Posts Tagged ‘Q&A’

NO PAIN

hurts

Appearing on the BBC Sound Of 2010 long list earlier in the year, Hurts have been steadily building hype ever since. The electro-infused two piece hail from Manchester and consist of Theo Hutchcraft (vocals) and Adam Anderson (synths). Today sees the release of their debut album, Happiness, and we Q+A front-man, Theo.

You’re called Hurts and the album is called Happiness - is this an intentional contradiction?
Actually, it’s not. All the songs on there are about the pursuit of happiness, which is often a sad, dramatic but hopeful road.
When we started writing the record we were very insecure and unhappy, and by the time we finished it we were happy. Just about.
 So happiness is the one thing which ties it all together.

Does pain bring enjoyment?
One usually follows the other. But pain is sometimes necessary, because it helps you find happiness in small things.

What are your inspirations when making music?
Films, photographs, Depeche Mode, Gary Barlow and women.

The album has a track which is a duet with Kylie - how long have you been a
 fan of her music?
I Should Be So Lucky was released when I was a 1 year-old, so she’s pretty much been there throughout my life. But really, I fell for her the first time I heard Confide In Me. To hear a darkness come from such a delicate voice was amazing. That’s where she shines.

You recently also covered one of her songs - what other songs would you like
 to cover?
We’d never really thought about it for a very long time. But recently we’ve been thinking of all sorts. Everything But The Girl, Dean Martin. It’s also nice to cover girls’ songs, give them a man’s perspective. We did Diana Vickers - Once, once.

Who else would you like to duet with?
Clare Maguire.

You’ve been around the festival circuit this summer - what was your 
highlight?
Too many to mention, this year was our first year of playing festivals. But Japan was an unbelievable experience. Not only for the place, the people and the general madness of it all, but the festival (Summer Sonic) was one of the best I’ve been to, and also the best we’ve played. 3000 people coming to watch us at 11am was just breathtaking.

Where is your favourite place to perform?
We did a lot of our first gigs in churches, so that used to be my favourite, because of the experience of it all. But increasingly I’ve got used to the intense club shows. It’s an odd thing to pack that much drama and an opera singer into a small dark room, but it works. At the same time though, the more unique venues make the whole thing more beautiful.

Being from Manchester, are you fans of Corrie?
Corrie is like the punk rock of all the soaps. Eastenders is quite serious and noirish sometimes I think, but Corrie doesn’t give a fuck. Some times it’s almost like a Carry On comedy, some times someone is on a totally extreme killing spree. And the knicker-factory is called ‘Underworld’. The characters in Corrie are just like that in real life too, I once saw Mike Baldwin [Johnny Briggs] in a betting shop in Manchester and I saw Roy [David Neilson] feeding the birds in a park with a beige rain mac on. Didn’t have a transexual on his arm though.

Do you support Man United or Man City?
I’m a (sometimes reluctant, often disappointed) Middlesbrough fan, but Adam has Red flowing through his veins.
HURTS_sq_cover2.indd

Happiness, the debut album by Hurts, is out today under Major Label

FLAWLESS

bbc1

When hype surrounds a band to hysterical levels, it can be disappointing when the end result doesn’t match the fanfare. Fortunately Bombay Bicycle Club didn’t disappoint when they released their debut album, I Had The Blues But I Shook Them Loose, last summer. As something of a reward to their fans, the band have produced Flaws – not quite a new album, but an acoustic EP of old and new tracks aimed as a bit of a bonus to last years debut. We Q+A Suren de Saram, drummer and backing vocalist from the band, to find out about the new record, summer plans and eating curry.

WONDERLAND: Describe your music in five words
Suren de Saram: Electronic and folk-tinged indie

What influences you when making a record?
Just life and our experiences really. We’re quite young and quite down-to-earth. A lot of the songs on the first album are about pretty typical teenage things. When we’re not doing band stuff now we just hang out with our old school friends. Obviously we’re not teenagers any more so I expect the second proper album will be a bit less angsty, but it will still be influenced by experiences from our normal everyday lives.

