The second edition went up today, and the focus is on WTSH faves Screen Vinyl Image. We at WTSH adore SVI and all of their projects, past and present, and after reading this, so will you.
26 January 2012
Strangeways Radio Blog: Shoegaze Spotlight - A Weekly Gaze. This Week: Screen Vinyl Image.
When The Sun Hits and Strangeways Radio are uniting on yet another level - activate the weekly Shoegaze Spotlight! Every week WTSH will present a shoegaze/dream pop band on Strangeways' blog, highlighting how very awesome the band is and how you should be listening to them and buying their music and supporting them because they deserve it.
25 January 2012
Tonight! Special Re-Airing of the Doomgaze Edition of When The Sun Hits.
Tonight on Strangeways Radio! The Doomdaze Edition of When The Sun Hits. That's right, I'm replaying it! It's one of my favorite shows I've done and a lot of listeners seemed to dig it too, soo I'm re-airing it. Stream it live, 10pm-11pm EST, HERE. Heads up, local folks, that's 9pm-10pm CST!
Come join me tonight for When The Sun Hits on Strangeways Radio. In celebration of Halloween, this week's show is dedicated to DOOMGAZE. Yes, I've trolled the murky waters of fringe shoegaze for you in order to drag up the darkest, loudest mire possible. Black out the windows, grab your headphones, and go down the rabbit hole tonight on Strangeways Radio. Disclaimer: I am not responsible for any subsequent nightmares you may have. Enjoy All Hallow's Eve.
Don't forget to log in to the Strangeways chatroom during the show to hang out with me and many other awesome people while we talk about the music that is airing in real time and god knows what else...
Tune in live every Wednesday, 10pm-11pm (EST), for When The Sun Hits on Strangeways Radio. Join us in the Strangeways chat room for additional entertainment!
Stream it here: http://www.strangewaysradio.com/
"When The Sun Hits: Many nude pelvic thrusts will be made tomorrow evening in honor of bad ass music." - David Goffan
Come join me tonight for When The Sun Hits on Strangeways Radio. In celebration of Halloween, this week's show is dedicated to DOOMGAZE. Yes, I've trolled the murky waters of fringe shoegaze for you in order to drag up the darkest, loudest mire possible. Black out the windows, grab your headphones, and go down the rabbit hole tonight on Strangeways Radio. Disclaimer: I am not responsible for any subsequent nightmares you may have. Enjoy All Hallow's Eve.
Expect to hear dark cuts from Nadja, [aftersun], Jesu, and a LOT more.
Don't forget to log in to the Strangeways chatroom during the show to hang out with me and many other awesome people while we talk about the music that is airing in real time and god knows what else...
Tune in live every Wednesday, 10pm-11pm (EST), for When The Sun Hits on Strangeways Radio. Join us in the Strangeways chat room for additional entertainment!
Stream it here: http://www.strangewaysradio.com/
"When The Sun Hits: Many nude pelvic thrusts will be made tomorrow evening in honor of bad ass music." - David Goffan
20 January 2012
Interview: Mat Flint of Deep Cut and formerly of Revolver and Death in Vegas. Interview by Rob Turner.
Interview by Rob Turner
How and when was Deep Cut band formed?
After Revolver ended, I played bass with Death in Vegas from the mid-nineties up to 2005. To begin with, I was really happy just being a musician in someone else's band - particularly when it was a band that was fucking great! It suited me, after all the pressures of being the singer, songwriter and guitarist of Revolver, to just play in someone else's group for a while. But as time went on, I missed not being able to write songs - I mean, I could make up bass lines, and be involved in the arrangement of how we played songs live, but I started to feel that I needed to do my own thing again. When they stopped touring in 2005, I decided to concentrate on writing some of my own stuff again. Me and Si - my brother and Deep Cut bassist - had been doing some stuff together before that, which was more electronic, but he agreed to work on some more guitar-based stuff with me. We got a few demos together, and tried out a few singers, but none of them really worked. One day Emma - my wife - said she wanted to have a go at the vocals. She did Rubbernecking, which is on our first album, then Commodity and Freezer Burn, and we thought they sounded so good that we put them up on Myspace. Robin from AC30 heard them, liked them, and asked us to play at the AC30 night. So we had to get a band together! We did that, played a few gigs, and then Tim from Death In Vegas agreed to produce a single for us, which AC30 released. And it went on from there.
Can you tell us what The Deep Cut band has been working on and what you've got forthcoming in the near future (new releases, tour, etc)?
Our new album Disorientation came out late last year. We started recording it in the summer of 2009, and finished it in September 2010... so it's taken a year to come out! We are very proud of it - I know that everyone says this when they bring out a new record, but I really feel that it's the best stuff I've been involved with writing. We just released a single from it, "Something's Got To Give." It's a really limited thing that you can only get via the AC30 site. We did a couple of videos which are up on YouTube, and we have done a few shows - we did Glastonbury, and we supported Ringo Deathstarr and Spotlight Kid. We might do another single - probably Dead Inside Your Heart from the album. We've got a few more gigs coming up, me and Si are remixing a couple of bands.. And then I guess we will start working on the next Deep Cut album. Plus, I am going to play on a couple of other people's records, hopefully.
Deep Cut. About Face.
Do you consider Deep Cut music to be part of the current shoegaze/dream pop scene, or any scene?
I don't ever think of music like that, to be honest, but I suppose that you probably could include us in it - if it exists! I'm happy to be included in anything, if it means that people hear our music. I actually see us as being closer to other current bands really - bands that don’t really get included in it.
Defining one's sound by genre can be tiresome, but do you feel that the band identifies closely with any genre?
The bands that I’m talking about, that I think we would sort of fit in with, are bands like the Horrors, the Duke Spirit, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Brian Jonestown Massacre and so on. You know, in that people that like their records would probably like ours. But I can see why you might lump us in with some of the more obvious shoegaze type bands. It's probably as much to do with the fact that I was in Revolver, as much as anything else. I mean, I can hear why you would think some of our stuff could be called “shoegaze” – but there is a lot more to it than that.
How do you feel about genres in music, in a general sense?
