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Yuck interview

Tue 3 Jan 2012

Ashes to Ashes

Formed on a Kibbutz in Israel, Yuck is a British band proudly rocking an American sound. They’re heading to New Zealand later this month to play at the annual Laneway Festival. Here’s a brief exchange we had with Yuck’s chief songwriter Max Bloom.

(EMJ) Hi Max. Where are you at the moment?
(Max) I’m just in London, at my house.

How long  have you been back home since finishing your last tour?
It’s been about two weeks now. I went on holiday to Stockholm for a week and I just got back yesterday.

You guys have spent most of the year over in the US, haven’t you?
Yeah, for the most part.

You’re signed to Fat Possum Records in the US. Do you think there’s much of a difference between the way your music is received in the US to the  way it’s received in the UK?
It depends. Different cultures, different people. America’s a bigger place so obviously there’s a lot more to cover. England could probably fit into the size of Texas, so it definitely requires a lot more work. I don’t know if the people who like our music in England differ to those in America.

But Yuck has quite an American sound, certainly when you hear comparisons made between your band and other bands, it tends to be American bands that people reference. Bands like Superchunk, Pavement and Dinosaur Jr.
Yeah.

Does that reflect a lot of the music you were listening to when you were growing up?
The bands that people often mention when they’re talking about us are the bands that I was completely obsessed with throughout the recording and writing of the first album. I didn’t listen to anything else because I was completely obsessed with guitar music. I guess it’s an album that’s born out of an obsession with stuff like that. It was kind of a period of this obsession, discovering what I liked and what I didn’t like, listening to various people playing guitar and feeling inspired to write music.

You were in a band called Cajun Dance Party when you were a lot younger, and that band has a very British sound…
I guess that was a whole different ball park. I wasn’t really writing music in Cajun, I was just playing bass. Obviously it was a really good time, and it was kind of fucked up because we were fifteen. We were still at school, it was a really fun time, but when we got a little bit older I felt more like I wanted to be in a band where I had a little bit of control over the creative effort. I wanted to be playing guitar and writing songs and my old band would not have been the group of musicians to do that with, so I formed a new band.

Like you say, you and Daniel Blumberg were only fifteen when you were in Cajun Dance Party. How is it now, touring and playing with people in other bands who are much older but perhaps less experienced?
Although I was in a touring band before this band I feel like starting Yuck was a little bit like going back to square one, in the sense that we were in school then and that meant that we couldn’t do any touring, we couldn’t do all the stuff we could do if we were out of school. We didn’t do much touring, we only released one album – it was something that we made when we were fifteen and that’s all we have to show for ourselves really. It wasn’t like reality, we didn’t actually do much. The amount of work we’ve all put in to this band in the past year is not comparable to anything with my old band.

Yuck’s a far more grown-up band then?
Yeah maybe, I guess you could say that insofar as we’re older people. It wasn’t necessarily the band I wanted to be in for the rest of my life, Yuck is.

The formation of the band is quoted in most press is dating back to 2009, but do the foundations of the band go back much further than that, especially considering that you and Daniel have been friends for so long?
I’m really not good with dates, but I think late 2009 is when things got started. Me and Daniel were writing together before that point. We spent a year not really doing much, just writing and recording music in my bedroom and stuff. But once it got to the stage where we had a large amount of songs to deal with we thought, ‘Let’s start playing live now.’ That’s when we got in touch with the other guys (Mariko Doi and Jonny Rogoff).

“The bands that people often mention when they’re talking about us are the bands that I was completely obsessed with throughout the recording and writing of the first album.”


You’ve played live quite a bit now. You had your first major tour with Times New Viking?
Yeah, I don’t know. I don’t know if that was a major tour, but I guess it was. It was just a situation where we travelled around the UK in a car and slept at friends’ houses and kind of got paid nothing, but I guess that was our first kind of tour.

And you’ve since toured with Unknown Mortal Orchestra?
Yeah, lovely boys.

Is Laneway your first run of festival dates?
Yeah I think so. In the summer we usually do things like a gig a week or whatever, but this is the first thing of this nature that we’ve ever done, definitely.

Have you played a few smaller festivals in other parts of the world?
We’ve done a couple of American ones and a couple of European festivals. I guess we’ll do a European festival this year, around Germany or somewhere.

So who looks after that side of the band’s affairs?
We’ve got an agent in America.

So you don’t look after much of the managerial side of things, bookings, etc?
I don’t think we’re the kind of band to let other people do those things, because, like, our situation with our English label and our American label is that we make sure we have control over everything. We make sure everything goes through us and that all the decisions are made by us.