Who had the worst record collection when you were at school?
Probably me. I’m pretty sure I would have had the weirdest anyway. It would probably have been a mixture of jazz and classical CDs, some Now compilations, some Offspring albums and maybe some Britney Spears singles.

How did Flaws come about?
We’ve always had that side to us. We’re interested in and play lots of different kinds of music. Jack writes a lot of “acoustic” songs. Before Flaws we had only ever really used acoustic songs as B-sides to singles, but we decided that that wasn’t really doing them justice and there was enough material to make a nice little album, which is how Flaws came about. Flaws was recorded in a very low-key way. The majority of it was done in Jack’s [Steadman, vocals] bedroom.

You’ve been touring a lot recently – what have been the highlights?
There have been quite a few…going to Japan for the first time in December was really exciting. We were only there for three or four days but we tried to make the most of it. We had a headlining gig at KOKO soon after when we were back in London and I think that was one of the most memorable gigs we’ve ever done for all of us. We had the London School of Samba come on and play with us for the encore…it was a really great moment. The NME tour in February was also a good laugh. It was a lot of fun touring around with three other bands and everyone, bands and crew, was really friendly.

You’re doing a few festivals this year too – are you looking forward to any in particular?
Probably Glastonbury the most. We played there last year for the first time and it was pretty amazing. We all camped for the whole weekend. We have a good slot on the John Peel Stage on Friday this year. Unfortunately I couldn’t stay for the weekend this time as it was my sister’s wedding on the Saturday!

What music do you listen to on the tour bus?
Depends what mood we’re in really. I remember us listening to the Strokes album all the way through on a couple of tours. If we’re in more of a party mood we might put on some electro. On one of our recent tours in Europe we had a two day drive to get to Italy and so we bought a Garage Classics compilation at a service station to relieve the boredom. It had some pretty banging tunes on it but unfortunately we found out our tour manager has a deep hatred for garage.

Are there any bands you would want to collaborate with?
Probably someone from a completely different musical world to us…I don’t know. It would be cool to work with the London School of Samba again.

Have you ever eaten at Indian restaurant chain, Bombay Bicycle Club?
Yeah, they invited us for a free meal when they found out about us. The food’s delicious. The portions are a bit on the small side but it’s very tasty.

What is the band’s favourite type of food? Are there any food/drinks you would demand (diva style) to have backstage for gigs?
We like lots of different kinds of foods - Indian, Chinese, Japanese… We used to go for Indian or Chinese buffets right before gigs but we usually ended up feeling ill on stage so we don’t really do that any more. In fact we had to delay going on stage once because one of us was being sick after we’d gone to a Chinese buffet. We all like sushi too. There is a really good sushi place around the corner from where we rehearse so we go there a lot. We went through a period of asking for sushi on our rider…that’s the most extravagant thing I can think of.
bbcflaws

Flaws by Bombay Bicycle Club is out today under Island records.

SURF’S UP SA

samlam

It’s not all about football in South Africa this summer as the next leg of the O’Neill Coldwater Classic series takes place on the African continent this month. Known for it’s wild surfing conditions, South Africa is just one of four locations in this competition designed to test the world’s greatest surfers in the toughest elements.  We Q+A Sam Lamiroy, one of the UK’s finest surfers and ambassador for the O’Neill Coldwater Classic series about his involvement in this thrilling event.

WONDERLAND:  How long have you been surfing for?
Sam Lamiroy:  It’s been a fair while now. I started when I was 11 years old up in Newcastle, and being 34 now that makes it about …. wow.. 23 years, and counting!

What first attracted you to the sport?
Probably the sense of freedom, adventure and, of course, the tropical waters of the North East of England!

