2012 album from the Rock supergroup, the third studio album since the original quartet reunited in 2006. Consisting of John Wetton, Steve Howe, Carl Palmer and Geoff Downes, Asia were one of the commercial success stories of 1982. Their debut album was the best-selling album of the year and remained on top of the Billboard chart for nine weeks. Now, 30 years later, the band release an album that has been called their best full-length album since that debut. The album's original artwork is by famed artist Roger Dean, who was also responsible for the first album's cover.
From New Wave to the 'NOW', experience the thrill of NEW WAVE from it's beginnings in the late '70s to the modern bands so obviously influenced by it! So, if you grew up in the '80s and still enjoy discovering new sounds as well as rediscovering old favorites, then read on! PUNK! POWER POP! SYNTH POP! NEW WAVE! POST-PUNK!
Showing posts with label EMI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EMI. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Monday, June 18, 2012
SPAZ slobbers all over THE BEACH BOYS' That's Why God Made The Radio!
And to think I thought that they don't make albums like this anymore....
I have to admit that the thought that it would be strange to hear THE BEACH BOYS singing about surf, music, love, cars and all the other stuff that goes with growing up in California. I mean, they were young when they started the band and it was OK back then... but c'mon, that was then and this is now! It's been 50 years since they guys first came together and it seemed kind of creepy for someone pushing 70 to sing about teenage love...
But that was until I heard That's Why God Made The Radio!
What I wasn't comprehending until I heard the album was that Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine, Bruce Johnson and David Marks aren't really literally singing about young love, they are singing about the FEELINGS of being young and in love. They are singing about the emotions that rule the mind, body and spirit when you are at an age when life is sweet. And for many of us, those feelings still ring true, no matter what age. I mean, who doesn't remember the golden years of our lives right before responsibility and adulthood robbed us of our hopes and dreams? It is those wonderful memories that rise to the surface as the listener experiences what is the best new Beach Boys studio album since the deliciously off-kilter music they released in the '70s. For the record, while I like the tune "Getcha Back" from '85, the self-titled album that song was pulled from was killed by '80s production. And furthermore, I'm still not quite sure about "Kokomo"... still on the fence about that one!
While the five members are augmented by session players and vocalists, this is definitely the work of Brian Wilson and his lifetime friends. From the glorious intro that spotlights the BB's signature harmonies, this is a special treat for fans, new and old. It is obvious that they try to recreate some of the sounds of their golden years, but they also sound fresh, vibrant and alive. Nobody sounds quite like the Beach Boys and believe me, there are some great artists out there who successfully re-create the style but they end up lacking the true spirit of the BB's California sound.
"That's Why God Made The Radio" speaks of an era when the radio brought people together, brought joy to the listener and spread the gospel of the power of music. It is a song that does just that. While the chorus' melody is faintly reminiscent of the them from "Midnight Cowboy", that doesn't stop it from reaching down inside you and stirring up emotions of a time in your life when the radio was your best friend when you were alone...
And the magic doesn't stop there!
"Isn't It Time", "Spring Vacation", "Shelter", "Beaches In Mind", "From There To Back Again", "Pacific Coast Highway" and "Summer's Gone" are amazing slices of Beach Boys pop filled with harmonies and hope. Only "The Private Life Of Bill And Sue" falls flat, but that's a minor complaint that I won't spend any more time talking about.
That's Why God Made The Radio is one of the best albums of the year and ensures that the Beach Boys' legacy is stronger than ever. By the time the sound of the waves close the album, there's a certain sadness that is washed away when you start the whole album again.
This is the sound of the California dream.... something that every generation can understand and relate to. And it will touch you right down to the core of your being. The album encapsulates the band's career while delivering a bittersweet joy that can only be felt by those with a heart and soul. God Bless The Beach Boys!
Friday, May 11, 2012
SOULSAVERS/The Light The Dead See: Available May 2nd, 2012!
2012 follow-up to their critically acclaimed album Broken (2009). Soulsavers, the music and production team of Rich Machin and Ian Glover have been a growing force since 2003's debut Tough Guys Don't Dance. 2007's It's Not How Far You Fall, It's The Way You Land brought their dark flair to a wider audience. In 2009, third album Broken confirmed that Soulsavers were moving away from early electronica to earthier guitars, use of space and what Machin described as "a soulful twist".
Friday, May 4, 2012
THE BEASTIE BOYS' Adam "MCA" Yauch Dies at 47
The Beastie Boys' Adam Yauch (center)
ADAM YAUCH
August 5, 1964 - May 4, 2012
It is with great sadness that we confirm that musician, rapper, activist and director Adam “MCA” Yauch, founding member of Beastie Boys and also of the Milarepa Foundation that produced the Tibetan Freedom Concert benefits, and film production and distribution company Oscilloscope Laboratories, passed away in his native New York City this morning after a near-three-year battle with cancer. He was 47 years old.
Born in Brooklyn, New York, Yauch taught himself to play bass in high school, forming a band for his 17th birthday party that would later become known the world over as Beastie Boys.
With fellow members Michael “Mike D” Diamond and Adam “Adrock” Horovitz, Beastie Boys would go on to sell over 40 million records, release four #1 albums–including the first hip hop album ever to top the Billboard 200, the band’s 1986 debut full length, Licensed To Ill–win three Grammys, and the MTV Video Vanguard Lifetime Achievement award. Last month Beastie Boys were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, with Diamond and Horovitz reading an acceptance speech on behalf of Yauch, who was unable to attend.
In addition to his hand in creating such historic Beastie Boys albums as Paul’s Boutique, Check Your Head, Ill Communication, Hello Nasty and more, Yauch was a founder of the Milarepa Fund, a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting awareness and activism regarding the injustices perpetrated on native Tibetans by Chinese occupational government and military forces. In 1996, Milarepa produced the first Tibetan Freedom Concert in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park, which was attended by 100,000 people, making it the biggest benefit concert on U.S. soil since 1985’s Live Aid. The Tibetan Freedom Concert series would continue to stage some of the most significant benefit shows in the world for nearly a decade following in New York City, Washington DC, Tokyo, Sydney, Amsterdam, Taipei and other cities.
In the wake of September 11, 2001, Milarepa organized New Yorkers Against Violence, a benefit headlined by Beastie Boys at New York’s Hammerstein Ballroom, with net proceeds disbursed to the New York Women’s Foundation Disaster Relief Fund and the New York Association for New Americans (NYANA) September 11th Fund for New Americans–each chosen for their efforts on behalf of 9/11 victims least likely to receive help from other sources.
