Displaying all posts tagged as 'dan deacon'.

DT Probes… Ecstatic Sunshine - an interview with Matt Papich

Ecstatic Sunshine is the project of Matt Papich and a revolving troupe of minstrels, based in Baltimore, USA. Their music defies description - it’s an intricate mix of looping psychedelia, noise and offset timing; it’s as subliminal as it is sublime. 

You can get an idea of the loose direction sound by looking at some of the fellow travellers on their label, Carpark Records - Dan Deacon, Beach House and Toro Y Moi to name just three. ES released their latest album Yesterday’s Work in December 2009, and it’s arguably their most accomplished and coherent to date. Here’s a suitably tripped out video for one of the tunes, Conch:



Ecstatic Sunshine are doing a full US and Europe tour this summer, and are playing at Ducked Tapes’ own night at The Basement, York on July 21st 2010.


Anyhow…


Here’s DT’s interview with Matt Papich of Ecstatic Sunshine.



DT: Your songs have such intricate texture to them, so much delicate, and, for want of a better word, psychedelic stuff going on - yet it all feels very deliberate. How does your writing process work for something like this?

Matt: I think what your hearing is the amount of attention paid to individual sounds. At every step of the process - from building loops, to tracking, to placing the sounds and recording them in rooms - I’m trying to stay tuned in to each sound, to keep hearing it, and to reduce it to it’s most unique form. This is done with nearly every sound in the songs; guitar, percussion, melodic synthesizers, and discreet synthesized sounds all get equal attention. It’s a way to build something that is hyper-real, or at least attempts to be, and I think hyper-reality and the psychedelic are related in some ways.

DT: The songs are instrumental, but I do still feel that there’s something definite being communicated in each track. Do you have something certain in mind when you’re writing or playing, or is it more moments of ‘free-expression’? 

Matt: No, I don’t really have something certain in mind when I’m beginning, but I’m looking for something specific or definite. I’ll generally mess with an instrument, like a synthesizer let’s say - work on a patch and develop it until it pops or resonates and forms a kind of identity. Its about hearing some realness amongst abstraction, which really isn’t a fresh idea - you could say the same for a lot of modernist painters..

DT: I’ve read a lot about your gradual picking up of more and more technology as ES progressed. What gear’s really getting you going at the moment?


Matt: Recently I’ve been lucky enough to get to use an old Lexicon Prime Time delay. Its has a very cool early dancehall kind of sound when you route percussion through it. I also think Korg Kaoss pads are a really amazing cheap tool that is poorly used a lot of the time, but can be so good, and very simple. 

DT: Do you think that it’s been important that you ‘grew into’ technology rather than start at a technologically advanced point? I guess what I’m getting at is, do you think if you’d had access to all these computer programs etc… at the beginning, ES would’ve turned out for better or for worse?

Matt: Well, it’s hard to say. I’m just using the technology that has been arousing. Our recordings may have sounded better, or maybe they’d just be kind of flat. Either way, its all about finding the sound that is most relevant at the time, for the shows or for the records - working with what is available, exploring it, trying to make it contemporary.

DT: Do you have any particular ethos about recording in terms of analog or digital, or do you just go with whatever sounds right for the particular record?

Matt: No real ethos. A lot of times I’ve used both analog and digital. It makes sense to use a mixture of those qualities - because we’re always hearing all the types of recorded sound, we don’t listen to just contemporary music (hopefully), and we don’t necessarily listen to just one format of music. I hope to produce recordings that are flexible enough to reflect this.

DT: You’ve often spoken about your love of photography and taking pictures on tour. Do you think work in other artistic media has influence, and perhaps helped, you as a musician?

Matt: Completely. In part because if you keep a diverse practice, you also keep a diverse lexicon. Ecstatics as a project has been very heterogeneous, sonically, aesthetically, and also in terms of players. I think most importantly, ES started in a completely conceptual framework, as part of a class at the Maryland Institute College of Art called Parapainting, taught by the poet Jeremy Sigler. So, if you look all the way to it’s inception, the project has always been in bed with the better sides of the arts.

DT: You’re from Baltimore, a place with a rich musical heritage (Ian MacKaye, ‘nuff said) and some really exciting contemporary artists such as Dan Deacon. How has living in Baltimore shaped ES’s sound and musical outlook?

Matt: Baltimore is one of the more reality based cities in the US, unlike New York which is market based, or LA which seems primarily imaginary. If you live here and are tuned in you can have a very actual life. It is a city in a basic form. So it lends a kind of primary and minimal environment. I think that environment is the one that is most important to me now, whereas in the past, the influence was mostly coming from the scene and peers.

DT: Which bands or artists are making the music that’s exciting you the most right now? Is there anyone you’d really like to work with or do a split with? 


Matt: New electronic music from the UK is getting a lot of play for me right now. Mount Kimbie and James Blake are making really gorgeous and contemporary sounds to my ears. I also like the new To Rococo Rot record, in terms of the gestures it makes towards band dynamics along with loop based composition. I’d love to work with Vladislav Delay, I’d really just be watching the working though.  