Where is your favourite place in the world to surf?
Having done about 10 circumnavigations of the globe it actually becomes more and more difficult to pick just one place. Some favourites are Barbados, Australia (west and east coast), Indonesia and Canada. Some are warm with perfect waves, some cold with perfect waves – just great places with lovely people and decent surf!

Where is the most difficult place to surf?
It doesn’t get much more difficult than Hawaii - really heavy waves, heavy locals and heavy crowds. In a word – the place is HEAVY!

How important is a wetsuit when competing?
Not so important in tropical waters, rather essential if you are paddling out into somewhere like Thurso, Scotland, where the water temperature can be as low as 3 degrees Celsius - bitter. But the new wetsuits, like the O’Neill   “psycho freak” - which actually has air chambers integrated into the neoprene for improved insulation - are so amazing that you can wear a wetsuit as thin as 3/2 mm in freezing water…. amazing!

How did you become involved with the O’Neill Coldwater Classic tournament?
I have been riding for O’Neill for over 12 years now - and having grown up surfing in freezing waters there was a natural link. I was really honoured to be the ambassador for the Scotland leg of the series last year, and I also take on some of the presenting/ webcasting duties for most of the events- basically just talking nonsense for hours on end!! From time to time I even get through a heat or two…

What are you most excited about with the competition?
Personally I just love the whole thing – the actual competing, finding new waves, meeting new people, opening up a whole new cold water surfing realm.

Are you looking forward to the South African heat of O’Neill Coldwater Classic?
I think it’s going to be a great event. They had amazing looking waves last year - and South Africa is just a magical surfing destination. I have spent a fair amount of time around Cape town, and just simply love the place.

What goes through your mind while riding a wave?
Very little indeed… you are mainly concentrating on the immediate future, looking at what the wave is doing and adjusting your approach accordingly. It sometimes feels like ‘being in the moment’ as eastern philosophies refer to it - no previous, no past just the present… enlightenment through surfing.

What’s your favourite way to waste time?
Hanging out with my wife and little boy - he’s just turned 18 months, Sleeping, golfing, reading, waiting for the best wave of the day - or simply sitting in the sun, sugary cocktail in hand, pondering the mysteries of life…. bliss!

The O’Neill Coldwater Classic series South African leg takes place on the 26th July in Cape Town.

REAL RUSSIA

Olga Chernysheva, From Guard Series, 2009, Courtesy Galerie Volker Diehl, Berlin and Foxy Production, New York © Olga Chernysheva

Olga Chernysheva, From Guard Series, 2009, Courtesy Galerie Volker Diehl, Berlin and Foxy Production, New York © Olga Chernysheva

If the papers and current waves of American hysteria are to be believed - Russian spies are everywhere.  With this in mind, there hasn’t been a better time to highlight other things Russia and from tomorrow, Olga Chernysheva takes over Calvert 22 (the UK’s first not-for-profit foundation specialising in contemporary art from Russia and Eastern Europe) in East London with a collection of water colours, photography and moving images that uncover a more realistic modern day Russia.  The artist has represented Russia at various international art events and this year shone through 500 entrants from all over the world to be shortlisted for the Artes Mudi at the National Museum Cardiff. We Q&A the artist about her memories, influences and experiences.

WONDERLAND: What is your earliest memory of art?
Olga Chernysheva: I was a Soviet child, so I grew up on Soviet animation. My favorite animated film was “My Green Crocodile” by Vadim Kurchevsky. It is about a crocodile who falls in love with a cow. The crocodile would read poetry to the cow. The poem went like this: Baba, babbububu, bububu. The cow understood everything. The film was the product of a breakthrough across the boundaries of ethnicity and race that happened in the 1960s. The film may not have been particularly influential, but it was very convincing in explaining the theme of love as a penetrative force. In this way it reminds me of in the work of Tolstoy, when Levin is in the process of writing the last lines of a love letter and immediately gets an answer.  Animation in the USSR was made by talented adults who were often pushed into a niche profession. As a result, they created high culture for children.