I want to ask about that band being more of a live band than a studio band. Your records sound like they may be recorded live rather than tracked. Is playing live your priority?
No, I think with us recording and playing live are two very different things. The way we write and the way we record are very dependant on the way a song will start in my bedroom, where we have a studio. I record a rough demo and I might have the bare bones of a song or whatever and record it on the spot. The album wasn’t recorded like that, it was done in tracks. We spent a lot of time, when we were kind of developing our songs and stuff, developing our sound and deciding on things we liked and things we didn’t. We’d have to trial it again and again, seeing what worked and what didn’t and that’s how the album is recorded. Playing it live is something completely different, especially on this album, because some of the tracks are just mine and Daniel’s take on the song entirely and that’s all you’re hearing, whereas when it’s live obviously there’s four people involved, and the way we play live is really different to the way the album sounds. Things are different just because of the way you’re feeling. The album was recorded quite a long time ago, so the way we were feeling then might be different to the way we’re feeling in the moment, standing on stage.

So have you got some new material to play live and then record as well?
Yeah, I think the recording will come first, just because I’ve been meaning to do that. It’s getting there, I have an idea of how I want it to sound.

Yuck play the Laneway Festival on January 30 at Auckland’s Wynyard Quarter

Purchase Yuck’s debut album


 

Posted by Nick Fulton under England, London
No Comments

TEETH!!! – new song ‘Care Bear’

Tue 30 Aug 2011

Removable Wisdom

Today I’m getting my wisdom teeth out. So I thought what better way to celebrate than by allowing you to remove some Teeth from EMJ? It just so happens that UK band TEETH!!! released an incredible, killer banger the other day that I’ve been itching to share with you. We’ve been fans of the band for a few years now, and they just keep getting better. More dynamic and edgy, they push the boundaries of thrash punk and electro, using gaming sounds and warped synths to get an awesome, aggressive dance punk sound. ‘Care Bear’ is so much fun, and some say, “better than coffee”. The band is definitely unique, having reportedly once hacked Lady Gaga’s twitter account to spam it with the message “LOVE GAGA??? LOVE T33TH!!” They’ve also toured with other favourites of ours, Dat Politics, Times New Viking, Sleigh Bells and Gang Gang Dance. They’re releasing their long-awaited debut album WHATEVER on September 20.

Watch their incredibly fun webcam-style karaoke drag video for ‘Care Bear’, on their website!

Listen to ‘Care Bear’ on SoundCloud

TEETH!!! on Facebook

 

Posted by Sarah Gooding under England, London, UK
No Comments

Mozart Parties

Wed 13 Jul 2011

George’s Stanza

Imagine a Mozart party! Big curly white wigs, velvet and long socks, and piano jams? Perhaps. Anyway, I digress. 23-year-old Lake District by-way-of-London musician James Bennett definitely earns his extensive blog love of late with his project, Mozart Parties. Strong, defiant bass lines lead soft vocal melodies, crunchy distorted guitar and distant tin can drums, providing for very memorable dream pop with an edge. I was immediately taken with ‘Black Cloud’, which I found in a FMLY blog radio playlist. For a song with such a gentle feel, it’s got an incredibly succinct, direct pop focus. Much like Generationals’ clean pop sound, it has a sparing, economical sense but is unashamedly emotive and lush. The forest of clicks in ‘Wish My Thoughts Away’ lays a gentle bed for James’ swirling atmospherics but the main parts – his unfaltering voice and the striding bass guitar backbone – always sound stable. He has an incredibly mature approach, and peppers his songs with just enough psychedelic touches – like the jangly end of ‘Wish My Thoughts Away’ – to keep it different. Managed by Merok records (home to Teengirl Fantasy, Rainbow Arabia and Comanechi), he’s featured in NME‘s “50 best new bands of 2011″ list. The thoughtfully constructed, layered songs likely gained their maturity from the range of styles James consumes – from The Antlers and Gang Gang Dance to Bartok and Rachmaninov – saying in an interview with Portuguese blog Musica Escrita, “It’s important to keep stimulated from all ends of the musical spectrum.”

 Mozart Parties- Black Cloud: MP3

Mozart Parties- Facebook

 

Posted by Sarah Gooding under England, London, UK
No Comments

Pet Scenes

Sat 9 Jul 2011

Beautiful Things

When I first heard London’s Pet Scenes they instantly reminded me of New Zealand band The 3D’s; full of shearing guitar chords and alluring pop-punk melodies. But to be fair to the band, they’ve probably never heard of the NZ noise-punk pioneers, with influences more likely to have come from British Gothic groups like Bauhaus and recent punk revivalists The Horrors. Pet Scenes however have a heavier hardcore sound that differentiates them, delivering a wall of guitar noise with an attacking vocal style.

Pet Scenes have a new demo EP available on Bandcamp, and later in month will take the stage at the 1234 Festival in London alongside The Black Lips, The Raveonettes and Damo Suzuki.