DT: Do any of the ES lineup have day jobs? Do you have any tips on how to effectively manage music making when faced with having to work for a living?


Matt: It just takes time. Ultimately that is what is valuable, and if you can increase the value of your time, or the time you own, whether it is by making music or art or otherwise, then you’re really beginning to acquire more or better time, which is all I think of really wanting anyway.


DT: What’s your favourite children’s character and why?

Matt: Charlie Brown for sure. He’s like the John Cage of cartoons.



Comments

DT probes… High Places - an interview with Mary and Rob

High Places are Mary Pearson and Rob Barber of Los Angeles. Their music is a collection of noises both familiar and unnatural - what stands out is the warmth within each carefully glitched melody or percussive interlude, understated but at once at the forefront of their tracks. High Places are set to release their second long player High Places vs. Mankind in the spring. As the title suggests, Mary and Rob are set to explore the existential on the new record. If High Places’ 2009 single I was born is anything to go by, being in touch with your humanity is a very good thing.

High Places have an extensive European tour planned throughout the United States and Europe (dates below) starting in March. If you’re not convinced yet, check out the below - it should whet your appetite.



Anyhow…

Here’s DT’s interview with High Places.


DT: Your new record is going to be called “High Places vs. Mankind.” Does this confrontational title have a particular meaning? Can we expect a more provocative album?

Mary: The title is pretty tongue-in-cheek. It’s also a bit of a nod to all those great dub records like Scientist vs. Prince Jammy - Big Showdown, King Tubby Studio vs. Channel One Studio, etc.
Rob: Yeah… I also sort of like to interpret it like as a little more based-in-reality, human-condition interpretation of “Fearless Vampire Killers” by the Bad Brains.

DT: I read you guys don’t use laptops. You still manage to create very complex, yet careful and organic sounds without using well-known software like Max / MSP. Was this a deliberate choice for you?

Rob: Well, some REALLY crazy recordings have gone down in history, pre-computer. Electric Ladyland, Les Paul, Bebe Baron, King Tubby, Schoolly D’s first couple of 12”s. We aren’t against all these great tools that are available, but we certainly don’t want to be reliant on them for us to get out there. I personally HATE reading manuals. I just want to start hammering our the sounds that I foresee in my head. To record myself, I personally use a 13 year old program that really only captures the sound, and allows you to simply just cut it up, and move it around. I mostly like to experiment outside the computer, then just capture it and arrange it. That being said, we did actually get more comfortable with more traditional instruments on the new record. For example, on the first track, when you hear the first snare hit, it is just a simple 808 snare, through a bunch of spring reverb. I like to sometimes reference a really specific sound, because it is familiar and just makes you feel good. I also missed playing guitar. As far melodic brainstorming, guitar is the most direct way for me. We used tons of guitar in the past, but heavily shrouded in overdubs, which we had to rely on sampling in the live show. This record, I wanted to be more immediate and live-minded, but still hopefully lush and enveloping.

DT: Your music features abstract qualities in equal measure with beautiful pop moments. What’s the writing process behind this kind of sound?

Mary: Thank you. We pass a lot of small ideas back and forth. Those ideas eventually build into a bunch of layers, and then we edit them down together into a song format.
Rob: On this new record, we would both work separately, in very different ways, and then get together to take all these little pieces of recordings and trying to arrange them. It makes for interesting results sometimes when we come together with each of our parts, not having heard the others, and cosmically enough, they will fit together in an interesting way.

DT: You’ve toured with some really great artists such as Deerhunter, No Age, Lucky Dragons and Dan Deacon. Have you got any plans to release collaborative records with anyone? Or is there anyone you’d like to?

Rob: Well we have done a few splits, with Soft Circle, Xiu Xiu, and Aa. But as far as combining ideas with another person/group, that has only really been done live, with Lucky Dragons and Hisham from Soft Circle.
Mary: We’re always up for a good collaboration. I’ve always wanted to play bassoon with Antony or to make some beats for someone like Rye Rye.

DT: You guys recently moved to Los Angeles – there’s so much exciting and varied music coming from there right now. Did the music scene there play a part in the move? How do you think it is affecting / will affect your sound?

Rob: Well, it definitely is awesome here. I love so many people, all the rad stuff they make. But I have to be honest, if all these rad people lived in a place with humid gnarly summers, and rainy-just above freezing winters, and land-locked, nowhere near and ocean, I think we would have maybe not moved there. In other words, the weather, and the Pacific and the mountains and the desert, and all the wildlife and nature in CA definitely seduced us. The awesome stuff happening here is just the icing on the cake!

DT: You both have independent projects you work on alongside High Places. Has it been important to you to do other music outside the band? How has it affected High Places’ sound?

Mary: Our solo projects have been around longer than High Places, so it’s important to us both to keep them fairly active. I tend to use my project Transformation Surprise as an outlet for short recorded sketches and videos. Rob performs pretty frequently under the name The Urxed. The High Places sound has really always been the sum of our two parts. The more we work on music, be it for our solo projects or the band, the more we figure out about composition and recording, and I think that can only be positive for us.