What made you want to become an artist?
In my family, no one else liked to draw so my humble interest in art was considered extraordinary. One of my drawings has become almost like a watchword between my father and I. It was called “View of a Rabbit from Behind.” It consisted of two sausage shaped ears and three circles: head, body, and tail. Not long ago, my father had surgery and I used this simple drawing to communicate with my father and help him overcome the effects of his anesthetic. Initially I wanted to become an animator but when I was done with my studies at film school, almost all of the studios had closed. At this time, animators did ‘mechanical’ work on commission from studios in the West and directors looked for any possibility to survive.

Which other artists do you admire?
There are many including George Kuchar and Dmitry Mitrokhin, a Soviet artist that I have recently rediscovered. In England I admire the work of Mark Wallinger.

You create video art, photographic art and watercolours – do you have a preferred method of expression?
I don’t think so. I like a quotation by Ingres: “You have to draw with your eye.” Ideally, that involves putting together the elements of a world. Like in poetry, when a chaotic variety of words and sounds suddenly give rise to meaning. It is a construction that lives on as a new form.  It’s like Alexander Vvedensky wrote: “I heard the horses cantering, and couldn’t understand their whispering, I knew that this was an experiment of turning that metal object into tenderness, sleep, sadness, into a drop of light.” The material used for this transformation is of secondary importance to me.

How do you find your subjects for your photographic work?
I don’t look for them. I usually react when it is impossible not to. Or I take pictures of everything without any intention whatsoever.

What was the first camera you bought?
I bought a Leica several years ago. At the institute I made sketches instead of taking photographs. When I started hanging around with people from the world of television, I would take pictures on the cameras that were around without ever really knowing much about them.

How did it feel being short-listed for this year’s Artes Mundi Prize?
I thought of this invitation as an opportunity to take part in an exhibition with strong artists and work with the National Collection of Wales.

What are your plans for the summer?
This summer, I would like to make some black and white photos of naked bodies in landscapes. These naked bodies would be almost unnoticeable so as to not add any tension to the photographs. The inspiration for these photographs comes from a memory I have of seeing a man crossing a river. He put all of his things into a neat bundle on his head, including his boots and crossed naked. It was like he was wearing the river, like the hidden root of a world in which there is darkness, gravity, and a milky light. I want to depict nudity like Cezanne did, as everyday spontaneity.

Olga Chernysheva, Calvert 22, July 1st - 29th August 2010, 22 Calvert Avenue, London, E2 7JP

WORD TO YOUR BROTHER

bhnabhna2

A Bathing Ape and previous collaborators, Neighborhood, have teamed up again to produce a new capsule collection called Brotherhood.  The brands have been collaborating on occasion since 1996 and this time emphasize the biker/1950’s car club approach of Neighborhood which is met with the distinctive shapes and playfulness from A Bathing Ape. We Q+A Neighborhood designer Shinsuke Takizawa about this latest collaboration with BAPE®.

WONDERLAND: What are your inspirations when designing?
Neighborhood: Music, movies, car culture, motorcycle culture, street culture, art, nature, animals, etc.

How did the new collaboration with BAPE® happen?
From a natural conversation with NIGO.

Do you find it an easy to collaborate on fashion designs?
It may seem easy, but it is not easy. Timing, amount of trust in the relationship, level of creative thought, etc.  If everything does not link, it does not become a good project.

How did you find the balance of getting both the BAPE® and Neighborhood aesthetics into the products?
Trust

This isn’t the first time Neighborhood and BAPE® have collaborated - why do you think the two brands work so well together?
History

Do you have any brothers (both blood related and those close friends that cross that boundary)?
Hiroshi Fujiwara, Hikaru, Skate-thing, Tetsu Nishiyama, and many others.  I feel the guys that made the history of Harajku together are like that.

Which other brands would you want to collaborate with?
CHANEL

Where is your neighbourhood?
Harajuku

Available from the end of June at BAPE® stores and online.

