NEW MUSIC By - · PDF filewho include Etta James andBillieHoliday. In partsthere’s...

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3 3 4 IT’S been 14 years since Swedish-Ethiopian singer Emilia Mitiku had a hit with Big Big World. Mitiku has found her feet and her own “vintage pop” sound, which reflects her influences, who include Etta James and Billie Holiday. In parts there’s beauty Winter Beach and You’re Breaking My Heart show off her raspy soul voice – but her cover of Dream A Little Dream doesn’t do the classic song justice and the jaunty Ooh La La takes the retro jazz vibe a step too far. JS DUBSTEP is proving more than a passing fad. Modestep latched on to the scraggy, over-used end of the genre when they formed a couple of years ago. They have now produced a debut record designed to be turned up to 11 by the next genera- tion of adolescents seek- ing the “cool” feeling of a sub bass vibrating their eyeballs. Impeccable in terms of quality or originality it may not be, but this album most cer- tainly does its job. PC EMERGING from the US state of Michigan is this quietly compelling band. Over sympathetic folk and country textures, frontman Matthew Milia delivers two discs of thoughtful rites-of-pas- sage songs. Wistful, melancholic, nostalgic, it’s like opening a family album of sepia- tinted photographs that summon fading memo- ries. The poetic quality of Milia’s tales recalls the work of Richmond Fon- taine’s bril- liant Willy Vlautin. That’s high praise indeed. SC CULANN WHO: PJ Kelly (vocals/ guitar), Greg Irish (guitar), Calum Davis (bass), Ross McCluskie (keys), Sean Kelly (drums/vocals) WHERE: Irvine, Ayrshire FOR FANS OF: Biffy Clyro, Pink Floyd, Frightened Rabbit JIM SAYS: It’s difficult to write about any Ayrshire act without referencing Biffy Clyro. The fact is they’ve become huge ambassa- dors for the area where they still live, and it’s no coincidence the Ayr- shire scene is so healthy. From singer- songwriters to hard rock, there seems to be an endless flow of tal- ent coming through. I’ve been keeping an eye on Culann for a while. Singer PJ Kelly acknowledges the impact Biffy have had. He told me: “Biffy are a big inspiration to bands in Ayrshire. They have achieved success on their own terms and that is something that every unsigned band should aspire to.” Despite their prog rock tendencies, I’m really digging what Culann do. With my radio head on, five min- utes is far too long for a single, yet the songs have enough twists and turns to maintain inter- est. A mix of classic and contemporary rock, with a smattering of folk, the self-titled album’s an impressive debut. PJ’s brother Sean, drummer with the band, said: “We have a pretty eclectic taste in music. We draw influence from Scots, Irish and English tradi- tional music, plus differ- ent schools of punk, metal and alt rock, and generally any music that is inventive and imaginative.” The album was mas- tered by Jon Astley, whose credits include The Who, The Stones and Led Zeppelin and the band have just been nominated for Best Rock/Alternative act at the Scottish Alter- native Music Awards (SAMA’s). They will appear at the Dirty Weekender launch night at Bakers in Kilmarnock on Febru- ary 23. They also sup- port hot Australian indie outfit San Cisco at the Art School in Glasgow on March 3. More: facebook.com/ culannband Jim will be playing Culann on In:Demand Uncut this Sunday from 7pm on Clyde 1, Forth One, Northsound 1, Radio Bor- ders, Tay FM, West FM & West Sound FM. See indemandscotland.co.uk EMILIA MITIKU I Belong To You MODESTEP Evolution Theory FRONTIER RUCKUS Eternity Of Dimming By SIMON COSYNS AS far as this beguiling album is concerned, Anaïs Mitchell is a fair maiden astride a “milk white steed” and Jefferson Hamer is her knight in shining armour. They perform exquisitely crafted interpretations of centuries-old English and Scottish folk songs about lovers, rogues, betrayal and murder. But they come with a twist, for Anaïs and Jefferson are American and they made the album in Music City itself: Nashville. What makes it so effective is the way the pair have captured the spirit of the originals while adding harmonies, fiddle, accordion and pump organ . . . all of which are typical of so much roots music in the States. Though called Child Ballads, it has nothing to do with children or children’s songs. It’s named after Sir Francis James Child, a Victorian luminary who collected five volumes of these wonderful hand-me-down songs. Two of them, Sir Patrick Spens and Tam Lin, were made famous by folk-rock giants Fairport Convention in the late Sixties and now we can marvel at the latest chapter in their journey. So here, exclusively for SFTW, Anaïs, the singer/songwriter behind the hugely acclaimed folk opera Hadestown, tells the story of her fascinating new project. WHEN did you first discover the Child ballads? When I was a kid, we had a book in our house called Rise Up Singing. It was a hippie-era hymnal and included folk songs, labour/union songs, and a few of the Child ballads (there had been a resurgence of the ballads in the Sixties via Joan Baez, Bob Dylan etc). That was my first exposure but I didn’t fall head over heels till about five