Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Rounding off the first Quarter

This first quarter of 2012 has been a good one, and it is nearly at an end so I thought I'd write a quick run down of what we (Josh and myself) have done.

Our first gig of the year was putting on Haiku Salut at the Birdcage in Norwich, and I for one think it was a success. Josh supported, and Bill did a DJ set afterwards to commemorate Josh's birthday. Everyone I spoke to thoroughly enjoyed the evening.

February was our "off-month" in name only. Josh has been busy preparing for the next Ziggurat Creative single (un-ironically his next single as The Shadow Committee - I did wonder why he was putting so much effort in). I was busy dreaming-up planning to start a number of video projects around Norwich, wanting to document as much as possible of our own gigs, and also the music scene in general. I did film the Brownies gig at the Arts Centre, but haven't yet finished the video (my self-imposed deadline of March 1st effectively ignored).

My February was also thrown by the arrival of some exchange students from Belgium wanting to make video about the Norwich music scene. I helped out in any way I could, acting as guide/karaoke-partner/stalker to varying degrees. Their videos are pretty good, and can be checked out here, and here.

Onward to March we have a lot to look forward to.
Josh is planning an installation of part of his project for his Music Masters, where he plans to get everyone to play a kart racing video game. Sounds like work, Josh. I believe you.

At the end of March we also have the second Ziggurat gig of the year; Matt Stevens @ Olives. We're both really looking forward to see Matt Stevens; he is a top notch guitarist and loopagician.
Until then, enjoy his musical stylings from his most recent album.



James

Saturday, February 25, 2012

The Shadow Committee - Interview

This week I interviewed local Norwich musician Joshua Rayman about his solo project The Shadow Committee.

Ok, I was feeling lazy. For anyone who doesn't know, me and Josh are in fact housemates and good friends, so this interview was pretty easy. I started the interview after he returned home from shopping at Aldi one day, and it went something like this...


Josh, at the UEA lake near some snow. (Credit : Charlie Wallis)
James (Me) : It's been a while since we last spoke (about 10 minutes). I hear through the grapevine (from you) that you've got a new single coming soon; can you tell me a bit about it?

Josh (TSC): I make really repetitive music. I bought a loop pedal last month, after using a simulation in MainStage for the last six months. This development has not been fruitful for those I share a house with (eg. you), but one by-product is this latest song, 'Lines'. It will be released upon MiniCD and Betamax in April 2012.
James: Having "MiniCD and Betamax" and "2012" in the same line seems almost contradictory. Was there any reason for this particular release format?

Josh: I be repping them retro formats. Sadly, unless someone could volunteer use of their Betamax equipment, the latter will remain a mere pipe-dream for now. I suppose the choice of miniCD was more of style over substance or practicality.


I think I jokingly mooted the idea of my second single being a triple release some time ago and it just stuck in the end. I sketched the design for triangular packaging and it snowballed from there.


James: “MiniCD”, “triple release”, “triangular packaging”? Do you think ‘style over substance’ is a phrase that describes your music well, or would that be unfair?


Josh: Totally appropriate.


James: Is this strange/niche method of release something that you’ve done in the past?

Josh: I released a cassette last April, which is a kind of a mini-album/demo. I have more ambitious plans for the future, I have designs on a zoetrope, piano roll, VHS and some video games for the future. I occasionally even think of putting some music with the merch.


James: Releasing some music with the packaging might help! Last year you also released one of your songs on a 7” vinyl single [NEPOTISM ALERT!]. Can you tell me about that?


Josh: http://zigguratcreative.bigcartel.com/product/zig001-7-split-single-vinyl

James: Thanks for that, Josh. [NEPOTISM ALERT OVER!] Your side of the vinyl has a very special inscription for your true love, didn’t it?


Josh: Bill [from Collider, the band on the other side of the 7”] put song lyrics on their side. I put a hex code on mine. It was the junction code / motorway number of my favourite motorway service station.


James: You have a favourite motorway service station?!?!


Josh: Don't we all?


James: No. No, we don’t.


Josh: Oh.


Well, I travelled around England quite a lot as a child whilst racing and on holiday, and these days I do a reasonable amount of late evening service station sojourns as a travelling musician. So I've experienced a wide variety of fast food joints on roadsides. I've always liked the stations that span across the motorway.


James: So, Top 5 motorway service stations?


Josh:


1. You would have to buy the vinyl.


But it's not Birchanger (despite the frequent visits and twitter hashtag, #birchangerforever).


