MUSICGLOB HOME
2/22/2007

PLAYGROUND MUSIC MAGAZINE

written by: DAN
playground music magazine

A new online music magazine just launched a little bit ago for all you to enjoy. PLAYGROUND MUSIC MAGAZINE is the name and it is nothing short of awesome. Not only do they have good bands, good photos, good words, they have an awesome design to the mag AND they have free tracks to click and download immediatly in the PDF. What more could you ask for than all that for free?! I’m excited to say that I was able to contribute to it’s birth with my live photos of Wolfmother.

Honestly – this is the best not only music but any online magazine I have seen. I would spend a whole long post talking about each feature and give it a design critique, but I don’t have that kind of time and lets just stick to the music. Head over and download the first issue.

Over the past month or so I’ve been emailing back and forth with Heathcliffe Bird, producer/creator/graphic designer of the whole bit. I asked him a few things and he answered.

What is the idea behind PLAYGROUND?

The aim is to put together (over a few issues) the magazine we always wanted to read… one we could pick up from wherever we were, free of charge, and with new bands, music, writers, photographers and things that we’d really want to know about. And some place to hang out and play and swap ideas. We also spend a lot of time on blogs and sites and listening to bands and we wanted to be able to shout about how good some of the stuff thats out there is. And we wanted something we could play with. Like our own skunkworks… somewhere we can try and figure out how to do the things we love about publishing while folding in all the tricks that the web and new media can do.

It’s like in a perfect music magazine you wouldn’t just read about bands… you’d hear them or watch them or chat directly with them if they’re doing something you really like. You don’t just read about stuff… you join in with it. And we wanted the kind of magazine that we could join in with, and that our mates and anyone who wanted could chip in and play with. Something less like MTV and more like having yr mates round and having fun, i guess.

How did PLAYGROUND come about?

Playground came about from loving and working on print magazines… we kinda wanted to see what would happen if we tried producing a magazine but using web and new media instead of paper. Just to see how it works and what we could do differently.

The web is great because it’s so fucking immediate. It can link out to anything from any place so its great for exploring… and you can play with sound and video which is fantastic. But there’s still something great about picking up a new issue of a magazine. Like being able to read cover to cover and knowing its all pages that you haven’t read before… and the way that magazines flow and how the pace changes throughout. If a good website is like listening to great tracks, then a good magazine is like a great mixtape. When you spend time around good editors you start to realise how smart they are at this stuff. Its old school tricks that we’re starting to lose as magazines get replaced by web.

So we started thinking about what would happen if you could podcast a website but put it together like a music magazine and we tried building it… It’s taken us the first issue to work out a format that’s do-able. But that’s pretty cool. Now we have to build it and make it work.

Do you plan on going to print or staying online?

Definitely online. Doing this is like being a kid with lego. And ’cause we’re inventing we get to bounce ideas off total strangers and have some great chat. And we can do stuff that isn’t possible on paper, and we can keep everything we do free of charge. But we have much to do to make it viable, and thats the stuff that we’re focussed on right now.

What do you think or want the future to hold for PLAYGROUND?

We’re just starting out so i guess the thing is to try and create that magazine that we’d kill to read. Issue one was about working out how pdf pages work and trying stuff out and working out how long things take and whats practical and possible… so we pinned down a lot of technical stuff and a design and commissioning and production and we’ve got tight writing styles and layouts to bring in for issue 2.

As a new magazine with no backing, getting bands and writers was a massive headache for the first issue. We were lucky that even with no magazine to show, some of the PR and music guys figured we were worth taking a chance on and lent us time. That was lucky and excellent. Now that we’ve shown we can deliver something, we’re starting to work out proper schedules for interviews and features and getting hold of bands is much easier. So issues 2 and 3 will see more content, more bands and new writers.

We’re also putting our backs into the free downloads. Where we had to rely on linkouts for free tracks in issue one, we’re chatting to PR and artists now about getting pre-cleared and exclusive tracks for download. If people are gonna read us, we want to give them something back. We’re also starting to look at audio podcasting and putting together stuff that runs alongside the written mag. We’ve been testing out on-page audio as well so you can hear tracks without leaving the magazine.