years back when I started listening to Andy Irvine & Paul Brady, Mar- tin Carthy, Nic Jones, Dick Gaughan, Anne Briggs, Fairport Convention, Pent- angle and the list goes on. What fascinated you about them? As a songwriter, I’ve always been interested in storytelling, and the Child ballads are such fascinating stories, masterfully told. They’re so sprawling, epic, fantastically poetic and they’re different from American folk music, which is also an inspiration but tends to be more stark and repetitive, with more of a percussive, African influence. I love the long lyric lines and especially the imagery of the Child ballads. Can you describe some of the typical themes of these great old songs? As a non-academic, here’s my sense of them: A lot of the ballads are love stories and it seems like many of the protagonists are women, young women who have to “win” a husband or a father for their babies. There are supernatu- ral stories of fairies and witches who cast spells . . . lots of shape- shifting. There’s betrayal and murder too, and some of the ballads depict spe- cific political events. There’s nearly an entire volume dedicated to Robin Hood stories. I haven’t read them all, but I’ve made a dent. How come you hooked up with Jefferson Hamer to make the album? I wouldn’t have made this album without Jefferson. When we first met, Jefferson was playing in my band and we immediately sensed that we had a special harmonic thing together. Jefferson’s one of the greatest harmony singers I’ve ever met and we shared a passion for this foreign folk music. The making of Child Ballads was a deeply collaborative project, it was really a twin-mind thing. How did you get that warm live-in- the-studio feel for the recording? We recorded the album really live, both guitars and both vocals at the same time, sitting as close as we could get away with, given the microphone placement, never once putting on headphones in the studio. We worked in Nashville with a beautiful producer called Gary Paczosa, who is most famous for his work with Alison Krauss. He’s got a wonderful set-up and a great ear for acoustic instruments, and he really helped to get the breath into these songs and the focus on the storytelling. How did you set about giving English and Scottish folk songs an American twist? I think both of us wanted to be able to sing these songs that we love so much in our own country and have them be understood in real-time by Americans who might not be familiar with the archaic language. We wanted to be able to stand in our own shoes and sing them and not feel we were playing dress-up at a Renaissance fair or something. So in order to make them feel authentic coming out of our mouths, they had to be bent a little this way and that. On the other hand, we love the exoticness of these songs so much and we didn’t want to dilute that too far. As far as the instrumentation goes, that was fairly intuitive and natural. Gary lobbied for accordion, we lobbied for fiddle. We worked with some wonderful Nashville musicians and they couldn’t help but bring their Amer- ican personalities to the music. What do you think of the Fairport Convention versions of songs such as Tam Lin and Sir Patrick Spens? We love Fairport Convention and were very inspired by their versions of Tam Lin and Spens. We actually did an entirely dif- ferent recording session about a year before the sessions that became Child Ballads. In that early session we were somewhat Fairport-inspired, Jefferson played electric guitar and we laid down some drum tracks and had a bit of a fantasy of making a highly produced folk-rock album. But ultimately we felt we were biting off more than we could chew and we wanted to hear the songs stripped back again to the way we first played them, just the two guitars and two voices, with the stories front and centre. By TIM NIXON “WE’RE like this ten-legged, ruthless, brutal machine now,” states Foals frontman Yannis Philippakis with unbridled confidence. Boasting a third album rich in grandiosity, subtlety, vision and muscularity, it’s hardly surprising he’s not shying away from celebrating their career high. If justice prevails, Holy Fire will propel Foals to the highest echelons of a UK band scene badly in need of leadership. The 11-song collection is the sum of many parts, not least their self-assuredness as a song-writing unit and their broad-reaching ideals. “The only rule was to not have any rules,” explains Yannis, 26, between bites of a burger at a north-west London pub. “We didn’t have a set of defined goals. There was very little analysis and there was almost no talking about the material as we were writing it. “We didn’t want it to be something that engaged with the brain we wanted it to engage from the neck down. Appeal “This time in the band recently has felt like the most liberated out of all the years we’ve been together.” Foals travelled the globe, borrowing from a range of environments along the way as they honed their compositions. They spent time at a friend’s river house in the suburbs of Sydney, playing outdoors to breathe life and universal appeal into their creations. Yannis says: “I think there’s something blinkered about making music that’s for