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Wildbirds & Peacedrums on movement, attraction, destiny and faith

August 12, 2009 Features, Interviews 2 Comments
Wildbirds & Peacedrums

Wildbirds & Peacedrums

We caught up with Wildbirds & Peacedrums, one of our favourite Swedish husband and wife duos ever. Mariam Wallentin and Andreas Werliin have been described as “The White Stripes in reverse”, but in reality they offer up a glorious mix of folk, blues and pit-of-gut vocals. Here’s the results of our word-volley:

You’ve got a compelling energy onstage. Do you try to distill that into the records? Is that a challenge?

To perform live and in the studio is two completely different things. We have tried to have the same input in the studio as we do live but it’s just not possible – try to talk to an microphone the same as you do to a human and you’ll see.

You’ve been doing a lot of travelling recently. Do you do a lot of writing when you’re out on the road?

Actually nothing, it takes to much effort to perform and travel that there’s almost no energy left to be creative. So we can brag with not a single new song in over a year! … Continue Reading

Slow Club: “if you call us twee, we’ll kick you in the tits”

Slow Club

Slow Club

Muso’s Guide caught up with Slow Club in Aberdeen last month whilst they were supporting Jamie T. Here’s what they had to say on the then forthcoming release of their debut album Yeah, So:

The album is out soon, some of the material has been about for a while now. How did you decide what went on, what stayed off?

Charles Watson:  Most of it is pretty new actually; there are re-recordings of older songs though. It felt like an accurate representation of what we were playing live really and were enthusiastic about. There was no label pressure to leave any song on or off, although a few people made suggestions. It came together over time. I think we finalised the track listing on the last day.

There’s also the special edition isn’t there, with some b-sides / early singles and live tracks from Union Chapel to round things up. … Continue Reading

Some Velvet Morning talk Fidel Castro and Fleetwood Mac

August 2, 2009 Features, Interviews No Comments
Some Velvet Morning

Some Velvet Morning

Some Velvet Morning are set for big things. We first found them on a London rooftop back in January playing a gig to raise awareness on musician’s rights and to commemorate 40 years since the Beatles last performance. Since then they have finished writing their second album and are ready to unleash their gargantuan riffs and all out vocal performances on the public.

Last week we caught Some Velvet Morning as they came off stage at Islington Bar Academy to talk Festivals, Fidel Castro and Fleetwood Mac….

Introducing Des Lambert (Lead vocals and guitar), Gavin Lambert (Bass) and Rob Flanagan (Drums).

Des and Gavin, being brothers, did you play music together growing up?

Des: No, we fought! Then we became buddies in the band … Continue Reading

A quick chat with Killa Kela

August 1, 2009 Features, Interviews No Comments
Killa Kela

Killa Kela

We met with Killa Kela at his London Cargo show in early July and found out what’s coming up for our favourite beat-boxer.

… Continue Reading

Muso’s Guide introduces… Youthless

Youthless

Youthless

Or, to be frank, Youthless introduce themselves. Or, to be more specific, Youthless’ Alex introduces Youthless and we add some sample mp3s for y’all to check out. Ok, enough from us…

Youthless is Sab and I. I play drums and sing and sometimes I play synth lines with my free hand. Sab sings and plays bass through two amps which he alternates between using a footswitch. We also use a bunch of weird FX boxes and other toys. It’s a bit of a strange set up but somehow, amidst all the confusion, we manage to bang out some rockin’ tunes.

Sab and I met when we were 15, in high-school in Lisbon, Portugal. Sab’s English, but he was born and raised in Portugal, and I’m from New York City but I moved to Lisbon as a teen. We’d used to skip class together to go play guitar by the river, and somehow not much has really changed since then. We’ve been through lots of shit together, first bong hits, first night in jail, wisdom teeth. … Continue Reading

Muso’s Guide introduces… Incrediboy and the Forget Me Nots

Incrediboy

Incrediboy

It’s no secret that here at Muso’s Guide, we’ve got a bit of a thing for Glasgow. A city with a sense of camaraderie to go alongside its rich back-story. On our brief weekend stop a little while ago, we ran into Incrediboy and the Forget Me Nots, a delightful little ensemble led by Christopher Panks – coincidentally, one of our contributors. Aah, that camaraderie…

Formed around three years ago, Chris and and Mikey (other guitarist) “have written and played as long as we’ve known each other”. Based in the band-hubbub that is Glasgow, they’re surrounded by a wealth of unpolished talent as well as a core of “great bands that have been on the scene for ages”. According to Panks, these include French Wives, Brother Louis Collective and Zoey Van Goey – and with this exciting and consistent heart to the scene, the difficult thing is to make it out of Glasgow”. “With these amazing bands playing all the time, it really spurs you on,” he continues. “You feel people pulling for you and wanting you to do well and it’s refreshing really, because there are a lot of scenes where bands would trample their own grandparents for a certain support slot.”