As much as I don't really like them when they’re applied to my own music, they are necessary I think. You know, if I go into a record shop, if I want a particular record, it helps if I can head straight to the psych section, or Krautrock, or hip hop or whatever! My problem with the “shoegaze” tag, really, was that I thought it sounded a bit silly... “Dream pop” is better, at least it tells you a bit about what the music sounds like!
What do you think of modern shoegaze/dream pop/psychedelia artists, any favorites?
I absolutely love the Horrors. I think their last two albums have both been fantastic. I like some other bands that might just about fit into those categories, like the Brian Jonestown Massacre, and there's an Australian band called Belles Will Ring that I really like. But I'm not crazy about many new bands, to be brutally honest. Maybe I just haven't heard the good ones! I mean I occasionally hear records that stand out, like that LSD and the Search For God record a couple of years ago, and I quite liked the Joy Formidable one... But generally I don't get to hear a lot of what you'd call "modern shoegaze". I’d be willing for someone to do me a mixtape though, of what’s really good at the moment. I don’t get to listen to as much new music as I used to and that’s a shame really. I do like some of the “new psychedelia” bands at the moment, though - the Black Angels, Asteroid #4, bands like that.
Deep Cut. Something’s Got To Give.
What is the most important piece of gear for your sound? Any particular guitars/pedals/amps that you prefer?
We are more about guitars and amps than we are about effects. I mean, we use a lot of
distortion, but if you listen to our stuff it's generally not overladen with loads of other effects, really. For distortion, we generally use the amp itself, or my Russian Bigmuff, or a Rat. I suppose we use tremelo quite a lot, but that's just on our amps. We used a Vox AC30 and a Fender Twin Reverb for pretty much everything on the album. And we just have nice guitars, you know – I have an American Telecaster Plus from the Revolver days that I still use, and I got a cool Jazzmaster a couple of years ago. We used a Rickenbacker 12 string on some tracks. And apart from the odd bit of flange or delay, the rest of the sound comes from which mike you use, and how you mike up the amp, and how you compress and EQ it afterwards. I dont believe in hiding behind loads of effects! I’ve always felt that the sound of a nice guitar plugged straight into an amp is a very physical sound – if you plug a Jazzmaster into a Marshall stack, and turn the gain up, you get a very physical, visceral effect from it. And to me, when you start adding digital effects into that, it takes away some of that visceral effect. And I don’t like that.
How do you feel about the state of the music industry today? There is no doubt a massive change underway; how do you see it and do you feel it’s positive at all?
I was talking to Robin from AC30 about this the other day, and he was saying that he reckons that of all the people that actually have the Ringo Deathstarr album, maybe 1 to 2 per cent of those people actually bought it. Which is really fucking frightening. It's so different to when Revolver came out, it's a different ballgame now. The only ways a band can actually make a living doing this now - unless you have an absolutely massive single or album - are through doing loads of shows, selling loads of merchandise, or getting your music licensed to an advert, or a movie or something. So for people in bands who are just starting out, who want to do this as a career, it’s a pretty daunting prospect. Because the chances are that you aren’t going to sell any records, or CDs, or whatever. Having said that, we don’t do Deep Cut for financial gain – we do it for the love of making music. I gave up on being a pop star when Revolver broke up! I’m not saying that I wouldn’t love to have a massive hit single – or a track used on a new HBO series or something – but we’re just very happy to be making music and putting it out.
When it comes to label releases versus DIY/bandcamp and the like, what is your stance, if any?
I have to admit that I still like the label approach - it works for us, any way. On our new CD, we’ve done everything ourselves up to a certain point, which is where AC30 take over. We wrote and arranged the songs, engineered them, mixed them, got them mastered, and did all the artwork ourselves. But once it’s finished, I don’t want to do all the stuff like getting the sleeves printed, manufacturing the CD, dealing with distributors and getting it into the shops, and up onto iTunes and whatever. I just wouldn’t have the time to do that! Plus, we are very lucky to be on a label that carries a certain amount of kudos – people listen to stuff because it’s on AC30, and we wouldn’t get that otherwise. Also, they’re great guys, Robin and Dunk, Nick too, and it’s good to have people who aren’t in the band, but who are closely involved with it, who you can go to for advice – to help you make certain choices and so on. Having said that, I think if I was 20 and just starting out, I would go down the Bandcamp route. It’s a brilliant option if you can’t get – or don’t want - label support.
Do you prefer vinyl, CD, cassette tape or mp3 format when listening to music? Do you have any strong feelings toward any of them?
I’m a vinyl man – always have been, always will be! I don’t like CDs and never have done, really. Vinyl sounds better, the sleeves look better, and they stack up more nicely on your shelves! And vinyl will pretty much live forever, I think – it’s quite clearly going to outlast CD. Plus, I DJ a lot and it’s much more of a hands-on experience to do it with vinyl. You can’t scratch with a CD! But I also love cassette tapes. I’m going through a big phase at the moment of converting my old cassette tapes into digital, to put onto my iPod. And I love the sound you get on them, particularly when it’s a recording of a radio show from back in the day. You get that great radio compression sound, combined with the slightly hissy tape – I never used Dolby on my recordings! And of course, where would we be without mp3? I listen to so much music, whatever I’m doing, and I guess the vast majority of it now is on mp3, due to it being so portable. But if I get new stuff on mp3 that I really like, I always try to buy it on vinyl.
What artists (musicians or otherwise) have most influenced your work?
