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Interviews

Dragonforce Interview

Originally from Hong Kong, Herman Li has forged himself a reputation as one of metal’s fastest and most flamboyant performers in recent times. His band – the multi-national but British based Dragonforce – have also been making huge waves around the world.

A whirlwind combination of speed, power and epic melodies, the band has fast become one of the UK’s leading metallic exports; while their Roadrunner Records debut ‘Inhuman Rampage’ has achieved Silver status for sales of over 60,000 on home soil alone.

Fresh from the band’s biggest and most successful British tour to date, Herman took a few minutes out with Ryan Bird for this rapid-fire Q&A session. Buckle up.

How old were you when you first began playing guitar?

I was 16 years old.

What type of guitar did you start out on?

I had a Squire for 1 year than I traded it in for my first Ibanez.

What inspired you to pick up the instrument?

I suppose it was because I simply ran out of exciting videos games to play!

Who were/are some of your favourite players?

Steve Vai, Joe Satriani, Tony MacAlpine and many many more.

How did it feel to scoop the Dimebag ‘Young Guitarist’ award at the Metal Hammer Awards back in 2005?

It was a surprise, I never expected to win anything. I still don’t expect to win anything these days but we won four categories in Guitar World magazine’s readers poll in the US this year!

Did you ever meet him? Do you consider yourself a fan of his playing?

Sadly I never met Dimebag, but I learnt a few Pantera riffs and solos years ago, which was great.

What about Pantera as a whole? Do you consider them a personal influence?

I really like the Vulgar Display of Power and Cowboys from Hell albums.

Have you been surprised by how quickly things seem to have escalated for Dragonforce over the past 18 months or so?

At the beginning of the year yes, but not so much now. We been around for like 7 years, it’s not like it suddenly happened. We’ve been building it up for years, but signing to Roadrunner made a big difference.

Your profile in the USA seems to be building nicely. How was Ozzfest?

Our first time in the US was a sold out headlining tour before the Inhuman Rampage album was released there. There has been a really strong underground following of DragonForce in the USA for a while now. The sold out tour really opened people’s eyes and that’s what got us on Ozzfest. Ozzfest was a great experience. We made loads of friends there.

Were you nervous going into the tour? You’re not exactly your every day metal band – especially when compared to the usual Ozzfest roster.

Absolutely not nervous at all, as every band on the main stage sounded totally different to each other.

How did you kill time? Perhaps the occasional tipple was consumed?

We didn’t waste time on tour playing video games or watching movies. Every day is a party! We hardly had any days off. When there was no Ozzfest show on the day, we were doing a sold out headlining show.

Any particular “rock star” moments?

Ozzfest was 2 months long, it’s not easy to pick out a moment!

A couple of years ago you were set to make your US debut at CBGB’s. How did you react when you were first told you’d be playing the venue?

I complained that the gig was too small and would be sold out in a few days. No one listened to me. The show sold out within three hours after the tickets gone on sale.

Your recent UK tour was a huge success, taking in larger venues than many thought you ever would. How did it compare to previous treks?

The December tour was better in every single way compared to the January one. We had more experience, the tour was sold out, we had our own production, our own crew, new gear and people we like to be with. We were 100% behind the support bands (Firewind and All That Remains). We love those guys and asked them to do the tour. It’s great touring with people we like.

Did you enjoy having larger stages to play with or is there something about smaller ones you missed?

We are always better on bigger stages. There is nothing good about smaller stages apart from if you are tired and can’t be bothered moving.

Did you find that with larger crowds came more female admirers, or more fat and hairy male ones?

Definitely more female fans, hehehe.

Go on then – just how DO you warm up?

I didn’t, then I did, and now I don’t again. I decided on the last tour that it’s better to save my finger muscles for the show, because by the last song my fingers are pretty much fucking dead!

What’s the Dragonforce war plan for 2007?

To go around the world another time! We’ll probably hit Russia, America, Australia, Europe and hopefully a few festivals. Plus we’ll probably make a new album! Woah!

For more information and all the latest Dragonforce news, check out www.dragonforce.com

[Photos by Kirsten Lane]

Categories
Interviews

C-Mon & Kypski Interview

Photos courtesy of Daniel.J. Ashes

Straight outta Utrecht, crazy motherfuckers named… C-Mon and Kypski!

The Dutch foursome have been tearing the rule book up with their own brand of hip hop for years now and recently got down to have a chat with Abjekt having just released their third album, ‘Where The Wild Things Are’.

So what’s it like to take a van into the Sahara and record an album? What are the benefits of having your front teeth knocked out? And just what would Borat think of Kypski and C-Mon having a quick blaze with Sadat X? Well read below and find out…

You and Kypski met very young right? Skating in the local neighbourhood yeah?

C-Mon: Yeah, well actually we met in gradeschool, at the age of 5. At the age of 10 I switched schools, and then I met Kyp again on the corner in my hood with a skateboard. I was interested in skating too, so that’s when we hooked up.

What drew you to sampling/scratching of hip hop? Was there a particular era, band or record that made you think “wow, that’s what I have to do?”

C-Mon: When I came around Kip’s house I discovered he was messing around with tapedecks and pausebuttons; recording stuff from the radio and repeating it. That’s what I did too. So we joined forces and set up all the gear we had together. A Walkman, a tapedeck and an old turntable from my Dad. We came across Public Enemy and De La Soul (1989), that’s when we knew which kind of music we wanted to make. It was the sampling and layering of sounds that intrigued us.

Kypski: Yeah PE was a real eye opener. We didn’t have to understand what Chuck D was saying (we were far too young to understand the words), the aggressive beats and scratches were out of this world, and said the same thing Chuck was saying. Gotta a give props to the Bomb Squad for this.

Does being such old and close friends help the song writing process?

C-Mon: Well yeah, we’ve been doing that for over 15 years now. We don’t have to say much to understand what the other likes or dislikes.

Kypski: It helps in being very productive – sometimes when there’s a lot of projects (remixes etc) at the same time there’s no time to discuss every single little musical decision, so you can rely on the other person’s expertise and get a lot of work done.

How do you share duties when you’re writing a song, do you lay the structure down and Kypski work on a melody or vice versa?

Kypski: C-mon & Kypski is four people!

C-Mon: C-Mon & Kypski is a 4 piece band for 4 years now. Also in the writing process. Most of the time Kip or myself comes up with an idea. It can be a drumbeat with a loop, or just a cool sample, a scratch or a melody. Then everybody listens to it, and together we try to figure out what direction it should go. Should it stay mellow? Should it freak out? When heads are in the same direction, everybody does what he does best. Dan’s figuring out cool basslines and guitarparts, Jori freaks on his synths and Kyp’s looking for the right additions in terms of samples and scratches. I kinda manage that. I listen to what they come up with, and make the puzzle fit. Also I record everything, and make sure it sounds like I feel it should sound.

How did Jori and Daniel fit into things with regards to writing material? Did touring with them so much help you all to understand each other musically?

C-Mon: J&D come from a different background. They had always listened to rock and pop music. So when we first started playing together there was some kind of ‘cultural gap’. We played Tribe Called Quest and The Roots for them, and they got into it. They were really open minded. I think it was an adventure for them to play with us, because they knew so little about ‘funky’ music. On the other hand, J&D got us into pop and rock music, like The Beatles, Rufus Wainwright, The Je Ne Sais Quoi (do you know these guys? they rock!) or Talking Heads for instance. Hanging out a lot caused the crossbreed!

Vinyl Voodoo was more sample based and Static Traveller had more self-recorded instrumentation in it, does that progression continue on the new album?

C-Mon: Yeah mos def. VV was a compilation of what Kip and I had made since we started making instrumental music (before that we made beats for local MC’s for a couple of years). By the time VV came out we started playing live with Jori & Dan. That’s when the whole band sound started growing. On Static Traveller I had no clue what to do with real instruments; I just plugged the guitar right into the mixingboard. Now we are much more aware of how to make the sound we have in mind. We can create a vibe, which back then we only could achieve by using samples.

Does having mainly instrumental tracks on your records allow you to come out of a more rigid verse-chorus-verse-chorus structure and allow you to experiment and take your music different places?

C-Mon: Yes. That’s why we decided to stop making beats for MC’s back in the day. We wanted to tell stories musically. Endtroducing by DJ Shadow played a role in that. I still don’t listen to lyrics so much when I listen to music. If the music’s not dope, forget it.

That said, on the new album, Where The Wild Things Are, you have more guests on than usual, was there a reason for that?

C-Mon: Well, it can add a face to music. A voice is also a unique instrument, so why not use it? We made our statement on VV and ST, now we felt the time was right to invite some people over.

You’ve got an American, Sadat X, who is a big name in hip hop, how did that collaboration come about?

C-Mon: I knew a Dutch hiphop promoter called Roger Brouwn, and I asked him who was coming to Holland. We had this really angry beat, so we needed a heavyweight MC. He named a few, and I immediately pointed my arrows for Sadat. He’s always been a favourite, with such a unique voice and delivery. Roger hooked me up, me and Kip went to his hotel in Deventer where he did the only show in Holland, and recorded the verse in his room. After we smoked a couple of “branches” of course.