Under the alias of Nathanial Hörnblowér, Yauch directed iconic Beastie Boys videos including ”So Whatcha Want,” ”Intergalactic,” “Body Movin” and “Ch-Check It Out.” Under his own name, Yauch directed last year’s Fight For Your Right Revisited, an extended video for “Make Some Noise” from Beastie Boys’ Hot Sauce Committee Part Two, starring Elijah Wood, Danny McBride and Seth Rogen as the 1986 Beastie Boys, making their way through a half hour of cameo-studded misadventures before squaring off against Jack Black, Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly as Beastie Boys of the future.
Yauch’s passion and talent for filmmaking led to his founding of Oscilloscope Laboratories, which in 2008 released his directorial film debut, the basketball documentary Gunnin’ For That #1 Spot and has since become a major force in independent video distribution, amassing a catalogue of such acclaimed titles as Kelly Reichardt’s Wendy and Lucy, Oren Moverman’s The Messenger, Banksy’s Exit Through The Gift Shop, Lance Bangs and Spike Jonze’s Tell Them Anything You Want: A Portrait Of Maurice Sendak, and many more.
Yauch is survived by his wife Dechen and his daughter Tenzin Losel, as well as his parents Frances and Noel Yauch.
Labels:
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cancer,
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Thursday, October 6, 2011
An EXCLUSIVE interview with M83!
An EXCLUSIVE interview with M83’s ANTHONY GONZALEZ
By Stephen SPAZ Schnee
There used to be a time when the double album was a grand and bold musical statement from an artist and not just a regular release with a few remixes added as a bonus. From The Beatles’ White Album and The Who’s Tommy to Led Zeppelin’s Physical Graffiti and Pink Floyd’s The Wall, any band brave enough to release a double album caught the attention of the critics and music fans alike. Even Prince’s 1999 and XTC’s English Settlement set new heights for those artists, attracting more fans than ever. But over the years, the double album has become a real rarity. While you may find many two disc releases on the shelves, the second CD usually contains nothing more than bonus demos, acoustic versions or remixes. In essence, the legitimate double album seems to be a thing of the past… but thank goodness nobody told M83’s Anthony Gonzalez that!
When Gonzalez moved from his homeland of France to Los Angeles nearly two years ago, his new surroundings inspired a prolific period of songwriting and experimenting with music. Early on, the transplanted Frenchman realized that his vision was much larger than a conventional 45 minute album. The songs that poured out of him began to form an album that would exceed anyone’s expectations, even his own. By the time it was complete, Gonzalez had created a double album that was mysterious, dark and utterly beautiful.
From Ambient and Electronica to Shoegaze and Dream Pop, Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming is an ambitious project and is the culmination of everything released in M83’s decade-long career. While the band’s sound has progressed over the years, this is an album that takes the best elements from all of their past releases and adds more depth and power to the mix. Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming takes the listener on a trip through different moods and atmospheres and leaves an indelible impression on their senses. This is an album that is raw and powerful yet unabashedly joyful. The album never outstays its welcome: every note is there for a reason and the entire project would feel incomplete were you to remove even one track. This is what double albums are all about.
Stephen SPAZ Schnee sat down to speak with Anthony about Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming, his inspiration and much more…
SPAZ: Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming is just about ready to drop. How are you feeling about the album and things in your world right about now?
ANTHONY GONZALEZ: I feel excited. I haven’t felt this excited for a long time… maybe since Before The Dawn Heals Us (2005). I feel confident and proud of this record. I’m just so excited to go back on the road and play shows in front of my fans. Sometimes, it’s hard to be a musician. Some people think its all holidays all the time. But sometimes, it’s very stressful. Emotionally, it can be hard to cope with everything. But when you feel good about an album, you’re excited to talk about it and play live shows. You’re looking forward to it. You’re like a kid… you’re just excited about everything.
SPAZ: The album is a very ambitious two CD release. When you started recording the album, did you plan on so many songs making the album or did it evolve over time?
ANTHONY: You never know what to expect when you start composing an album, obviously. But early on, I realized I wanted a double album. We’d been touring a lot for the previous album and being on stage and on the road for such a long time made me realize that I wanted to create a big project. I couldn’t wait to go back into the studio while I was still on the road. When I first moved to L.A. one and a half years ago, I was so excited about being in the studio again. I was enjoying myself so much. I was playing with my keyboard like I’ve never played before. I was experimenting and improvising. That was the first time that happened in many years. When you’re excited about being in the studio, it flows out of you and you keep composing and composing. At the end, you have a lot of songs to pick from. (laughs)
SPAZ: The era and the art of the double album has all but disappeared over the years. Was there ever a time that you felt you should compromise and whittle the album down to an average album-length single disc?
ANTHONY: Yeah, definitely. It’s the wrong time to be releasing a double album. But I thought that if I don’t do it now, it would be even more difficult to release a double album in two, three or five years. But I’ve been working on this album for a year and that’s a long period of time. Sometimes, you start to lose confidence and you start doubting yourself. But other times, you feel proud. I like to feel as if this album is a gift to myself. There was so much pleasure in the making of this album. I was feeling all these different emotions. If I felt like this during the making of the album, hopefully people will feel like this listening to it. So, I said let’s go for it, let’s go double. I didn’t want to have any regrets. I wanted to do something for myself for once.
SPAZ: While the tracks on the album certainly flow together very well, each track has it’s own personality (and in some cases, multiple personalities). Did you initially create the songs as distinct individual tracks, or were you always looking at these tracks falling under a unifying theme?
ANTHONY: I can’t say that all the songs are part of a main theme. Some of them are… the ambient songs and small interludes are part of that theme. But I love pop songs and I wanted this album to have pop songs as well. I think this album is like a combination of all my previous albums together. I wanted to have a lot of different elements: epic songs, slow songs, quiet interludes and pop songs.
SPAZ: Some of the lovely and moving melodies are gentle and understated, while others are powerful and loud. Were the song arrangements dictated by the melodies or did the melodies come out of the song arrangements? Tracks like “Soon, My Friend” and “Reunion” are very different, yet equally effective.
ANTHONY: You know what? I have no idea! (laughs) I’m not waking up and saying to myself “OK, today I’m going to work on an epic track or I’m going to work on a slow interlude.” I write what comes naturally so I don’t have the feeling that its forced. I didn’t have to fight against the songs. It was just a natural progression. It makes sense that some of the songs needed to be very epic and very orchestrated. But you also want to keep some songs very quiet because they didn’t need anything more.
SPAZ: The album, like all of your releases, seem to draw from the last 30 years of Pop, Rock and Electronic music, from Brian Wilson to OMD, yet you manage to maintain a very distinct sound. What influences you?
ANTHONY: A lot of things. This is what I like about being a musician, being an artist: you can be inspired by so many different things. I was moving to a new city (L.A.). I was going out to see movies. I was going out to live shows. I was going to museums. I was reading a lot of books as well. I was just being inspired by anything. Its funny because sometimes I feel like I don’t want to make music because I don’t feel like something good is going to come out of my brain. But for this whole year, I felt so inspired by everything and anything. It could be something simple like meeting a new friend or talking to some people at a party. Or being inspired by a movie you just saw the day before. This album was inspired by one year in my life.