2. Birchanger, gateway to Norwich (from London). Long KFC hours on the weekend, just far enough out of London to warrant stopping, knowing that if returning to Norwich around midnight that the roads from here on will largely be empty. All good things. Starting my birthday there this year after a gig was satisfying. I had some cake.


[James: You seem to have a very different idea of what constitutes a good birthday than I do.]


3. M1/J23A - lovely view out behind it, kind of lived there during Download 2010.


4. M1/J15 - with cross-motorway footbridge and near Milton Keynes... Win.


5. Dutch Service Station?


James: Near Milton Keynes doesn’t sound very “win” to me. And when was the last time you drove through Dutchland. That aside, what has been the highlight of your last year?


Josh: Almost touring. The vinyl was a nice moment, and finishing the film score was an achievement I value.


James: The film score was a very interesting to experience as a member of the audience. How did you come up with the ideas for the score?


Josh: I make really repetitive music... But I nicked bits from old songs, some bits of future songs. I went through the film a few times without music and figured out sections, and went from there. There was a deliberate reference to Long Way From Home, the vinyl song, placed in the score in a referential manner to try and bring a nickelodeon-style punning to the table, if only briefly. Two people might have got that joke.


James: Two people? Isn’t that optimistic?


Josh: Yeah, you're probably right.


James: Anyway, thanks for the interview. Any final words?


Josh: Lines. Of Lines. Of Lines. Of Lines.


Ok, thanks for that Josh. I feel it appropriate to end with some of Josh's songs. You can listen to and download for free some excerpts from his film score (mentioned in the interview). 


James








Saturday, February 11, 2012

Mogwai Young Team - Track by Track

This is Part 3 of my Playlist blog series, and following on from my almost obsessive listening of Django Django's debut effort last week, this week I have become obsessed with Mogwai's debut effort; Mogwai Young Team.

Mogwai
Mogwai Young Team

Some would say I'm somewhat late to the Mogwai game, and they'd be right. While I have listened to Mogwai Young Team and Hardcore Will Never Die, But You Will, I had never really given them the time of a 'proper' listen. This, it would seem, makes all of the difference, because while listening to Mogwai on February 6th, it suddenly clicked; I really like this.

Some of the songs are very simply constructed, but I don't mean that in a derogatory way - I simply mean that they manage to achieve their desired sound (what I assume is the desired sound) without unnecessary complexity. And isn't that what music is all about? Reaching the conclusion in the simplest way possible? (Oh, sorry prog).

While repetition is a staple of post-rock, I might argue that Mogwai even push it a step further. To me, some of the tracks are almost an indistinguishable mesh of sounds that flow together even though many sound completely different, and use different instruments. I still couldn't tell you which songs were which (apart from two, Like Herod, and the vocal track R U Still In 2 It?). If you wanted you could say I haven't been paying enough attention, but I don't really think it matters. While writing the review I will actually look at what song is playing, so I can accurate describe each track, for anyone who reads.

While Mogwai don't seem to follow the structure of massive suites, championed by the likes of Godspeed You! Black Emperor, the songs on Mogwai Young Team definitely feel like movements to me, and many only seem finally realised when the melody of the next track kicks in. In the battle between song, suite and album, I would argue that this composition that makes up Young Team is most definitely an album. The tracks are well placed, and flow into each other so well it gives the illusion of continuity where perhaps there is none.

Throughout my listen of the album, I do hear moments of GY!BE and Explosions in the Sky, but I think the band I hear most in Mogwai's debut is Sigur ros. Similar soundscapes and eclectic instrumentation (I'm looking at you flute and glockenspiel).

The album starts with Yes! I Am a Long Way from Home, which begins with vocals describing music as "bigger than words, and wider than pictures", and also likens Mogwai to the sounds that stars would make (not pop-stars, actual stars). The song builds nicely, and has a great payoff when the distorted guitar comes in which always seems to please (me, at least). The next song Like Herod, is the first that really stood out; mostly because the first time I listened to it it scares the living shit out of me! I very naively decided to turn the volume up so I could hear the bass-line better. 'Nuff said.

Despite its five-plus minutes, Katrien is come and gone surprisingly quickly. It is underpinned by an almost indistinguishable vocal sample throughout, while the guitars meander and build on top. Afterwards we are dropped straight into the piano of Radar Maker; an interesting juxtaposition. The song, due to its short length of only one-and-a-half minutes is more an piano interlude - a movement, if you will - which builds up to, and leads into the next 'long' song, Tracy.