Kypski: Borat would be very EXCITE if he was in our shoes then!

And you’ve got Dutch artists on there too, like Pete Philly, Voicst, Benjamin Herman and The Amsterdam Klezmer Band – Did you specifically want to work with mainly Dutch artists?

C-Mon: No not really. But we like to work with people we know. They’re all really talented friends wich we share a love for music with. Making music should be fun, making the tracks with these guys was like hangin out in the park.

How close is the music scene in Holland?

C-Mon: It’s small, so it’s kinda close. When you play the festivals, after a year or two you’ve met almost every band at least once. Because we don’t really fit one genre, we play all different kinds of gigs. Jazz festivals, HipHop events, Dance party’s, Ethnical shit, you name it. That’s a lot of fun.

On Cereal, you did beats for Dutch artists, such as Senna, U-Gene and Raymzter – is it important for you to work closely with the Dutch scene so that you can get them known outside of Holland?

C-Mon: I’ve never looked at it that way. I was still trying to prove myself as a producer, focussing on Holland. I still work with Senna. I’m trying to get her album done.

Do you have any more plans like this for the future, maybe with artists from around Europe and even the UK?

C-Mon: Recently more and more people start asking me that. If y’all push me a little harder, i will! If i’d do it again, i’d like to do it with international artists. But for now I’m too busy with C&K, so no plans yet.

‘Where The Wild Things Are’ was recorded in Morocco right? After you’d all spent some time travelling around the country. Did this influence the way you made the record and the styles you used? I noticed that in your latest live show [shown on fabchannel.com] you seem to have funky shirts on – are they north African?!

C-Mon: Haha, yeah we bought ’em in Morocco. The big idea was to get out of the studio, into Where The Wild Things Are, and make the blueprint for the album. And that’s exactly what we did. We wanted to experience the adventure that lies in the music we make… For Static Traveller it was all imaginative (hence the word ‘static’), and for this album we wanted the songs to have more depth. So there we were, in a camper stuffed with recording equipment, in the middle of the Sahara… We never wanted the record to sound Moroccan, we wanted to expand our own ideas and creativity. Also, when your at home in the studio there’s always somebody to walk in or whatever. We were focussed.

Your live shows seem very energetic, with Kypski on the drums as well as the turntables, and with Daniel and Jori on stage with you – with these additions to the traditional two man group, are you able to improvise more? Or do you want to keep it to a specific structure live?

C-Mon: Well, that’s why we hooked up with J&D in the first place. We felt we could not bring the music we made in the studio to the stage by just some scratching and DJ-ing. Now, we play the tracks in a specific structure, because we want to. There’s still a lot of improvising in the tracks, but the global structure is set. There were times we improvised whole sets, starting from scratch. That’s fun to do, but sometimes it’s just not so rockin’. Now we know we can make people go crazy if we go to a certain part. And that’s even more fun.

What impresses me most about your music is that, though you have a lot of scratching in your songs, you never take away from the overall feel of the song – you don’t get SO into scratching on the record that the melody is lost amongst it all – Are you conscious of that? Or do you think it balances itself out naturally?

C-Mon: Uhm, it’s a natural balance I think. Music making is not about showing your technical skills. It’s not a circus (although it is sometimes haha!) So we always try to make a nice song, whatever instrument is needed.

Kypski: When i listen to other turntablists making music i often am surprised at how much they scratch. And at the same time they say: the turntable is an instrument as any other instrument! See? I think if you really believe that, you should start out by quitting all that cutting and scratching, if you catch my drift.

The C-Mon & Kypski videos are always a lot of fun – Shitty Bum with the guy being chased by graf, the Superhero in Evil Needle, the party in the boombox for What’s Happening and the police chase on the Bumpy Road video – do you bring these ideas yourself or do you work with particular artists and directors?

C-Mon: Yes, they’ve all been done by Emiel Steenhuizen and Rogier v/d Zwaag. They’re friends from Utrecht, and they made the first one (Shitty Bum) as a school project. We stuck with ’em ever since. We let them bring the ideas because we think it will make the best videos. Their sense of humour fits our way of music making. The videos add a healthy dose of humour to the music; we’re not trying to be too serious about how people should enjoy our music.

Kypski has won loads of battle titles, is he still interested in that side of things, or has he taken a step back from it to allow everyone else a chance?

C-Mon: Well, on one hand, he was done battling in Holland because he had won every type of battle at least twice. On the other hand, he wanted to use the turntable as an instrument. In battles you’re some kind of circus act. So he wanted to take the turntable to a next level and so he started making scratch records (Mazturbation Tool 2004 / Clocktaves 2005).

Kypski: World Battle Domination has never been a goal for me. I did try once, I did attempt to enter the world DMC finals in New York – didn’t make it through the eliminations. I started out battling for fun, to learn, and because I knew there was a lot of media exposure involved if you won, and the prizes of course (a new SL 1200, a new mixer). Composing, producing and releasing great music projects has always been the main goal though.

In 2005, you both played at SXSW in the USA, how was the reaction to you there? It’s such a big festival for people to play now that it must have been quite a rush to be invited to perform there.

C-Mon: Yep. We had great fun; Americans are crazy. Everythings exaggerated, so were the reactions to our music. Also if your from “Amsterdam” (Holland), you’re extra cool. Then again, you’re just another band trying to make it in the US of A. Jeggshemesj.

Also in 2005, I read you won a Devil Award? Can you explain what that is, and how did it feel to win that?

C-Mon: It’s an award chosen by Dutch fellow musicians. They picked me to be the best DJ/Producer of 2005. It’s not a real big deal, but it’s nice. Year before me DJ Tiesto was chosen; compared to him I am a nobody. Well, I mean in terms of fame, haha.

And most recently, I read you won the Red Bull Soundclash against BEEF… was that a straight live battle or how did it go down?

C-Mon: Yeah that was some dope shit. They had 2 stages with their own PA facing each other, with the audience in between them. We had to battle them live, so for instance, they played a track of their own which we had to take over and finish. I secretly sampled them on the spot: we remixed them live!!

Kypski: Yeah that was one of the dopest jams/battles ever. The audience was like ‘What the Fuck!! Great to battle in this way, with two bands. I’d made classic battle disses ridiculing their style – they didn’t know how to react!

And you’re both skaters? Are you still interested in the Dutch skate scene?

C-Mon: Yes, but we both don’t skate so much anymore. I have the feeling there are a lot of kids I don’t know about, ripping it up.

Kypski: Skating, oh yes I haven’t done that for ages. Its also raining here every day, not much chance to.

Who are the Dutch riders killing it at the moment? I’m told that Louisa Menke is doing the business over in Holland.

C-Mon: Louisa is one of the best (or the best?) female riders here. The Dutch star is Wieger van Wageningen from Eindhoven. Kaspar van Lierop is one of my best buddies, he was tech-king before he broke his ankle. He’s now doing Nike SB for Europe.

Zac from Crossfire recently went over to Holland to cover the Globe Bowlbash in Eindhoven at the brand new Area 51 park- Have you ever been there?

C-Mon: Yeah, it’s pretty cool, I’ve always been a street skater.

What is the best place to skate in Utrecht?

C-Mon: It’s called The Yard, and it’s already famous all over the world!! It’s an old trainyard close to central station, with gaps, curbs, and even an indoor park run by squatters. Here’s my buddy Kaspar, old pic on The Yard [see pic]

Have you ever had any bad skate injuries in the past? So bad that you’ve been unable to scratch or perform live?

C-Mon: I broke two front teeth, but I wasn’t performing then… The cool thing was, when I reversed my new fake tooth, the inside was gold! So I walked around like Lil Jon for a couple of days.

Thanks for taking the time out to answer the questions – Do you have any last words for the Crossfire readers?

C-Mon: Keep ripping it up! There’s a lot of creativity in skateboarding, I couldn’t have done it without it!! And oh yeah, stay real!

And last but not least – how do you say “Caught in the Crossfire” in Dutch?

C-Mon: Uuuuhm, something like: “gevangen in een vuurgevecht”!

C-Mon & Kypski’s new album Where The Wild Things Are is out now on Penoze Records. You can find out more from their website at www.c-monandkypski.nl

Want more Hip Hop? Click here to stream our monthly Hip Hop radio show featuring many underground artists and if that isn’t enough then click into here to read weekly Hip Hop reviews at The Mix.

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Interviews

The Haunted Interview

Anyone that visits the infamous Blabbermouth.net on a regular basis will need no introduction to Peter Dolving – vocalist of Swedish metal titans The Haunted.

Through the medium of blogging Dolving has become an unlikely subject of intense scrutiny, with many of his innermost thoughts and opinions frequenting the site’s news stories and chat bulletins quicker than most people shit after a night at a Curry House. Crossfire’s metallic veteran Ryan Bird recently caught up with the front man to discuss life as Blabbermouth’s most outspoken and accidental resident…

Hello. How are you, sir?

Pretty god damned good, though I’m sorer than a whore’s ass! I started working out again a couple of weeks ago; new trainer, new regime. Harsh but good as gold.

Where in the world can we find you today?