a niche and that can only operate in one sphere. “That’s why we went outside to record in Sydney you don’t want to make music that only sounds good in one borough of London, you want it to sound good in all types of places.” And there’s plenty to please all kinds of tastes in Holy Fire. The starkest example of their inhibition-shedding is second track Inhaler, launching into life after instrumental opener Prelude. It features their heaviest moments to date, with distorted riffs aplenty and Yannis letting rip vocally over the choruses. The catchy mood-lifting pop of My Number and Bad Habit follow, but it’s the building beauty of Late Night that’s bound to attract legions of new fans and earn its place in lists of 2013’s finest tracks. Out Of The Woods and Milk & Black Spiders prove they’ve lost none of their prowess for dance- infused gems, while the bluesy rock of Providence provides a dramatic shift in direction. Closing tracks Stepson and Moon burst with atmosphere and adventure, bringing the album to a conclusion full of heart, soul and emotion. The collection is the work of a band striving for both uniqueness and mass appeal and pulling each off with authentic aplomb. Yannis explains: “It’s a bipolar band. We have a desire to make music that is fresh, bold, that has courage to it, is experimental and is not derivative. “We also have a desire to make music that has that unexamined joy of pop music. I love both equally.” Many bands have tried and failed to strike that balance, but studio titans Flood and Alan Moulder spearheaded the recording sessions in the faith that Foals had the skill set and drive to successfully navigate that tricky terrain. Holy Fire is only the fourth album they’ve co-produced, having helmed Nineties classics The Downward Spiral by Nine Inch Nails and Smashing Pumpkins’ Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness, and more recently Sam’s Town by The Killers. Yannis recalls: “We were interested in working with them and they were interested in working with us, which was a huge honour. “We had other people in mind but the moment we met them, it just clicked.” They decamped to the producers’ studio in Willesden, north-west London, for three months. Flood and Alan were determined to capture Foals in their purest form, without dehumanising their performances with studio effects. “We played live as a band as much as we could,” Yannis reveals. “There was very little post- production and we left in the imperfections. What saddens me is that so many records by supposedly free-thinking alternative bands are played through a digital matrix.” Throughout the process, the producers frequently fooled Foals into believing they were recording demos. It was a crafty move designed to rid them of any tension, and many of the so-called practice runs ended up as final takes. “We were duped,” laughs Yannis. “That happened a lot. Stepson and Moon were done like that. “Later on in the process, we’d go there in the evening with a couple of bottles of wine and we’d play a song all night five or six hours without interruption. “Once we were tired of playing it, we’d come out and they’d say, ‘We’ve got it’. “In that process, you forget yourself when you’re allowed to just play and play and play. They captured the essence of songs in the best way possible.” Holy Fire is out on Monday and Yannis is justifiably itching for people to hear it. However, his fervour is tempered by fears that the album format is dead, because of the vast conveyor belt of music available at no cost. He muses: “The problem is that the internet has created this flippant, appetitive, gimme gimme gimme attitude where people think they’re entitled to free music. Mildew “You can download all of Fela Kuti’s or Frank Zappa’s life work in ten minutes and it will sit there and rot and collect virtual mildew at the bottom of your iTunes. “There was a communicative process there when it was made — an inbuilt respect in the music. “You respect the audience and you want to make something of value and the audience respects that you put your heart and soul into it. “I’d like to think that that’s still there but it worries me that you make something that falls on otherwise-occupied ears.” Trying to keep pace with the rapid-fire, restless modern marketplace is a source of frustration for Yannis. As a result, he’s already plotting his escape should “living within this system” become too intolerable. He says: “The hamster wheel has always been there but technology has cranked it up so that the hamster is running at 100 miles per hour now instead of a gentle trot. “I’ve got to the point where I feel like if it starts to bother me that much, I will leave and live in the Greek countryside and grow artichokes.” But vegetable production’s gain would be a devastating loss to music. Whether Holy Fire becomes immortalised as Foals’ best work remains to be seen, but it’s the pinnacle of their career so far. And, for now at least, Yannis remains committed to the cause. “Music’s the most powerful thing on the planet and it can change people’s lives,” he says. “We have a responsibility to do that.” NEW NEW MUSIC MUSIC By JIM GELLATLY By JIM GELLATLY Friday, February 8, 2013 53 1S