They’d describe their music as “simple folky pop tunes with post-rock tendencies… a band that could be some peoples favorite band, or at least someone’s girlfriend’s favorite band”.

Read some more here, download an mp3 at the bottom and show them some love.

How and when did you become Incrediboy and the Forget Me Nots?

“We started doing some bedroom demos and the songs sounded good but because we were like kids with new toys we fired about a million layers on, and it just didn’t sound as good when we stripped it down to play live. So we went about recruiting a backing band, for our first show we played at the Carling Academy Glasgow at a show I organised myself. Then for various reasons half the band couldn’t commit to us exclusively anymore, and we’re just getting into our stride again now, we have a fantastic new piano player and a great violin player, and it certainly feels a lot more natural I think.” … Continue Reading

We Were Promised Jetpacks: mums, library fines and Dr Dre

June 29, 2009 Features, Interviews 4 Comments
We Were Promised Jetpacks

We Were Promised Jetpacks

I’ve totally taken We Were Promised Jetpacks to my heart – ever since back in February when they played The Borderline, they’ve carved a little path in my left ventricle. And now I’m at 2009’s halfway mark, I can safely say that These Four Walls is my favourite debut LP of the past six months; it’s an album so exciting that the only way in is to listen and listen to it until you’re essentially inside it. The melodies give me the impression they’re alive and on fire and the lyrics have this enormous, irreparable vigour. And yes, I’m using first person here because it’s my love for the band that counts. I’m not speaking on behalf of anyone else, ‘Jetpacks can do that well enough for themselves.

Comprising Adam (vocals), Michael (guitar), Sean (bass) and Lackie (drums), they’re balanced, entirely enthralled by the lives they’re leading and extremely lovely to boot. They share a love of Dr Dre‘s 2001, Wetherspoon’s pubs, early Kings of Leon and Biffy Clyro. Though entirely without realising it, they have produced an album all of their own.

Having formed in Glasgow at school many years ago, the four-piece have all just graduated (apart from the band’s drummer, who’s been working for the past year), and can hardly believe they’re a few months away from a coast-to-coast US tour with Fat Cat compatriots (and nigh-on idols) The Twilight Sad and Frightened Rabbit: “It’s a scary thought,” offers drummer Lackie. “We knew it was planned but didn’t know it was gonnae happen – we found out in the last couple of weeks.” It’s all part of the fact that We Were Promised Jetpacks somehow fail to realise their own power. I tell them how diverse I find their album, the fact that ‘This Is My House This Is My Home’ is an entirely distinct offering from ‘Quiet Little Voices’, and bassist Sean’s instinctive reaction is an honest, immediate “really?”. … Continue Reading

A video-chat with Natalie Portman’s Shaved Head… the band

June 26, 2009 Features, Interviews 1 Comment

It’s always a party with Natalie Portman’s Shaved Head, both on and off the stage, and there really is no other band quite like them. Not only do they have a bizarre name that triggers both confusion and intrigue, but their offbeat lyrics and crazy on-stage dancing make them one band that can’t be missed.

Drummer Liam shows off his new genuine police coat (which he just received from his father)

Drummer Liam shows off his new genuine police coat (which he just received from his father)

Watch and find out what this Seattle-based band have to say about Red Lobster, their freshly-signed deal with Warner Bros. Records, their new fashion trend and their plans to record an album on a yacht…and get a peak into their gig at Santos Party House in NYC.
… Continue Reading

Words with The Twilight Sad

The Twilight Sad

The Twilight Sad

At last month’s Great Escape in Brighton, we caught up with two of the finest live acts in the UK, let alone central Scotland, before they performed on the Levi’s OnesToWatch stage at Audio. After chatting to Dananananaykroyd, we spent some time with The Twilight Sad.

What’s in store for The Twilight Sad for the next few months?

James Graham: Well, the new record out mid-September. It’s recorded, just being mastered. We actually just got the artwork for it today. So it’s kind of all there, the track-listing was finally decided today as well.

Does the artwork have the same theme that your previous releases have had?

J: Like the music on the record it’s going to be familiar, but slightly different. We’re hoping to develop a theme across our albums with it. It looks brilliant, I actually like it more than the first one.