Wow, what a question. We could be here all day! To really try to narrow it down… the first band I really became obsessed with were the Smiths, back when I was a teenager. I literally didn’t talk about anything else for about 3 years! I was a massive Johnny Marr fan. The way he looked, the way he played the guitar, the way he churned out all those songs so quickly, was just phenomenal. Plus, the first two gigs I ever went to were the Smiths, so that had a massive impact on me. I saw their last ever show, at Brixton Academy. After that, the Jesus and Mary Chain were next up – Psychocandy just blew my mind. The amazing songs, juxtaposed with the white noise – and the fantastic way they looked, I just loved it. I tried to look like I was in the Mary Chain for a long time when I was younger! And I always really loved New Order – just the most uplifting band in the world, ever. They’re still pretty much my favourite band, to this day. And My Bloody Valentine of course – when You Made Me Realise came out it just completely blew my mind. The whole EP was just incredible, and I became obsessed with them, went to all their shows, for a couple of years. Then Primal Scream were the next band to really influence the way I thought about music; I always loved reading interviews with Bobby, I often agreed with the things he said, and he always enthused about records that you hadn’t heard, that you then had to go and check out. And when they did “Screamadelica” it just changed the game, really. I started going to clubs, and getting really into dance music around that time, and a lot of it was through the Scream and Andrew Weatherall. We used to go to Weatherall’s club night Sabresonic – and that was a big influence, really getting into stuff that was electronic, and not guitar-based. And then there’s Sonic Youth, who have always been really inspiring to me – still brilliant now, after all these years. These are the artists that I’ve “grown up” with that have inspired me the most; but there are so many older artists that have had just as a big an impact, sometimes more so – Arthur Lee and Love, Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys, John Lennon, Iggy, John Lydon.
Can you tell us a little about what you are currently into (books, films, art, bands, etc)?
I’m currently reading a really good book about Syd Barrett, it’s called A Very Irregular Head, and it’s great. I just finished a book about Arthur Lee – Forever Changes I think it was called. That was pretty good. I haven’t read a novel for a while, last one I read was American Pastoral by Philip Roth which did my head in a bit! The last interesting film I saw was Enter The Void, I think. And I saw the Creation film, “Upside Down”, which was ok. Music wise, I’m listening to a lot of mid-90s hip-hop, lots of radio mixes from that time – Stretch and Bobbito shows, DJ Eclipse and DJ Riz, just really amazing stuff. It makes me want to cry at how terrible “hip-hop” has become today! I run a lot, 20-30km a week, and I find it’s the best kind of music to listen to while I run! I love the new Horrors album, been listening to that loads, along with Bo Diddley, David Bowie, Neil Young, J Mascis, Flying Burrito Brothers, Wooden Shjips… I just remembered that I like that Tame Impala album a lot, too.
If you had to choose one Deep Cut track that was the ultimate definition of your sound, which would it be and why?
I’m tempted to say “Out Of Nothing” from the new album, as we did it in a really different way to how we normally write songs, and we will probably do that a lot more in the future. We played along to a loop of this really great hip-hop track by Godfather Don, and just basically wrote a song on top of it – and it worked. Then we took the loop out, and just let the song stand on its own. And it sounds like us, but it sounds like us coming from a different place, if you see what I mean. And that’s what we will do a lot more of. But, you could also say that a track like “Next Disaster” off the new album was more typical in terms of an “ultimate definition” of what we do, as it has all the things on it that we tend to do on most songs. Great lyrics and melody, noisy guitars, great rhythm section – but it’s not just a noise-pop thing. There’s brass on there, weird percussion, strange backing vocals… it has a twist to it. I’d very happy for people to hear that track, if they were only going to hear one song by us, to give them an idea of what we were about.
Can you tell us a little about the band’s song writing process?
I normally come up with the first idea – usually guitar chords, or a bassline idea, or a sample or loop. And then me and Si sit at the PC and fuck around with it until it turns into a workable idea. When we’ve got something that sounds like a song, we give it to Em to put vocal melodies on, and to try to come up with lyrics, and we then try to get it to a “rough demo” sort of stage. We then take that demo into the rehearsal studio for the whole band to work on; or, we just decide to do a new version of the song that ends up becoming the finished version, with the whole band playing on it. We don’t write songs from jamming together much – but we might do that more in the future.
What is the band’s goal for 2011?
I just hope that people get to hear this album. We put so much into it, and we’re very proud of it, you know? And I think it stands up, really. I’d be surprised if people who were listening to bands like the Horrors heard our stuff and didn’t like it… And that’s all really. I just want people to hear it, and say, “you know what, that Deep Cut album is fucking good.”
What is your philosophy (on life), if any, that you live by?
I got asked this the other day, and to be really honest, I didn’t think I really had one. But when I thought about it, I suppose it’s to do things only when it feels right – and fits in with your life. I’ve never been pressured into doing stuff I didn’t want to do. I’ve turned some things down over the years that I could have done, but didn’t, and I think it’s stood me in pretty good stead. I’m still making music that people are listening to, 20 years after I started doing it. And I don’t think many people can say that.
What do you think of modern shoegaze/dream pop/psychedelia artists, any favorites?
I absolutely love the Horrors. I think their last two albums have both been fantastic. I like some other bands that might just about fit into those categories, like the Brian Jonestown Massacre, and there's an Australian band called Belles Will Ring that I really like. But I'm not crazy about many new bands, to be brutally honest. Maybe I just haven't heard the good ones! I mean I occasionally hear records that stand out, like that LSD and the Search For God record a couple of years ago, and I quite liked the Joy Formidable one... But generally I don't get to hear a lot of what you'd call "modern shoegaze". I’d be willing for someone to do me a mixtape though, of what’s really good at the moment. I don’t get to listen to as much new music as I used to and that’s a shame really. I do like some of the “new psychedelia” bands at the moment, though - the Black Angels, Asteroid #4, bands like that.
Deep Cut. Something’s Got To Give.
What is the most important piece of gear for your sound? Any particular guitars/pedals/amps that you prefer?
We are more about guitars and amps than we are about effects. I mean, we use a lot of
distortion, but if you listen to our stuff it's generally not overladen with loads of other effects, really. For distortion, we generally use the amp itself, or my Russian Bigmuff, or a Rat. I suppose we use tremelo quite a lot, but that's just on our amps. We used a Vox AC30 and a Fender Twin Reverb for pretty much everything on the album. And we just have nice guitars, you know – I have an American Telecaster Plus from the Revolver days that I still use, and I got a cool Jazzmaster a couple of years ago. We used a Rickenbacker 12 string on some tracks. And apart from the odd bit of flange or delay, the rest of the sound comes from which mike you use, and how you mike up the amp, and how you compress and EQ it afterwards. I dont believe in hiding behind loads of effects! I’ve always felt that the sound of a nice guitar plugged straight into an amp is a very physical sound – if you plug a Jazzmaster into a Marshall stack, and turn the gain up, you get a very physical, visceral effect from it. And to me, when you start adding digital effects into that, it takes away some of that visceral effect. And I don’t like that.
