Issue 15 Archives | Wonderland https://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/tag/issue-15/ Wonderland is an international, independently published magazine offering a unique perspective on the best new and established talent across all popular culture: fashion, film, music and art. Wed, 20 Jul 2011 16:04:27 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.1 Friendly Fires /2008/11/23/friendly-fires/ Sun, 23 Nov 2008 10:41:56 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/beta/?p=406 Aged 14, St Albans school friends Ed Macfarlane, Edd Gibson and Jack Savidge formed First Day Break. “It was all guitars, no vocals… far too serious,” says Gibson. University changed all that. Thanks to a student diet of German techno and Prince, in came romantic melodies, propulsive drumming and rib-rattling bass. In 2006, three months […]

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Aged 14, St Albans school friends Ed Macfarlane, Edd Gibson and Jack Savidge formed First Day Break. “It was all guitars, no vocals… far too serious,” says Gibson. University changed all that. Thanks to a student diet of German techno and Prince, in came romantic melodies, propulsive drumming and rib-rattling bass. In 2006, three months before graduating, the trio met in The Beehive – “St. Albans’ most depressing pub” – and reinvented themselves as Friendly Fires. Their self-titled debut album – recorded in the garage of Macfarlane’s parents using “a laptop and a crappy mic gaffer-taped to a stand” – is out now on XL Recordings.

Do you have a post-show routine?

Ed Macfarlane: Champagne and forget all the mobile phones, jackets and things that we’ve left on stage.

Edd Gibson: Maybe a short informal debrief. ‘How was that?’… ‘Yeah, it was alright’… ‘Good, see you later.’

Jack Savidge: I was backstage straight after an Iron Maiden concert and the singer and drummer were hanging around in dressing gowns two minutes after they’d walked off stage. I saw Nicko McBrain putting his robe on as he was walking out of his dressing room and there was the faintest glimmer of a penis. He was decently hung.

Who is your musical nemesis?

JS: We need to get one of those!

EM: I’m trying to think of a shit Indie band… Someone like Pigeon Detectives. Pretty bollocks.

EG: If we’re going to start a proper Blur/Oasis rivalry with someone then it might as well be Pigeon Detectives.

JS: Who’s No. 1 at the moment?

EM: Actually someone like Late of the Pier because we play gigs a lot with them. They copy our every move. Their synth player Sam Potter said, ‘I don’t like Friendly Fires… I see them as competition.’

What’s the worst show you’ve ever played?

EM: Barcelona. We were playing at the Razzmatazz event and there were only about ten people in the room. After about five minutes they just turned around and looked the opposite way towards the bar. We played our set to their backs and then after we’d finished they put the Spice Girls on the sound system and everyone went crazy!

EG: If we’d have known that was the magic formula beforehand we’d have just got up and played “Wannabe” and cashed in.

If you had to kill one of the Spice Girls, which one would get it first?

JS: There’s something about Sporty Spice…

EG: No, she’s my favourite. And Baby.

EM: I’d put a cap in Posh.

Funeral song?

EG: “Ed Is Dead” by The Pixies.

EM: Yeah, has to be.

JS: I can’t have that one.

EG: You’d play “Sparklehorse,” wouldn’t you?

JS: No. The last two minutes of “Wish You Were Here” by Pink Floyd. It’s really cheesy but it sounds like you’re going into another world.

EM: Played on an organ would be good.

Which song do you wish you’d written?

EM: “Happy Birthday.” We could do with the royalty money!

Photography: Ben Rayner
Words: Ben Cobb

A full version of this article first appeared in Wonderland #15, Oct/Nov 2008

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Margaret Howell Spring 2009 /2008/11/22/margaret-howell/ Sat, 22 Nov 2008 11:02:56 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/beta/?p=372 Flair without fuss. Chic without chi-chi. Style without showing off. Margaret Howell, British fashion scion and understated style queen, tells Wonderland the tricks of her trade. A grey jersey T-shirt with rolled-up sleeves. A tuxedo cut in linen. A back-buttoning granddad shirt. A raglan sleeve raincoat in proofed cotton. A pair of roomy mourning-stripe trousers. […]

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Flair without fuss. Chic without chi-chi. Style without showing off. Margaret Howell, British fashion scion and understated style queen, tells Wonderland the tricks of her trade.

A grey jersey T-shirt with rolled-up sleeves. A tuxedo cut in linen. A back-buttoning granddad shirt. A raglan sleeve raincoat in proofed cotton. A pair of roomy mourning-stripe trousers. A shirtdress in pure white organdie that would look virtuous at the holiest of first communions. “They are real clothes,” says Margaret Howell of her SS/09 collection. “That’s how I work. I take these pieces and I interpret them. I don’t want it to feel over-the-top.”