And over the next few issues, we have to work really hard on getting more writers, upping the bar on everything and finding us more readers. At the end of the day, its the readers that matter. And if anyone’s up for chipping in or playing, we’d love to hear from them. It’s that ‘having people round yr house’ thing… People are smart. Telling them what to listen to is all well and good but chatting to people about what’s great is stuff that makes it worth getting out of bed. People rule.

PLAYGROUND MUSIC MAGAZINE: Official Website

1/23/2007

Mika Interview

written by: DAN
Mika

Today is Mika day. I’ll be heading to the Roxy tonight to catch him live and today you all get to read this e-interview that he was kind enough to do for me.

Your childhood seems to be filled with adventure, could you tell me maybe a story or two growing up?
When you come from a family where you move around a lot traveling certainly doesn’t become an issue anymore apart from money of course. Ill never forget on the several occasions where my mother and father had an enormous fight we left for Portugal and another time in Rome…and another time in NY. Anytime that he would blow the fuse with my mother we got a free holiday out of it and we would go on these adventures. When you consider I come from a family of 5 children that’s no mean fee!

What are your favorite bands right now?
Favorite bands right now hmm… Absolutely loving The Gossip! One of my songs “Big Girl You Are Beautiful” could have been written about her (Beth Ditto).
Going on major major Tom Waits binges and there’s a Ultra Super Hyper Condensed concentrated POP band from Sweden called Body Without Organs that have an amazing song called Sunshine In The Rain…that is my current unashamedly guilty pleasure.

What were some of you inspirations for the album?
There is an overall “concept” to this album. It has a coming of age theme dealing with my transition from late childhood into early adult hood. As a result, I deal with a lot of issues or stories where people are going through changes in their lives. Those are always fruitful episodes to write about.

A little off topic… favorite food? place to shop?
Favorite food: Growing up the way that I have I kind of assume that I can hop from country to country with every meal. But I’m a sucker for good French Fries with mayo.
Favorite place to shop: There is a shop I am dying to go to in San Francisco called MAC Modern Apparel as they stock one of my favorite designers, Walter Van Bierendonck.

If you had to choose a place to be, where?
I would like to be in the mountains. I am terrified of water and tend to never swim in the ocean, even when I am stuck on the beach for 4 weeks.

For MP3’s and more words: head to the Music Glob archives.

Mika: Myspace | Official Website

11/17/2006

Daniel Lanois Interview

written by: DAN
Daniel Lanois

Interview by Randall, a contributor to MusicGlob… he also writes his own blog at freethescene.com

In music there are definitely people who get more credit than others. Everyone knows who Sid Vicious is, what did he do? A lot of heroin, broke a lot of objects on stage, killed Nancy, and played bass for the Sex Pistols for a bit. Then there are those who are responsible for the setting the standard in modern music. Most people today don’t know this ,but there is one guy in this world who is responsible for helping invent ambient music and a lot of today’s great modern music. That man is Daniel Lanois. I met Daniel randomly. I was DJing a fashion show in Downtown Los Angeles. It was kind of funny considering all the fashion people there didn’t know who he was and were too concerned with who had the coolest pair of skinny jeans on to even care. Anyway, he was nice enough to let me hang out with him at his place in Silverlake and do this interview. Thanks again Daniel.

Randall: What do you do to coin your style for your music and producing? I know people as long I have been alive people have been trying to capture something similar.

Daniel: My style is really an approach, and the approach seems to vary from application to application. I have that beautiful Steinway piano behind us and I have a stereo microphone hooked up to it. If some happens to pay a visit and they play the piano and then we are ready to record. So preparation is a big part of what I have always done and it still is. I keep instruments plugged in basically and that increases my chance of some lovely spontaneous moment as people stop by. So there is not really a lot of preconception to my sound beyond preparation. That’s really what it’s all about. At any given time I will be excited about a few tools, a few bits of processing and I will become a master of those tools at that time, and that has evolved over the years

Randall:
In your opinion, how does your style fit in with modern music?

Daniel: I think there is a quality that has never gone out of fashion or has been given stylistic boundaries and that is having soul. And that is what we respond to as music listeners. When we get the impression that the person making the music is a believer, and they were just pouring themselves out and doing the best they could with what they had that is a very contagious quality. I think that is what is ongoingly present in my work. In reference to contemporary sounds it’s hard to define because it’s so referential living in post modern times, for example a lot of the rock and roll we listen to is borrowing values from the 70s and is essentially is using guitar basses and drums. As far as electronic comes that’s where the ambient sounds would exist in contemporary efforts.