How do you feel about the state of the music industry today? There is no doubt a massive change underway; how do you see it and do you feel it’s positive at all?
I was talking to Robin from AC30 about this the other day, and he was saying that he reckons that of all the people that actually have the Ringo Deathstarr album, maybe 1 to 2 per cent of those people actually bought it. Which is really fucking frightening. It's so different to when Revolver came out, it's a different ballgame now. The only ways a band can actually make a living doing this now - unless you have an absolutely massive single or album - are through doing loads of shows, selling loads of merchandise, or getting your music licensed to an advert, or a movie or something. So for people in bands who are just starting out, who want to do this as a career, it’s a pretty daunting prospect. Because the chances are that you aren’t going to sell any records, or CDs, or whatever. Having said that, we don’t do Deep Cut for financial gain – we do it for the love of making music. I gave up on being a pop star when Revolver broke up! I’m not saying that I wouldn’t love to have a massive hit single – or a track used on a new HBO series or something – but we’re just very happy to be making music and putting it out.
When it comes to label releases versus DIY/bandcamp and the like, what is your stance, if any?
I have to admit that I still like the label approach - it works for us, any way. On our new CD, we’ve done everything ourselves up to a certain point, which is where AC30 take over. We wrote and arranged the songs, engineered them, mixed them, got them mastered, and did all the artwork ourselves. But once it’s finished, I don’t want to do all the stuff like getting the sleeves printed, manufacturing the CD, dealing with distributors and getting it into the shops, and up onto iTunes and whatever. I just wouldn’t have the time to do that! Plus, we are very lucky to be on a label that carries a certain amount of kudos – people listen to stuff because it’s on AC30, and we wouldn’t get that otherwise. Also, they’re great guys, Robin and Dunk, Nick too, and it’s good to have people who aren’t in the band, but who are closely involved with it, who you can go to for advice – to help you make certain choices and so on. Having said that, I think if I was 20 and just starting out, I would go down the Bandcamp route. It’s a brilliant option if you can’t get – or don’t want - label support.
Do you prefer vinyl, CD, cassette tape or mp3 format when listening to music? Do you have any strong feelings toward any of them?
I’m a vinyl man – always have been, always will be! I don’t like CDs and never have done, really. Vinyl sounds better, the sleeves look better, and they stack up more nicely on your shelves! And vinyl will pretty much live forever, I think – it’s quite clearly going to outlast CD. Plus, I DJ a lot and it’s much more of a hands-on experience to do it with vinyl. You can’t scratch with a CD! But I also love cassette tapes. I’m going through a big phase at the moment of converting my old cassette tapes into digital, to put onto my iPod. And I love the sound you get on them, particularly when it’s a recording of a radio show from back in the day. You get that great radio compression sound, combined with the slightly hissy tape – I never used Dolby on my recordings! And of course, where would we be without mp3? I listen to so much music, whatever I’m doing, and I guess the vast majority of it now is on mp3, due to it being so portable. But if I get new stuff on mp3 that I really like, I always try to buy it on vinyl.
What artists (musicians or otherwise) have most influenced your work?
Wow, what a question. We could be here all day! To really try to narrow it down… the first band I really became obsessed with were the Smiths, back when I was a teenager. I literally didn’t talk about anything else for about 3 years! I was a massive Johnny Marr fan. The way he looked, the way he played the guitar, the way he churned out all those songs so quickly, was just phenomenal. Plus, the first two gigs I ever went to were the Smiths, so that had a massive impact on me. I saw their last ever show, at Brixton Academy. After that, the Jesus and Mary Chain were next up – Psychocandy just blew my mind. The amazing songs, juxtaposed with the white noise – and the fantastic way they looked, I just loved it. I tried to look like I was in the Mary Chain for a long time when I was younger! And I always really loved New Order – just the most uplifting band in the world, ever. They’re still pretty much my favourite band, to this day. And My Bloody Valentine of course – when You Made Me Realise came out it just completely blew my mind. The whole EP was just incredible, and I became obsessed with them, went to all their shows, for a couple of years. Then Primal Scream were the next band to really influence the way I thought about music; I always loved reading interviews with Bobby, I often agreed with the things he said, and he always enthused about records that you hadn’t heard, that you then had to go and check out. And when they did “Screamadelica” it just changed the game, really. I started going to clubs, and getting really into dance music around that time, and a lot of it was through the Scream and Andrew Weatherall. We used to go to Weatherall’s club night Sabresonic – and that was a big influence, really getting into stuff that was electronic, and not guitar-based. And then there’s Sonic Youth, who have always been really inspiring to me – still brilliant now, after all these years. These are the artists that I’ve “grown up” with that have inspired me the most; but there are so many older artists that have had just as a big an impact, sometimes more so – Arthur Lee and Love, Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys, John Lennon, Iggy, John Lydon.
Can you tell us a little about what you are currently into (books, films, art, bands, etc)?
I’m currently reading a really good book about Syd Barrett, it’s called A Very Irregular Head, and it’s great. I just finished a book about Arthur Lee – Forever Changes I think it was called. That was pretty good. I haven’t read a novel for a while, last one I read was American Pastoral by Philip Roth which did my head in a bit! The last interesting film I saw was Enter The Void, I think. And I saw the Creation film, “Upside Down”, which was ok. Music wise, I’m listening to a lot of mid-90s hip-hop, lots of radio mixes from that time – Stretch and Bobbito shows, DJ Eclipse and DJ Riz, just really amazing stuff. It makes me want to cry at how terrible “hip-hop” has become today! I run a lot, 20-30km a week, and I find it’s the best kind of music to listen to while I run! I love the new Horrors album, been listening to that loads, along with Bo Diddley, David Bowie, Neil Young, J Mascis, Flying Burrito Brothers, Wooden Shjips… I just remembered that I like that Tame Impala album a lot, too.