Tracy is where the album really sounds like Sigur ros to me; both the ambient guitars and the glockenspiel melody. Interestingly, this track remains fairly subdued (especially when compared to Like Herod), and shows a lighter side of Mogwai which is refreshing to see. This track also uses vocal samples - a common staple in Mogwai Young Time - but it still hasn't got old at this point, and by the time the song ends, Tracy has died down to allow the next track to come through.

Summer (Priority Version), is the next track on the album (I believe there are other versions of Summer on compilations and the like, but I haven't listened to them yet, so cannot compare). More upbeat, and louder than the previous helping, Tracy, this track includes quiet moments, followed by sections of distorted guitar; again showing us loud-quiet changes, albeit nowhere as abrupt as the ones in Like Herod.
Summer, and the next track With Portfolio are both quite short - though not as short as Radar Maker earlier - and are well placed next to each other. With Portfolio may seem like a primarily piano track on the surface, but by far the most interesting thing for me is the......the noise? (I really can't think of a better way to describe it. That's annoying! Anyone got any ideas?) It builds to a screeching cacophony, which at the wrong volume can sometimes become almost unbearable. And, it has one of the best pans i've ever heard. I Heart Pan.

Next we get R U Still In 2 It? the only 'vocal' track on the entire album. First a short point about the guitar riff; it really reminds me of the theme tune to twin peaks for some reason. (In fairness, after just having listened to the theme tune when I got the link for it, I realised they don't sound that similar, but it was the first thing that came into my head when I heard the track). The vocal part of this track is a brilliant guest appearance by Aidan Moffat of Arab Strap, backed by members of Mogwai. The vocals really work well with this track, whereas I don't think they would with any other tracks on this album. The track leaves us with bassy piano notes and ambient guitars, then the introduction of a piano melody before succumbing to silence.

A Cheery Wave from Stranded Youngsters is another of the albums more upbeat tracks. It starts with a chant in of "One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight" before the drums and piano start the song. Another short helping by Mogwai, it feels almost like an introduction to the next and final track; the epic sixteen-plus minutes Mogwai Fear Satan.

The final track on the album has a fairly simple guitar line which runs throughout most/all of the track, building through distorted sections, but the main treasure here is the melody provided by the flute. Both haunting and hopefully at the same time, the flute provides us with an equisitive ending to this album and fills us with realistic hope. (perhaps the best kind we can hope for from a song entitled Mogwai Fear Satan). Despite the song length, It never starts to bore me (perhaps my history with even longer tracks), and it moves surprisingly quickly through its sixteen-minutes until you are left with the flute trying to survive against the other sounds, before they all eventually fade out.
Someone (uncited source) said that this was the post-rock anthem, and I tend to agree with them. It is certainly more anthemic than many other of my favourite post-rock songs (GY!BE, Eplosions, etc.).

As you can tell, I really liked this album, but I think one of the best compliments I can pay it is that it has made me want to learn how to play guitar.
This album is definitely a post-rock gem - a seminal album for our scene - and I for one am glad I listened through it. It is (in my opinion) still fresh even after these last 15 years when sounds have changed quite a lot. I would recommend it to anyone who hasn't listened yet.

James

Friday, February 10, 2012

Post-rock is when you get drunk and chase girls.

"What really is post-rock?" has been a question asked by many over the years. Many reject the label; particularly post-rock 'superstars' Godspeed You! Black Emperor (who would rather be described as punk) and Mogwai (the title of this post comes from an interview with Mogwai bassist Dominic Aitchison here).
Are they right?
Is post-rock a useless descriptor that has had it's day? I am going to argue against that, and argue that while post-rock might not describe the music, it does describe the scene that the music develops in.

I have noticed that while the sound of post-rock can change wildly from band to band, the following that it has is relatively static. One post-rock fan is likely to like many different post-rock bands, no matter how different their sound is.
Are we to assume that post-rock fans are more eclectic in their tastes than the majority? While this is perhaps the case, it seems a far more satisfactory conclusion to say that there is something inherently similar about post-rock that goes beyond the sound; the scene it inhabits, and the ethos surrounding it.

And this isn't isolated to post-rock. I was given the example earlier (by Josh) of using the term "emo rock". In this context "emo" doesn't really describe anything about the music. (The music is, as was pointed out to me, "american whiny alternative pop-rock"). "Emo" describes the scene; the look, the attitude, etc. and it does a really good job at doing that.