Transcript of NEW MUSIC By - · PDF filewho include Etta James andBillieHoliday. In partsthere’s...

Page 1: NEW MUSIC By - · PDF filewho include Etta James andBillieHoliday. In partsthere’s beauty –Winter Beach and You’reBreakingMyHeart show off her raspy soul voice –but her cover

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IT’S been 14 years sinceSwedish-Ethiopian singerEmilia Mitiku had a hitwith Big Big World.Mitiku has found her

feet and her own “vintagepop” sound, whichreflects her influences,who include Etta Jamesand Billie Holiday.In parts there’s beauty

– Winter Beach andYou’re Breaking My Heartshow off her raspy soulvoice – but her cover ofDream A Little Dreamdoesn’t do the classicsong justice and thej a u n t yOoh La Latakes theretro jazzvibe a steptoo far.

JS

DUBSTEP is provingmore than a passing fad.Modestep latched on to

the scraggy, over-usedend of the genre whenthey formed a couple ofyears ago.They have now

produced a debut recorddesigned to be turned upto 11 by the next genera-tion of adolescents seek-ing the “cool” feeling of asub bass vibrating theireyeballs.Impeccable in terms of

quality or originality itmay notbe, butthis albummost cer-tainly doesits job. PC

EMERGING from the USstate of Michigan is thisquietly compelling band.Over sympathetic folk

and country textures,frontman Matthew Miliadelivers two discs ofthoughtful rites-of-pas-sage songs.Wistful, melancholic,

nostalgic, it’s like openinga family album of sepia-tinted photographs thatsummon fading memo-ries. The poetic quality ofMilia’s tales recalls thework of Richmond Fon-taine’s bril-liant WillyVlautin.T h a t ’ s

high praiseindeed.

SC

CULANNWHO: PJ Kelly (vocals/guitar), Greg Irish(guitar), Calum Davis(bass), Ross McCluskie(keys), Sean Kelly(drums/vocals)WHERE: Irvine, AyrshireFOR FANS OF: BiffyClyro, Pink Floyd,Frightened RabbitJIM SAYS: It’s difficultto write about anyAyrshire act withoutreferencing Biffy Clyro.The fact is they’ve

become huge ambassa-dors for the area wherethey still live, and it’s nocoincidence the Ayr-shire scene is sohealthy. From singer-songwriters to hardrock, there seems to bean endless flow of tal-ent coming through.I’ve been keeping an

eye on Culann for awhile. Singer PJ Kellyacknowledges theimpact Biffy have had.He told me: “Biffy are

a big inspiration tobands in Ayrshire. Theyhave achieved successon their own terms andthat is something thatevery unsigned bandshould aspire to.”Despite their prog