If you had to choose one Deep Cut track that was the ultimate definition of your sound, which would it be and why?
I’m tempted to say “Out Of Nothing” from the new album, as we did it in a really different way to how we normally write songs, and we will probably do that a lot more in the future. We played along to a loop of this really great hip-hop track by Godfather Don, and just basically wrote a song on top of it – and it worked. Then we took the loop out, and just let the song stand on its own. And it sounds like us, but it sounds like us coming from a different place, if you see what I mean. And that’s what we will do a lot more of. But, you could also say that a track like “Next Disaster” off the new album was more typical in terms of an “ultimate definition” of what we do, as it has all the things on it that we tend to do on most songs. Great lyrics and melody, noisy guitars, great rhythm section – but it’s not just a noise-pop thing. There’s brass on there, weird percussion, strange backing vocals… it has a twist to it. I’d very happy for people to hear that track, if they were only going to hear one song by us, to give them an idea of what we were about.
Can you tell us a little about the band’s song writing process?
I normally come up with the first idea – usually guitar chords, or a bassline idea, or a sample or loop. And then me and Si sit at the PC and fuck around with it until it turns into a workable idea. When we’ve got something that sounds like a song, we give it to Em to put vocal melodies on, and to try to come up with lyrics, and we then try to get it to a “rough demo” sort of stage. We then take that demo into the rehearsal studio for the whole band to work on; or, we just decide to do a new version of the song that ends up becoming the finished version, with the whole band playing on it. We don’t write songs from jamming together much – but we might do that more in the future.
What is the band’s goal for 2011?
I just hope that people get to hear this album. We put so much into it, and we’re very proud of it, you know? And I think it stands up, really. I’d be surprised if people who were listening to bands like the Horrors heard our stuff and didn’t like it… And that’s all really. I just want people to hear it, and say, “you know what, that Deep Cut album is fucking good.”
What is your philosophy (on life), if any, that you live by?
I got asked this the other day, and to be really honest, I didn’t think I really had one. But when I thought about it, I suppose it’s to do things only when it feels right – and fits in with your life. I’ve never been pressured into doing stuff I didn’t want to do. I’ve turned some things down over the years that I could have done, but didn’t, and I think it’s stood me in pretty good stead. I’m still making music that people are listening to, 20 years after I started doing it. And I don’t think many people can say that.
19 January 2012
Set List for When The Sun Hits on Strangeways Radio, Aired January 18, 2012.
Band Name. Track Title.
The Jesus and Mary Chain. Up too High (demo '83).
Ceremony. Regret.
Ringo Deathstar. Swirly.
Ride. Silver.
My Bloody Valentine. Slow.
The Horrors. I Only Think of You.
A Place to Bury Strangers. Never Going Down.
Chapterhouse. Satin Safe.
The Lost Rivers. Stay.
Dwayne Sodahberk. Open Cuts.
M83. Teen Angst (Montag remix).
Swallow. Holes.
Mahogany. Bunker Soldiers (OMD cover).
lovesliescrushing. Your Eyes Immaculate.
18 January 2012
Tonight! When The Sun Hits on Strangeways Radio. Hosted by DJ Amber Crain.
Heads up, local folks, that's 9pm-10pm CST! Tonight!
Come join me this Wednesday for When The Sun Hits on Strangeways Radio. When The Sun Hits is one full hour of distilled shoegazey goodness, so black out the windows, grab your headphones, and go down the rabbit hole this Wednesday night on Strangeways Radio.
Expect to hear something new from Wild Nothing tonight! And much more.
Don't forget to log in to the Strangeways chatroom during the show to hang out with me and many other awesome people while we talk about the music that is airing in real time and god knows what else...
Tune in live every Wednesday, 10pm-11pm (EST), for When The Sun Hits on Strangeways Radio. Join us in the Strangeways chat room for additional entertainment!
Stream it here: http://www.strangewaysradio.com/
Come join me this Wednesday for When The Sun Hits on Strangeways Radio. When The Sun Hits is one full hour of distilled shoegazey goodness, so black out the windows, grab your headphones, and go down the rabbit hole this Wednesday night on Strangeways Radio.
Expect to hear something new from Wild Nothing tonight! And much more.
Don't forget to log in to the Strangeways chatroom during the show to hang out with me and many other awesome people while we talk about the music that is airing in real time and god knows what else...
Tune in live every Wednesday, 10pm-11pm (EST), for When The Sun Hits on Strangeways Radio. Join us in the Strangeways chat room for additional entertainment!
Stream it here: http://www.strangewaysradio.com/
Strangeways Radio Blog: Shoegaze Spotlight - A Weekly Gaze. This Week: Matt Bartram.
When The Sun Hits and Strangeways Radio are uniting on yet another level - activate the weekly Shoegaze Spotlight! Every week WTSH will present a shoegaze/dream pop band on Strangeways' blog, highlighting how very awesome the band is and how you should be listening to them and buying their music and supporting them because they deserve it.
The second edition went up today, and the focus is on the extremely talented Matt Bartram. We at WTSH adore Matt and all of his projects, past and present, and after reading this, so will you.
12 January 2012
EP Review: Go for Gold. EP. Reviewed by Anne Marie Taul de Neergaard.
Artist: Go for Gold.
Title: EP.
Release Date: May 2011.
Reviewed by Anne Marie Taul de Neergaard.
”Falling in love with noisy guitars, tambourines, distant pianos and no-bullshit drums surrounding catchy tunes...” - that's what their Facebook profile says, and I couldn't possibly agree more!
The Copenhagen-based danish band Go for Gold play a totally outstanding kind of shoegazy post-rock that really sweeps me off my feet right from the very first chord, I'm blown away, I'm in love!
The band's put together by five people; Kristian Rasmussen (vocal + guitar), Sille Mosegaard (vocal + keys), Andreas Brixen (drums), Mads Nyboe (guitar + keys) and Kenneth Skovhus (bass + production) and they released their first and self-titled 5-track EP back in May 2011.