ANTHONY: It does surprise me, but in a good way. It’s exactly what I like about music. It’s very different from reading a book where everything is written on a page or watching a movie where everything is up there on the screen. There’s this feeling of freedom and I like that. I can’t wait for people to tell me stories about them listening to the album.
SPAZ: People tend to create their own visuals in their head while listening to the music… Do you think that music videos can take away from a listener’s own personal attachment to a song?
ANTHONY: Yeah, of course. Sometimes, the video can be a perfect match for the music. But sometimes it doesn’t happen that way and that’s a risk. I grew up watching videos during the MTV era. This is part of my culture. I couldn’t picture myself releasing an album with no music videos. Its part of the process of the making of an album.
SPAZ: What’s next for M83?
ANTHONY: I’m really excited to go back on tour. It’s been two years now since we’ve played any shows. I couldn’t be any happier than I am today. I am proud of this album and I’m ready to travel and play this album in front of my fans.
SPAZ: What is currently spinning on your CD and DVD players?
ANTHONY: Recently, I was listening to and love the new Mogwai EP. I’ve also had the chance to listen to the new Zola Jesus album. It’s really, really good and I can’t stop listening to it. On my DVD player, I have Halloween 2 from Rob Zombie. I just saw it two days ago. His Halloween movies are really good movies, honestly. I was a big fan of the original Halloween movies, but… I don’t know… this guy comes from a different planet!
Thanks to Anthony Gonzalez
Special thanks to Jacki Feldstein, Nicole Blonder and Anthony Balboa
M83
HURRY UP, WE'RE DREAMING
10.18.11
M83
HURRY UP, WE'RE DREAMING
10.18.11
An EXCLUSIVE interview with CHRIS ISAAK!
By Stephen SPAZ Schnee
Memphis-based DJ and music fan Sam Phillips launched his Sun Records label in 1952, initially focusing on Blues and Rhythm & Blues artists. While the label didn’t score any huge hits for the first few years, their luck changed in 1954 when a young man named Elvis Presley walked through the door. From that moment, Rock ‘n’ Roll music as we know it was born. Add some Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins and Roy Orbison to the mix and you’ve got the most influential label of the Rock ‘n’ Roll era.
Some 30 years later, 1985 to be exact, a young man named Chris Isaak released his debut album, Silvertone. While he may have looked, at the time, like the latest entry in a long-line of Rockabilly artists, one listen to the album was proof that this singer, songwriter and guitarist was much more than a Retro-billy throwback: Isaak had depth, charm and a heartbreaking beauty in his voice and songs. More Elvis and Roy than Johnny, Carl and Jerry, Isaak’s music was heavily influenced but not dictated by the sound of Sun Records. His melodies were timeless, the arrangements were simple and the production did not carry the weight of ‘80s studio trickery. Isaak, like those Sun artists that influenced him, was the real deal.
Since then, Chris Isaak has continued to travel his own path, taking his influences with him but always staying true to his own musical vision, which seemed to incorporate numerous genres. Scoring a huge hit with “Wicked Game” in the early ‘90s, the sudden brush with fame lifted Isaak into the spotlight, a place where he has seldom strayed ever since. From rapturously received tours to critically-adored albums, and even the odd acting gig and TV series in between, Isaak has continued to perfect his unique sound without compromising his integrity or losing his large fanbase. In fact, he is now more popular than ever.
With a solid catalog of originals behind him, Isaak finally decided to revisit the music that inspired him as a child. Along with his ace backing band, Silvertone, Isaak entered Sun Studios in Memphis to record an album of songs by the artists who created Rock ‘n’ Roll within those very same walls over 50 years before. From hits like “Ring Of Fire” and “Oh, Pretty Woman” to lesser known tracks like “Dixie Fried” and “Miss Pearl”, Isaak and his band had completed nearly 40 tracks before deciding they had enough to work with.
While it may have been difficult to decide which 14 tracks were going to make it onto his 2011 album, Beyond The Sun, the results are stunning. A few of the tracks may be remarkably close to the originals, yet Isaak and his band add their own personalities into the mix and put the Rock ‘n’ Roll passion right back into the songs. This isn’t just a stop-gap tribute album to tide his fans over: this is an artist revisiting the magic and reigniting the fire that set him in motion so many years ago. The Deluxe Edition of the album is even better since it includes a second CD containing an additional 11 tracks.
Stephen SPAZ Schnee was able to catch up with Chris Isaak to chat a little about Beyond The Sun, his career and so much more…
SPAZ: Beyond The Sun is just about ready to drop. How are you feeling about this project and everything leading up to it?
CHRIS ISAAK: You know, I’m really excited and I’m dying for people to hear the record. For a record to be a hit, people have got to hear it, first of all. So far, everybody that’s heard it that I’ve played it for went, “Wow! You should have done this record a long time ago! (laughs) I love this kind of music! What is this?” When I was a kid, I was listening to this music. In the packaging, I put in pictures that I had from when I was about 20 or 21, the first pictures that I took before I had a band or anything else. I worked all summer and I got a Shure microphone and a Silvertone guitar, I borrowed my dad’s jacket, I snuck into the college theater and stood up on the stage and had my picture taken. And I said, “Look! Now, I look just like Elvis and I’m ready to go!” (laughs). And that’s all the music I wanted to play was that Sun Sessions music. I’ve been wanting to make this record a long time.
SPAZ: What inspired you to do this project now as opposed to any other time in your career?
CHRIS: Because when I started off, I thought I looked a little like Elvis when I combed my hair back. When I was boxing, everybody who was on my boxing team, their nickname for me was Elvis. That was before I even sang. When I went to Japan, I cut my hair short and that sort of killed that. But when I was starting off, I didn’t want to fall into a thing where that was what I did, somebody else’s music. I wanted to make sure I could write my own songs and have my own sound. On purpose, I struggled hard to write my own songs and not to do cover songs in the beginning.
SPAZ: I really liked the different approaches to the songs, both in the arrangements and at the mixing stage (with a few tracks being recorded or mixed down to mono). In essence, you’ve re-created these songs as Chris Isaak vehicles. Was it a little daunting to record these tracks, knowing that they are iconic Rock ‘n’ Roll classics?
CHRIS: Thank you. I appreciate what you just said because that’s exactly what I was trying to do. I said, “This is not a throw-away record. We’re not going in and like, hey, let’s have some fun and cut a few oldies and then be done. Let’s really work on this like we do any other album.” We rehearsed more for this album because we were going to cut it all live… and we did. The vocals you hear, those were done with those guys all at one time. If I make a mistake, we do another take.
SPAZ: All these tracks were one take?