Pet Scenes – Dell Sez: MP3

 Pet Scenes’ Facebook

Pet Sounds’ Tumblr

 

Posted by Nick Fulton under London, UK
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Connan Mockasin: new video

Sun 6 Mar 2011

Dream Magnet


Connan Mockasin, the eccentric wizard of majestic pop, has a new tour de force of sorts. His album Please Turn Me Into The Snat is being re-released just over a year after it came out, by the possibly more accessible name Forever Dolphin Love in the UK. The occasion has been celebrated with the release last week of an amazing video for the title track. Arguably his finest work yet, ‘Forever Dolphin Love’ (above) features London-based Connan caked in face paint and stiffly posing among fan-bearing friends also dressed in wild costumes, from where he ventures out into the city. The camera work and concepts in the video are incredible, as if transporting you to Connan’s weird little cult. The psychedelic blues-pop mastermind clearly creates his own world to inhabit, as the scenes seem stolen from his dreams. The dude just keeps getting more whimsical and mystical, having played a party in Paris for Fashion Week the other night alongside Jarvis Cocker and Busy P, and was recently announced as the support act for Warpaint’s UK tour in May.

Forever Dolphin Love will be released on March 28 with a bonus live recording via Erol Alkan and Phantasy Sound.

Connan Mockasin- Facebook

Connan Mockasin- Myspace

 

Posted by Sarah Gooding under Auckland, London, New Zealand, UK
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Noah and the Whale

Fri 25 Feb 2011

Love Is A Dog From Hell

Yesterday a press release from Shock Records reminded me of Noah and the Whale, a band whose debut album in 2008 I adored, but then only briefly listened to a few tracks from their follow-up album The First Days Of Spring. That album was also accompanied by a short film, directed by front-man Charlie Fink. Now the band are about to release their third album, named after Charles Bukowski’s poetry collection The Last Night Of The Earth. Fink admits to being a huge Bukowski fan and of the “loser pride” that is portrayed in his peotry and in Lou Reed’s Berlin. Noah and the Whale’s third album is titled Last Night On Earth, reflecting on hard times and Fink’s obsession and admiration of poets and songwriters during their darkest days; Lou Reed, Tom Waits and Arthur Russell. With that theme running through the album,  and the fact that this album has a guest performance from Michael Jackson’s once famous backing singers The Waters Sisters (most famously heard on Jackson’s 1982 hit ‘Wanna Be Startin’ Something’), Last Night On Earth is an album for those who appreciate good literature and a story told using indirect rhetoric and poetic narcissism. Already two tracks have been released off the upcoming album, both strong on storytelling with a essence of down-and-out characters battling themselves and society. ‘Wild Thing’, released in December last year shows the band has come together more than ever before, working together to fuse Fink’s masterful lyrics with a much cleaner, richer sound that reflects the band’s tighter grouping. ‘L.I.F.E.G.O.E.S.O.N’, the second single has more of a pop direction, somewhat suited to easy listening radio. It was perhaps chosen for the sing along vocal chorus, but it appears to be more of a bridging track that will sound much stronger when heard in context with the rest of the album.

Last Night On Earth will be released in the UK and the US on March 7. A New Zealand and Australia release date is yet to be confirmed. 

Noah and the Whale – Wild Thing: MP3

Noah and the Whale’s official website

 

Posted by Nick Fulton under London, UK
No Comments

FRIENDSHIP

Mon 19 Jul 2010

Carry Me In Your Backpack 

FRIENDSHIP

Total carnage and garage rock riffs with splintering drums set the backbone for the songs of London duo FRIENDSHIP. Will de Witt (guitar, bass, loops) and Daniel Hills (drums, vocals) formed the band in 2007 and this April released a split 7″ with Die! Die! Die! after opening for them in Shoreditch last year. Released on Too Pure‘s singles club, the 7″ features FRIENDSHIP’s ‘Lifeguard’ backed with D!D!D!’s ‘We Built Our Own Oppressors’. The duo’s sound varies from high intensity punk with dance intentions to more slow burning shoegaze. 2009 single ‘The Graveyard Shift’ uses tropical guitar melodies, heavy driving rhythms and quasi-cyborg vocals elsewhere heard in peer two piece powerhouse Death From Above 1979. ‘The Graveyard Shift’ video features hilarious vogue-ing in the style of Blink 182. Elsewhere songs like ‘High Horse’ utilise echoplex and multiple guitar parts drift upwards like slow burning ashes being extinguished by a fire hose. ‘Live Long And Prosper’ has the feeling of settling on the edge of something, like a cliff crumbling under the burning rays of the sun. You get the feeling that if you stared at their guitar long enough your eyes would start burning.