All the way through, the Go for Gold EP is a truly high-flying and euphoric experience, and just pushing 'play' should really require some sort of clearance for takeoff! No wonder the first track's called 'No Patience' since that's actually a very accurate way of describing the feeling that presents itself after only seconds of listening! I find myself having a seriously hard time remaining calm enough for typing – I feel like jumping up and dancing, or jumping out from high places, absolutely confident my freshly grown wings will carry me just perfectly! Oh no, I'm not coming down any time soon!
Go for Gold. No Patience.
Thankfully the EP's second track is slowing down the beat a tiny bit, giving me a brief chance to catch my breath.
I have to agree with the chorus, though; “There's no way out for me” - I'm totally hooked and really impressed with how the band has managed to create such a coherent and consistent set of songs, yet allowing each and every song to differ from the others, adding new and pleasant surprises all the time! Thus also the third track provides a really nice variation in sound and mood, it's a bit more blue sounding, mixed with Kristian Rasmussen and Sille Moesgaard's almost symbiotic vocal harmonies, while the fourth track takes me back up in speed to the burningly intense feeling that's a consistent characteristic on the whole album.
Finally, Go for Gold has mercy on me. The last track takes my heartbeat back to it's more or less calm and steady normal rhythm – or, rather it sets it's speed really, dictating every heartbeat in the same way some of My Bloody Valentine's greatest songs do. And once again I'm completely swept away by the most amazing vocal harmonies, deliciously covered by layers of crisp and noisy guitars.
Oh yes, this superb EP is definitely one of my personal absolute favorite releases from last year – and will remain a favorite for a very long time to come, I'm sure!
Title: EP.
Release Date: May 2011.
Reviewed by Anne Marie Taul de Neergaard.
”Falling in love with noisy guitars, tambourines, distant pianos and no-bullshit drums surrounding catchy tunes...” - that's what their Facebook profile says, and I couldn't possibly agree more!
The Copenhagen-based danish band Go for Gold play a totally outstanding kind of shoegazy post-rock that really sweeps me off my feet right from the very first chord, I'm blown away, I'm in love!
The band's put together by five people; Kristian Rasmussen (vocal + guitar), Sille Mosegaard (vocal + keys), Andreas Brixen (drums), Mads Nyboe (guitar + keys) and Kenneth Skovhus (bass + production) and they released their first and self-titled 5-track EP back in May 2011.
All the way through, the Go for Gold EP is a truly high-flying and euphoric experience, and just pushing 'play' should really require some sort of clearance for takeoff! No wonder the first track's called 'No Patience' since that's actually a very accurate way of describing the feeling that presents itself after only seconds of listening! I find myself having a seriously hard time remaining calm enough for typing – I feel like jumping up and dancing, or jumping out from high places, absolutely confident my freshly grown wings will carry me just perfectly! Oh no, I'm not coming down any time soon!
Go for Gold. No Patience.
Thankfully the EP's second track is slowing down the beat a tiny bit, giving me a brief chance to catch my breath.
I have to agree with the chorus, though; “There's no way out for me” - I'm totally hooked and really impressed with how the band has managed to create such a coherent and consistent set of songs, yet allowing each and every song to differ from the others, adding new and pleasant surprises all the time! Thus also the third track provides a really nice variation in sound and mood, it's a bit more blue sounding, mixed with Kristian Rasmussen and Sille Moesgaard's almost symbiotic vocal harmonies, while the fourth track takes me back up in speed to the burningly intense feeling that's a consistent characteristic on the whole album.
Finally, Go for Gold has mercy on me. The last track takes my heartbeat back to it's more or less calm and steady normal rhythm – or, rather it sets it's speed really, dictating every heartbeat in the same way some of My Bloody Valentine's greatest songs do. And once again I'm completely swept away by the most amazing vocal harmonies, deliciously covered by layers of crisp and noisy guitars.
Oh yes, this superb EP is definitely one of my personal absolute favorite releases from last year – and will remain a favorite for a very long time to come, I'm sure!
Album Review: Yakari. Feel It Two. Reviewed by Anne Marie Taul de Neergaard.
Artist: Yakari.
Album: Feel It Two.
Label: Ikarus Records.
Release Date: December 2011.
Review by: Anne Marie Taul de Neergaard.
From time to time, you're somehow struck by luck, accidentally stumbling upon something new and awesome while following some online path of sound, looking for something completely different. But not infrequently you're then entirely forgetting what you were searching for in the first place, all hooked on this new discovery. New to you, anyway. This was what happened to me this morning. See, I'd never even heard of the Swiss band Yakari, which was definitely my mistake, it turned out!
The band released their second album, Feel It Two, on the Zurich label Ikarus Records December 1st 2011 (their first album was self-titled) and the bandcamp tags 'indie rock', 'noise rock' and 'shoegaze' are quite fitting – while the word 'shitgaze' has to stand entirely on the band's own account. While consistently more melodic, the influence from Sonic Youth is quite undeniable on most tracks, which shouldn't really be held against Yakari though. The resemblance to bands like Green Concorde, Dinosaur Jr. and Autolux may be a little less obvious and, I assume, not really as intentional – but nevertheless there. However, on top of influences and resemblances, Yakari are able adding something new, another layer or two, a sound of their own. Even if all six tracks on the album somehow feel and sound more or less similar to something you might have heard before, having loved this kind of music for years, Yakari has a clear and rather personal 2011 touch to their sound, and most of all the album's really catchy all way through!
To an indie-kid like me Feel It Two feels kind of like coming home, the feeling becoming very intense already on the album's second track 'Higher Sphere' - oh yes, this is where I came from and I'm all in! Yakari approximates the Sonic Youth sound the most, almost making me sing 'Teenage Riot', on the album's fourth track 'Kids', which is very catchy indeed, however it's the album's last track 'Autospace' that gets to me the most and really blows me off my feet! Lasting more than seven minutes straight, this track's inevitably making me slip into a calm but yet very powerful ocean of sound, the flow taking me for a ride through the whirlpools with a couple of very nice surprises on along the way, only getting wilder and wilder, till at last it empties into a deep sea of white noise.
This is definitely an album you should not miss! It's available on vinyl at Ikarus Records and could be downloaded via bandcamp for the very advantageous price of 'pay what you want'.