TEST THE WATERS

surferblood_bandphoto01_300dpi

Also releasing a new album today are another American band. Hailing from Palm Beach, Florida, the music of Surfer Blood sounds as gloriously sun drenched as you would imagine the band’s home environment would be.  Releasing a debut LP today titled Astro Coast, we Q&A Surfer Blood’s lead singer JP Pitts about surfing, music and summer.

WONDERLAND: Describe your music in five words
JP PITTS: Rock and roll high school.

Can you explain the band name Surfer Blood?  Do you have a vendetta against surfers?
Not at all.  I’m a really live and let live type of guy.  The name was kind of something we stumbled on by accident.  Tyler [Schwarz, Surfer Blood's drummer] was totally into surfing in high school, he had the spiked hair with the bleached tips and everything.  Him and I were on a road trip to Gainesville one time and he had this tacky surfer bag from his surfer days.  I was making fun of him for it and the name surfer blood came up.  We immediately liked it and knew we wanted to use it as a song title or something, when everything came together with the band last year all of us agreed that it was the best fit.  Its a cool twist on some classic imagery and it has this sense of invulnerability and youthfulness that really comes through in our music.

Can any of you surf?
I can but I’m not great.  Tyler is still pretty good, he always tries to get me to go out with him but I always find a way to excuse myself.

Have you had any memorable encounters with sea life?
Jellyfish are evil critters that live in the ocean near my house.  They have no brains and no hearts and are composed of 98% water.  They also have super long tentacles that will hurt you really badly if you come into contact with them and you will be out of commission for days.  There are hundreds of myths about how to treat a jellyfish encounter, but I have never known any to be particularly effective.  Sea lice are annoying too, they are “marine ectoparasites that feed on the mucus, epidermal tissue and blood of host marine fish” according to Wikipedia.  They leave little bumps on your skin that kind of look like mosquito bites.

What are your main influences when making music?

My friends, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, nature, not having fun in college and wondering why, other bands, the future.

Which other artists do you most admire?
I really admire Kim Deal, she is still so excited to play shows and make records after all the years she’s been playing with the Pixies and the Breeders.  I really appreciate her zest and energy.  I also look up to David Bowie and David Byrne, they always have an ear to the ground and are constantly collaborating with young artists.

Which musicians would you most want to collaborate with?
I always say Jeff Mangum, even though I would be so intimidated.  I am just curious about his creative process, his music just seems to erupt from inside him.  I was so shocked when I heard that In the Aeroplane Over the Sea was recorded in a week or something, that’s nuts!  I would love to spend some time in a studio with him writing and recording.

There is a very summer feel to the LP, what are your plans for summer 2010?
Surfer Blood is doing a ton of festivals in the US, Europe and Japan this summer, so I’ll be doing a lot of traveling.  I am getting to see the world!  When I’m home I’m going to try and start an exercise regiment, Tyler and I used to go running on the beach, I want to get back into that.  I also want to work on some new songs.

What has been your most memorable gig to date?
On one end of the spectrum, our show at Market Hotel was a total blast.  It is an abandoned building in Brooklyn where they put on shows, I heard it shut down recently, which is a real shame.  There were nine hundred people at the show that night and the floor was starting to bow.  Absolutely nuts.  On the other end of the spectrum, our first show at Koko in London was also insane, it was really cool to play on the same stage as The Clash.  That theater is really beautiful, I hope we can play there again soon.

Swim shorts or Speedos?
Swim shorts. I’m not ready for a speedo.

picture-2

Surfer Blood’s debut LP Astro Coast is out today under Kanine Records

CLOCKWORK

clock-opera-004a

Highlighted on a number of “Ones To Watch” lists earlier this year, London band Clock Opera today release their first single for 2010 (and their second to date) A Piece Of String.  Not only does the new single answer the age-old question how long is a piece of string? (it’s 3 minutes 27 seconds - who knew!?) but it’s an instantly interesting single with it’s mash up of guitar and improvised instruments creating the track.  We Q&A lead vocalist Guy Connelly about his influences, performance highlights and touring with Marina & The Diamonds.