Farting around in my house in the woods outside Gothenburg. I spent the morning eating cookies with my kids at their school.

What does a typical day in the world of Peter Dolving entail – both on and off the road?

At home: Laundry, vacuum cleaning, picking up toys and listening to the neverending rantings of two little Dolvings, who incidentally make me pale in comparison. And I train, sleep and eat. Chop wood, you know – I have a life pretty much.

On tour: Sleep, get a massage, read, watch movies and try to not get involved with groupies or drugs.

You seem to have attracted a lot of attention with regards to your personal blog lately – particularly via Blabbermouth. Why do you think people focus so intently on your views when there are so many other artists out there with a similar thought log?

Maybe ’cause I’m so damned handsome? I’m fucked if I know. I should do a survey – I’m sure that would get the appreciation with the nose pickers cruising Blabbermouth.

Do you find it quite flattering or just plain amusing that people choose to single you out in such a way?

I think it’s mostly fodder for my weak ego. Otherwise I probably wouldn’t keep doing it. As far as I know anyone so apt to talk and write about his emotions like myself have issues, big fucking slabs of the shit and yes, this is part of me dealing with it. But again, I think I’d probably still do it if I was a fairly balanced dude. There’s some greater sense of pathos that just enjoy starting shit with assholes who deserve being fucked with. I have to bite my lip not to get into shit sitting at a diner sometimes. Basically – sexists, homophobes, racist, and outright oppressive powertripper fascism pisses me off. What am I supposed to do? Shut up becuase it’s the cool thing to do? Fuck that. I live now. I don’t have another life to do things in.

Having focussed some of your thoughts and opinions through spoken word projects in the past, do you think this is something you’ll continue with after your time with The Haunted ends?

I still do some spoken word and I also lecture on music business, law and art. I’m a busy boy.

Speaking of The Haunted, your new album ‘The Dead Eye’ was recently released to largely positive acclaim. Are you pleased with the reception thus far?

Indeed I am, but my head has started boiling for a new album already.

How do you feel it compares to other efforts?

Personally I think it’s the best album we’ve produced together up until now. It’s diverse, has strong songs, amazing playing and I actually sound like I can sing. I think it kicks ass in a big way. Not that the previous albums didn’t, but this one is… deeper? Wow that sounds pretty horrific don’t it?

Of course, this is your first back-to-back recording as a member of The Haunted. Do you feel this continuation had any effect on how the material came out?

I think all in all coming back in the band has been good for all of us. I’m a pretty demanding dude but I love the four other members of this band and I’m VERY vocal in how I feel about things. It’s brought everyone a little bit out of their shells and made them speak out about what they feel strongly about, and it’s made us even stronger as a unit.

Did you find it difficult to adjust to life back in the band initially?

Sure, people change over the years. We all do. I read somewhere that a person completely changes in perception and attitude towards reality and becomes a new person on a cycle of 5-10 years. Artists even more often. That means in order to have a good relationship to someone you have to do a lot of fucking talking and feeling and fighting and making amends. When it comes down to it, I love my band.

Do you feel you’ve changed either as a person or a musician since your initial spell in the 90’s? If so then how?

I’m a waaaaaaaaaaay happier person. When onstage I still have a tendency to lose grip on shit but as long as it stays onstage that’s alright. Being me has been rough. Not to say I’m not a priviliged person, because I think I am. But if someone would have told me that when I was 23 I would have punched their face through the back of their heads, and possibly gotten an erection to match the following anxiety.

I’m sure you get the picture. As a musician and person I feel I’ve come to terms very much with myself and my capacity. I enjoy who I am and what I do, which wasn’t true when I younger. It’s taken a LOT of work and I still have a lot to do. I still struggle with reality at times, but i’m human and I like it.

The Haunted’s new album ‘The Dead Eye’ is in stores now through Century Media Records. The band will return to UK shores in early 2007 as main support to Killswitch Engage. See www.the-haunted.com for exact dates and details.

Categories
Interviews

Vic Bondi Interview

14th December 2006
All B&W photo’s courtesy of Gail Butensky.

As front-man of Chicago’s Articles of Faith, Vic Bondi was at the spearhead of the early-Eighties North American Hardcore Punk Revolution.

AOF’s tenure was a relatively short lived affair, but their impact was seismic.

Post-AOF Vic kept busy with a number of musical ventures in the late-Eighties and Nineties, notably Jones Very and Alloy, as-well as reuniting with former AOF band-mates on a one-time only tour of Mainland Europe.

A couple of years back Vic marked his return to the fray with an EP on Alternative Tentacles, and then most recently he joined forces with J. Robbins under the nom de guerre Report Suspicious Activity. Their debut self-titled album (also on AT) is a thoughtful and powerfully pissed political collection of songs, that rallies against the state of 21st Century America. Brighton hardcore fiend Pete Craven was commissioned by Crossfire to run this world exclusive with Vic – this is what went down….

Hey Vic… can we turn back the clock to year zero and you tell us a bit about when and where you were born and raised…

Honolulu. Hawaii – Nine presidents back. Raised in a military family. Spent my teenage years in Pensacola, Florida.

What’s your earliest memory of music getting in to your system, and how did that develop?

Because we were stationed in Puerto Rico and my parents were squares, I missed all the great music of the 1960s. In the 1970s I got a “C” in an English class and my dad banned me from TV until the grades came up. So I started listening to a little transistor radio while I studied. I listened to WBAI in Baltimore, Maryland, and they played a lot of the great soul classics: Marvin Gaye, Temptations, Stevie Wonder, O’Jays, Four Tops. This was the moment in black music history before disco when it was militant and magnificent. I still love those songs: “What’s Going On“, “Masterpiece“, “You Haven’t Done Nothing” (I should cover that one), “Backstabbers“. It was the first music that turned me on. Couldn’t begin to play or sing like that, though.

Later, in the mid-Seventies, I discovered all the ’60s rock I had missed: Beatles, Stones, Who, Byrds, Neil Young. I was a huge Beatles fan – the first song I ever learned to play on guitar was “The Ballad of John and Yoko.” One chord – Em.

What was strange about my musical development was because I was rediscovering the music of the ’60s in the 1970s, I was never influenced by early 70s bands like Zeppelin, Black Sabbath or Kiss. I never really listened to that music until I was on tour with AoF and we’d play it in the van…

And then along came Punk Rock… were there some deciding factors that drew you in?

In 1977 or 1978, I was listening to a lot of the Stones. I had a part-time job at Kentucky Fried Chicken, and the guy I worked with had heard about the Sex Pistols, the Clash and Elvis Costello. But it was almost impossible to find those records in Pensacola. I finally found a copy of Give ‘Em Enough Rope. From the moment I heard that first snare shot on “Safe European Home” I was hooked. I put away the Stones records. Punk was it for me.

… it’s dusting back through time, but can you recollect some of the earliest Punk records you brought, and gigs attended?

The first records were easy, because I learned how to play guitar listening to them: Clash, Give ‘Em Enough Rope; Ramones, Road to Ruin; The Jam, This is the Modern World; Sex Pistols, Never Mind the Bullocks. I still can play almost every riff on those records.

The first (quasi) punk gig I attended was an Elvis Costello concert, on the “Armed Forces” tour, around 1978. The first real punk gig I attended was the Clash at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago in 1979. They thundered onstage with “I’m So Bored with the USA.” I had just moved up to Illinois from Florida, and still had my surfer hair down to my ass. I shaved my head the next day.

Was there a pivotal moment that made you think ‘yes, I wanna be involved’ and put you on your own musical discourse (if you will!)?

That Clash concert was everything I had hoped punk would be. I got into a band after that, the precursor to AoF, called Direct Drive. I also had an epiphany at a Bad Brains show at the 9:30 club in the fall of 1981. AoF had just formed up in Chicago, and we were pretty derivative – still too influenced by The Clash. The Bad Brains floored me. I had never seen such an awesome band. I went back to Chicago and told the guys we had to play fast. And that was how the AoF sound was born.

AOF’s first two seven inches were released on your own label Wasteland (or in the case of the debut EP ‘What We Want Is Free‘ re-released) It must have been quite an endeavour to record, release and then distribute/sell these records – a real labor of love… what do you make of the modern day processes by which bands can make their music known to the general public?

The hard part about putting out our own records was finding the money to do it. Studio space cost maybe $500-600/day, and manufacturing a record was over $1000—and I was working at a sandwich shop for about $ 4.50/hour. We were so broke. It was very hard to get the money together to finance that stuff. I know Paul Mahern helped us out with Wait, and Bob loaned us the money for both the LPs. I’m pretty sure Mike Sukow helped finance What We Want Is Free. Mike was kind of AoF’s banker. He was an ex-Marine who drove a beer truck for a living. He put up the money for all the Central American Social Club shows, and helped us when he could. A pretty great guy.

I love how the Web has changed all this. You don’t need record companies, distributors, stores, marketers or publicists. Absolutely great. Hopefully it will destroy the record industry. It deserves to die.