Album: Feel It Two.
Label: Ikarus Records.
Release Date: December 2011.
Review by: Anne Marie Taul de Neergaard.
From time to time, you're somehow struck by luck, accidentally stumbling upon something new and awesome while following some online path of sound, looking for something completely different. But not infrequently you're then entirely forgetting what you were searching for in the first place, all hooked on this new discovery. New to you, anyway. This was what happened to me this morning. See, I'd never even heard of the Swiss band Yakari, which was definitely my mistake, it turned out!
The band released their second album, Feel It Two, on the Zurich label Ikarus Records December 1st 2011 (their first album was self-titled) and the bandcamp tags 'indie rock', 'noise rock' and 'shoegaze' are quite fitting – while the word 'shitgaze' has to stand entirely on the band's own account. While consistently more melodic, the influence from Sonic Youth is quite undeniable on most tracks, which shouldn't really be held against Yakari though. The resemblance to bands like Green Concorde, Dinosaur Jr. and Autolux may be a little less obvious and, I assume, not really as intentional – but nevertheless there. However, on top of influences and resemblances, Yakari are able adding something new, another layer or two, a sound of their own. Even if all six tracks on the album somehow feel and sound more or less similar to something you might have heard before, having loved this kind of music for years, Yakari has a clear and rather personal 2011 touch to their sound, and most of all the album's really catchy all way through!
To an indie-kid like me Feel It Two feels kind of like coming home, the feeling becoming very intense already on the album's second track 'Higher Sphere' - oh yes, this is where I came from and I'm all in! Yakari approximates the Sonic Youth sound the most, almost making me sing 'Teenage Riot', on the album's fourth track 'Kids', which is very catchy indeed, however it's the album's last track 'Autospace' that gets to me the most and really blows me off my feet! Lasting more than seven minutes straight, this track's inevitably making me slip into a calm but yet very powerful ocean of sound, the flow taking me for a ride through the whirlpools with a couple of very nice surprises on along the way, only getting wilder and wilder, till at last it empties into a deep sea of white noise.
This is definitely an album you should not miss! It's available on vinyl at Ikarus Records and could be downloaded via bandcamp for the very advantageous price of 'pay what you want'.
10 January 2012
The First 100,000 Compilation: Re-Release via Bandcamp Now Available for Free Download.
Our very first compilation, The First 100,000, which was originally released in May 2011, is now officially on bandcamp as a free download! It's bloody well awesome, so definitely grab yourself a copy. And yes, we have corrected the bandcamp problem, so it will remain free. Enjoy it!
200,000 Gazes: Volume Two is nearly ready to hit the interwebs...we can't wait for you guys to hear it. Is it cocky if we say it's bad ass? Because it's bad ass.
09 January 2012
Strangeways Radio Blog: Shoegaze Spotlight - A Weekly Gaze.
When The Sun Hits and Strangeways Radio are uniting on yet another level - activate the weekly Shoegaze Spotlight! Every week WTSH will present a shoegaze/dream pop band on Strangeways' blog, highlighting how very awesome the band is and how you should be listening to them and buying their music and supporting them because they deserve it. The first edition went up today, and the band is the incomparable Kontakte.
08 January 2012
200,000 Gazes Comp: Refunds and Release Dates.
Greetings, gazelings! Several topics to cover here, so let's get to it.
Regarding the temporary bandcamp glitch, during which 200,000 Gazes: Volume One appeared on bandcamp as $5.00 to purchase: All refunds should now be completed. This error should not happen again, as I just dropped some good old USD to bandcamp so that they'd stop effing with our attempts to gaze. So, all is well! If your refund doesn't appear in your paypal account by Wednesday, contact me at:
editorwhenthesunhits@yahoo.com
Regarding the re-release of The First 100,ooo (WTSH's first compilation), it will be available to download on bandcamp,FOR FREE (seriously, for reals, FREE) tomorrow (January 9th) - for absolute certain!
Regarding the release of 200,000 Gazes, Volume Two, it will be released via bandcamp as a free download this Wednesday, January 11th. Fo' sho'. Special edition posters of the compilation cover art will become available shortly thereafter.
We apologize for the delays. It sucks for us too, since working on the blog ranks much higher on the "what we want to do rather than our silly dayjob" scale and all. Alas, we are real people with full time jobs. I know. We think it's lame, too! Luckily, with the expansion of our staff (we still have 3-4 new staff members to announce! You'll read about this in the coming week), it should be smooth sailing (smooth gazing?) from here on out. We hope you are ready for WTSH 2012- because things are about to get rad around here. Thanks so much, everyone!
Regarding the re-release of The First 100,ooo (WTSH's first compilation), it will be available to download on bandcamp,FOR FREE (seriously, for reals, FREE) tomorrow (January 9th) - for absolute certain!
Regarding the release of 200,000 Gazes, Volume Two, it will be released via bandcamp as a free download this Wednesday, January 11th. Fo' sho'. Special edition posters of the compilation cover art will become available shortly thereafter.
We apologize for the delays. It sucks for us too, since working on the blog ranks much higher on the "what we want to do rather than our silly dayjob" scale and all. Alas, we are real people with full time jobs. I know. We think it's lame, too! Luckily, with the expansion of our staff (we still have 3-4 new staff members to announce! You'll read about this in the coming week), it should be smooth sailing (smooth gazing?) from here on out. We hope you are ready for WTSH 2012- because things are about to get rad around here. Thanks so much, everyone!
04 January 2012
Shoegaze Quote of the Week: Jim Reid on Depressing Songs and Drinking.
Taken from an interview with Jim Reid by NYROCK...
NY Rock: Sometimes your lyrics are pretty melancholic. Isn't it a bit strange to sing a sad song, especially if you're feeling great at that particular moment?
Jim Reid: Not really, because a depressing song can make you feel really depressed, so that's OK. Don't take the lyrics too seriously...
I really do feel more like drinking now. I gave you all the answers I have. If you need more just make them up...
03 January 2012
IMPORTANT 200,000 Gazes: Volume One Information.