CHRIS: Yes. I’d try it in three four takes, but we’d get it in one pass. We wouldn’t fix it. I’m proud of that but hardly anybody goes in without wearing headphones and being separated so that they can, later on, fix the mistakes. But in the old days at Sun, everybody was in the same room, everyone bled into everyone’s microphone. Elvis was standing there singing and you heard him. Jerry Lee Lewis was playing piano heard the piano over in the vocalist’s microphone. You could kinda feel like it was party going on. You could tell where people were standing in the room because you could hear it between two or three microphones. And that’s what we did. When I went in, I told the guys, “Listen, we can’t play forever in there because I’m singing this stuff, so if I’m singing it good, you better hit it because that’s the one we’re gonna use!”… and we went in and everybody played great. I never had so much in the studio. I think part of it was that everybody realized that this isn’t a rehearsal, this isn’t a practice, we’re making a record. Everybody could hear what the other guy was doing. You’re playing together instead of through earphones and hoping that somebody else later makes sense of it.
SPAZ: Your passion for the material is apparent in every track. Did any first takes make the album, or was it a long recording process?
CHRIS: I’m so proud of the band. Talk about passion for this music! If somebody listened to this record and said “Oh, I’ve got a great singer. We should make one of those records. Let’s hire some guys in L.A. and let’s do it,” I don’t think you could. My drummer, Kenny (Dale Johnson), loves this kind of music and he’s a natural fit for it. He plays in shuffle, which a lot of those songs have, or a ‘stripper beat’… they didn’t have very many straight ahead rock beats on those recordings. He plays with a real subtle groove that nobody else has got… and that’s tricky. The bass player (Rowland Salley) comes from background where he played early Country Western and Bluegrass. He played a standup bass and he totally loves this kind of music. My piano player (Scotty Plunkett)… how many guys can cop Jerry Lee Lewis riffs and then throw their own riffs in with it and make it sound like its blended? Scotty is a monster on piano. But for him to be able to capture that style of Jerry Lee and some of those simple Gospel piano riffs… When we started off, we said “Let’s learn all these songs and then when we’ve made the record, let’s not listen to it at all. When we’re done with rehearsing, let’s go into the studio, let’s cut it, let’s have fun and let’s do it our own way.” So, on “Ring Of Fire”, Scotty’s playing a B-3 Organ, which is not on the original. We’d do stuff like have a guitar and piano go back and forth on a solo that isn’t on the original version. I said “We’ll just do whatever feels good to us. We already know the songs.” At the end, the only time I listened to it was at the end when I was done mixing. I thought, OK, now I wanna hear: what did we come up with versus the originals. I still have to laugh because I’ll listen to some things that those guys did and I love those guys so much. When we were recording, we had Roland James, who played guitar on all Jerry Lee Lewis’ stuff… he’s just a great guy and my favorite guitar player. He was in and I remember asking him “Hey, Roland. I’ve got a question. It sounds stupid, but I just don’t know who else to ask but you were there: how loud did you play in the room, because I’m singing, you know?” He said, “Chris, we played as loud as we wanted!” My guitar player (Hershel Yatovitz) was standing there right next to me and just gave me a big grin, like, oh boy, all bets are off. And then I could have kissed Roland because he continued on, “You gotta remember though, Chris. It was 1956 and we didn’t want to play very loud!” (laughs)
SPAZ: Being a fan and artist from the days of the record LP, when putting the tracklist together, do you still think of things in ‘vinyl’ terms with the songs making up a Side One and a Side Two?
CHRIS: We’re actually putting this out on vinyl, so we actually have a real Side A and Side B. This is a perfect record for that. What was fun for me is that you usually make a record and you have 16 songs you record and then you cut it down and put out 13. On this record, we had so much fun recording it…my manager asked “How many songs did you guys cut?” I said “We’re up to 38 songs and we’re still going.” And she’s like “Stop! Please! You have enough for three albums!” And I s aid “Let’s put out a double,”… and we did! (The Deluxe Edition of Beyond The Sun has 11 additional tracks.) It was fun because we knew these songs and we practiced a bunch. When we’d go into cut ‘em, it wasn’t like, “Oh, we have to go in and overdub and we’ll fix that…” No, some of the songs we cut, I bet we cut ‘em in three takes. We’d rehearse it plenty and then we just went in and played.
SPAZ: It’s been over a quarter century since your debut album, Silvertone, was released. Did you think that you’d still be at it in 2011?
CHRIS: You know, when I started off, you never dream where life’s going to take you. It could take you bad places or it could take you good places. You just hope it’s going to be something nice and I’ve just been really really lucky. I hooked up with Kenny and Roly, Hershel and Scotty, my crew… people I’ve worked with I’ve been with forever. Some people don’t understand that if you are a musician, the road can be your life and if you don’t have friends out there on the road with you, it can be a really lonely ride. I guess that’s why people end up getting in trouble. But they’re my friends. Here I am, years later with those same guys… and it’s a ball.
SPAZ: You’ve cultivated your own unique sound over the years, which is as timeless now as it was then. Have you ever been tempted… or even encouraged by the powers that be, to alter your sound and try to fit into whatever cookie-cutter sound is popular at the time?
CHRIS: I’ve been lucky. I have good producers. I always kinda knew what I wanted to sound like. I’ve always been drawn to a pretty vocal and song that’s got some kind of truth to it. So, I always thought that if you had a song that has a ring a truth and you’re singing well, it’s going to be fun, good music. The trend just kind of went around us. I do remember at one point, a person at the record company said “Chris, you’re a surfer and you’re in good shape: you should take your shirt off when you’re up on stage!” And I said, “Why would I do that?” And they said, “For the girls.” I said, “I’m a singer, not a stripper!” (laughs). And I was thinking ahead and I said, “You know, if I start taking my shirt off now, my career’s going to be over in about three years! I don’t want to do that!”
SPAZ: What’s next for Chris Isaak?
CHRIS: I’m going to go out on tour all over the U.S. We’re going to tour Australia. The record’s coming out and I think that there’s a lot of interest in it. So, we’re so excited to actually play it live. It’s so much fun to play this music live. The look on people’s faces when you kick into “Ring Of Fire” or something… it’s just a ball
SPAZ: What do you currently have spinning on your record, CD and DVD players?
CHRIS: I just introduced a bunch of films for that Turner Classic Movies channel… I watch old movies all the time. They called me and asked me to come down to the studio for a bit… I watched Rebel Without A Cause a couple of times in a row so I could talk about it. What a fun, strange film. I always find something new in it. (Audio-wise), when I travel, usually in my car, I’ve got Jerry Lee Lewis going on.
Thanks to Chris Isaak
Special thanks to Jacki Feldstein and Kimberly McCoy
Thursday, September 8, 2011
JAPANESE POPSTARS/Controlling Your Allegiance: Available NOW!