rock tendencies, I’mreally digging whatCulann do. With myradio head on, five min-utes is far too long for asingle, yet the songshave enough twists andturns to maintain inter-est. A mix of classicand contemporary

rock, with a smatteringof folk, the self-titledalbum’s an impressivedebut. PJ’s brotherSean, drummer withthe band, said: “Wehave a pretty eclectictaste in music. We drawinfluence from Scots,Irish and English tradi-tional music, plus differ-ent schools of punk,metal and alt rock, andgenerally any musicthat is inventive andimaginative.”The album was mas-

tered by Jon Astley,whose credits includeThe Who, The Stonesand Led Zeppelin andthe band have justbeen nominated forBest Rock/Alternativeact at the Scottish Alter-native Music Awards(SAMA’s).They will appear at

the Dirty Weekenderlaunch night at Bakersin Kilmarnock on Febru-ary 23. They also sup-port hot Australian indieoutfit San Cisco at theArt School in Glasgowon March 3.More: facebook.com/culannband Jim will beplaying Culann onIn:Demand Uncut thisSunday from 7pm onClyde 1, Forth One,Northsound 1, Radio Bor-ders, Tay FM, West FM &West Sound FM. Seeindemandscotland.co.uk

EMILIAMITIKUI Belong To You

MODESTEPEvolution Theory

FRONTIERRUCKUSEternity Of Dimming

By SIMON COSYNS

AS far as this beguilingalbum is concerned, AnaïsMitchell is a fair maidenastride a “milk white steed”and Jefferson Hamer is herknight in shining armour.They perform exquisitely craftedinterpretations of centuries-oldEnglish and Scottish folk songsabout lovers, rogues, betrayal andmurder.But they come with a twist, forAnaïs and Jefferson are Americanand they made the album in MusicCity itself: Nashville.What makes it so effective is theway the pair have captured thespirit of the originals while addingharmonies, fiddle, accordion andpump organ . . . all of which aretypical of so much roots music inthe States.Though called Child Ballads, ithas nothing to do with children orchildren’s songs. It’s named afterSir Francis James Child, aVictorian luminary who collectedfive volumes of these wonderfulhand-me-down songs.Two of them, Sir Patrick Spensand Tam Lin, were made famousby folk-rock giants FairportConvention in the late Sixties andnow we can marvel at the latestchapter in their journey.So here, exclusively for SFTW,Anaïs, the singer/songwriter behindthe hugely acclaimed folk operaHadestown, tells the story of herfascinating new project.WHEN did you first discover the Childballads?When I was a kid, we had abook in our house called Rise UpSinging. It was a hippie-erahymnal and included folk songs,labour/union songs, and a few ofthe Child ballads (there had beena resurgence of the ballads in theSixties via Joan Baez, Bob Dylanetc). That was my first exposurebut I didn’t fall head over heelstill about five years back when Istarted listening to AndyIrvine & Paul Brady, Mar-tin Carthy, Nic Jones, DickGaughan, Anne Briggs,Fairport Convention, Pent-angle and the list goes on.What fascinated you aboutthem?As a songwriter, I’vealways been interested instorytelling, and the Child balladsare such fascinating stories,masterfully told.They’re so sprawling, epic,fantastically poetic and they’redifferent from American folkmusic, which is also an inspirationbut tends to be more stark andrepetitive, with more of apercussive, African influence.I love the long lyric lines andespecially the imagery of the Childballads.Can you describe some of the

typical themes of thesegreat old songs?As a non-academic, here’s mysense of them: A lot of the balladsare love stories and it seems likemany of the protagonists arewomen, young women who have to“win” a husband or a father fortheir babies. There are supernatu-ral stories of fairies and witcheswho cast spells . . . lots of shape-

shifting.There’s betrayal andmurder too, and some ofthe ballads depict spe-cific political events.There’s nearly an entirevolume dedicated toRobin Hood stories. Ihaven’t read them all,but I’ve made a dent.How come you hooked

up with Jefferson Hamer to make thealbum?I wouldn’t have made this albumwithout Jefferson. When we firstmet, Jefferson was playing in myband and we immediately sensedthat we had a special harmonicthing together.Jefferson’s one of the greatestharmony singers I’ve ever met andwe shared a passion for thisforeign folk music.The making of Child Ballads wasa deeply collaborative project, itwas really a twin-mind thing.