Ok everyone, a few things. Bandcamp only allows 300 free downloads before they force charging. I wasn't aware of this, so that's why the comp was suddenly $5. I paid off bandcamp, so now it is free again. IF you paid, you will receive a refund. Sorry dudes, just wasn't aware of that bandcamp rule. I'll get that refund to you shortly. Contact me via whenthesunhitsblog@gmail.com if you are uber concerned about it. Put in the subject heading "ATTN: AMBER, gimme my refund, and start reading the fine print on shit!" This will get my attention. I guess the cool thing is that tons of people wanted to download it, which is rad!
Secondly, I've highlighted the exclusive tracks on the comp below. Sorry I didn't do it before. I guess I just figured it didn't matter - cool is cool, why beat the dead cool horse? The comp rocks! But okay, the exclusivity is now included. :)
Secondly, I've highlighted the exclusive tracks on the comp below. Sorry I didn't do it before. I guess I just figured it didn't matter - cool is cool, why beat the dead cool horse? The comp rocks! But okay, the exclusivity is now included. :)
200,000 Gazes: Volume One
1. [aftersun]. Don't Touch.
2. Dead Leaf Echo. Woolgathering (Mark Van Hoen Remix).
3. Brief Candles. Permafrost.
4. Screen Vinyl Image. Station 4. (this is BRAND new - a week old)
5. Bloody Knives. Undecided. (this is an exclusive unreleased track, it will be on their next LP)
6. Was She A Vampire. Delusions.
7. Highspire. Believe.
8. Sansyou. Black Nerve Administrator.
9. Scott Cortez. You Have Burned Bright. (exclusive)
10. 2060 Chiron. Liftoff. (this band hasn't released an album yet. so - exclusive)
11. Deepfieldview (feat. Charlie Nieland of Her Vanished Grace). 21 Grams. (exclusive)
12. Dead Parties. Take Control. (this is a new mix of this song)
13. The Sunshine Factory. Can't Be Found (Falling Down).
14. Between The Cities Are Stars. Miss West.
15. Presents for Sally. Say Something. (this is brand new & unreleased)
16. Elika. We Have Failed.
17. Drowner. Chime.
18. The Consolation Project. King of Darkness.
19. Deep Cut. Decision Time (Electric Loop Orchestra Remix). (exclusive)
20. Hel Vetica. In Bed. (exclusive and unreleased)
01 January 2012
200,000 Gazes Compilation: Volume One. Now Available for Download on Bandcamp.
200,000 Gazes: Volume One is now ready for download on bandcamp. For FREE, naturally. We hope you enjoy it - it was certainly fun to put it together and we are very proud of it. 200,000 Gazes: Volume Two will follow shortly after, as well as the re-release of The First 100,000, our very first compilation that was originally released in May. It has a swanky new bandcamp home. Happy New Year! Follow the link below to download Volume One. The track listing is also below. Prepare to swoon.
Limited Edition Posters of Volume One and Volume Two Cover Art will soon be available. These will be an extremely limited run of 10 each. More on that later!
200,000 Gazes: Volume One
1. [aftersun]. Don't Touch.
2. Dead Leaf Echo. Woolgathering (Mark Van Hoen Remix).
3. Brief Candles. Permafrost.
4. Screen Vinyl Image. Station 4.
5. Bloody Knives. Undecided.
6. Was She A Vampire. Delusions.
7. Highspire. Believe.
8. Sansyou. Black Nerve Administrator.
9. Scott Cortez. You Have Burned Bright.
10. 2060 Chiron. Liftoff.
11. Deepfieldview (feat. Charlie Nieland of Her Vanished Grace). 21 Grams.
12. Dead Parties. Take Control.
13. The Sunshine Factory. Can't Be Found (Falling Down).
14. Between The Cities Are Stars. Miss West.
15. Presents for Sally. Say Something.
16. Elika. We Have Failed.
17. Drowner. Chime.
18. The Consolation Project. King of Darkness.
19. Deep Cut. Decision Time (Electric Loop Orchestra Remix).
20. Hel Vetica. In Bed.
Click here to download 200,000 Gazes: Volume One.
And now, for a bit of story time. For those unfamiliar, The First 100,000 and 200,000 Gazes are compilations that celebrate the number of blog views When The Sun Hits has received since it was begun in July 2010. We were shocked that we ever reached 100,000- that's a hell of a lot of people looking at our blog! We remember (vaguely) when When The Sun Hits was but a mere twinkle in Danny Lackey and Amber Crain's eyes. Now it's 1.5 years old (that might as well be a bazillion in blog years) and has been gazed at nearly 200,000 times. TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND TIMES. We can hardly believe it. When The Sun Hits now has an international following, a radio show on Strangeways radio, merchandise, compilation releases, and a staff of about 10 starry eyed shoegazers. We are beside ourselves with excitement about this unexpected turn of events, and we are beyond grateful to all of our readers. Keep gazing, everyone. We know we will.
Limited Edition Posters of Volume One and Volume Two Cover Art will soon be available. These will be an extremely limited run of 10 each. More on that later!
200,000 Gazes: Volume One
1. [aftersun]. Don't Touch.
2. Dead Leaf Echo. Woolgathering (Mark Van Hoen Remix).
3. Brief Candles. Permafrost.
4. Screen Vinyl Image. Station 4.
5. Bloody Knives. Undecided.
6. Was She A Vampire. Delusions.
7. Highspire. Believe.
8. Sansyou. Black Nerve Administrator.
9. Scott Cortez. You Have Burned Bright.
10. 2060 Chiron. Liftoff.
11. Deepfieldview (feat. Charlie Nieland of Her Vanished Grace). 21 Grams.
12. Dead Parties. Take Control.
13. The Sunshine Factory. Can't Be Found (Falling Down).
14. Between The Cities Are Stars. Miss West.
15. Presents for Sally. Say Something.
16. Elika. We Have Failed.
17. Drowner. Chime.
18. The Consolation Project. King of Darkness.
19. Deep Cut. Decision Time (Electric Loop Orchestra Remix).
20. Hel Vetica. In Bed.
200,000 Gazes Compilation: Volume I - The Release is Upon Us...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)