WONDERLAND: Describe your music in five words
Guy Connelly: Scissors, glue, Velcro and love

What is your favourite opera?
Winfrey.

You’ve remixed quite a few other artists music, which track from the past decade would you most like to mix up?
Police Story by Dirty Projectors. Anything by them really. They have more melodic ideas in a minute than a lot of albums.

Which artists would you most like to collaborate with?
Department of Eagles, Gold Panda, Joanna Newsom (some of my guitars sound like harps after coming through the mill, so she’d fit right in). Leonard Cohen to stand around and smile at everyone. Roy Orbison’s ghost.

What song would you like to do a cover version of?
The Electrician by Scott Walker. I heard Squarepusher play it in a DJ set the other day and thought, we should do that.

You toured with Marina & The Diamonds – did her dress sense rub off on you guys at all?
For a while there, I did feel at ease with my more eccentric jumpers

Where is your favourite place to perform?
The only festivals we’ve played have been in dreams, where the stage is always on such a slope that we all fall to the back. This summer we’ll put all that straight with the Camden Crawl, Standon Calling, Stag & Dagger & Pop Dakar in Sweden.

What has been your favourite gig to date?
Our second gig was playing a live score I wrote for Rambert Dance Company at Queen Elizabeth Hall. We played samplers and banged bits of metal alongside a string section and conductor. For pure nerve explosions, and the enormous possibility of failure in front of a lot of people and of being exposed up against proper musicians, it went incredibly well.

What has been your worst performance?
We’ve only played about 20 shows. And amazingly, there hasn’t been a single disaster. The recurring Dream Festival Stage Slide nightmare is still my worst experience.

What are your plans for summer 2010?
Finishing our album & playing a few festivals with glue on shoes.

RELEASING BABS

we-are-scientists

Indie rockers We Are Scientists return next week with their third studio album, Barbara - the first under their new self label, Masterswan Recordings.  Drafting in Andy Burrows from Razorlight to take drum duties, the band sound even fresher than before.  With a new single Rules Don’t Stop out today, we caught up with Keith Murray from the band to find out a few things about the new album.

WONDERLAND: Describe your music in five words
Keith Murray: Aimed at the pleasure-centers.

If you really are scientists… can you explain ‘special relativity’?
I’m not really a scientist, neither by practice or qualification. That’s just a band name. The Killers, I presume, have never killed anyone, although perhaps they’ve killed animals or plants. So, bad example, potentially.

You’ve drafted in Andy Burrows from Razorlight for the new album – how was he to work with?
He was like a dream, a dream in which you’re eating the tastiest cake imaginable, and have a limitless quantity at your avail, but are immune from any possible detrimental effect of unrestrained cake consumption (i.e., gastrointestinal distress, caloric overload, etc.), so you just eat it and eat it and never experience diminishing returns in enjoyment. That’s what working with Andy is like: a great cake dream. I would recommend that anyone who’s looking for a world-class drummer with excellent taste and a charming disposition stay the hell away from Andy, because he is mine!

What are the inspirations behind new album, Barbara?
I would say that the main inspiration was a delicious cocktail that came to my attention while I was summering in Athens, GA, which is one part Bulleitt Bourbon to one part Blenheim’s Spicy Ginger Ale (that’s the cocktail, not Athens, GA).  Squeeze a crescent of lemon in there, and you’ve got golden-hued, liquid inspiration, the ice tinkling about in the glass suggesting a samba beat here, a swing beat there, and, after four glasses, a double-kick metal beat, right there in your mind.

How many people do you know called Barbara and do you have a favourite Barbara?
I know one person named Barbara - that’s Barbara Zeltman - and, as such, she is my favorite.