FRIENDSHIP- The Graveyard Shift: MP3

FRIENDSHIP- Myspace

FRIENDSHIP- Blog

Photo by Simon Whybray

 

Posted by Sarah Gooding under London, UK
No Comments

TEETH

Wed 19 May 2010

Extremism Is Purple

 teeth.jpg

Glitchy fucked-up noise punk from Dalston, England. TEETH combine the spazzy apocalyptic rhythms of HEALTH with the bootsy dance beats of the English underground DIY grime scene. Their music is akin to an infestation of vermin, all filthy and infested with obnoxious bugs, but for those of us who like nasty diseased specimens TEETH totally appeal to our sick minds. They come from an extreme end of the punk spectrum, where electronics are an accepted device and dance music isn’t the enemy, it’s the progressive older brother.

John Famiglietti from HEALTH once told me that he wanted to be as “forward-thinking as some other genres that are doing things electronically”, and that same concept applies to TEETH, whose music pushes strongly in the direction of electronic dance music and like HEALTH, somewhat reinvents the traditional punk band structure.

The band has hooked up with Moshi Moshi Records and will be releasing their latest offspring, a 7″ record titled See Spaces on July 12. Moshi Moshi Records had a hand in some of the biggest releases of 2009, including The Drums’ Summertime EP and Florence and the Machine’s album Lungs. They’ve also released singles by Casiokids, Slow Club, Matt and Kim, Friendly Fires and Late Of The Pier.  

You can download an early version of ‘See Spaces’ below which appeared on TEETH’s Jammers demo EP, released last year. A newer version of the song, which sounds a little bit like HEALTH’s recent single ‘USA Boys’ can be heard on their myspace page, along with the b-side for the See Spaces 7″ titled ‘Time Changes’.

 TEETH- See Spaces: MP3

TEETH- Phrases: MP3

 TEETH- Myspace

 

Posted by Nick Fulton under London, UK
No Comments

Wild Palms

Tue 24 Nov 2009

Heretic Descendant

Wild Palms

Taking cues from The Fall and Bauhaus, London’s Wild Palms are rendering a new strain of aggressive, post-industrial postpunk. Their trademark staunch, mechanical bass and guitar scrape away any superfluous decorations for a suitably dreary, industrialised sound. Wild Palms have been touted as a band to watch by NME, and listening to their debut single, the oddly scripted ‘….Over….Time….’, it’s easy to see why. Released today, the song’s briskly shouted echoey orders coast over rusty pipes of bass and slithery percussion. The basslines do much of the driving in their repertoire, with all instruments binding together in a tightly wound, highly strung epochal message. Lou Hill adopts a stringent, powerful profile as the lead-limbed lead singer, constricting his yelps and howls over Gareth Jones’ tangential bass and Darrel Hawkins’ abrassive guitar, presiding over James Parish’s percolating drums. Elsewhere in their catalogue, ‘Reason Dazzled (Narrenschiff)’ can irk in its early bars but grows tremendous roots as an electrifying and powerful polished rock song. ‘Deep Dive’ is a more emotively pained, poppier take on their catchy riff-led harmonies. Touring Europe at the moment and the UK in December, expect to see a bit more of these folk.

 Wild Palms- ….Over….Time….: MP3

Wild Palms- Deep Dive: MP3

Wild Palms- Myspace

 

Posted by Sarah Gooding under London, UK
No Comments

Wetdog

Thu 1 Oct 2009

Post-Pumpkin

Wetdog will be touring the UK in early October with The Slits and together they make a fine pair, blending old-style jams with new unpretentious concrete punk. They’re another noisy post-punk band but fuck it, their music rules.

The band formed about four years ago in London and has been turning a few industry heads with their droney, antagonistic, guitar-driven punk. They’ve featured in Artrocker, Drowned In Sound, Uncut and NME all very positively and have played a recent run of festivals in the UK. Their debut album Enterprise Reversal is magnificent, crafting a fine mix of angular guitars, rolling bass lines and chitter-chatter drum rolls. It’s obvious all three members (Billy, Rivka and Sarah) are fans of The Fall, The Slits and The Smiths, but they’ll stab anyone who dares to criticise their originality.

Of the twenty-one songs on their debut album, ‘Zah Und Zaheet’ stands out as an instant favourite. With a dirty repetitive bass line drilling the song deep into the crusty parts of the brain, it’s a two minute-long, skull-crushing classic. There’s even a subtle Slits reference in there too. All the songs on the album were written over a period of three years, but they all join together relatively easy, filling both sides of the Arctic moss-coloured vinyl they were pressed to.

You can get your copy from the Angular Records store, available in 12″ vinyl as well as on CD and as a digital download.

Wetdog- Jane Bowles: MP3

Wetdog- Myspace

 

Posted by Nick Fulton under London, UK
No Comments

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