinback is the most accessible thing that you do- can you elaborate on that?  What other projects are you involved with at the moment?

I gravitate more towards extreme things that most people don’t care about, which is unfortunate.  I don’t gravitate towards it because it’s not popular.   It just seems to be what I’m interested in for no particular reason.

Tell me about the Helios Creed tribute album.  How did that come about?  Was it more about the project for you or the charity?

Somebody asked me if I wanted to do it; only recently did I hear that it was for charity.  Charity is great – I just didn’t know about it.

I read that you now do a lot of recording at SDRL studios?  Is it your studio?  What does it stand for?

At the time it was me, Zach, and two other people partnering in it.  We have studios at home also.  Zach doesn’t work [at SDRL] anymore.

You all have children now- do they inspire or change the way you write?  How does having a family change the way you prioritize the band?  Do they ever tour with you?

It’s a lot harder to really put the time in to complete a linear thought; they used to tour with us.  It’s a lot more difficult now that I have three kids – one’s a baby, one’s in school.  It would be a little crazier.  It was pretty great when I could [take them on tour].  They have been all around the US already.

I really like concept of an artist as a person.  People go to see a band, and they’re all spotlighted.  So people may think we’re above them or something, which we’re not.

We’re definitely not cooler than them.  It’s a privilege not a right what we do.  We should all be on our knees thanking people for letting us play for them.

You released “Proceed to Memory” to Rolling Stone and then “His Phase” to Pitchfork before releasing the full album.  Are those your favorites or were they just the first done?

I don’t know.  I don’t know much about marketing.  Jeremy runs Temporary Residence [record label]. I thoroughly trust whatever he does.  He’s a good, honest guy.  If he thinks the way to go about something is the way to go about something, I trust him completely.

What is “Denslow, You Idiot!” about?  What inspired the lyrics?

There is a lot of stuff on the album that I decided not to talk about for about a year…there is a bunch of hidden stuff in some of the videos and the songs.

The reason for this is because it is more fun to have people use their imaginations and come up with what they think these things are about.

It’s like the old days of radio when people used imagination instead of just turning on the TV and having it in their face.

[It’s] any excuse to use your imagination.  It’s also an excuse for people to come up to me at the end of show.  It’s a way to promote conversations and communication.  If they have ideas about what things are, they can come talk to me about it.  Some people are too nervous to talk to us, and this can give them things to talk about.

Is it strategic to release albums so far apart, or is that just how it goes with your schedule and writing process?

It’s just how it went it.   It just took so long.  We did not want it to take so long.  We’d be happy if we could put out an album a year.  We would, but we just can’t.

What is your favorite part of touring?

Making new friends and seeing old friends and getting to go to cool areas around the country.  Getting regional food and drinks.

What is next for Pinback?

We do a lot of touring.  We are talking about whether we want to do a new record or not.  If we do, we try to do it in a way that wouldn’t take five years.

_____________

Tour Dates

11/14 – Durham, NC @ Motorco
11/15 – Atlanta, GA @ Terminal West
11/16 – Nashville, TN @ Exit/In
11/17 – Chicago, IL @ Metro
11/18 – Madison, WI @ High Noon Saloon
11/20 – Ann Arbor, MI @ Blind Pig
11/21 – Toronto, ON @ Lee’s Palace

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Greg Saunier of Deerhoof interview

Posted on November 5, 2012October 23, 2014 by Colin Frawley

Despite what you could maybe call a bit of inclement weather – Hurricane Sandy tore through New York City just as the band’s tour was supposed to begin – Deerhoof have made it out onto the road to support Breakup Song, its latest release on Polyvinyl (the label). Vinyl (the mag) was fortunate enough to catch up with drummer Greg Saunier a week before the tour’s kickoff show in Dallas.

 __________

Vinyl Mag: A lot of people experienced the new album for the first time through the Youtube video that was all one track. As a result, I can’t get it out of my mind that the album almost is one big, long track, composed of various movements.

Greg Saunier: While we were making [Breakup Song], I had deejayed some shows – before the band played and then after – and they would turn into dance parties. I had only ever thought in terms of “what’s going to make it sound like a great album?” But the idea of an album, as a format, is not even as popular a format nowadays. It’s much more likely that you’re hearing a sequence of unrelated singles, and the only thing that relates them is that they share the same roomful of people, and there’s room to dance. If you want it to be danceable, it would be pointless to put in even one song that’s not danceable. You’d have to start over again from scratch. This is something that really struck me, and I kind of learned it the hard way while I was deejaying [laughs]. It was a fun thing to realize, and we tried to sequence [the album] as if it were a continuous party, and that’s why there are no breaks between songs – you don’t want to let it flag even for a second.

Even though the songs all sound quite different from each other – that in itself isn’t meant to be arty; that’s just how it sounds the way the party gets deejayed.  You’re switching from artist to artist, most of the time. In my case, you’d put on one song from Motley Crüe, you’d put on one by the Zombies, and they’re all danceable.

VM: So you’re trying to work within your own vernacular, but trying to find every disparate corner in the same little room.

GS: Yeah, exactly. Dance music doesn’t have to mean disco … When we decided we wanted to make a dance record, we ultimately ended up with no songs that were like that. We ended up cutting everything that was in a disco vein. Dance music is still very wide open – you can feel like it’s a limit on what you’re doing, but really it opens it up even more. If you’ve got one dance song on your record, then, boy, you’d better make it a disco song. But if every song on the record is dance, then you suddenly realize the range of what that can be. A lot of it was kind of a heavy metal approach to dance music, and that’s not normally thought of as dance music, but when you listen to early Motley Crue, or the Scorpions, or something like that – of course it’s dance music. One of my favorite songs is “Come on and Dance” by Motley Crue, actually, and people started moshing to it when I played it at those dance parties. It is danceable.