2011 release from the Electronic trio. In the two years since their debut album, We Just Are, dropped, they've toured The States, Australia, Europe and, of course Japan. But it's Controlling Your Allegiance that's the real leap forward, not least because they've used vocalists for the first time. And not just any old session singers either. First single, 'Destroy', featured an idiosyncratic and eerily compelling vocal from Jon Spencer (of Blues Explosion fame) set atop a squelching, brooding slab of nu-electro that climaxes in an unholy riot of angry synths. Decky from the Japstars had the idea of enlisting The Cure's Robert Smith for one of the rough edits.
Thursday, July 7, 2011
THE MOTELS/Apocalypso (The Lost 1981 Album): Available on August 9th, 2011
Los Angeles, CA - Omnivore Recordings has announced they will officially release The Motels' legendary, lost 1981 album Apocalypso on August 9 in celebration of the 30th anniversary of its recording. Apocalypso will be released in its intended original form as a 10-track LP (on limited-edition orange vinyl). In addition, Omnivore Recordings will release Apocalypso as an expanded 17-track CD version that includes previously unissued original demos and outtakes.
In 1981, Los Angeles band The Motels convened to record the follow-up to their 1980 release Careful. The band's lineup consisted of Martha Davis (vocals/guitar), Marty Jourard (sax/keys), Michael Goodroe (bass), Brian Glascock (drums), and Davis' then boyfriend, Tim McGovern (guitar), who had recently replaced founding member Jeff Jourard.
"So it was" says Davis, "a band, on their third attempt to gain some commercial success in the U.S. A relationship quantified by music and qualified by its abusive nature-and of course there was the Art, that most magical place of expression-'tear down the walls,' 'piss in the face of tradition,' 'make something no one has ever heard before'-and in the '80s there were a lot of drugs, which might explain all of the above. We did as all bands do-locked ourselves away in a room with a tape machine and started making demos, a heady, wonderful experience, where we made up the rules. Tim's influence and command over the process is not to be overlooked."
"On the last day of March we met with producer Val Garay at his Record One studio in Sherman Oaks," recalls Marty Jourard. "After listening to a couple of the songs on the cassette, he immediately agreed to produce the album. He was coming off a huge success with 'Bette Davis Eyes' and was the hot producer of the month. In my recollection it was Tim making most of the production decisions and Val engineering, but opinions may vary. We recorded from April to August. On July 23rd the album cover was shot. It was fun watching Martha being photographed surrounded by fire. The final album session was August 9th from 1 p.m. to 7 a.m.-we drank a lot of coffee!-recording overdubs for 'Art Fails.' We were done."
"When we were convinced we had amassed the perfect collection of what were obvious hits or at least great album tracks, we went to the label," says Davis.
As Capitol A&R man Bruce Ravid recalls, "having cosigned the band, I was one of the A&R guys who thought that this album was 'too strange, too dark, and where's the single?' It was very much a Tim McGovern record that seemed like too great a departure for The Motels. This was a crucial release for the band, as we knew we needed to get them on radio in a big way. There was an unusual amount of love for The Motels at Capitol from the day we signed them, and we really needed consensus from the promotion, sales, and marketing people downstairs. It's true, our promotion execs didn't feel they had a shot with Apocalypso. We dreaded the thought of telling the band they needed to return to the well."
"When Capitol heard the album the reaction was something like, 'We'll release it if you really want us to, but the promotion department will not work it,' says Davis.
Davis sums up what happened next: "After the bruising of egos, and some time to reflect, it was apparent that this was actually a good thing. It was long past time for Tim and I to part ways and this was the opportunity to get out of a bad relationship. So Tim was gone and with him the album Capitol didn't want to release."
The resulting album All Four One was released in 1982 as The Motels' official third studio record and was the band's first commercial success, featuring the timeless "Only The Lonely," which would go Top 10 on the Billboard charts; the subsequent video would become a staple of rotation on the burgeoning music television network MTV.
"With the hindsight that only 30 years can bring, I hear Apocalypso as a sort of wild sonic ride," says Jourard. "All Four One was our first real commercial success, but it was born of these sessions."
"All Four One came out, and we had our first real chart success in the U.S.-we were mainstream, baby...But something was lost with Apocalypso, the album that got away," says Davis. "I look at it as the last time The Motels were uninhibited, wild, and not worried about our place on the charts. In my heart, I think I've always liked Apocalypso more."
Apocalypso track list:
1) Art Fails *
2) Tragic Surf
3) Only The Lonely
4) Schneekin'
5) So L.A.
6) Apocalypso *
7) Mission Of Mercy
8) Lost But Not Forgotten
9) Who Could Resist That Face *
10) Sweet Destiny *
Bonus Tracks
11) Art Fails (alternate version) *
12) Don't You Remember (4-track demo) *
13) Tragic Surf (4-track demo) *
14) Fiasco (4-track demo) *
15) Obvioso (4-track demo) *
16) Only The Lonely (4-track demo) *
17) Only The Lonely (TV Mix - hidden track) *
(*) previously unissued track
Labels:
Apocalypso,
EMI,
Lost Album,
Martha Davis,
New Wave,
Omnivore,
The Motels,
Unreleased,
Val Garay
Friday, July 1, 2011
An EXCLUSIVE Interview with CHRIS SQUIRE from YES!
By Stephen SPAZ Schnee
In one form or another, Yes has been creating music for over four decades. In the late ‘60s, they were an underground band with a unique sound, but it wasn’t until the early ‘70s that the band achieved massive worldwide success. Perhaps more than any other band from that era, Yes wrote the Progressive Rock rulebook and every Prog band that followed in their wake took inspiration from them.
When Punk came along in the late ‘70s and attempted to destroy the popularity of bands like Yes, the headstrong Progsters may have lost the attention and adulation of the always-fickle press, they never lost the dedication of their fanbase. Even when vocalist Jon Anderson and keyboardist Rick Wakeman left the fold, the band bounced back in 1980 with the album Drama featuring vocalist Trevor Horn and keyboardist Geoff Downes (both of Synthpop duo The Buggles) in their place. While the band disintegrated shortly after that, they weren’t gone long before a new line-up emerged with their most successful album yet, the Trevor Horn-produced 90125, which included the massive hit “Owner Of A Lonely Heart”.
Since then, the band have continued to evolve with slightly different line-ups and fresh, new approaches to their sound. In 2008, Jon Anderson experienced respiratory issues and the band’s touring plans were put on ice. After realizing that they may not be able to tour with Anderson, a replacement was sought and vocalist Benoit David, formerly of Yes tribute band Close To The Edge, fit the bill.