How did you get that warm live-in-the-studio feel for the recording?We recorded the album reallylive, both guitars and both vocalsat the same time, sitting as closeas we could get away with, giventhe microphone placement, neveronce putting on headphones in thestudio.We worked in Nashville with abeautiful producer called GaryPaczosa, who is most famous forhis work with Alison Krauss. He’sgot a wonderful set-up and a greatear for acoustic instruments, andhe really helped to get the breathinto these songs and the focus onthe storytelling.How did you set about giving Englishand Scottish folk songs an Americantwist?I think both of us wanted to beable to sing these songs that welove so much in our own countryand have them be understood inreal-time by Americans who mightnot be familiar with the archaiclanguage.We wanted to be able to standin our own shoes and sing themand not feel we were playingdress-up at a Renaissance fair orsomething.So in order to make them feelauthentic coming out of our

mouths, they had to bebent a little this way and that.On the other hand, we love theexoticness of these songs so muchand we didn’t want to dilute thattoo far.As far as the instrumentationgoes, that was fairly intuitive andnatural. Gary lobbied foraccordion, we lobbied for fiddle.We worked with some wonderfulNashville musicians and theycouldn’t help but bring their Amer-ican personalities to the music.What do you think of the FairportConvention versions of songs suchas Tam Lin and Sir Patrick Spens?We love Fairport Convention andwere very inspired by theirversions of Tam Lin and Spens.We actually did an entirely dif-ferent recording session about ayear before the sessions thatbecame Child Ballads. In thatearly session we were somewhatFairport-inspired, Jefferson playedelectric guitar and we laid downsome drum tracks and had a bit ofa fantasy of making a highlyproduced folk-rock album.But ultimately we felt we werebiting off more than we couldchew and we wanted to hear thesongs stripped back again to theway we first played them, just thetwo guitars and two voices, withthe stories front and centre.

By TIM NIXON

“WE’RE like this ten-legged,ruthless, brutal machinenow,” states Foals frontmanYannis Philippakis withunbridled confidence.Boasting a third albumrich in grandiosity, subtlety,vision and muscularity, it’shardly surprising he’s notshying away fromcelebrating their careerhigh.If justice prevails,Holy Fire will propelFoals to the highestechelons of a UK bandscene badly in need ofleadership.The 11-song collection is thesum of many parts, not leasttheir self-assuredness as asong-writing unit and theirbroad-reaching ideals.“The only rule was to nothave any rules,” explainsYannis, 26, between bites of aburger at a north-west Londonpub.“We didn’t have a set ofdefined goals. There was verylittle analysis and there wasalmost no talking about thematerial as we were writing it.“We didn’t want it to besomething that engaged withthe brain — we wanted it toengage from the neck down.

Appeal“This time in the bandrecently has felt like the mostliberated out of all the yearswe’ve been together.”Foals travelled the globe,borrowing from a range ofenvironments along theway as they honed theircompositions.They spent time at a friend’sriver house in the suburbs ofSydney, playing outdoors tobreathe life and universal appealinto their creations.Yannis says: “I think there’ssomething blinkered about makingmusic that’s for a niche and thatcan only operate in one sphere.“That’s why we went outside torecord in Sydney — you don’twant to make music that onlysounds good in one borough ofLondon, you want it to soundgood in all types of places.”And there’s plenty to please allkinds of tastes in HolyFire.The starkest example oftheir inhibition-sheddingis second track Inhaler,launching into life afterinstrumental openerPrelude. It features theirheaviest moments to date,with distorted riffs aplentyand Yannis letting ripvocally over the choruses.The catchy mood-lifting pop ofMy Number and Bad Habitfollow, but it’s the buildingbeauty of Late Night that’s boundto attract legions of new fans andearn its place in lists of 2013’sfinest tracks.Out Of The Woods and Milk &Black Spiders prove they’ve lostnone of their prowess for dance-infused gems, while the bluesyrock of Providence provides adramatic shift in direction.