Then we got into trying to do stuff influenced by Cuban mambo music from the 50’s. It’s not the kind of dance music where you sort of space out; it’s not like a rave. It’s much more starting and stopping; it’s very tense-sounding. There will suddenly be a pause, and then some guy yells, and then it starts again. It doesn’t flow; it’s almost stiff-sounding. I just completely fell in love with that over the past year or two and was trying to think of how that is dance music, and how we could make music that has something like that quality.

And then, last summer, we played in this big supergroup with a bunch of musicians from the Congo like Konono N˚1. We did a tour in Europe last summer with them. That was basically dance music, too. The show would be up to two hours of basically dance music. There were all these things I learned to play on the drums from playing with them that were very different from anything I had ever done before. I started playing stuff that was a lot more repetitive, and kind of a lot simpler. Once my hands and feet started being in the habit of playing like that, it changed the way I played a bit, too. So I think the album turned out different, as a result.

VM: Those briefed ahead of time on the dance-heavy nature of the record were probably expecting something closer to the four-on-the-floor disco thing you mentioned earlier. Yet it’s obviously nowhere near that area.

GS: There’s a second in “Mario’s Flaming Whiskers III” that I think has a bit of that – a bit of house beat to it. That was Satomi’s [Matsuzaki, Deerhoof bassist and vocalist] song, and she wanted a house beat on that one. But other than that, it doesn’t sound like disco or house.

VM: Do you find it liberating or limiting – or maybe even both – to be known as a “weird band”?

GS: [Laughs] In our actual day to day existence – like when we’re on tour, for example – I think that’s something that comes into play when journalism enters the picture. When we have a new release, journalists often want to describe it that way. Or sometimes it happens with booking. When a tour is first being set up, it’s like, “Okay, we’re going to play in Athens. Where should we play? Who should we get as the opening band?” A lot times the promoter will be like, “Who’s the local weird band? We should get the local weird band.” [Laughs] But the thing is that, yeah, I see that, but in a way it doesn’t touch me, because by the time we show up in Athens, what I see is people dancing, I see people with big smiles on their faces, and where it fits in in some kind of music blog or music history book is the furthest thing from anybody’s mind in the middle of a loud rock show. I don’t think of my music in any category, and I feel extremely liberated. Sometimes I feel limited by my own creative limits or my own abilities to play the drums, but I just see that as a challenge all the time, and try to trick myself into finding something new that I didn’t know I could play or write.

VM: You guys have managed success in two different eras. When you were starting out in the nineties, it was more the era of records sales. Now we’re in an age where you’ve got to keep the touring machine going. How have you managed a smooth transition between the two?

GS: [Laughs] Sorry, the reason I laugh is because it was in the nineties – the quote-unquote era of record sales – that we sold no records. It was like, from 1994, when we started the band, to 2000, it wasn’t like no records sold, it was just that not enough sold to ever break even on anything. I’ve got to give Kill Rock Stars credit for putting out our albums. For the first seven years of the band, everything we put out lost money. I’ve got no nostalgia about the good old days [laughs]. That doesn’t exist for me. It exists in that I knew it was true for some of my friends, but it was never true for Deerhoof.

As much as we do like putting out LPs – and I like colored vinyl, and we put out cassettes of our last two albums, and for this last album we put out a book of flexi-discs – deep down, I have never cared that much about format. And it’s just me; I’m not even speaking on behalf of the whole band. On behalf of Deerhoof’s drummer alone, I have never cared about format … I’ve been happy that our music is available in this other format, the mp3. Or, like you were pointing out, not even the even the mp3, just a Youtube video, which you can’t even download. It’s just something you press play on, and then you can either watch it or not watch it, but you hear it playing in the background. As a person in a band that always does something special for Record Store Day, and who has always been on indie labels that are heroic, I think – Polyvinyl and Kill Rock Stars, I think of that way, heroic in that they even continue to exist in the face of a very difficult market – I’m not the best mouthpiece, honestly. If record labels cease to exist, and physical formats end tomorrow, we will still be a band. We would still make mp3s and still go on tour. I feel like a very successful band in that we are still playing and we still love playing. In fact, we love playing now more than we ever did. As far as living through two eras … I plan on living through a lot more than two. I plan for the era to come to put the previous two to shame.

INTERVIEW: Crashing practice with Tumbleweed Stampede

Posted on October 6, 2012October 8, 2013 by Emily McBride

Hanging out in the practice room with Athens-based Tumbleweed Stampede. If you don’t know these guys, you should really learn how to use the internet and look them up. In the meantime, enjoy the interview- these gents are lovely.

Also be sure to check out their show tonight at the 40 Watt if you’re in/next to/around Athens.  Gonna be a good one.

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Post-show chat with Nick Diener of The Swellers

Posted on September 21, 2012October 8, 2013 by Samantha Gilder

Sundays for me are usually a day of an embarrassingly large amount of inactivity. Coffee, breakfast, and nothing- and that usually works just fine for me, but this past Sunday was a day full of music that brought me right back to the prime of my youth. Continue reading “Post-show chat with Nick Diener of The Swellers”

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