With the line-up of bassist Chris Squire, guitarist Steve Howe, drummer Alan White, vocalist Benoit David and keyboardist Oliver Wakeman (son of Rick), the band entered the studio with producer Trevor Horn and began work on their first studio album in 10 years, Fly From Here. Soon after recording began, Wakeman left the band and was replaced by Geoff Downes. While this line-up was practically a recreation of the Drama-era version of the band, many fans were expecting an album that picked up where that album left off. But Fly From Here is certainly no carbon copy of that album. Instead, this project takes elements from all periods of Yes’ career and creates a fresh and exciting new beast altogether. It is most definitely a Yes album and contains all the elements that fans have come to love, but it’s also an album that stands well on its own and has the potential to attract a new generation of listeners. Simply put, Fly From Here is their best album in years.
Stephen SPAZ Schnee was able to catch up with Chris Squire, who was kind enough to discuss the new album and so much more…
SPAZ: Fly From Here is just about ready to drop. How are you feeling about the album and Yes’ musical journey thus far?
CHRIS SQUIRE: Feeling very good. We’re all extremely happy about how the album turned out. All the interviews I’ve done with people who have heard it, they’ve all been very positive. So, everything seems good.
SPAZ: Fly From Here is the first studio album in 10 years. What inspired the band to record the album now, as opposed to getting things together a few years ago?
CHRIS: Yeah, our last studio album was in 2001, the Magnification album, which was with an orchestra. After that was released, we spent the next two or three years pretty much going around, promoting it with various orchestras, in different parts of the world. So, a couple of years go by quite easily like that. Then Jon Anderson started to have problems with his respiratory system and his voice, so we laid low for awhile to see how that would all pan out. We were planning to go back on the road when he felt good in 2008. Just before we started rehearsing for the tour, he had another attack, unfortunately, so we had to make a decision at that point to get Benoit (David, vocalist) into the band. Of course, we spent the next couple of years going on the road making sure that Benoit was the right man for the job, getting him up to speed with the whole touring experience, etc. Then we decided that it was time to do a new album, so we started working on that. By the time we got ‘round to going into the studio, it was nearly 10 years since the last one! It certainly wasn’t intentional.
SPAZ: The album has that classic Yes sound, yet is also very much a modern-sounding album.
CHRIS: When you say ‘modern’, you mean sonically?
SPAZ: Yes, sonically, which is probably due to Trevor’s production, but the album does not sound ‘dated’ at all. It sounds completely new and fresh, musically.
CHRIS: Yeah.
SPAZ: Did you purposely try to fit the best of both worlds into the album, or did this all fall together organically?
CHRIS: I think more organic. Usually, in my experience, the outcome of any album is a combination of all the people involved in making it, starting, obviously with the music and singing. But then it goes beyond that because we were working with Trevor again and he has his own team of people that he’s been working with. He’s very current with modern recording techniques. So we definitely wanted to make the music itself be organic and we definitely wanted to play everything as opposed to having machines building the tracks up, which of course, is common place more than not these days. We wanted to get the element of a real band playing. We added the benefit of modern equipment to that as well. It does come out feeling like a modern sounding record and Trevor’s team did a great job at that.
SPAZ: Geoff Downes was a late addition to the line-up. Did it take much convincing to get him involved with the project?
CHRIS: Not really. It was a late decision. We’d already started making the album. Oliver Wakeman (keyboardist) was involved. It just came to a certain point when Trevor Horn decided that he did want to be involved in the production of the WHOLE album… Originally, we were just going to be working on the one song with him, but that seemed to go so well that we carried on doing more with Trevor. He said “If that’s the case, I think you guys will make a better record with Geoff.” Not that there’s anything wrong with Oliver Wakeman’s playing at all. He just thought the flavor that Geoff brings with his style and his keyboard sounds was going to help us to make a better record. I’ve always enjoyed working with Geoff, so we agreed to go and do it that way.
SPAZ: Your vocal turn on “The Man You Always Wanted Me To Be” is amazing. How did you come about doing that track and why not sing lead on more of the album’s tracks?
CHRIS: That tune is the one song that I actually completely wrote 100%. When I was in London in 2007, I was doing a lot of writing and that was one of the songs that I wrote during that period of time. Then I made this album with Steve Hackett called The Squackett Album, which hasn’t been released yet even though it’s been finished for a year. That was one of the songs that was supposed to go on that album, but we didn’t really need it because we had plenty of other material. So I put it forward as a suggestion for the Yes album. We did do a version with Benoit singing, actually, in a higher key because that suited his voice better. But Trevor decided that it would be better if I sang it, so we went along with that.
SPAZ: That was a great decision by Trevor because, in my opinion, it’s one of the highpoints of the album.
CHRIS: Thank you very much!
SPAZ: While the album may be considered a ‘return to form’ by some fans and critics, does that sometimes frustrate you since Yes has always been a consistent band that evolves and changes over the years?
CHRIS: I don’t think it’s a question of going back. I mean, I know that I have a press quote out there about the album where I say I think the album represents some of Yes’ best qualities from the ‘70s and the ‘80s but, as you obviously agree, with a modern twist to it. I couldn’t really ask for anything more. To me, it does feel like a progression. It’s a very clean sounding record. This Swedish journalist said to me that it’s like the lightest record and, at the same time, the darkest record we’ve made. And think I kind of understand what he means by that. I think we’ve definitely achieved another notch in the Yes success belt.
SPAZ: The playing on the album is exceptional, but more importantly, it’s a beautiful piece of work from start to finish. Are you usually conscious of the atmosphere and beauty in your music while recording, or does it all seem to hit you afterwards?
CHRIS: I think it develops as it goes on. There’s no doubt that everyone was in a good frame of mind and enthusiastic. There wasn’t too much bickering… I mean, there’s always discussions… but generally, everyone had an attitude with a smile while we were making the record and it definitely seems to shine through in the end product.
SPAZ: You’ve been doing this a long time. Are there still moments when you listen to a playback and get chills?
CHRIS: Yes, there have been. With Trevor’s main engineer, Tim Weidner, who we’ve worked with before on the Magnification album… One day, when he’d been working on the balancing and the sounds on “The Man You Always Wanted Me To Be”, I walked into the studio and I thought, ‘Fuck that sounds really good!” (laughs).
SPAZ: Was it a conscious effort for Yes to pick up from where Drama left off in expanding upon and recording “We Can Fly From Here", given the return of Geoff & Trevor?
CHRIS: Obviously there’s gonna be an element of that because the return of Geoff. He does have a distinctive keyboard style. When he and Steve play with Yes, it seems to open up the possibilities more than their work with Asia.
SPAZ: Many fans are likely to find Fly From Here to be the most consistent Yes album in years. Are we likely to see this line-up return to the studio in the near future to try to capture a bit more lightning in the bottle?
CHRIS: Oh yeah, I sincerely hope so. The bigger mark the album leaves in a successful way, there’s a lot more chance where that could happen. So, it seems on track for that possibility.
SPAZ: After all of these years, you are still considered one of Rock’s greatest bass players. Is it humbling to know that so many people have been touched by the work you’ve done over the years?
