Displaying all posts tagged as 'deerhunter'.

DT probes… Real Estate - an interview with Martin Courtney

Real Estate are Martin Courtney, Matthew Mondanile, Etienne Duguay and Alex Bleeker of New Jersey. Think about surf’s most reverb drenched, ambient moments and you begin to come close to the Real Estate sound - it’s like they’ve just emerged from an underwater grotto to play a beach party in the misty twilight of dusk. There’s no sign of Dick Dale here, but there are definite signs of Mondanile’s solo project Ducktails. Real Estate released their debut self-titled record in Autumn 2009 on Woodsist, followed up by the Reality EP a month later on Mexican Summer. For a band that have such a dream-like sound, their choice of Reality for the name of their EP is interesting - their songs are about real and very normal things.

Ducked Tapes caught up with lead singer Martin Courtney of Real Estate at their show at the magnificent Nation of Shopkeepers in Leeds, UK. They were really swell chaps - we gave them a 6 Piece Percussion Set that they promised to use on upcoming songs.



Anyhow…

Here’s DT’s interview with Real Estate.


DT: So where did the name Real Estate come from? Are you big fans of the mortgage market?

MC: Let’s start from the beginning. We all grew up together, we all went to high school together; at least me, Bleeker and Matt did, and we all kind of like went off to college for a couple of years and then kind of moved home. I was just trying to look for a job or whatever and I was going to real estate school at the time. We started a band and had to give it a name and didn’t know what to call it - I thought it was a good name, ‘coz it didn’t really bring too much to mind really, it’s just kind of like a pretty generic sounding term. Then immediately afterward there’s like a housing crisis, mortgage bubble, all this shit happens and it’s kind of funny. It was actually Etienne that came up with the idea. It’s just a name.

DT: You’ve all done work with other bands and solo - obviously Matt did Ducktails - how was it coming together? Did it make it easier to work together?

MC: It was easy to start everything because we had all played together so much in the past, and then we all kind of went our separate ways for a little bit and came back - we’d always stayed in touch and everything, so it was the most natural thing to start a band. We know each other’s styles pretty well. Not only have we played with each other so much but we’ve done our own thing separately and stayed on top of that. It’s definitely pretty natural for us to play together.

DT: From the album and from the EP I get the sense that it’s a bunch of friends coming together and partying. Is that the kind of vibe when your playing together?

MC: Like I said it’s just the most natural thing for us to start a band - it’s just kind of what we did to hang out, you know play music because it’s the most fun thing that we all do together and it makes us happy.

DT: I read that you record at home. From the Reality EP especially you certainly get that sense. You can hear it in Atlas Sound’s latest record - it’s got this vibe to it that’s really relaxed and homely. Do you think recording it at home has affected the sound at all?

MC: Yeh, definitely. I guess that’s why people would call it lo-fi or whatever because we don’t have nice shit to record with. We just use like a cassette eight track and stuff. I think that there’s a lot less pressure when you record at home - you’re not spending money on a studio and you have as much time as you want to work on it. That EP is just like songs that were recorded over the course of a long time. It’s not like we sat down and decided to record it. That plays into the sound I guess. Maybe it’s laid back because we weren’t really thinking about it too much or something.

DT: You mention lo-fi. There’s obviously quite a strong scene on the East Coast. I find Real Estate really stands out from the crowd; it’s got a different kind of sound. Do you think that’s to do with you guys being from New Jersey - obviously people like Yo La Tengo are from there, did that heritage have much influence?

MC: I can’t speculate what we would’ve sounded like if we’d gone somewhere else, but I definitely think we didn’t try to make it sound lo-fi. We want it to sound as good as we can. Some bands it’s a way of recording, or it’s part of the sound, which is cool - it’s an aesthetic or something - but for us, if I could afford to have a really nice recording system I’d go for it. We like to keep it analogue and we all really like the way that cassette sounds. It makes it seems like a little worn in almost, like it’s almost old. If we tried recording digital it’d end up sounding shit ‘coz we don’t know how to do that. It’s just like what we know how to do.

DT: Your songs have this whole kind of haziness to them - I can really pick up the sense of a coast or beach in them. How do you feel playing them throughout Europe during the coldest and darkest part of the year? Does it make them feel different when you play them?