Randall:
Last I heard you were working on producing Dashboard Confessional’s new album. What kind of touch did you plan to add to his music? According to Wikipedia ,which we all know isn’t always accurate, Don Gilmore took over production. I was hoping for you save poor Chris from the teeny bopper scene.

Daniel: I didn’t produce the Dashboard record, Don Gilmore did. I was asked to do a few demos with him and there were a couple of things that may survive the finish line, but Don Gilmore is the man. He went on the investigate other possibilities for himself.

Randall: Which Artists you have worked with that have been the most interesting to produce?

Daniel: Well I have been very lucky because I worked with some of the greats. Bob Dylan is very fascinating to me. He is one of American’s great lyrical treasures. It was very inspiring to work with him. Just sitting next to the man himself and watching him weave his lyrics was very fascinating to me. Eno, we always have done very beautiful and innovative work together. So I think about him all the time and the same kind of thing in the early 80s we did a bunch of ambient records and those values were a great part of my bedrock and have been with me ever since. Small toolbox, a lot of dedication and becoming a master of a few ways of doing things. I still do that now. Don’t embrace too much at one time only embrace what you are excited about.

Randall:
What work were you most proud of?

Daniel: The Pearl, which is an Eno/Harold Budd record. U2’s Achtung Baby was a strange and bizarre masterpiece. There was a lot of torment in that process, and it shows up in the music, but it has beauty in it as well and it’s kind of a strange furry beast that you would be happy to have sit at your dinner table.

Randall: When I last saw U2 on the Vertigo I noticed they had The Arcade Fire open for them for some dates and at an LA show they came out to “Wake Up” off of their latest album Funeral. Would you have any interest in ever producing them?

Daniel: Oh, I like them ,I heard them at Spaceland. I thought they were great. I think they have some special qualities. They are upbeat, rhythmic, kind of celebrative, but they have melancholy in there too. Joy surfaces as well it is a unique combination of feelings. When I did come out to the Spaceland show I did think that the singer had come out of the David Byrne School, but then a friend of mine said not only the David Byrne School, but the Bob Marley and David Bowie School. I guess they should carry the torch and show us to the next level. In regards to me producing them I operate by invitation.

Randall: You mentioned you go between 3 different locations Jamaica, Toronto, and of course Los Angeles. Why Jamaica, Why Toronto, Why Los Angeles?

Daniel: I went to work in Jamaica to work on some recordings with Jimmy Cliff; I kept my work papers alive and have a place down there. Toronto is sort of home, stomping grounds, I’m French Canadian I grew up in Hamilton which is next to Buffalo on the Canadian side, and that’s a stone’s throw from Toronto, so I keep a nice apartment in Toronto. Los Angeles I don’t know how that happened, my manager moved to Los Angeles and it sort of turned out like this.

Randall: Favorite Venue out here?

Daniel: I really like the Henry Fonda for sound and visibility. It has a good size. About 12-1500 people. I like the sort of panoramic view, it’s a nice long stage and the same thing kind of gets mimicked in the audience, everyone gets a nice point of view. For smaller venues Spaceland. The only problem is you can really only hear the band if you are in front of the stage. I did a little experiment there when I had a spontaneous show. I had these almost headphone packs you put on your belt and you broadcast yourself to that belt and you turn it up into an ear piece so you can hear yourself. That same little contraption can feed a powered speaker. So I had a few people in the audience wear the packs and walk around with blasters. So my sound would be coming out of these blasters and I peppered myself through the audience. It was kind of an experiment to get the sound out to the people.

Randall: Any local artists off the top of your head that have been impressive?

Daniel: I heard a nice band at Spaceland a few weeks ago Sea Wolf. I liked them I thought there was some imaginative writing, a nice way of looking at the world. It didn’t seem to be built on bragretry, or posing, nice songs, well presented, smart people lots of heart.

Randall: At the moment what has been inspiring you to write?