CHRIS: Yeah, it’s definitely a great feeling. I do hear quite a lot from other musicians and I read articles where I’m cited as an influence and I’m very proud about that. Who wouldn’t be, really?
SPAZ: What’s next for Chris Squire and Yes?
CHRIS: We’re going to go out on the road for at least a few years to promote this album. I’ve also go plans for the Squackett album to come out, hopefully in the fall. It’s been already finished for a year, but we haven’t quite nailed down the schedule for releasing that yet. All I know is that between those things, I’m setting myself up to be quite busy.
SPAZ: What is currently spinning on your CD player?
CHRIS: A lot of bands I consider to be new aren’t really new anymore, like the Red Hot Chili Peppers, No Doubt and bands like that that I really like. The Foo Fighters have just put out a great new album and I’m a big fan of them. Sometimes, I’ll just put on the current Top 20 urban hits. You gotta like some of Rihanna’s stuff. I don’t have any prejudices: I’ll listen to classical music, straightforward Pop…. Probably like many people my age, I’m more drawn to putting the comedy channel on over the music channels. (laughs) I will put American Idol on, things like that. I just keep an open mind.
Thanks to Chris Squire
Special thanks to Jacki Feldstein, Shawn Potter, Chris Anderson and Gayland Morris
7.12.11
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
JESSICA 6/See The Light: Available June 7th, 2011
2011 release, the incredible debut album from New York's super talented hipsters. Jessica 6 deftly meld their sound into an inspired modern day take on paradise Garage, New Jack Swing, noir Pop and Disco Soul, all with a pronounced twist of rugged R&B. With See The Light, Jessica 6 have created a raw portrait of life in their beloved city and the highs and lows that come with it. A shadowy cinematic theme runs through their sound giving it a drama and edge that's influenced by the twisted other worldliness of Twin Peaks and Blade Runner as well as classic horror films. The album is timeless and contemporary in equal measure, darkly emotive but with a massive pop sensibility.
Labels:
Discussions Magazine,
EMI,
Jessica 6,
Peacefrog,
See The Light
Friday, May 6, 2011
An EXCLUSIVE interview with MOBY!
By Stephen SPAZ Schnee
Very few of us are lucky enough to know what it’s like to be a successful musician. When we are young, we all fantasize about being famous, having a decent amount of money in our pockets and touring the world. By the time we are old enough to know better, we are already settling down, working full time jobs and fantasizing about winning the lottery.
Richard Melville Hall, better known to you and me as Moby, is one of the lucky ones. While he didn’t set out to become one of the most famous Electronic artists in the world, it didn’t happen by accident, either. Moby’s talent and instincts have served him well over the last 20 years and he’s always created music that moves the heart and soul and not just the feet. By constantly challenging himself, he has created a body of work that has defined a new generation of Electronica.
While getting ready to hit the road and promote 2009’s Wait For Me album, Moby decided to make the best of his touring experience. Armed with a camera and recording equipment, Moby wanted to share both sides of the touring ritual: the euphoria of the short time spent on stage and the long, often strange and isolated times that most musicians experience behind the scenes. Add in a bit of Moby’s chronic insomnia and you’ve got Destroyed, one of his most personal albums to date.
Destroyed is not a vanity project. It is an emotional musical journey that is both beautiful and unsettling. The album is filled with wonderful melodies that linger in your head long after the music has ended. It is pretty, but far from pretentious. From the Bowie-esque ‘The Day” to the glorious “Lie Down In Darkness”, Destroyed is an album that works as a whole, yet the tracks stand up quite well outside of the context of the album.
Available as a regular CD, a deluxe version including a DVD and a version that includes a book of his photographs taken on tour, Destroyed works on all levels. The album can be listened to on its own and is as atmospheric as it is melodic. The book of photos tells a story without words: touring is not all sex, drugs and Rock ‘n’ Roll. It is both joyful and cold. It is everything we once thought it would be, but it is nothing like we expect it to be.
Stephen SPAZ Schnee was able to sit down for a chat with the man himself and dig a little deeper into Moby’s though process in regards to the album and his career…
SPAZ: Your new album, Destroyed, is just about to drop. How are you feeling about the album and things in general at this point?
MOBY: So far, the reaction has been pretty good. It’s interesting. Because I make the records by myself… it’s just me alone in my studio writing, engineering and playing the instruments… by the time an album is being released, I’ve lost all objectivity and perspective. One of the interesting things about putting a record out into the world is you start to get other people’s reactions to it, whether the reactions are good or bad, and it actually helps me to regain a degree of objectivity. I hope this doesn’t sound self-serving, but one of the things I like about this record is that it actually sounds like an album that I would probably listen to if someone else had made it. There’s a couple of records in my past that I’ve made that, once I released them, I realized I was sort of happy with how I produced them but I ended up with records that I might not have listened to.
SPAZ: The album is a fascinating juxtaposition of emotions and atmospheres. Do you hope that the music and book will help people understand the life of a musician better? There are some who still imagine that it’s all sex, drugs and Rock ‘n’ Roll 24/7…
MOBY: I don’t really like touring all that much, so on this most recent tour, I gave myself two little projects: one was to take as many pictures as I could and the other was to write music while I was on tour. So, the pictures became the book and a lot of the music written on tour became the music on the album. I sort of did these two little projects to help me enjoy touring more, but also to document the strangeness of touring. I’ll never complain about touring because I’m a musician and it’s every musicians dream to stand on stage and play music for people. But even though I won’t complain about touring, it is a really strange institution: always living in these completely alien, anonymous spaces, be they hotel rooms or airports or backstage areas… I think the book, especially, I’m putting out to show people these strange environments I live in almost to try and get people to help me make more sense of it.
SPAZ: Was the concept of Destroyed a new one or something you had been thinking about for awhile?
MOBY: I’ve been a photographer for almost as long as I’ve been making music, but I just, for some reason, never felt comfortable releasing the photographs I’ve been taking. It was only now that I felt comfortable…like I felt I knew enough as a photographer to not just feel like some strange digital photographing dilettante. (Laughs) And also, the music and the pictures do sort of relate to each other. So that’s why I felt more comfortable putting this out now than probably in the past.
SPAZ: The songs on the album, like your past work, are open to interpretation depending on the mood of the listener as well as the mood of the recording itself. Do you find it difficult to convey a feeling knowing that it could be misconstrued by anyone from a critic to a fan?