Closing tracks Stepson and Moonburst with atmosphere andadventure, bringing the album toa conclusion full of heart, souland emotion.The collection is the work of aband striving for both uniquenessand mass appeal — and pulling

each off with authenticaplomb.Yannis explains: “It’sa bipolar band. Wehave a desire to makemusic that is fresh,bold, that has courageto it, is experimentaland is not derivative.“We also have adesire to make musicthat has thatunexamined joy of

pop music. I love both equally.”Many bands have tried andfailed to strike that balance, butstudio titans Flood and AlanMoulder spearheaded therecording sessions in the faiththat Foals had the skill set anddrive to successfully navigate thattricky terrain.Holy Fire is only the fourthalbum they’ve co-produced,having helmed Nineties classicsThe Downward Spiral by Nine

Inch Nails and SmashingPumpkins’ Mellon Collie And TheInfinite Sadness, and morerecently Sam’s Town by TheKillers.Yannis recalls: “We wereinterested in working with themand they were interested inworking with us, which was ahuge honour.“We had other people in mindbut the moment we met them, itjust clicked.”They decamped to theproducers’ studio in Willesden,north-west London, for threemonths.Flood and Alan weredetermined to capture Foals intheir purest form, withoutdehumanising their performanceswith studio effects.“We played live as a band asmuch as we could,” Yannisreveals.“There was very little post-production and we left in theimperfections. What saddens meis that so many records bysupposedly free-thinkingalternative bands are playedthrough a digital matrix.”Throughout the process, theproducers frequently fooled Foals

into believing they wererecording demos.It was a crafty move designedto rid them of any tension, andmany of the so-called practiceruns ended up as final takes.“We were duped,” laughsYannis. “That happened a lot.Stepson and Moon were done likethat.“Later on in the process,we’d go there in the eveningwith a couple of bottles ofwine and we’d play a song allnight — five or six hourswithout interruption.“Once we were tired ofplaying it, we’d come out andthey’d say, ‘We’ve got it’.“In that process, you forgetyourself when you’re allowedto just play and play andplay. They captured theessence of songs in the bestway possible.”Holy Fire is out on Mondayand Yannis is justifiably itchingfor people to hear it.However, his fervour istempered by fears that thealbum format is dead, becauseof the vast conveyor belt ofmusic available at no cost.He muses: “The problem isthat the internet has createdthis flippant, appetitive,gimme gimme gimme attitudewhere people think they’reentitled to free music.

Mildew“You can download all of

Fela Kuti’s or Frank Zappa’slife work in ten minutes and itwill sit there and rot andcollect virtual mildew at thebottom of your iTunes.“There was a communicativeprocess there when it was made— an inbuilt respect in the music.“You respect the audience andyou want to make something ofvalue and the audience respectsthat you put your heart and soulinto it.“I’d like to think that that’sstill there but it worries me thatyou make something that falls onotherwise-occupied ears.”Trying to keep pace with therapid-fire, restless modernmarketplace is a source offrustration for Yannis.As a result, he’s alreadyplotting his escape should “livingwithin this system” become toointolerable.He says: “The hamster wheelhas always been there buttechnology has cranked it up sothat the hamster is running at100 miles per hour now insteadof a gentle trot.“I’ve got to the point where Ifeel like if it starts to bother methat much, I will leave and livein the Greek countryside andgrow artichokes.”But vegetable production’s gainwould be a devastating loss tomusic.Whether Holy Fire becomesimmortalised as Foals’ best workremains to be seen, but it’s thepinnacle of their career so far.And, for now at least, Yannisremains committed to the cause.“Music’s the most powerfulthing on the planet and it canchange people’s lives,” he says.“We have a responsibility to dothat.”

NEWNEWMUSICMUSICBy JIM GELLATLYBy JIM GELLATLY

Friday, February 8, 2013 531S