Both your albums were produced by Bob Mould, the first ‘Give Thanks’coming out on Husker Du’s own label Reflex, and some of your earliest recordings were on the seminal ‘Master Tape’ compilation, compiled by Paul Mahern of the Zero Boys. It seems like the scene in the Mid-West was quite tight back then…

It had to be. There weren’t two dozen bands in twelve states playing this type of music (although, in those days, the styles were wide open). A lot of people in the Midwest were openly hostile to the type of music we played, and to the way we looked. You got in fights with frat boys back then, and cops raided shows and parties. So you did get tight with like-minded souls.

Huskers were the great band of the Midwest. They and the Toxic Reasons blazed the trail for everyone—they were the first band to tour nationally and brought attention and professionalism to the scene and the music. There would have been no Midwestern scene without Huskers. They introduced everyone to everyone else. You slept on their floors and they slept on yours. It was a very friendly scene.

But AOF did have a well know ‘spat’ with fellow Chicago band the Effigies… have you ever make your peace with ‘Attorney’ Kezdy??!!!

No.

And from AOF you formed Jones Very, and then Alloy who certainly made a name for themselves in mainland Europe in the early Nineties. What memories do you hang on to of your trips to Europe in those heady days, including the ’91 AOF tour?

Great memories. I think the first Alloy tour, with Colin (Sears – Dag Nasty), was the best. We started the trip completely unknown, playing small shows. The end of the tour was sold out for two weeks. It was amazing. The last show on that tour, in Cologne, was one of the best I’ve ever played. We also once flew over to Amsterdam for a New Year’s Eve show at the Paradiso. It was Pete’s first show with the band in Europe, and we were completely jet-lagged. We were sleeping backstage right up until we went on, but then we destroyed the place. During the encore, Pete (Hines – ex Cro-Mags) kicked over and demolished his drums, not such a good thing, since he had borrowed them from Bill Stevenson.

What made Pete Hines ‘the most difficult personality you’ve ever worked with’?

Pete was a violent alcoholic. On the second Alloy tour of Europe, we forbade him from drinking, but in truth, he was almost as bad sober as drunk. He had a lot of serious personal issues. A great drummer, but impossible to get along with, and wrong, in the end, for the band. Colin was the definitive drummer for Alloy.

About six years after Alloy broke up, I ran into Pete in Seattle. He had moved there and was working as a chef in a restaurant. He seemed to be doing a lot better, sober, and with his demons behind him. I haven’t heard from him since, but I think he is playing drums with Cub Country, an indie-country group.

Going through the discography on your website it looks like you’ve had your fair share of bad-business deals with record labels, including Roadrunner (that didn’t surprise me too much) but also Jade Tree (which did)… What have you learnt from these experiences?

That independent labels can be as rapacious and greedy as major labels. Jade Tree never did right by me. I understand they are better now, but when Jones Very was on the label they had very few bands and very little money. So they took mine. They’ve never made it up to me. When they put out The First Five Years, they charged Jones Very with the entire cost of production, and then took our royalties to pay for it—even though we were one of many bands on the record (for which they never asked my permission).

It was interesting to read that back in the mid-Nineties you had a musical ‘project’ under the name Weatherman – a collaboration with (then) Rage Against the Machine man Tom Morello.

It was a complete blast. Tom was an AoF and Alloy fan—he had come down to some of the Alloy shows on the west coast. I ran into him at a Lollapalooza show, and he told me he was doing a side project. He sent me the tapes of the roughs, I wrote some lyrics, and before I knew it I was flying down to LA to record. We did about 35-40 songs initially, pared it down to about 25 for an LP, and a year later did a 4-song EP. We called it Weatherman, after the ’60s radicals. Sony didn’t like the songs—they sounded a lot like Rage with a different singer. In truth, they weren’t that good, but the ones on the website are some of the ones that were pretty great. Part of the problem was the drummer on the project, but the biggest problem is that Tom hated working with Zack, and was looking for some way to evolve out of Rage.

Some of Audioslave’s first record used the exact same Weatherman music—the song “Cochise” was originally a better track called “Enola Gay“. Had Tom the clarity he had several years later the project might have gone further. But it was great working with him; he’s seriously gifted and has great politics. We had a lot of fun.

The next time I pick you up on the radar is 2003, with the ‘Fortunate Son’ CDEP on Alternative Tentacles… firstly how did you end up on AT, and secondly – what was the inspiration behind recording the classic John Fogerty penned ragged anthem?

I’ve always loved that song and most of what CCR recorded. But that song in particular always struck me as one of the most pissed off and spot on records ever made. I hate that it is always poor guys fighting wars for rich men—same now as then. I had been to a bunch of peace rallies in Seattle, almost all of them were filled with middle class families—we took our two-year-old daughter to them. I thought the song might work as an intergenerational call to arms. Not surprisingly, I don’t think too many folks from the ’60s ever heard the cover, and a lot of the punks that did hated it. It got poor reviews—most punk types didn’t get it at all. I was listening to a lot of old Iggy at the time—I wanted to throw that into it. Biafra liked it—I think he got the reference—and thought it would be good to put out on AT. I’ve known him for over 20 years. I asked and he said yes.

And then last year came the Report Suspicious Activity album, with you and J Robbins (Government Issue, Jawbox, Burning Airlines) teaming up… how did you this relationship come about?

Alloy and Jawbox used to play a lot of shows together. I had liked Burning Airlines and gone down to see them in Seattle. J and I kept in touch casually. When I started writing music again, I recorded everything on a digital studio in my basement, programming the drums on a drum machine. I sent them to J, thinking he might produce them for me. He liked them so much he asked if he could play bass, and shared his drummer, Darren Zentek, from his new band, Channels, with me. The stuff just clicked. We recorded it with virtually no rehearsals—most takes are first takes. You can hear it on “Patriot Act” at the end when I scream for them to keep the tape rolling. We cut “Subtle” immediately after that, with the blood pumping.

The album is a heavy and pissed collection of songs that rips in to Modern Day USA, with it’s war driven obsessions, flag waving patriotism… in the name of ‘liberty and freedom’… I think it’s fair to say you have still had enough of American Dreams?

Yeah, well, I think the problems today are the reason I got back into music. I really didn’t do much at the end of the 90s—just the Morello project. For about five years I didn’t even pick up the guitar. But after Bush was appointed president, something clicked in me.

My wife and I were mildly active in politics—we had actively campaigned in a few local Seattle elections. But “normal” politics weren’t working. We marched in the Anti-Iraq rallies from the very first. They made no difference. Out of frustration I think I turned back to music. The songs started pouring out just around the time the US invaded Iraq.

One thing to bear in mind about the situation today is that Bush is the symptom, and not the cause. There is a small minority of the America public that are genuine sociopaths. For these guys (they are mostly men), fighting in Iraq is great—they are nihilists and find the only meaning for their lives in war. They’ve always been in America. The dark underside of American history is that millions of idealists came to North America, had their dreams shattered (because they were unrealistic) and became raving nihilists. They’ve created a culture of hidden nihilism, and need enemies to give them meaning. They slaughtered the Indians and the Filipinos and the Vietnamese and are having a fine time in Iraq. They’d love to extend it out to Iran or Syria, North Korea or China. They live to kill because they have nothing to live for. They are probably less than 3% of the American population, and their ranks are filled with serial killers and klansmen.

But a very small number rise to prominence. Cheney is certainly a nihilist, as is Rumsfeld. Around this small core there is a constellation of apologists, careerists, unprincipled opportunists and greedheads. They form the center of the Republican party. They are not explicit nihilists, but have a remarkable capacity to rationalize their own self-interest. They are more common in America, a land of hustlers and con-men. Maybe 30% of the population is like this, and they are in both political parties—most politicians of any caliber are part of this group. Bush is like this, as is Condi Rice. Then there are relatively well-meaning people who get caught up in the propaganda the first two groups spit out—probably 50-60% of Americans are like this, people like former Treasury Secretary John Snow, maybe even Colin Powell.

Many supported Bush in the past, but don’t now. The most frustrating people in this group are people like my father-in-law or uncle—good people who know in their hearts that Bush is a disaster for the world, but out of pride and an unwillingness to admit they are wrong, refuse to drop their support for him. This is why a man so obviously incapable of ruling responsibly or competently continues to get almost 40% support from the polls. Everything I am doing artistically is directed towards this group. They need to be shamed. And maybe then we can move on.

And of course Bush’s War on Terror© was embraced whole heartedly by Britain’s Tony Blair… what’s your thoughts on our own glorious leader?

I was in London at the end of August. I hadn’t been there in 9 years. It’s changed a lot: much less provincial, much more cosmopolitan. It’s like a lot of the international cities I do business in—it’s become a playground for rich people. The London Eye makes the connection so clear: if the model for the city in the 19th century was the factory, the model for the city in the 21st is the amusement park. But the only people that get to really enjoy the park/city are the rich.

I guess much of this is owing to Blair and his “new Britannia” policy. But whatever positive efforts he made coming into office have been eclipsed by his becoming Bush’s poodle. I don’t understand why he did it. I’m waiting for the definitive explanation as to why such an ostensibly smart man would associate himself with such an idiot.