Whose idea was the Goo pastiche? (The Twilight Sad’s 2008 live compilation gets the title, Killed My Parents and Hit The Road , and its artwork from the 1990 Sonic Youth album)

J: That was Andy [MacFarlane, guitar]. We were playing in America with Mogwai, we’ve just finished supporting them out there, and Thurston Moore comes to the gig. So we were thinking ‘fuck’ and hoping he didn’t see the merchandise table. They haven’t sued us though. Yet.

You should keep it up then!

J: Aye, we might do The Beatles next [MG is wearing a Revolver t-shirt] or Pet Sounds. How many other people can we rip off? We are working our way through them all!

Any schedule for touring in the UK coming up?

J: Definitely, when the record’s out. We’ve got a small run of dates this month like Stag and Dagger and here obviously. We’ve also got Hop Farm in Kent this July.

There do seem to be more and more of these smaller urban festivals springing up of late.

J: Yeah, definitely for those that can’t get to the big festivals. That said the End of The Road festival, always a strong line up and is the best one we’ve been to so if they’re reading this. Book us! It would be great to play Glastonbury if we got the chance as well.

You got your first review via Teletext’s Planet Sound [former home of Muso's Guide's Editor, Natalie Shaw], how important a jumping off point was that?

J: I think it’s always nice if someone is saying something good about you. It wasn’t just the review itself; people were writing letters in to The Void as well. They turned a lot of people on to us. Especially as, growing up, we used to go on Planet Sound a lot. So what they did for us, giving us album of the year as well for our debut at such a well respected outlet.

I’ve heard that the new record is louder, darker, bigger….

J: … and better! It is all of those but it’s also more melodic as well.

Have you been working with Peter Katis again this time out?

J: A lot of the time, on the first record, people have said that Peter Katis produced it, but really Andy did and Peter Katis mixed it. Andy did the same on this one and Paul Savage (The Delgados) recorded it.

Because looking at the list of other bands that Katis has worked with like The National, Interpol and Mercury Rev on Deserter’s Songs and especially with that Mercury Rev album I’ve always been struck by the way that your songs build to a crescendo, albeit it a louder fashion, in a similar way.

J: Hmm, those are all brilliant bands. We felt on this record, I mean there’s no doubt about it we are proud of the first record, that we wanted to go for it and not get into the trap of being lazy and we thought with the same people we might have got comfortable and it can reflect on the album if you do get too comfortable. We wanted to keep some things the same but also some things different.

There does seem to be now with the higher emphasis on touring and so on, an element of pressure off bands slightly when they go into a second record that wasn’t the case maybe 10-15 years ago.

J: There was a suggestion that we should try and get the second album out very quickly after the first but we weren’t that keen on the idea. We needed a bit of time on it.

Most second albums benefit greatly from being tried out on the road. I think second time out; if you rush it, it does show.

J: We’ve been on the road a lot of the time, trying out new songs and new arrangements. We didn’t really get that with the first record because we recorded it after four gigs. When we were signed and went over to America, by the time we came back we had played more gigs in the US than in Glasgow. It was like a whirlwind.

On the recent compilation of live songs the cover versions, how did they come about?

J: That was really in order to fund the Mogwai tour and that was the way of doing it. The covers, at first we weren’t that into the idea of doing it but once we had we were really happy with the results. We all like the bands that we covered and we had done that Smiths’s cover [‘Half APerson’] a couple of times on the radio and that worked quite well. ’Twenty Four Hours’ we worked into the set after recording it and it was fun to play, although I had to keep taking the lyrics on stage.

So did the new recorded get influenced by those bands you covered at all, or has their been anything else that has channelled into the recording process?

J: Not really, I don’t think there’s been anything specific that has influenced this one that hasn’t always been a general influence. More than anything we try and avoid sounding like other bands in the studio.

So there’s a list of people you haven’t been influenced by?

J: Ha ha! Yeah, I think that’s more accurate.

So if someone realised a song was starting to sound a bit like <insert band name> it stopped.

J: Pretty much! (In the background Andy is playing the riff from Ocean Colour Scene’s ‘The Riverboat Song, badly’)

Can we expect that on the next live album?

J: It’s his solo project!

The whole of Moseley Shoals.

Andy: It’s going to be the whole of Oasis’s Be Here Now, acoustic though.

Laura leaves Dananananaykroyd

June 15, 2009 Interviews, News 1 Comment
Dananananaykroyd

Dananananaykroyd

Hot off the presses is this sad news from Glasgow‘s finest, directly from the band’s offical blog:

“Hey Everyone,

It is our sad duty to inform you that Laura is no longer playing bass in Dananananaykroyd.

The only way the band can continue is if every member is on the same page musically and that each member’s efforts and passions are towards making us the most rocko band possible.

We’d like to add that we love Laura and wish her all the best and we will miss hanging out with her all the time. … Continue Reading

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