MOBY: Instead of ‘misconstrue’, I would probably say ‘subjectively reinterpret’. Once I put a record out into the world, I actually really love the fact that everyone who hears it might have their own personal, subjective understanding and relationship to it. I know some musicians and film makers, it drives them crazy that they can’t control not only the way in which people experience the work but how people respond to it. I love that once the music leaves my hands, it’s almost no longer mine. It goes out into the world and people can either listen to the whole album or they can listen to individual songs… they can sit down and listen with rapt attention or they can have it playing in the background on a computer speaker while they check their Facebook updates. Music is one of the only art forms that can exist in so many different contexts. No one puts on a movie while they’re driving to work. (Laughs) Every time music is heard, the context in which it’s heard is really influencing the content of the music. Movies tend to be seen on screens: a computer screen, a TV screen or a movie screen. There aren’t that many other ways you can experience a movie, which is not to malign movies. It’s just to say that they have a specific utility. But music is heard on big sound systems, tiny little speakers, headphones… and it always sounds different. Listening to this record on a pair of crummy headphones on the L train going under the East River in New York is going to sound an awful lot different on a surround sound system in a brand new BMW driving down the 101. You can’t control any aspect of that so I think a musician who tries desperately to control how people experience their work is just gonna end up making themselves insane.
SPAZ: While the album sounds utterly modern, it also retains a timeless quality because of the use of a wide array of electronics, including old rhythm machines and synths. Does the mood of the song dictate which instruments you ultimately use for each track or vice versa?
MOBY: I’d say it’s a fairly strange symbiotic relationship between the two. Some of the songs start out very conventional, using maybe guitar or piano and I then I add all the weird, broken down electronic stuff as the song develops. Some songs really just start with an old drum machine and then the song is, in some ways, inspired by the old, broken down drum machine or the old, broken down synthesizer. With the album, one of the reasons that I wanted to use a lot of old equipment is because the old equipment has all the built in limitations that come with old drum machines and synthesizers. A lot of new software does so much. If you use some of the plug-ins you get with recording software, you have access to literally tens of thousands of sounds; with an old drum machine, you plug it in and it only does one thing. I really like working within the restrictions you get with old, broken-down equipment.
SPAZ: The album is filled with beautiful melodies that are often times haunting and disconcerting. Is this album more about conveying that emotion than any of your past works, or do you feel it’s a continuation of what you have been building up to over the last 20 years?
MOBY: I think it’s perhaps both. This is one of the interesting things about the interview process… First, you make the record and then you go out and talk about it. And talking about it is almost like a form of psychotherapy. If I make personal work, and I have an intuitive understanding of the work, and then you go out and do interviews and you sort of have to deconstruct and analyze the work that you’ve made. How you just described the music, that’s how I perceive it as well. It’s pretty and emotional and atmospheric, but there are underlying elements of things being disconcerting and a little strange in there as well. On its most simple level, and I’m not saying I succeeded at this, but I like everything to have a simple, uncomplicated beauty… but I think I like beauty to have some nuances and depth to it. Like if I listen to Debussy, for example. I think, in many ways, he was the person who invented modern music… and if I go back and listen to Debussy, a lot of his better compositions, they’re really beautiful but kind of unsettling at the same time. I guess a lot of my musical heroes aspired to that so, in turn, I think I aspire to that as well.
SPAZ: When I listen to your music, there’s so much emotion in it. But I know that others have listened and said “Oh, it’s Electronic. There’s no emotion in that.” I have always told them: “Sit down… you will FEEL a Moby record before you actually HEAR it!”
MOBY: Well, that’s about the nicest compliment I’ve ever received.
SPAZ: Apart from being an artist in your own right, you are also a DJ and remixer. Do you tend to find it easier to work with someone else’s music or is it just as much as a challenge?
MOBY: I guess it depends on whose music it is. Years and years ago.. 20 years ago…I did a whole bunch of remixes for Brian Eno and that was daunting because he’s my hero and I really wanted him to love what I’d done. I was kind of new to the world of remixing so I worked for weeks on these remixes so I probably over-worked them, over-thought them… Sometimes, when you do remixes, you do have an objectivity that the original musician and producer wouldn’t have and it’s always easier to record and mix someone else’s vocal performance than my own vocal performance. I can just hear other people’s performance with more objectivity. With remixes, you also tend to do them very quickly. I just did a Daft Punk remix and, I think, from start to finish, the whole thing took a day and a half. Someone sends you the master tapes, you open them up, you start playing around with them, you get a remix in pretty good shape… then you realize you have to have it finished in the next two hours, so sometimes you don’t have enough time to over-think things.
SPAZ: You tend not to play by normal music business rules. Do you think this has aided in your longevity and respect as an artist?
MOBY: I think it’s that I never expected to have a career as a musician in the first place. The height of success for me was in 1983, I was playing in a Hardcore Punk band called The Vatican Commandos and we put out a 7” single and we sold 200 copies. And selling 200 copies of a 7” out of my friend Jim’s bedroom, that was more success than I had ever imagined having. Every aspect of my career as a musician is completely accidental. There are also a lot of musicians who have conventional careers because they are fairly conventional musicians. I don’t mean that as slander or criticism but if a musician is a good looking singer who fronts a four piece Rock band, there’s a good chance they will have a very conventional career. And if you are a weird, middle-aged bald guy who makes strange records in his bedroom and has no understanding of how the music business works, by definition, you are going to have a strange career.
SPAZ: The groundbreaking work of Brian Eno and David Bowie inspired your own work. Do you realize that you have inspired a generation in the same way that they did?
MOBY: I’d be inclined to disagree with that. It’s because I think that David Bowie and Brian Eno were so hugely inspirational to so many people and I don’t see myself in that role at all. I can see that there might be a few musicians who, at times, have listened to the records I’ve made… but with all the really remarkable and inspiring music out there, I can’t see that anyone would choose my music to be inspired by.
SPAZ: What’s next for Moby?
MOBY: All I wanna do is just make music. I have no idea if anyone will listen to it. I’ve been making music since I was 10 years old and I hope to be making music until the day I die. Honestly, I love albums and I just want to keep making albums, which at some point is going to seem like a fool’s errand. Whenever I have conversations with my manager, he always try to remind me that we live in a climate where, for the most part, people don’t listen to albums. I love albums and I’m happy to make albums for the 15 people that still listen to them. I can’t think of a better way to spend your life than trying to make music that you love in the hope that someone else might like it as well.
SPAZ: What is currently spinning on your record, CD and DVD players?
MOBY: I have the weirdest musical taste. Lately, I’ve been listening to John Lee Hooker’s Greatest Hits. And one of my favorite bands of all-time is The Gun Club, so I’ve been listening to them…especially the album Miami. I just moved to L.A. recently, and maybe I shouldn’t admit this because it’s sort of embarrassing, but I made an L.A. playlist… and driving around L.A. late at night and listening to music inspired by Los Angeles… it just makes a lot of sense. In fact, Saturday night, I was driving back from a fund raiser with a couple of friends. We were driving down Hollywood Blvd where all the sleazy clubs are and the song “I Looked At You” by The Doors came on and it just sounded more perfect than any piece of music has sounded in that context.
Thanks to Moby
Special thanks to Jacki Feldstein and Nicole Blonder
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