To me the situation in Iraq and Afghanistan is futile, ill thought out, and will ultimately fail because the supposed brains behind the invasions of these countries had no long term goals, and – more importantly – seemingly no idea of the politics and history of the peoples in these countries. Do you see any hope?

Not really. The best we can hope for now is to withdraw and hope the bloodbath is not too great. But we should definitely get out (we should have never gone in).

On the home front – I’m typing this interview up on the week that a gunman shot dead six little girls in a school at an Amish community in Pennsylvania… a tragic incident. Will your gun laws ever change?

Probably not. That sociopath community in America considers gun laws on par with castration. Can’t say I blame them too much, given that they need something to define their manhood…

Okay, on a lighter note – I saw the film ‘American Hardcore‘ recently, very good it was too… some fantastic footage I’d never seen before (the Bad Brains material was ace!) and plenty of neat insights from folks from the olden days (!!!) including your good self… had you read Steven Blush’s book before taking part? For my part, I couldn’t help note that there was virtually no mention at all of The Dead Kennedy’s in the film, who are surely one of the most important Punk bands ever… do you know what the deal was there?

Yeah, I do. Biafra refused to work with Blush. He hates him. When I saw the private screening of the film, I told Steve and Paul that I thought the film suffered for not having the DKs and the Huskers in it—I thought they were central to the movement, and a core part of the DIY ethic. But Biafra refused their interview requests, and I don’t know why they didn’t get Bob. I tried to talk to Biafra about it, because I thought the film, with all it flaws, would become one of the central documents in the history of hardcore. But Biafra refused to discuss it. You’ll have to ask him more about it to get details.

Blush asked me to do the film. He never contacted me about his book, and I don’t own a copy and have never read it. But it was pretty clear the book did a disservice to AoF. I think he asked me to be in the movie to make up for it, but you’ll have to ask him.

What about your own future Vic… what does it hold, both personally and on a musical front?

I’d like to tell you that RSA will be doing more and more interesting stuff. We get along great and have finished a great new EP with lots of collaboration between me and J. But I’m not sure that will happen: J has some very serious and very private problems in his life, and it’s very likely that my work will force me and my family to move back to Seattle. So I’m not sure how many more live shows, or records from RSA there will be. That said, I am still writing music, so you can be sure more records will come from me.

And before we close this down… please list us 5 essential albums that you think every record collection should include…

1. Elvis Presley, The Sun Sessions. This is the sound of Rock n Roll at birth. Nothing else is like it. And Elvis is still cool.

2. The Beatles, Revolver. This is the template for almost all of the sonic experiments of the 1960s. I could have put the Stones Let It Bleed, Dylan’s Subterranean Homesick Blues or Who’s Next on here, but this is the best of the 1960s.

3. Marvin Gaye, What’s Going On. This is probably the only concept record (with maybe the exception of Zen Arcade) I can stand. It ushered in all the great soul experiments of the 1970s, and is one of the most idealistic and transcendent records ever made. Second place goes to Sly Stone’s There’s a Riot Going On.

4. The Clash, Give ‘Em Enough Rope. I know the critics like The Clash or London Calling better, but this is the record in which I discovered punk, and to me, it’s the best they made. The Clash has great songs, but without Topper Headon on drums, it doesn’t kick you in the face the way “Safe European Home,” or “Tommy Gun,” does. Never Mind the Bullocks is a great punk record, but the Pistols were a one idea band and a dead end. The Clash were complex, and showed you the way out. Second place goes to the Bad Brains ROIR tape.

5. Miles Davis, Kind of Blue. I hated jazz back in the hardcore days, but in my late 20s I finally got the vibe. Miles, Armstrong, Colman, Coltrane—great stuff. Jones Very was influenced by Coltrane. I used to practice leads listening to his solos. But the biggest single reason this is on my list is because, if you put this record on, you will get laid. Every time. What could be more rock than that?

Many thanks for your time Vic!

Peter Craven

IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO HEAR OUR LATEST NONE MORE PUNK SHOW WITH A HOST OF HARDCORE TRACKS ALL OVER IT INCLUDING ARTICLES OF FAITH, THEN CLICK HERE AND FOLLOW THE FLAG.

Go to www.myspace.com/reportsuspiciousactivity for Vic’s newest project, www.vicbondi.com for the full discography, music and more and also www.aofcomplete.com for all Articles of Faith related malarkey.

Categories
Interviews

Bedouin Soundclash Interview

Canadian trio Bedouin Soundclash released one of the finest records of 2005 in ‘Sounding A Mosaic’ – a fresh, addictive hybrid of dub, reggae, rock and ska influences, which spawned something of a radio staple in the single ‘When The Night Feels My Song’.

The band recently toured the UK as part of the Eastpak Antidote Tour – also featuring Gogol Bordello, Danko Jones and Disco Ensemble where Alex Gosman caught up with Jay Malinowski (vocals/guitar) and Eon Sinclair (bass) shortly before a show at London’s Brixton Academy.

How are you guys, and how’s the tour going so far?

Jay: It’s been great so far…this is the fifth date, and I think most of the shows have been sold out – or at least very close. Manchester last night was one of our best shows yet, and tonight we’re hoping we can beat the curse of London being more subdued than everywhere else! [laughs]

Really? Did you get that impression from when you played the Mean Fiddler back in January?

Jay: No, that was a good show, because our fans aren’t generally the type that just stand there and watch…but when we did a show with the Ordinary Boys [in late 2005] in Shepherds Bush, it really wasn’t a good show for us, their fans just weren’t getting into it.

This tour boasts a pretty varied bill, though – have the crowds on this tour been enjoying your sets?

Jay: Yeah, I think especially in the UK, where we’ve played a lot, there seems to be a lot of people coming out to see us play – we do have an advantage here, in that respect. But in genereal, we tend to be the odd band out! We recently toured with Flogging Molly in the States; playing shows in middle America to a bunch of kids that came to see Irish folk-punk music…and because we play reggae, we were up against some stiff odds. But we’ve become used to that, so it doesn’t bother us much.

It should help that I’ve only ever seen this tour advertised as ‘The Eastpak Antidote Tour’ – never as ‘Gogol Bordello plus support’!

Eon: Exactly – no one band is taking the other bands out on tour, each band has had to prove themselves every night. And that was how Eastpak wanted it.

You came over in January for your first proper UK headline tour, and then returned in August to headline the Carling stages at the Reading and Leeds festivals – what else have you been up to this year?

Jay: We toured Canada for a couple of weeks after Reading, then went to the States for about a month…we’ll be on this tour until the end of November, and then we’re gonna take s short break. We spent a lot of time in the States earlier this year too. We’re going to a lot of places for the first time, though – this tour will be our first trip to mainland Europe.

And what was the highlight of 2006 for you?

Jay: Probably winning a Juno award, which is the Canadian equivalent of a Grammy, for ‘Best New Group’ – that was a real benchmark for what we’ve achieved so far. Plus it’s something nice to give to our parents!

I’ve often heard people comparing your music to artists like The Clash, Bob Marley, and Sublime – but are there any others that you think helped make Bedouin Soundclash who you are today?

Eon: Well, Sublime weren’t really much of an influence…although The Clash and the Wailers definitely were. But the fact is that we’re into so much different music, that if I started listing bands, then I couldn’t stop – we draw influence from a lot of different areas.

Jay: I think those bands you mentioned are really just a starting point – it’s not like, with every record we do, we just go back and listen to Bob Marley and try to replicate his sound! We just try to take the best parts of the music we like and put them together in an original way.

So how did you guys originally discover dub, ska and reggae? I ask because people don’t generally think of Canada as a hotbed for that kind of music!

Eon: [laughs] Believe me, Canada isn’t a hotbed, period! But what a lot of people don’t know is that there’s actually a large West Indian population in Canada, so a lot of people do get exposed to that kind of music.

Jay: I got into reggae through listening to electronic and punk music – bands like The Clash, Massive Attack, Asian Dub Foundation – they all used elements of dub and reggae. It’s just where we fit in as people – we take that as our musical base, and add other influences to it. A lot of classic Jamaican reggae artists live around Montreal, or elsewhere in Canada – like Vernon Maytone, who collaborated with us on ‘Money Worries’ [track from ‘Sounding A Mosaic’]

Your next record, ‘Street Gospels’ is released next year – is there anything in particular that you’re doing differently to when you were recording ‘Sounding A Mosaic’?

Jay: I think the new record is far more focused, and more up-to-date than ‘Sounding A Mosaic’ – because we were playing those songs for about two years before we recorded them. So the newer songs are a lot fresher for us, because we’ve hardly played any of them live yet. But yeah, in general, it’s just gonna be a more focused record.

How did you guys and Side One Dummy Records discover each other?

Eon: We played the Toronto date of the Vans Warped Tour back in 2004, and our manager at the time had been involved with the Warped Tour and knew Kevin Lyman, the guy who runs it, and who is also involved with Side One Dummy. He saw our show and really enjoyed it, and from that moment on has been really supportive of us, and it’s all worked out really well.

What are your plans for the near future, after this tour ends?

Jay: Well, after we’re done in Europe, we’ll go home and start writing, to prepare for the last session of the new record. Then we’re gonna go to Japan in January, just for a few shows though, we won’t be doing any major tours early next year.