Daniel: I go back to a lot of old records for inspiration. There is a record I like if I am being Romeo I put on Stan Getz called Bossanova. I’ve been enjoying listening to my pedal steel guitar recordings that no body has ever heard. After the singing record we are putting out I am hoping to put out a steel guitar record. They are really beautiful and delicate.

Randall: From one of your more recent albums Shine “J.J. Leaves LA” is one of the best instrumental pieces I have recently heard these past few years. What inspired you to write that?

Daniel: I wrote J.J. Leaves LA in my theater workshop up in Oxnard. I had a nice little shop a fews years back in an old Mexican theater. It came out of a batch of steel guitar recordings that I did over a course of 3 weeks. I was kind of in a funky state of mind a little on the lonely side of the fence and I just poured those feelings into my instrument. Just sitting at my instrument playing and playing and playing I was also using this pedal called a boomerang which would allow me to put in a chord sequence, then I would press repeat to repeat the sequence, and then I would play on top of it so it was 2 steels and that was how JJ leaves LA was born.

Randall: Top 5 Desert island Discs of all time?

Daniel: Miles Davis- Kind of Blue, Jimi Hendrix- Are You Experienced, James Brown- What ever has sex machine on it, hah Just so I don’t’ lose my way keep my head on straight. I would take my own record Apollo a record I did with Eno and Rodger Eno out of a moment of bragetry. There is a record called Fresh by Sly and the Family Stone, it’s got the funkiest track ever on it called In Time. They do a nice combination of live drumming and beat box. On that track you hear that combination and it’s really really good.

Randall: What is the most modern piece of technology you are currently using to cut tracks and what is the most primitive?

Daniel:
I am using a computer based recorder. It is a Canadian machine they call a Radar. It’s a bit like protools; it’s in that realm, but a higher grade machine. I make a special effort to hold on to equipment I used for recording, for example I use an RCA ribbon mic there are two models a 77 and a 44, they are kind of like Bing Crosby sort of microphones, where you see old Nat King Cole pictures. The one looks like a Contact C cold capsule I think Larry King had one on his show as a prop for a few years. The 44 is a much bigger angular looking sort of thing. They have a ribbon in them and they give you a real velvety vocal sound so you get that Patsy Klein sort of Elvis sound because they are very kind to low and midrange and vocal sounds really the density is in the low midrange so you have to be careful not to notch that out and ribbon mics are great for that. There is a number of pieces use. I still have these Neve consoles for preamps. In my opinion the preamp is the one link in the chain that did not need to be reinvented. They were great in the 60s and 70s and are still great today. I have a bunch of effects boxes. Then musical instruments that is very important to my work. I collect pieces I got various organs, this Steinway piano, it’s been restored so it has that crystal top end and that deep bottom, hard to find on contemporary pianos. The contemporary ones are a bit harder more brittle. I like Korg too I was introduced to a Korg machine when I went to go work with U2. Edge was using a box called a Korg SDD3000 and I still have some of those as does he does. It’s just really the sound you get out of it. It’s an echo machine that has vco possibilities as well which is that human voice vibrato sound. Then this has an adjustable output so you can hit a guitar amp in a much hotter fashion than you would just straight out of the guitar. I also use an AMS harmonizer. It’s an English company that came out in the 80s and I have used the harmonizers every since.

Daniel Lanois Moog Bass Synth

A Moog Bass module used to create the low end on many of his recordings

Randall: Since you are one of the best ambient producers in music what are your favorite noises and least favorite noises. How do you go about capturing your favorite noises?

Daniel: It’s funny the term ambience gets thrown around very loosely. When I first worked with Eno we had very limited equipment to create those sounds. We had an AMS harmonizer, Lexicon Primetime, and an EMT 250 which is essentially a reverb type of unit. So we made the ambient sounds by re-routing back through the initial processing equipment. So lets say we do a bit of processing on a piano, we would print that sound onto the multitrack, which would then free up the processing devices to handle another job. We would send the already printed processing back to the original boxes. That’s when it starts getting interesting. That’s when you start adding VCO on top VCO and you get these little irregularities. The best of ambient music has that in it. The constant motion of nature that never repeats. Like when a sunlight shimmers on something it won’t be the same in a minute. It keeps moving. So introducing irregularities and the bits of flow that life has to offer within, that’s what gives ambience it’s trembling effect. There are lots of instant ambient sounds available at music stores. When you take them to the workplace and challenge them on with process on top of processing that’s when you get something really organic.