It’s not a description one can imagine many people throwing her way. Howell has been a mainstay of UK fashion for the past three decades; slowly and inexorably building a reputation for beautifully simple, classic, wearable clothes. Today Howell, who graduated in fine art from Goldsmiths back in 1969, is dressed in a wrinkled Gitane-blue dress-shirt (made for her by a former member of her team), black vest, threadbare jeans and Birkenstock sandals that appear to have wandered off the beaten track, many times. While her home is in South East London, she does now spend more time in her 60s house on the Suffolk coast. “When I am not working I like to get away from everything…” she says.

This ability to meld past and present is the key to Howell’s appeal and has made her a constant fixture on stylish shopping lists over the years, regardless of the vagaries of high fashion. “I have never felt particularly comfortable in real fashion circles,” she confesses. “I know that there is a connection with fashion in what I do and I like the imagery you can play around with for a fashion show; but I want to do something very real and loved. When I like something then I like it and it doesn’t change too much.” Howell cites the dégagé elegance of Katharine Hepburn as an early influence, alongside photographs and films from the 30s. Her designs offer a lived-in familiarity. They are the kind of clothes you imagine you already own… or wish you did.

Her earliest sartorial memories are positively Proustian – the softness of her father’s shirt and a pleated chiffon dress her mother wore to go ballroom dancing. “I think that’s why some of my clothes hint at nostalgia, why people respond to them,” she continues. “There has to be something more than just a shirt. It needs a character behind it.”

“I found this man’s shirt in a jumble sale,” says Howell, explaining how she made the transition from selling painted papier-mâché beads to opening her first shop in London’s South Molton Street in 1977. “At the same jumble there was a slipover, a tie and a pair of cotton trousers and I put them on my boyfriend and thought, ‘Oh, that’s a good outfit’ and it went from there.” Fashion retailer Joseph Ettedgui (creator of Joseph) spotted Howell’s potential and bankrolled that first store. “I was supplying him with men’s shirts and then a linen jacket and then a pair of trousers and he said, ‘When you’ve made the complete men’s outfit I will open a shop for you.’” Howell’s entry into womenswear in 1980 was equally accidental. “Women were buying the men’s jackets so we did them in smaller sizes and then a skirt came along,” Howell laughs, aware of the irony presented by the naïve beginnings of a business that now has a £50 million annual turnover and 48 retail outlets in Japan alone.

This season Howell has revisited her own archive. As she takes me through the new collection, she highlights a bright blue drill overall coat that bears the stamped MHL label of her secondary line. “It’s difficult to get people to understand what MHL really is,” she says. “It’s something very basic; raw, almost. Naturally it’s a lower price point but it can’t look cheap. It’s the difference between a really good café and a really good restaurant. You like them both for what they are.” She describes MHL as “things to be worn with something at the other end of the scale. Contrasts are nice.”

MHL underscores the dichotomy in Howell’s design ethos. While her pieces offer effortless chic, they also require a bit of imagination. Does she agree that at times they are deceptively basic? “Yes, but sometimes there is quite a bit going on that you’re not really aware of,” she insists. “There are little subtle details; maybe even on the inside.”

There is an endearing pragmatism to Howell’s designs that cuts through the catwalk capers of so many designers obsessed with front-row swooning and front-page headlines. “I think most people would think it’s nice when you put something on and you know there’s something about it that you like,” she says, as she reaches for a sleeveless V-neck knit and draws my attention to a wider-than-usual ribbed armhole. “This is our take on an Argyle slipover. The shoulders sort of slip off, hang over.” She offers the garment for the touch test and tells me it’s made with a mix of cashmere and silk. “Or cashmere and cotton? Whatever it is, it feels nice and soft.” There couldn’t really be a better description for Howell’s aesthetic.

Interview over, Howell heads back to join her design team and I take a look around the shop-floor. As I am about to leave she reappears with an old newspaper advert for the original 1977 store – a sketch of a man wearing a T-shirt with rolled sleeves. She smiles. “I think the style has remained pretty constant, don’t you?”