MC: We’ve played the songs a lot, we’ve done a lot of touring recently. The actual structures of some of the songs - we’re pretty used to playing them, not to say that I’m bored by it or anything. I don’t think it’s too much about where we are that much, but then at the same time it’s kind of like interesting being… I guess the other times we’ve toured the weather’s been a little bit nicer, a bit warmer, so it is a little different. I don’t know, I think for us it’s not really about the season or whatever. I know a lot of people associate it with summer, a summery vibe, but there’s room for that in the winter time too, even more so. People want to feel that kind of vibe.

DT: Yeh, it takes you somewhere else this time of year.

MC: That’s good to hear!

DT: I noticed a lot of the kind of subject matter is normal life. The whole sound of the album is quite free wheeling, but it’s got this restraint in the heart of it, holding back from being overdone or anything. Do you think that comes from the subject matter you’re writing about?

MC: It’s just our way of arranging the songs. I didn’t want, on the album, to have too much that wasn’t already there. I didn’t want to add too many layers of different things, except maybe to have like multiple guitar tracks to maybe fill it out a little bit. We tried to keep each track kind of simple. The subject matter of the lyrics, that’s just what we read about - I don’t know what else to write about, just everyday life I guess. I does fit with the music in that they’re both kind of simple I guess.

DT: Do you have any particularly favorite artists that that you’d recommend our readers checking out?

MC: That’s funny - right now they’re playing Kurt Vile [on the Nation of Shopkeeper stereo. Ed] - we all really like him a lot. His solo stuff is really awesome. He’s on a kind of similar circuit to us, we’ve played with him a couple of times. He’s definitely on a really good label and stuff - it’s cool that we got to play with him. Also this band Woods - we go on tour with them next month, and we played at SXSW with them. We also all really like them. We feel a kinship with them ‘coz they’re our friends and stuff. Our sound’s different but sort of similar. We all like to jam and like improvise.

DT: Do any of you guys have day jobs or is it music full time? Do you have any recommendations about how people starting out split their time?

MC: None of us can afford to do music full time. That’s the short answer. I have a job. I work at a real estate office and kind of do bookkeeping sort of stuff and boring shit there - it’s the way to pay my rent. Two other people in the band live at home with their parents just kind of doing music and stuff but don’t have jobs. Etienne lives in Brooklyn and he makes money putting on shows and stuff - he’s sort of like a promoter I guess. None of us make enough money to pay our rent. Hopefully that’ll happen at some point - not yet!

DT: Yeh, I heard Deerhunter could only quit their jobs after Microcastle.

MC: You always hear about bands that you think are like…you know… everyone I know that’s in a band has a job - you have to be doing really really well to make money off of it. It’s kind of depressing to think about [laughs]. There’s really not that much money to be made, but at the same time we all feel so lucky to be able to be over here in Europe touring and stuff - that’s amazing and we’re not paying for it out of our own pockets. It’s a free trip pretty much - I mean we’re not gonna make very much money off the tour, we’re basically paying for our plane tickets and all the stuff through the shows - but it’s worth it. For sure.

DT: Do you have a favorite children’s character?

MC: Probably Little Pete from Pete and Pete, I don’t know if you guys have that show over here.

DT: It’s ok - High Places listed like 7 and we didn’t recognise any.

MC: [laughs] It’s this awesome show that was on Nickelodeon. It’s this live action show about the suburbs. It’s kind of funny, I feel like the aesthetic of Pete and Pete fits a little bit with our music. It’s pretty weird. Plus the band that did all the music for the shows was this band called Polaris. This guy Mark Mulcahy kind of like had a solo thing going on too. That band is really awesome too, you should check them out. They made one album, which is like the soundtrack to this show. It’s funny ‘coz it’s like really solid, really good music. It’s pretty much a kids tv show but you can still watch it today and be super amused by it. Steve Buscemi’s in it, and… I can’t believe I can’t remember this dude’s name…. “I wanna be your dog”…

DT: Iggy Pop?

MC: Iggy Pop’s in it. He plays one of the girls’ fathers. There’s a lot of kind of indie… Michael Stipe was in it. It’s a really good show. That’s Little Pete. He’s a prankster.



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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



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