Randall: How do you think music is going to change in the next 10 years?

Daniel: Easy access to tools by everybody. The same thing is going to happen with filming everyone is going to have a camera. Renegade folks are going to make cool films. The successful films will not only belong to those with big bucks. I think the economy is going to be a big drive in music. I don’t think the ratio will ever change from special records to forgettable ones. I think that will always be the same, but there will be a massive amount of volume of it. So you are going to get a lot of people trying to get there foot in the door and to be noticed. So that is going to make it tough on listeners, because they are going to have to wade through more and you are only awake so many hours during the day. So we operate the same way by recommendation. The easy access to tools means you will get more renegade records out there. You might be fooled now a days so many times because you will find yourself listening to a stylist rather than an artist.

Randall: With music technology what is your preferred environment to enjoy music?

Daniel:
Some of my favorite listening moments have been by surprise. A lot of the time I will be in a coffee shop and there will be a smart person behind the cash register and they have made a compilation or pull a record out or play something I have never heard. I like surprises. If I put a record on myself I kind of know what is coming. That’s where I have enjoyed my own work best is when I happen to be in a place and someone plays it. Sometimes I think this a great record, but I would never put it on in my own house. I also like sound system installation. In Toronto I have a 5000 square foot loft and I am going to revisit this idea I experienced as a kid when I went to the Canadian National exhibition. It was the 60s pyshcadelic era and someone had did a beautiful installation with about 200 speaker cabinets, hung from the ceiling, all different kind of sized ones and they were all above your head almost like a warehouse kind of a place. The speakers were hung about 5 ft. about your head and they were piping electronic music of the time. Like early electro and it was fantastic. They had a way of distributing these speakers so everywhere you walked without bumping into anything you had an interesting sound. So I already started this experiment of installing a multi speaker system in Toronto.

Randall: What two artists would you like to collaborate with the most?

Daniel: There is a great singer from Montreal called Martha Wainwright. She visited me here a couple weeks back and we recorded one of her songs and she did a little something on one of my songs. When she was leaving I told her I was experimenting with different tracks and she said if you want to sample my voice on one of those and put it in be my guest. So I did that on the weekend and came up with a very very beautiful mixture. She is a very soulful singer. My track is just something I have had on the burner for a while, but I didn’t have any singing on it. It turned out beautiful so I am going to send her a copy of this and there is a chance if she is in agreement with this idea just start a new project you know give it a name and she can be the singer and I can be the musical mastermind.

Randall: What type of Edge do you think is best? No hat Edge? Cowboy hat Edge? Or Beanie Edge?

Daniel: Is this referring to doing eras? HAHA I’m going to get myself in trouble here. I love the Edge in anyway I can get him. I’ve had him in Barcelona, I’ve had him in Malibu, I’ve had him in Dublin, and I’ve had him in Berlin. I will take him anyway I can get him. What is nice about the Edge is he is a very consistent man and always dedicated to innovation and always open to surprises. Anytime we hook up I try and bring a pedal to the project some little gimmick. There have been a few of them. Eno brought in the whammy pedal somewhere in the late 80s. A lot of Edge sounds came out of that. I brought him this little Fuzz Wah pedal. Edge is always great. I do always have a soft spot for where he was it in the 80s. Perhaps it’s because we were absolutely dedicated to the work every minute of the day. I don’t know if he was wearing a hat then.

Randall: Last question you got to jam with Tortoise wasn’t totally awesome or what?

Daniel: AHH Tortoise we toured right across the country. A bus with 10 guys in it. It was great. They are really great people and real smart, really have done their homework. By the time we got to LA we were sounding pretty good ya know. Nice guys I wish them the best and we all share a passion for instrumental music so it was great.

Daniel Lanois: Official Website

9/09/2006

The Epsilons Interview

written by: randall
epsilons title

I have heard of these guys before, but I had never seen them. Anyway the first time I saw them play Ty the lead singer/guitar player was playing on top of Bills fridge with these intense garage/surf/punk songs. The majority of the bands age is 18 and The Epsilons are Retard Disco’s #1 selling band. I had to interview these dudes. Anyway here it is.