Photograpy: John Lindquist
Fashion: Lauren Blane
Words: Iain R. Webb

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Seasick Steve’s Favourite Things /2008/11/22/seasick-steves-favourite-things/ Sat, 22 Nov 2008 10:51:51 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/beta/?p=368 When the dog bites, when the bee stings, etc. Seasick Steve can cheer himself up by remembering a few of these… Food Oatmeal. I have it every morning. My favourite restaurant is Arnold’s in Nashville. Meat and three veg. It’s like greasy but for real Southern food. Drink That’s easy. Jack Daniels. Straight. The best […]

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When the dog bites, when the bee stings, etc. Seasick Steve can cheer himself up by remembering a few of these…

Food Oatmeal. I have it every morning. My favourite restaurant is Arnold’s in Nashville. Meat and three veg. It’s like greasy but for real Southern food.

Drink That’s easy. Jack Daniels. Straight. The best thing to come out of Tennessee.

Person in the world My wife Elisabeth. Oh yeah! Ain’t no question about that. She’s my best friend.

Place in the world The Big Sur coastline in California. One time me and my wife and my first boy, we didn’t have nowhere to live and we just driving in Big Sur and we all slept on the side of the road. It was just one of those magic nights, you know, where we didn’t get bothered and it was real beautiful. It was almost kinda like camping. Real special. But I don’t like holidays. I always seemed to be in jail on holidays. I don’t have no relationship to holidays.

Possession My pocket watch, which I have on me right now. But if I had to choose between that and one of my guitars, I’d keep my old beat-up brown acoustic guitar. Someone gave it to me a long time ago. It didn’t even have a name on it. It’s real old, I think from the 1800s.

Body part My hands because that’s what I use the most. Without the hands I couldn’t play the guitar and then I’d be very bored… My favourite tattoo is my rolling dice. That’s how life is for me. I never know what the day will roll.

Item of clothing My denim overalls. You English call them dungarees. I’ve worn them my whole life. I started wearing them when I was a little boy.

Animal Dog. My German Shepherd died last year. He was called Boss because he was the boss.

Proper job I never had many jobs that I liked. But I used to like working in the carnival when I was a kid. I set up the bumper cars.

Film I like that old cowboy film Shane.

Movie star Clint Eastwood.

TV show I used to like Wagon Train back in the 50s, with Clint Eastwood. Actually, you know what? I take that back. Rawhide was my favourite when I was a kid. I didn’t watch TV too much over my life though. Rawhide… that was it!

Work of art I ain’t so much into art. I don’t go look at art much but one time someone took me over to one of these museums in London where the Van Gogh pictures were. I was impressed with the light coming from them.

Book Jim Grim by Talbot Mundy. It’s kinda pulp adventure set back in the 1920s and 30s. Some of it takes place in the British time in India and Afghanistan. People keep asking me if I ever read On The Road. I never read a book about none of that stuff. It’s only in the last few years that I even heard of this Jack Kerouac character. I doubt he ever rode a freight train, anyway.

Sport I played baseball when I was a kid. I was a catcher. I also liked playing first base. I used to like watching baseball a little bit, too. But now I kinda like watching football, which y’all got over here in England. At least there’s lots of action going on so I’ll watch it if it’s on the TV. But I don’t know nothing about no teams.

Comedian My kid played me a little bit of that Bill Bailey. I like him. He was pretty funny.

Musician I’d have to say Mississippi Fred McDowell. Helluva nice guy. I never played with him but I could’ve and I blew it! He said, ‘If you wanna come down here and play you can’ and I was doing something else so I didn’t do it. And now he’s dead.

Song “You Only Hurt The One You Love” by The Inkspots.

Gig I’ve seen James Brown. 1963 or 64. Oakland, California. Ain’t no-one ever even come close to him.

Gig I’ve played This year at Glastonbury. 65,000 people is a lot of energy comin’ atcha. It was like getting hit with a wave.

Motto It’s all good. Cause These days it’s the stayin’ alive cause. That’s a good one for me.

Photography: Ben Rayner
Words: Lousie Brealey and Ben Cobb

A full version of this article first appeared in Wonderland #15, October/November 2008

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Lykke Li /2008/11/22/lykke-li/ Sat, 22 Nov 2008 10:39:08 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/beta/?p=362 Hyperactive pop sprite Lykke Li talks to Wonderland about unrequited love, sounding like a little girl and wishing she was Tom Waits. Lykke Li (pronounced ‘Lookki Lee’) is such a mess of contrasting emotions – from brash confidence to alarming fragility and back in a single sentence and back – you have to wonder if […]

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Hyperactive pop sprite Lykke Li talks to Wonderland about unrequited love, sounding like a little girl and wishing she was Tom Waits.