‘Sounding A Mosaic’ and new single ’12:59 Lullaby’ are out now on Side One Dummy; ‘Street Gospels’ is expected to be released around springtime next year.

Check www.bedouinsoundclash.com for more info.

Alex Gosman
[Bottom two photos by Dustin Rabin]

Categories
Interviews

L Man Interview

Who’s that white kid? L Dot Man! Spittin’ grizzle? L Dot Man! Got two girls kissing? L Dot Man!

That’s the word on the street for one of the biggest new talents on road right now. Originally from South London, L Man has been killing the grime scene with his sick lyrics and twisted sense of humour over the last couple of years. Crossfire caught up with the busy artist as he ran around Europe promoting his latest album, Facts Of Life Volume 2, and spreading the word on one of the UK’s biggest musical movements. If you log onto www.ldotman.com you can sign up and download L Man’s latest mixtape Impatiently Waiting for free!

I’m guessing the L in L Man stands for London, right? But whereabouts in the big Smoke are you repping? Could the L stand for anything else?

L MAN stands for LYRICAL METAPHORICAL ARTISTIC NATURAL sound. I’m reppin’ South London and the whole of the UK.

How did you get into the rap/grime game? How long ago?

I’ve been doing my thing for about six years now as part of N Double A and as a DJ. I stopped DJing about three years ago I had to sell my decks because I was broke and I didn’t have any money to give to my mum to pay the rent, so the decks had to go. I’ve concentrated on writing bars and making songs ever since.

Your current mixtape, Facts Of Life Volume 2, is on heavy rotation, but what happened to Volume 1? Why didn’t it blow up as strong?

Facts Of Life Volume 1 was just my first mixtape that I pressed up myself and gave away for free around my area to promote my name and let people know what I was about. It ended up on the Internet and a lot of people downloaded it and passed it around on forums and it got a lot of good feedback. Facts Of Life Volume 2 came out May this year on From The Ground Up records one of the UK’s hottest new labels, shouts out to Riff Raff for putting it out and all the support.

What have you learnt since your debut?

To succeed in the music game you need to be strong minded and be prepared to work to get your name out and promote yourself. A lot of the time you need to be prepared to do shows for free, lose money by giving away your mixtapes but at the end of the day its more important for people to be listening to your music in the beginning than to be making money because if your music is good enough people will stay interested in what your doing and support you in the long term. Bottom line is don’t come into the game thinking its gonna be easy and you will blow up straight away, it takes determination to move forwards.

Is Grime music a UK specific sort of Rap music, or really something entirely different?

Grime is unique to the UK as it’s a fusion of UK Garage, Drum N Bass, Jungle and Rap with our own take on sounds, production and MC’s have their own flows and delivery’s. Obviously now that Grime is getting bigger across the world there are people all over the world putting their own take on the sound, and that’s great as music is for the people and there should be no boundaries that can’t be crossed, or barriers put up by people labelling what Grime should be or shouldn’t be. Just accept it for what it is and enjoy it.

In comparison to other grime spitters, your flow is steadier and less hectic, making the lyrics easier to listen to – is this intentional? Who has the sickest flow?

I call my music ‘Mixbreed‘ because I aim for content in my rhymes that people might find more interesting when they listen to it. I try and cover more day to day situations that people might find themselves in because more people can relate to reality then just spitting some hype bars that might only be good to get a reload in the rave but other than that those bars serve no purpose. I think some of the best flows in the UK are Narstie from my crew N Double A, all my crew N Double A. Look out for Nolay as well, Ghetto, Bruza and obviously people like Dizzee Rascal have set the standards across the world and Dizzee continues to do so.

I remember listening to you explain your technique for writing rhymes which involved sifting through catalogues and the like for inspiration. Does this help for freestyling?

To be honest I’m not really one for freestyles or off the top rhyming. I prefer to sit down for a while, think about what I’m saying and the point I’m trying to get across in the track so most of what I do is written material.

Another aspect of Grime is the rate at which dubplates are dropped – Is this just an effect of the new media formats i.e. mp3s, cds etc…? Or is it a case of ‘quantity over quality’?

Yeah the internet helps a lot in promoting Grime Music because a lot of the artists are unsigned and don’t have any labels behind them to promote and market their music so there is a big DIY approach where you just end up promoting the music yourself. Make a tune, give it to the pirate and radio DJ’s to play and then it ends up getting passed around all over the world on the internet. Its quick, fast, cheap and effective and its always gonna be that way because it works. A lot of MC’s make their name through the internet with people checking them out on Myspace etc. so it’s a good look.

Despite the UK, where is the major foreign fan base for grime?

I think Germany, Scandinavia, USA and Canada in particular really follow the scene enthusiastically and there are a lot of fans out there and DJs trying to build the scene which is a beautiful thing to see it grown and spread worldwide.

What are your plans for the future?

I’m gonna be getting back into the studio mid November to work on my next mixtape which will be out for February 2007.This is gonna be my best ever mixtape and I’ve held back a lot of material for this so there are gonna be a lot of very big tracks coming out from January so stay locked. I’m gonna be doing more live shows across the UK from February as well and hopefully a few more shows across Europe.

Do you think it’s good for the game that people like Kano have received mainstream attention?

Definitely- the more artists that achieve success by making good music that is innovative the better. Hopefully over the next few years people in the UK will be supporting our home-grown artists more instead of just downloading UK artists stuff for free but going out to buy American music that gets pushed in their faces more on radio and TV. That will be the point when things start really moving in the UK.

If you could pick 3 tracks for people to get into grime with, what would they be?

POW by Lethal B, I Luv U by Dizzee Rascal and anything by L Man!

Do you like to play on the light-hearted side of things, like your verse on the Rudeboy remix?

Yeah I don’t take my self seriously I’m just here to enjoy myself you only live once so fuck it!

You’ve even done some shit over a Coldplay track, are you interested in bringing other elements like indie, rock etc into grime? Has it got good responses from the scene?

All I’m saying is stay locked to what I’m gonna be doing, stuff a lot of people never thought to do but when it comes out other MC’s will be like…”Shit…Why didn’t I think of that???” Sometimes the best ideas are the most obvious ones.

Check out www.myspace.com/ldotmanmusic or log on to www.ldotman.com to hear my music and download my mixtapes.

Watch L Man rip it up at the Cube Nightclub in Glasgow here.

Ralph Lloyd-Davis

Categories
Interviews

Motion City Soundtrack Interview

Originally formed in 1999, Motion City Soundtrack have been making plenty of friends in recent times with their keyboard-infused pop rock tunes.. The band’s second album ‘Commit This To Memory’ was produced by former Blink 182 bassists Mark Hoppus, and was warmly received by both critics and fans alike.

Last month they returned for their biggest UK headline tour to date, and I caught up with guitarist Josh Cain, shortly before a sold-out show at the London Astoria.

How are you guys doing? First major headline tour of the UK?

It’s been great so far…I think this is actually our third UK tour; the first time around we did a bunch of small venues, and then there was the one when we played the Islington Academy. But this is the biggest one we’ve done, and it’s been awesome.

You also toured here with Blink 182 [in 2004] and Funeral For A Friend [earlier this year] – how were those tours for you?

Well, we were only out for one day with Funeral, because their singer got ill, so they had to cancel that tour! Playing with Blink was unreal – it was our first trip over here, and most of the shows were in these huge arenas. We were kinda nervous, and our sets just flew by…we just got onstage and got on with it. It was really good for us though – I’d attribute a lot of our success in the UK to that tour.

How would you describe yourselves to someone who’d never heard your music before? Quite a range of influences…

I guess I’d say we’re a pop rock band, that kind of thing. We’re influenced by punk and aggressive music generally, but there’s always a melody in there somewhere!

‘Modern Chemistry’ seems to have become something of a fan favourite, at least amongst many of the MCS fans I know – how does it feel, given that it’s a very personal song?

Well, Justin [Pierre, singer/guitarist] writes most of the lyrics – but I know that he’s received a hell of a lot of feedback from fans about that song, it certainly seems to be one of our more popular songs. It’s always good to know that there are other people out there who can relate to what you’re feeling – and to hear a band that you like singing about those kinds of issues is great too.

You were on the Vans Warped Tour earlier this year – how was that for you? I’ve heard criticisms that the tour isn’t what it used to be – would you agree with that?

I think the reason people complain is because when it started out in the mid-nineties, the Warped Tour was a hell of a lot smaller than it is now, and as a result had more of a community atmosphere to it. I guess people who were there from the start miss that atmosphere, but I think the tour still has the same ethos as it did back in the day – it’s just a lot bigger now! We had a great time, though.

What’s live music scene like in Minneapolis these days? I know it’s famous for bands like Husker Du, but how good in recent times? How was it starting out there?

The scene wasn’t so good when we were starting out…it used to be great in the early 90s, with bands like the Jayhawks, and there were places that would do all ages shows every Sunday. That had kinda died out by the time we were getting started, but recently, there’s been something of a revival, and I’d say the Minneapolis scene is a lot bigger and more supportives now than it has been in recent times.