R: So the name the Epsilons where did you get that from? It sounds kinda Frat Boy?
T: Haha. We are no frat boys… The name epsilons comes from the Aldous Huxley Novel, “A Brave New World.” In the book, cloning is the only way human reproduction is allowed. There are 5 differet castes of clones, Deltas being the highest in social status, and Epsilons being the lowest.

R:How did you guys get together and get discovered. I mean you guys are at most 19?
T: We started the band when we were in high school. I believe it was the begining of senior year. We just tried to play as many shows as we could, gave away demos and such.

R:How did you come about being signed on Retard Disco?
T:We actually sent our demo CD to them. They dug it at first but said that they were’nt looking for any other bands to put out at the time. Andy and Alex (the masterminds behind retard disco) went to a couple of our shows, and I guess we grew on them. We were only supposed to put out a single, but it turned into a three records deal. Pretty badass if you ask me.

R:Your from Orange County whats it’s like down there music wise?
T:Well for a while it was a bleak and disheartening place filled with bros and shitty metal. Buyt lately all of our friends are bring back the scene so
there are a bunch of great bandds starting up . Watch out for them…

R:Do you consider yourself more of an LA band?
T:Kind of. We play in LA way more. Alot less people know us in Orange County than in LA.

R:Did you have an predetermined idea of what type of music you guys wanted to play before you formed the band?
T:When we started we were a Coachwhips/ Le Shok rip off. But then we just developed a different vibe.

R:What influences your music mostly?
T:Life experiences. Love. Getting pissed off. Wanting to be a part of
something.

R:Do you get offended if people classify you as garage?
T:Not at all. At the moment I am a garage fiend. Some of the best bands ever are garage bands. I think its the trashiest genre around.

R:Favorite Bands?
T: Right now:
The Intelligence
The Trashmen
Thee Headcoats
The Fall
The Milkshakes
The Rolling Stones
The Reatards

R:Newer Bands to watch out for?
T: WATCH OUT FOR THESE BANDS!
Charlie and the Moonhearts
Goosebumps
The Powerchords
Party Fowl!
The Mothballs

R:Your Plans For the Future?
T:I play in a band called the traditional fools and we are putting out a few seven inches and stuff up in SF (check us out if your in the bay area) I am starting a label (no biting records) and epsilons are putting out a new seven inch in two and a half months. School…..

So there ya go! For mp3s and more info check out their Myspace

Originally WWW.FREETHESCENE.COM

8/08/2006

HEALTH making noise in Los Angeles

written by: randall
Healthpic

About a 2 months ago I was trying to put together a show in Downtown Los Angeles. I was working with the infamous commander of Fort Cool and guitar player of Holy Buffaglow, Billy Gray and he recommended I contact this new band called HEALTH. They said they were too busy to play so orginally I said, “EEEFHHH this band!” Anyway I went to see them at Fort Cool the next week, to see what they were all about. They blew everyone’s mind. Then I knew why they were too busy. There is an incredible unsigned band in LA that would play for free, of course everyone is trying to book them. I ran into the bass player a few weeks later at a show at Zamakibo in Downtown LA, we shot the shit, bought burritos, and gold chains off some random dude in the street at 2:00am in downtown LA. Surprisingly they had never been interviewed so last week after a night at the Il Corral in East Hollywood we sat down and had HEALTH’s first interview:

Randall: The name HEALTH, why HEALTH, How did you get that name?

John HEALTH: HEALTH wasn’t the first choice. We came up with a bunch of names we thought were awesome, but they were all taken. Originally we wanted to be called “medicine”, but it was already taken by an LA shoegaze band from the 90s… HEALTH really isn’t a good name, it ends in a soft sound but we figured that if an awesome band was called HEALTH it would be an awesome name when associated.

Randall: Was there a concept to the band before putting it together?

John HEALTH:
When we first started our sound was totally different. We had, like 6 or 7 songs that were way more traditional, but that we weren’t pleased with. We weren’t sure how we were going to do it but we all felt that we had to drastically change our sound. It started to come together when we wrote Get Color, which was a more conceptual piece, then we wrote Girl Attorney and went off the fucking deep end.

Randall: Los Angeles Community the scene what do you think of it?