Lead track from the album is Rules Don’t Stop – are you rule breakers?  When did you last break a rule?
We are not rule breakers in any way.  If we’ve learned anything from Wesley Snipes (and believe me, we have), it’s that rule-breakers will get their just desserts.  We’ve also learned to “always bet on black,” which has made Chris [Cain, We Are Scientists' bass player] and I unbelievably wealthy at craps games and checkers tournaments.

What are your views on illegal downloading and free music websites?
My feeling is that free downloading should be perfectly legal IF the downloader is also willing to buy overpriced pastries at a semi-annual bake sale held by the “big four” record companies.  So, for example, if someone downloads Coldplay’s  “Nodding Off Again,” EP or whatever, they should be expected, come April, to pay $20 for a couple of brownies at a stand erected outside of EMI’s offices.  It’s not only fair, it’s delicious!

In you’re years of gigging, where has been your most memorable performance?
Oh, definitely the one where I . . . um, where Chris . . . er.  There was this time when we, uh, um. . . Geez, let me see…

What has been your least favourite performance?
I know that everybody loved it, and he won an Oscar for the role, but I really hated F. Murray Abraham’s performance in Amadeus.

What are your plans for summer 2010?
Tour, tour, festival, tour, pint of Bulleitt and Blenheim’s, tour, pitcher of margaritas, tour, strawberry daiquiri, tour, festival, tour.  And that’s just June 17!

was_barbara_packshot1

We Are Scientists, Barbara, is out today under Masterswan Recordings.

PRIASE THE DRUMS

the-drums

New York band The Drums this week release their new single Forever and Ever, Amen, and release their self-titled debut album on June 7th.  Earlier this year the band appeared on the shortlist for the BBC Sound of 2010 poll and anticipation for their first album has been building steadily since.  We Q&A lead singer Jonathan Pierce about musical influences, live performances and the pressure to deliver.

WONDERLAND: Describe your music in five words
Johnny Pierce: Oh, it’s just pop songs.

There has been a lot of hype around your band and you haven’t yet released an album – how has this pressure to deliver affected the band?
Well, the album was done before we were getting this amount of attention, so we didn’t have the pressure to make a perfect record because we had already made an album that we loved and so we are glad to finally be able to release it. Also we do everything ourselves, from our artwork to directing our own videos and of course our music, and we have been touring constantly so you can see how we don’t even have time to be affected. It’s a very incubated process.

The album has a summer feel and also sounds quite Californian (most noticeably on Let’s Go Surfing) – have any of you lived/worked on the West Coast?

Really? I wonder if Let’s Go Surfing was not on the album if it would still feel summer-y to you? To me the album just sounds like a bunch of sad, simple love songs. None of us have ever lived on the West Coast,  I think we all love New York too much to ever leave really. Honestly, I would really miss the winter.

What are your inspirations when creating music?
Well for me, every song that I write has a photograph to go with it. And I think with The Drums we are more influenced by visuals than by other forms of music. We wanted each song to do what a great movie or great photograph does and that is to help you escape your own life for even just a few minutes. Escapism is our biggest influence. Genre is not really important to us, it really is just about The Song. Everyone forgot about The Song and you hear a lot of music these days, but not too many songs.

You’ve toured with Florence + The Machine, how was that experience?

It was pretty wild for us because we have not been a band for even a year yet and to be playing a tour of that size so early on is both exciting and terrifying. It is kinda like being shoved into the deep end of a swimming pool when you’re just learning to swim, but our vision carried us through victoriously. It was a triumph. Florence’s fans for the most part loved us and I guess it could have gone either way so we are all grateful.

You also toured the UK previously with the NME tour alongside The Maccabees, The Big Pink and Bombay Bicycle Club – what was that experience like?

Well that was more of a “rock-n-roll” type of tour and the whole thing felt really crazy. We made some good friends and it was a special time in our lives where we realized that, yes, maybe this really IS happening. People DO care and anything is possible.