What are your plans for the near future, after this tour ends?

Write, write, write, maybe do a sbort tour, and then write some more! We’re gonna take some time off in the near future, because we have done a hell of a lot of touring. After we do one last US tour, that’ll be it as far as touring ‘Commit This To Memory’ is concerned.

‘Commit This To Memory’ is out now on Epitaph Records. Check www.motioncitysoundtrack.com for more information

Alex Gosman

Categories
Interviews

Gym Class Heroes Interview

The most diverse act on fueledbyramen’s label is, without a doubt, indie hip-hop outfit Gym Class Heroes.

After releasing debut record ‘Papercut Chronicles‘ here last year, the funky quartet are already bursting to show us new material from their catchy-as-hell follow-up ‘As Cruel As School Children‘.

Crossfire writer Cathy Reay caught up with kooky frontman Travis McCoy and right-hand drummer Matt McGinley just before their Barfly show in the UK last month.

Alright, so let’s start with the basics – how’d you meet?

Travis: We met in gym class!

Matt: Yeah… 9th grade. Travis was playing drums in a band and I was in another band. We played at a friend’s party together. During one of our songs Travis came up and started rapping over it and we thought it sounded really cool. We’ve been under the moniker Gym Class Heroes ever since.

Travis – you played drums in high school. Had you rapped before?

Travis: I flirted with it. I had a little group with my brother and my dad back in the day… we were called True Life Playas!! It was so bad! The tapes exist somewhere but hopefully they’ll never be found.

In high school I took songwriting and poetry way more seriously; it was a good outlet for me. I used to get grounded a lot for goofing off so that gave me a lot of time to be artistic. I found my diploma the other day and it made me laugh! I went to an arts school so I majored in fine arts and illustration. I actually came up with the concept of As Cruel As School Children (ACASC) artwork.

Were you guys nervous to sign to FBR due to the fact that you’re unlike any of the other bands on their roster?

Matt: I think that just made us more excited. I feel like the music speaks for itself. Actually, we had less to prove than most bands coming out at the time because they were just watered down versions of other artists achieving success. We stood apart so much that we could just do whatever we want; and I still feel that way.

Travis: From the beginning we never fit in anywhere. We played shows with death metal, reggae, hip-hop artists and even feminist poets. We found a way of taking a crowd that wasn’t necessarily there to see us, demanding their attention and making them have a good time. We run the whole spectrum – everyone listens to us because we’re so amazing!

When you were here last supporting Fall Out Boy, who are obviously a rock band, how’d you find it?

Travis: It was cool. Manchester was the weirdest show, there were couple of hecklers. Usually I’m like ‘whatever’ but that night I had a short fuse. It was awesome though. We’ve toured with FOB a lot. We drank a bunch of cider…

Matt: Yeah we were introduced to cider that tour…where we come from it doesn’t get us drunk!

Would you ever support hip-hop artists?

Travis: Oh we have. It’s a misconception that we only tour with rock bands but we’ve done our fair share with hip-hop acts. We opened for Run DMC a long time ago; it was our first paid show!

Do you think your sound is really different from 10 years ago?

Travis: Completely – we sucked ten years ago!

Matt: Yes, I think it’s a natural progression for bands to evolve. People say we’re an amalgamation of all these genres but back in the day we used to play like a hip-hop song, a jazz song, a rock song: it was really extreme. I think we eventually found a style we were comfortable with and solidified.

How involved are all of you in the writing process?

Matt: It used to be us in my living room passing around ideas and seeing what we liked, what stuck. For ACASC it was a more of a test. We all moved into a house together and tried to write songs during rehearsals. We did half of it that way then we went to NY and wrote the other half with producers. We were constantly constructing the songs. This was one big winding road…

Do you think all four of you have very different influences and outlooks on music?

Matt: Yes and no. Being on tour together and being constantly with the same few people means we now think the same things are funny, we have inside jokes and stuff. Musically there are bands we all love to listen to: Bloc Party being one of them. There aren’t many we agree on. Greenday, 311, RHCP – rock/funk – got me wanting to be in a band in the first place. Disashi comes from a very rock background and he’s really into Jimi Hendrix which I think shines through on his guitar solos on ACASC. Our bass player is into a lot of reggae. Travis is all over the place with singing and rapping – this is the first album he sings complete songs rather than rapping a little in them. There were tracks where we were like, ‘where do we fit in the rap part?’ and it didn’t feel right to put one in. It wasn’t a conscious movement away from rap, we made that decision to suit the songs.

Papercut Chronicles vs. As Cruel As School Children: discuss. What was going through your heads at the time of writing them?

Travis: We did Papercut in three days on our own budget. The whole record is really, really personal, it has a lot of eerie dark overtones. On the new record we got to work with producers for the first time – Patrick Stumph from FOB produced a few tracks – we wanted to show we were out of that. We’re happier with where we are as humans and we wanted that to shine in the record: we wanted to make a summertime record. I feel like we accomplished that.

Generally which record is more personal to you and why?

Matt: Both for different reasons. Papercut was the record that started it all – we did that out of our own pockets and time, we weren’t even being looked at by labels. Then through doing that we got picked up and FBR put it out as it was. The new record though was a brand new experience – to have a budget and timescale.

It’s really unusual for bands not to step back and take a gap between delving into their follow-up, why did you decide to release ACASC so immediately after you stopped touring with Papercut?

Travis: A lot of the time bands make a record, tour a little bit then kinda fall back satisfied: “oh we’ll do a new record when it’s time…” – we want to stay consistent and on top of our game. We feel constantly musically creative. That doesn’t mean we’re gonna keep dishing out records for the sake of it, everything that we do is meaningful.

Matt: For us, the two records have a perfect interval. The tendency is to milk them dry but we’re not into that. As long as we have music to put out, we’ll put it out.

Personal favourite songs on the new record?
Matt: ‘On My Own Time‘ is mine. It was a really great song to watch evolve. We went shopping for loads of stuff and we got a call saying that a friend of ours won a million dollars – we stayed on his floor during the making of the record – and the memory of that happening surrounds the song.

Travis: ‘Shoot Down The Stars‘ and ‘Viva La White Girl‘. Musically and lyrically I feel like I nailed them.

Tell me about ‘New Friend Request‘ (ASASC) and why you decided to base one song on Myspace.com.

Matt: We’re all really into it! It’s a true story too: Travis actually did woo and court a girl over Myspace. That song though is more an observation of the site. I think sites like that might replace actually having to go ask a girl out in real life!

The song ‘Taxi Driver‘ from Papercut references a lot of rock artists but not many hip-hop artists, would you say the latter are less of an influence on your music?

Travis: Not at all. It’s not a serious song, more of a thought. I have friends that listen to predominantly hip hop and the song is still cohesive to them even though they don’t know the bands.

Matt: It’s not necessarily an appraisal of all the bands listed. It’s just that, for the most part, they have funny names you can link stories to.

Travis: So many bands have long, outrageously narrative band names lately.

Most hip-hop artists use a lot of samples, why don’t you?

Travis: It’s more fun and organic in the live show. There’s definitely a lot of acts that can pull off a DJ/MC thing but then a lot that can’t. Also I guess it’s all we know.

Matt: We’ve always been a band and we never did sampling at all before but within the last couple of years we’ve embraced it more. In the songs we did with Patrick Stumph we used it.

Tell me about the cover songs you’ve done.

Matt: We covered ‘Under The Bridge‘ by RHCP on a compilation CD. We play it live sometimes. We used to cover ‘No Woman, No Cry‘ by Bob Marley – I love that song.

Something no-one knows about your band?

Matt: Hmmm… me and Travis are really good at ping-pong! I’m not really competitive, but that’s because I know I can beat him.

Travis – tell me about Cobrastarship.

Travis: Cobrastarship is Gabe Saporta’s (Midtown) new side project. The first time I met him I was really wasted in a place called Maxwells and we were trying to eat food off a bus boy’s tray. The manager comes out and asks us what the hell we’re doing and Gabe said: “shut up man you’re gonna throw it out anyways!” – I was just like, I love this dude already. Before Snakes On A Plane he asked me if I’d be on a song and I said yes. He was working with one of the producers we’d worked with on our record. I got the call they told us about this movie. I’d already heard about it from a friend of mine and I thought it was pretty damn unlikely they’d get away with something so stupid. But when they called me with the song I was just like sure I’ll do it! I wrote my verse in the shower, got out, went to Denver to record it and that’s it. The song is brilliant and I’m stoked to be a part of it.

As for side projects generally – yeah I dabble but Gym Class is my home front. It’s where I feel comfortable artistically. When we get on stage we’re a really solid unit.

Do you think people view you as a new band right now and does it annoy you?

Travis: When people are like oh yeah I just heard you guys, I’m like cool. It shows we’re still getting exposure. I love when people hear us and identify it.

How have the shows been so far over here?

Matt: Awesome. Crowds here are very open-minded in terms of music they listen to. In America you sometimes feel like they’re just there to say they went to that show, just because you fit the same scene as some other band.

Plans for the rest of this year… next year….