John HEALTH:
Amazing support, amazing people, amazing venues. I mean we go to il Corral every Monday regardless of whose playing, just to hang out. The energy here is totally positive and most of all FUN, which is so awesome because the vibe at Il Corral especially is this totally unpretentious party atmosphere for EXTREMELY experimental music.

Randall: Is that just the east end or what’s your opinion on the Westside?

John HEALTH: Do shows happen on the Westside?? I don’t know. I only go there to go to the beach.

Randall: Do you feel an Image is necessary to make it as a band?

John HEALTH:
I think image is just part of being a band, another thing that makes bands exciting. A lot of bands like say “fuck the image, maaan” but you’re gonna have one no matter what. I mean you can go really out of the way to portray yourself as unpretentious as possible, but ironically that’s your fucking image. I don’t see anything negative with a band thinking about their image, y’know their aesthetic their sound, artwork etc.

Randall: So what’s up with the Lance Armstrong thing you guys are pulling on stage?

John HEALTH: PHHHHH?!??!?What? HAHA

Randall: You know the tank top all that:

John HEALTH: That was just a one time thing. We usually never wear shorts, but it’s just been so fucking hot lately, and it was even hotter when everyone crammed into the Corral. Yeah that was the only time we’ve all worn shorts simultaneously.

Randall:
And the tank top?

John HEALTH: Dude that tank top’s fucking awesome! But yeah we don’t have this Lance Armstrong work out thing.

Randall:
I was thinking maybe the HEALTH thing had something to do with it?

John HEALTH:
No, No Jesus Christ. That would be retarded.

Randall : Which bands do you feel are hot and to watch at the moment locally and worldwide?

John HEALTH: Crystal Castles! Fucking best band! They’re from Toronto. Locally, Captain Ahab, Anavan, Cock In Black, Tik//Tik, Holy Buffaglow, A++, I could go on for a while.

Randall: Plans for the Future?

John HEALTH:
Were going to record a full length and go on a US tour in October.


HEALTH
is playing next week Monday August 14th at the Silverlake Lounge in Silverlake with the Antarticans. I highly recommend seeing this show it’s FREE

HEALTH: Myspace

MP3:
Health – Crimewave
Health – Courtship

7/19/2006

Under The Influence Of Giants Interview

written by: DAN
Under The Influence Of Giants

By some form of magic, I was able to get an email interview with Under The Influence Of Giants. They are the new hotness with their debut album coming out August 8.
To catch up on UTIOG, go to this post.

UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF GIANTS Email Interview
Answered by Aaron Bruno, lead singer

MG: With your debut album coming out August 8, how does it feel to be almost there?
UTIOG: It is pretty scary, but at the same time, a huge relief! its like getting someone an amazing christmas present but having to wait for two months to give it to them. well, this year, christmas is coming early, august 8!

MG: What are your favorite tracks on the upcoming album?
UTIOG: That changes all of the time. right now, i would have to say “stay illogical”, “got nothing”, and “meaningless love”. stay illogical is the closest we have come to a beatles/electric light orchestra kind of sound, it was not intentional but those are two of my favorite bands so i guess thats why. “got nothing” has that gangster grove in the chorus, it reminds me of nwa and prince when i was a young lad. “meaningless love” paints a unique picture of an epic story of love, doubt, and trust. plus the end makes me want to hate-fuck someone, ya know?

MG: I saw that you have ringtones available, do you guys use your own ringers?
UTIOG: No way! we here those songs enough, that would be a little obsessive, dont you think?

MG: 26,000 friends and growing on myspace, how does it feel to be that loved?
UTIOG: Actually, it is 30,000 as of two days ago, and it feels great, but not even close to the numbers that we are aspiring for.

MG: Your music to me has heavy influences of classic rock with that funky feel. What in your opinion would be the greatest vinyl to own?(Or what is your prized vinyl possession? – Mine in The Doors Greatest hits.)
UTIOG: We have this wine tasting record that is amazing for samples, i think that drew found it a year ago. i think that all of the old records sound good on vinyl, i have a pretty good size hip hop collection, from 2 live crew to biz markie, i could go on for days!

Under the Influence of Giants Under the Influence Of Giants: Myspace | Official Website



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