Which other artists would you want to collaborate with?

We try our hardest to not do collaborations but there are some things that we could not say no to. We went to Edwyn Collins’ (Orange Juice) studio to write and record a new song for his new album. It was a like a dream as he a huge inspiration. The ultimate cool band.

Are there any tracks you would want to cover?

We have covered Do I Love You by The Ronettes. It is recorded but I doubt we will ever release it. Maybe doing a cover of a great pop song while we are on stage is something we would do, but to spend time re-doing a song that someone else has already done perfectly seems almost like a waste of time. I  would always rather hear a new song by a band that I love than have them give me a cover.

What is your all time favourite song?
I can’t be sure, but right now… it is I Will Always Love You by Dolly Parton. A perfect example of a song that has the most simple basic lyrics and melody, but somehow moves mountains. Also it’s an example of why a good song does not need to be covered. The original is flawless and It will last until the end of time. Amen.

DREAM TEENS

teenagers1_rgb

Hailing from ‘Down Under’, Australian band Teenagersintokyo (consisting of ladies Samantha Lim, Miska Mandic, Linda Marigliano, Sophie McGinn and sole male Rudy Udovich) relocated to the UK to create their debut album Sacrifice in the Welsh countryside.  With production from David Kosten (Bat For Lashes) the band today release their new single End It Tonight and the debut album simultaneously. We talk to Teenagersintokyo’s lead singer for a Q&A on inspirations, band dynamics and album cover polar bears.

WONDERLAND: Describe your music in five words
Samantha Lim: Dark pop to dance to

You’re from Australia – how are you coping with the UK climate?
Winter was definitely a struggle but we’re seeing the light at the end of the tunnel now that Spring and Summer is just around the corner. London can be very beautiful when the sun is out and everyone also seems happier when the sun is shining.

Have any of you been to Tokyo?
Both Rudy [Udovich - Drums] and I have been separately for holidays. It’s such an incredible city and the energy of Tokyo is like no other place; it’s an intense stimulation of the senses mixed with a contrast of new and traditional. My favourite place is the Senses Museum in a town north of Tokyo, the name of which currently escapes me.

What were the inspirations behind the album?
The album was written over a long period so anything that we experienced, heard or saw in that time would be the inspiration. We write collectively so it’s hard to pin point exact inspirations as everyone brings a different perspective into the mix.

Did you enjoy recording in Wales?  What was that process like?
Aside from the fact that the cottage we were staying in has been known to experience some paranormal activity, which totally freaks me out, Wales was perfect for us. We loved escaping from everything and just focusing on recording, playing frisbee and going on mountain walks. It was a really relaxing and calm environment, we could have easily stayed there for weeks longer.

What is the significance of the album cover?  Are those polar bears dancing or fighting or something else? Is there a nod to climate change there? Are they being indirectly sacrificed as a result of environmentally unfriendly actions of society?  Or are we over analysing…?
I love that interpretation! It’s not something we thought of when we saw it, but the great thing about art is that everyone can take something different away from it. There was just something about it when we first saw it that spoke to us. I find it hard to express in words what it means to me. I do feel that the image invokes a lot of different emotions for me anyway.

Do the girls ever team up against Rudy as he is the only guy in the band?
Never, there’s no reason we’d do that. Rudy’s one of the girls and the rest of us are all one of the guys.

Are there any songs the band would like to cover?
We’ve recently been playing a live cover of Maneater by Hall & Oates, which has been really fun. I think it’d be great to have a go at an INXS track or swap songs with another contemporary band, kind of like doing a remix live.

Who would you want to collaborate with?
It would be really nice to work with someone like M83. It would be an interesting mixing of minds.

What are your plans for the summer?
We’re going to play a bunch of shows, release the record and tour Europe as well as try and enjoy as much of the English sunshine as we can.

tits

Teenagersintokyo’s debut album Sacrifice is out today on Back Yard Recordings.