DT: You both have artistic backgrounds, but from different perspectives. Rob yours seems more visual, and Mary you were classically trained. How does this affect the working dynamic of High Places?

Mary: I can’t tell if it’s the difference in our schooling or in our temperaments, but I do seem a bit more left-brained in my approach to art and music, and Rob seems more right-brained. One weird thing that can happen during classical music studies is that you find you’re not really listening to yourself play. You get so robotic sometimes playing off a sheet of music. Rob has taught me a lot about listening and thinking about music in terms of textures and colors.
Rob: But at the same time, I have learned a lot about proper music ideas from Mary, which helps in our song craft. Prior to HP, my music theory was like a purely aesthetic but in a gut-instinct-cave-person- banging-on-a-log approach.

DT: Which bands are making music that’s exciting you the most right now?

Mary: I can’t wait to hear the new Awesome Color record. That band is so talented, I know it will be great. I get really inspired by prolific musicians like Will Oldham, Beck, Jack White. They clearly have that creative impulse to release song after song, and to take on lots of projects.
Rob:
Yeah Will Oldham for sure. We saw him randomly get up and play last night in this tiny tiny bar, and he just owned the room. He is heavy. I love music that is weird, but still makes you feel something inside, makes you move or it can make you feel intensely comforted. Javelin, Silk Flowers, Infinite Body, Hecuba, Lichens. I am really excited to hear what No Age is cooking up in the studio right now. Frankie Rose is totally doing pop music right.

DT: Do you have day jobs? Do you have any tips on how to effectively manage music making when faced with having to work for a living?

Mary: We don’t have day jobs anymore. I had a steady babysitting job for awhile when we lived in New York. I was really close with the family and they were super supportive of High Places. They never gave me a hard time for going on tour.
Rob:
We are very fortunate, that being only two people, who are also both totally frugal, that we can get by on HP. I was teaching printmaking at an art school in NY, but then touring took over and I couldn’t commit to a whole semester. Best life change I ever made. It gets a little dicey financially, but we at least have our freedom. As far as tips…I know this might come across as a bit tuff-love, but I would have to say I definitely sacrificed my comfort and financial stability for my creativity. If I didn’t make that change, I think my brain would have severely melted down.

DT: What’s your favourite children’s character and why?

Mary: Ramona Quimby from the Beverly Cleary books. Pesky little sisters who love cats are the coolest.
Rob:
So I guess that makes me Superfudge? “Flat” Stanley and Lamb Chop were pretty rad too. Charles Schulz circa 1950-54 was amazing. Oh, jeeze, there are just too many! We can’t forget most Jim Henson characters. Sid and Marty Krofft characters are pretty much the most bizarre creations of all time. OH! and DEFINITELY Charles Nelson Reilly as the evil wizard on Lidsville.


High Places full European tour schedule for Spring 2010:

03. 19 Los Angeles, CA The Echo
03. 24 San Francisco, CA Rickshaw Stop
03. 27 Portland, OR Berbati’s Pan w/Bear In Heaven
03. 28 Seattle, WA The Crocodile w/Bear In Heaven
03. 30 Salt Lake City, UT Kilby Court
03. 31 Denver, CO Hi Dive
04. 01 Omaha, NE Slowdown Jr.
04. 02 Minneapolis, MN Triple Rock Social Club w/Tobacco
04. 03 Chicago, IL Schubas
04. 05 Columbus, OH The Summit
04. 07 Philadelphia, PA Kung Fu Necktie
04. 16 Madrid, Spain La Casa Encendida w/Javelin
04. 17 Barcelona, Spain LA2
04. 18 Valladolid, Spain Espacio Joven
04. 20 Paris, France Point Ephemere
04. 22 Milan, Italy Amigdala Theatre
04. 23 Pisa, Italy Fosfeni Festival (Citta Del Teatro)
04. 24 Dudingen, Switzerland Bad Bonn
04. 25 Prague, Czech Republic Bio Oko
04. 26 Zagreb, Croatia AT
04. 27 Graz, Austria Explosiv
04. 28 St. Gallen, Switzerland Grabenhalle
04. 29 Dijon, France Kill Your Pop Festival (Atheneum)
05. 01 Antwerp, Belgium Trix
05. 03 Brighton, UK Freebutt
05. 04 London, UK Cargo
05. 06 Glasgow, UK Nice & Sleazy
05. 07 Sheffield, UK The Harley
05. 08 Leeds, UK Brudenell Social Club
05. 10 Amsterdam, Netherlands De Nieuwe Anita
05. 12 Berlin, Germany Spex Festival
05. 13 Copenhagen, Den03.k Rust
05. 14 Stockholm, Sweden Debaser
05. 15 Malmo, Sweden Debaser
05. 20 Lisbon, Portugal ZDB
05. 21 Porto, Portugal Plano B



Comments