Post-rock also does a really good job at describing the scene. Bands like Mogwai, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Sigur ros, Battles, 65dos, Explosions in the Sky, Maybeshewill (do I need to name more?)... all sound different, but from my experience they have very similar fans. The same people tend to like this post-rock band and that post-rock band. While post-rock perhaps isn't a great descriptor for the sound, it is useful in setting the scene, and letting someone know if they are likely to enjoy the sort of sound that a band is producing.

So, in short, post-rock doesn't describe sounds, it describes the scene that the sounds come out of, and I for one think it does a pretty good job at that.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Django Django - Django Django (Another Review)

While this blog already has a review of Django Django's debut album, written by Josh, it definitely also deserves it's place as Part 2 of my Playlist blog series. While Part 1 focussed on the month of January, this part is just going to talk about the album that I spent most of the first week of February listening to.

Django Django
Django Django


Django Django's Django Django (as I will call it - primarily to be annoyingly accurate. The best kind of accurate!) is a good album, but I don't think i'd give it the 8/10 that Josh gave it for two reasons; firstly, because I don't actually like all of the songs, and secondly, because 8 is really fucking high!!
I suppose we have different weights for this sort of thing, but for me 10 would be the perfect album (not that that will ever exist), 9 would be a seminal album (album of the decade, etc.), and 8 would be an excellent album (album of the year material). I don't quite think Django Django's Django Django matches up to this. But I would give Django Django a 6 or 7. I will decide at the end. Just for reference, i'd say 'Good' albums start at 5/10. In my rating system anyway.

The songs from the album which I actually like, I really like.
Default is the first track on the album for me. It's their lead-in single and it has a great video (here). The track almost resembles a dance/electro-pop track (which is not usually my sort of thing), but it does it artfully. One of the highlights of the track has to be the cut-up and electro-fied refrain of the word 'default'.
After skipping Firewater (which really doesn't do anything for me), we get to the core of the album for me, with Waveforms. In Waveforms the electronic wave-like synths are joined by a choral and trance-like vocal line, which, complimented, makes this track a pleasure to listen to. The video for this track (here), is beautifully abstract with great circular imagery. My favourite part of the video has to be where their hands are in the circle playing the percussion instruments.
Straight after Waveforms we drop into Zumm Zumm, with its catchy synth lines which give you a desire to dance (or in my case bounce around on my bed while i listen). When the vocals come in it just adds to the catchiness of this songs. All the lines work so well together, and when it drops into the slow section of the song it feels unexpected but really works. I actually had this song stuck in my head for most of the time I was out one day. Kind of annoying, but also shows how catchy this song is. Probably my favourite track off the album.
After another skip, we reach Love's Dart, which, despite its fairly upbeat percussion is perhaps the most brooding of the tracks on the album; particularly the vocal line. This song has some great harmonies, as well as some really interesting lyrics. Perhaps only beaten in romantic metaphor by the next song on the album, Wor.
Speaking of Wor, it was the first Django Django song I heard - at least a year ago now - and probably still my favourite along side Zumm Zumm. After the siren, when the rhythm kicks in this song really does sound like a soundtrack to some post-apocalyptic western. And then the lyrics kick in, which seem to be using nuclear war as a metaphor for a relations (or perhaps the other way around?) Another really great track, which I have listened to over 100 times. It also has an indescribably crazy video (here).
Last by not least (of the tracks I like), we have Storm.
Storm seems a more standard indie-pop song than many before. It doesn't sound as electronic as tracks like Default and Waveforms and seemingly represents an earlier sound of Django Django (unless I am mistaken, Storm was their first single). It is a very solid track, and has a memorable hook.

The rest of the album I usually skip, or only half-listen to. None of the other tracks really draw me in as much as these six. Had this been an EP of just the songs I liked, then I would probably have given it an 8/10, but it included lots of songs I didn't like, so I wont. I guess before people start making music based on what I like i'll have to become King of the World....or just go work at Pitchfork.

In short: Django Django's Django Django has some really good songs, but too few, and also far too many that really don't do anything for me. Still...I would recommend it.

James gives Django Django's Django Django 6.5/10

Monday, February 6, 2012

January Playlist

Well, now that we are firmly in February, it seemed a good time to go through a rundown of my main listens in January. In no particular order...