Matt: We’re about to go out with the All-American Rejects in the US until around Christmas. We already want to start writing new songs and stuff. We feel really creative lately – sometimes you gotta strike when the iron is hot!

www.gymclassheroes.com

Recorded live at Atlantic Records HQ in West London during September 2006. Thanks to Chloe Browne at Hyperlaunch.

Categories
Interviews

Converge Interview

In their fifteen-year existence, Boston quartet Converge have constantly blurred the lines between metal, hardcore, and all-out sonic warfare; creating a unique, progressive sound that has won them plenty of devoted fans and critical acclaim for albums such as ‘Petitioning The Empty Sky’ and ‘Jane Doe’. Alex Gosman caught up with vocalist Jacob Bannon for a chat about forthcoming new album ‘No Heroes’, and the band’s current activity.

How are you guys, and what have you been up to since you last visited the UK [in April last year]?

Well, we’ve been writing and recording the new album, doing a few tours in the United States…right now we’re on the road with Mastodon and The Bronx, and we’re on our way to a show in Chicago.

You recently did a few dates on the US leg of the Sounds Of The Underground tour [an increasingly popular multi-band metal/hardcore tour] – how did that go?

It was…interesting! We’re not really fans of festival tours and things of that nature, so it definitely wasn’t our ideal environment to play in. But you might as well try everything once, you know? There were some great bands there, it was just that we didn’t like that huge amphitheatre environment – it’s kind of impersonal.

It’s been nearly two years since you released [previous album] ‘You Fail Me’ – are you happy with how it was received, and in retrospect, is there anything about it that you feel you should’ve done differently?

Not necessarily, no…we were all pretty happy with the record when it was finished. We’d had to overcome a lot of legal issues and label issues before it was finally released through Epitaph, so it felt like a great victory when it finally came out. In that way, it was more than just releasing a record – it was more like a new chapter for our band. The new record was the product of a whole new recording and touring environment for us, so again, it’s like a new chapter for us.

Is there any particular reason why you decided to sign to Epitaph Records?

Well, we had those legal disagreements and other issues with [previous label] Equal Vision – but ever since we signed to Epitaph, we’ve had a really positive experience. For the most part, they’ve been very supportive of everything we’re doing, they understand what we’re about, so it’s worked out pretty well.

What’s the story behind the title of ‘No Heroes’? Do you feel that it’s pointless to idolise other people/bands?

It’s completely pointless – but that’s not the overall theme of the album: just of the ‘No Heroes’ song. We thought that title would work well for the record too, but it’s not a concept album or anything like that; it’s still very much a personal record, written about our experiences over the last couple of years.

But as one of the more forward-thinking bands of today, you’re viewed as musical heroes – or at least a huge inspiration – by a lot of other bands, including some who are local to me. How do you feel about that?

It’s flattering, but it’s not the reason why we do what we do as a band. We just try to write music that is moving and exciting to us, and that challenges us – and that really is our only goal. We’ve never been concerned with attaining any level of commercial success. If people enjoy what we do or are influenced by us, then that’s great, but it’s not something we reflect on.

Was there any particular lyrical inspiration for ‘No Heroes’?

All the songs are about specific experiences I’ve had over the last couple of years…but I’d rather just let people listen to the music, read the lyrics and see what they get out of it. I think that for the first time, the songs are poetic but also pretty literal, so I think a fair amount of people could relate to a lot of the personal stuff in there.

One track that really stands out on ‘No Heroes’ is the ten minute long ‘Grim Heart/Black Rose‘ – how did that come about?

Yeah, it’s ten minutes long, and it also has a guest vocal from Jonah Jenkins, who sang in Only Living Witness and Miltown – he’s been one of my favourite vocalists since I was a teenager. We’d been working on the song for a while, and in my head I could imagine him singing on it – so I figured it was a long-shot, but that I might as well ask him, and he was happy to be involved. So he sings for the first five minutes, and then I come in for the remainder of the song. So yeah, we’re really happy about how that one worked out.

Finally, what are your plans for the near future, after ‘No Heroes’ is released?

After this current tour finishes in a couple of weeks, we’re gonna take October off, then we’ll be touring the States again with Some Girls and Modern Life Is War. Next year, we’re gonna concentrate on worldwide touring, getting to Europe, Japan, Australia and other places. We’re hoping to make it to Europe and the UK around springtime.

‘No Heroes’ is released October 23rd on Epitaph Records. Check www.convergecult.com for more info.

Alex Gosman

Categories
Interviews

The Needles Interview

Hailing from Aberdeen, The Needles are one of those bands that are preceded by swaths of justified hype. Support slots for Muse, Young Knives and Bloc Party to name but a few have made their name as a dynamic live act, building up a solid fan base before they’d even released an album.

They’ve been bubbling under since their 2004 EP releases sold out, and are now coming into their own with debut album ‘In Search Of The Needles’, a punky, raw and exciting debut, but still found a few minutes to talk to Crossfire about John’s pheromones, rickets, psychedelic windscreen wipers and of course, soup.

The Needles formed at school and have been together ever since – how did the name come about?

We were briefly known as The Invisibles, then The Subvisibles. We did songs about the comedian Frank Skinner on an Amiga computer. It wasn’t very good.

Who were your main influences growing up? Who were your musical heroes?

We’ve all always loved savage Rock’n’roll music be it Little Richard, AC/DC, or whatever reminds you of the existence of your reproductive organs, alongside great pop songs that are like the entire universe coming together in perfect harmonious, lyrical, mathematical order for 2 minutes and 45 seconds, if only to remind you you’ve been dumped. You know the ones.

Do you feel that growing up far away from the London music scene helped or hindered you? [The Needles were based in Aberdeen]

It perhaps meant our heads were filled with less silly rubbish, but then again we probably filled that space with all sorts of parochial nonsense about Londoners being full of silly rubbish.
I’d imagine we’re just as famous as we would have been anywhere with a ginger singer.

You were described by one journalist as sounding like Weezer covering The Buzzcocks, how would you describe your sound?

I always though we sounded like 50’s Cliff after a good bumming, or maybe a bad soup. But then I’m probably the wrong person to ask. Too involved!

Haha! Quote of the Week there! You’ve supported some impressive bands, what’s been your most memorable show so far? Muse must have been amazing!

Muse was good cause we got to go up a ramp to the stage wearing towels around our necks like Elvis.
We also made some Goths so angry they wrote into the internet to complain. Each of these in my book is a measure of success.

And in those love shows – you’re apparently somewhat injury prone? Explain!

The physical world simply isn’t built for our mental and emotional funkiness. End of.

The new record – where did you record it, who produced it?

We recorded “In Search Of the Needles” at Sawmills studio in Cornwall. It was produced between ourselves and Tom Joyce, the engineer down there who is a very rocking gentleman and is almost certainly going to Heaven after putting up with us whingeing, drunken man-children when he could have easily murdered us out there and nobody would have known.

Do you maintain artistic control in the studio? Has the end product ended up sounding exactly how you wanted? Who writes most of your material?

I think it took us a couple of sessions to get cookin’ I think. I think it helped massively that Tom really clicked with how we play as a band and knowing when we had it or didn’t. Although there’s a bit of experimentation sound-wise with backwards this and flanged that what makes the record sound like The Needles is The Needles playing how The Needles play. Ie not Pro-Toolsed to buggery like every damn record these days.

We recorded it over a year ago and I think it’s a good document of those songs at that time. I think the next record will be quite a bit different though. But there wouldn’t be any point in making a next record if it wasn’t would there?

What do you prefer – touring or being in the studio?

I’ll go wherever needs me most. I usually consult my Owls before deciding.

Where were you the first time you heard your single on the radio?

The first time I ever heard the Needles on the radio I was in the bath pretending I was on the telly.

What’s the best part of touring? And the worst?

Worst is hard to choose at the moment but it’s definitely somewhere between the impetigo and the rickets.
Best is, obviously, the good shows.

If you could change one things about yourselves, what would it be?

Either the impetigo or the rickets I thinks.

Many bands have random items on their rider – what’s on yours?

I’d love a nice soup and it’s not often we get one.

What are your hopes for the next 12 months?

To get to make another record and to bring about world peace with guitar solos and cloaks like in Bill and Teds.

What’s been your most memorable experience with the band so far?

Probably King Tut’s gig last week. It was a really good show and it was also last week so it’s easy to remember.

Who smells the worst after a show?

After the show we smell of pheromones which apparently is good. It’s the next day when the bacteria kicks in you’ve got to worry.

Probably John though.

What are 3 essential items to take on tour?

A nice jumper – you might have to stay with an elderly relative. Kaleidescope windscreen covers -turn the M25 into a psychelic thrill ride! These might be illegal, but not as illegal as drugs. A ham sandwich -You’d be surprised how hard these are to find in this day and age.

If you could be asked any question, what would it be?

Would the amount of crisps ever eaten in the world be less than, greater than or equal to what you feel at the exact point of death.

Finally…any words of wisdom for the readers of Crossfire?

Shut up you big weirdos!

For further info check out www.theneedles.net and www.myspace.com/needlesuk

‘In Search of The Needles’ is out NOW.

Dee Massey