The Velvet Underground
Heroin and The Black Angel's Death Song
The Velvet Underground are one of my favourite bands at the moment. My first encounter with them (that I remember) was the 2009 film Away We Go, in which their song Oh! Sweet Nuthin' plays over one of the most emotional scenes in the film. Since then, I have mostly listened to their first album; The Velvet Underground & Nico, which is regularly my 'walking' music these days. Their mix of classic 60s rock with experimental sounds is fresh even nowadays, and must have been so different from any other 'pop' when it was made that I am surprised anyone would pay to have it released. Until I realise, of course, that their biggest champion was Andy Warhol. For a while i didn't get past the first half of the album, stopping at All Tomorrow's Parties where side A of the vinyl ends (I primarily listen to the VU on vinyl). While All Tomorrow's Parties and Oh! Sweet Nuthin' are still my favourite VU songs, these two new favourites from the second half of the album are quickly catching up.


Sonic Youth
The Burning Spear and I Dreamed I Dream
Sonic Youth are a band that I really don't know much about (and i only actually have their first album), but that doesn't stop me from enjoying it, particularly the first two songs. They are both quite different, but special in their own ways. The almost chanting lyrics in I Dreamed I Dream are at the same time equal parts creepy and sexual. I first started listening to Sonic Youth after recommendations of a read through of wikipedia which almost convinced me I was going to like them. While i cannot say for certain (as I said above, I only have their first album), these two tracks are both of a very high quality.


Rumour Cubes
All of We Have Sound Houses Also
This first EP by Rumour Cubes is the best new post-rock i've heard in a while, and over its three tracks it definitely lends new vitality to Explosions/Mogwai-style soundscapes, which - in the wrong hands - can get boring fast. Rumour Cubes are definitely not the wrong hands. I look forward to their new album which is out this February, and also hopefully going to see them live this February as well. If you haven't already checked these guys out, you really should - their facebook and their bandcamp probably being the best places.


Spring Offensive
I Found Myself Smiling and The First of Many Dreams About Monsters
I was lucky enough to see Spring Offensive live last year at the Playhouse Bar, and I knew I was going to like them when the first thing they said was "This song is about being cold, so we are going to play it outside." They didn't disappoint, and these two tracks (the first and the last on their sampler that I bought) are my favourites. The epic thirteen-and-a-half minute The First of Many Dreams About Monsters drifts between different melodies and movements, but never feels disjointed enough to warrant being split apart. As with above, I really recommend listening to these guys if you don't already know them - facebook as ever, and soundcloud.



Well, wasn't that nice, eh? Four great bands.
If this first week of February is anything to go by, my next monthly playlist is going to include a lot of Django Django and Mogwai. See you then!

If you liked this, please like our facebook page, or follow us on twitter. Or both.

James

Studio Stories: Lines

On Saturday I spent most of the day in the studio with Josh (The Shadow Committee) going through the tracks for his upcoming single; Lines, and the b-sides, Bullingdon and Rumours.
The day seemed to go pretty well. We (and by we, i mean Josh) got rid of the clicks and crackles, and managed to make the tracks sound louder at the same time.
Josh also live performed Lines, and if the footage is any good, it may go out (after i've had time to airbrush Josh - the vain man).

All joking aside, Josh threatened me with an iPad solo (see below). Surely that would somehow be an infringement of my human rights? Luckily i was spared, and at the end of the day we both managed to leave the studio unscathed and still talking to one another.



On the Sunday we both returned to the studio, and were joined by Bill (from Collider) who had a listen to the tracks and gave some advice on improvements in the EQ and compression.
All in all it seemed a very productive weekend, and we are all one step closer to The Shadow Committee's next single, and Ziggurat Creative's next release.
April though, i am reliably told, is the month in which Lines goes live.

James

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Music or "Music"?

Discovered The Durutti Column. Don't know where they've been hiding from me. (Or which rock I've been hiding behind).

Josh poses me the question: "Does it matter how old you are when you make instrumental music?"

And follows up with: "When Britney Spears is seventy do you really think we'll want her singing 'Hit Me Baby One More Time'?" He has a good point.

Before I point to the distinction between Music, and "Music". Perhaps this is overly pretentious, perhaps not, but I feel the Durutti Column falls in the first camp, and Britney Spears in the second. One makes a lot of money, the other doesn't. (No prizes for guessing which.)

But as a reward for reading my crap, here is the Durutti Column.


James approved this message.

Django Django - Django Django Review

Django Django made music. It is enjoyable. 8/10


Josh