Lykke Li (pronounced ‘Lookki Lee’) is such a mess of contrasting emotions – from brash confidence to alarming fragility and back in a single sentence and back – you have to wonder if she has what it takes to cope with the soul-flying highs and crushing lows of your average music career. “I was confident, like I knew I was going to get my music out there and I’m going to be a legend,” claims the Nordic pop-starlet. “At the same time, I was like, ‘What the fuck if I don’t? What if I’m not a star? Then I’m gonna die.’”

Eighteen months ago the impetuous, impatient Swede was fretting to mentor Björn Yttling that her life was fading away because she was 21 and hadn’t yet released her first album. Now that she has – the deceptively simple Youth Novels – even that’s not entirely fulfilling in Lykke-land. “My intention was to make a really obscure record,” insists Li, phoning from LA at the start of a US tour. “I wanted to do an album that nobody understands but is genius. And then it became really accessible…” But you’re not really disappointed? “Yes, I am… I don’t want to be pinned down as just a young girl with a girlish voice. I’m like, ‘Do they not know that I’m like Tom Waits?’”

It would be easy to write Li off as just another self-declared maestro desperate to share her muse with the world, but that would be to overlook her obvious gifts. With its sweetly melodic, multi-instrumental flavour (even the theremin makes an appearance), the album – accompanied by self-consciously kooky videos in which Li’s seemingly angry gaze defies you to look away – has put her brand of Scandinavian synth-pop on the underground map. With her sugary, ethereal vocals and passionate, wounded lyrics, she’s hypnotic and amusing at the same time. It’s this wit that marks out Li from the army of pouting, blank-faced nymphs who become one or two-hit wonders.

Li’s love of performance began early. Her family abandoned Sweden after Chernobyl’s radioactive rains and decamped to Portugal, where she spent carefree formative years writing poetry, ballet dancing and putting on a stuffed bra to perform Madonna songs. The boundary-free existence also has its downside, she insists. “I have no home and when I talk with my mum she is the same way. She says, ‘Maybe I should live in India, or maybe I should stop taking photos and open a dog kennel, or maybe I should become a Reiki therapist.’ There’s no comfort – we’re just drifting souls.”

While both her parents were players in the Swedish punk scene, Li draws her own inspiration from sonic eccentrics like Nina Simone, Dr. John and alternative-rockers Suicide. “I listen to dark, strong voices, and if I would try to copy that, that would just be a mess.” She’s the first to admit that her voice “kind of sucked” at first although it’s ripening with experience. It’s the reason she settled into a cooing, baby-doll singing style, which she pairs with trademark confessional lyrics (in Little Bit she sings, ‘And for you I keep my legs apart/And forget about my tainted heart’). “Little Bit is about an unrequited infatuation,” she admits. Where relationships are concerned, it transpires, Li doesn’t cope very well: “I have the balls to do anything but when it comes to the guys that I like, I’m shy.”

Touring into 2009, Li says she won’t succumb to the pressure to rush out a second album because she’s craving more life experience first: “I’m kind of a loner. I don’t take any advice from anybody. I make up my life all by myself… You never know what lies ahead. It’s like fresh food – you just have to keep making it.”

Photography: Ben Rayner
Fashion: Lauren Blane
Words: Matt Mueller

This article first appeared in full in
Wonderland #15, September/October 2008

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]]> Black Mountain /2008/11/22/black-mountain/ Sat, 22 Nov 2008 10:17:44 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/beta/?p=357 Stephen McBean, Amber Webber, Matt Camirand, Jeremy Schmidt and Josh Wells are five longhaired Canadian stoners on a crusade. When they’re not unleashing epic psychedelic rock on bleary-eyed revellers as Black Mountain, they’re busy helping out at Insite – a Vancouver-based charity for the chronically poor, drug addicted and mentally ill. Not many bands can […]

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Stephen McBean, Amber Webber, Matt Camirand, Jeremy Schmidt and Josh Wells are five longhaired Canadian stoners on a crusade. When they’re not unleashing epic psychedelic rock on bleary-eyed revellers as Black Mountain, they’re busy helping out at Insite – a Vancouver-based charity for the chronically poor, drug addicted and mentally ill. Not many bands can mix a punishing schedule of tour hedonism with a keen social conscience. But Black Mountain have a knack for straddling extremes: they’ve managed mainstream success – their song “Stay Free” was featured on the Spider-Man 3 soundtrack and they supported Coldplay on their 2005 US tour – whilst still retaining their hard-rocking credibility.

Describe your sound in one word?

Josh Wells: Wide.

Stephen McBean:
Ecclesiastical.

Jeremy Schmidt:
Minus the really heavy religious connotations.

Matt Camirand:
But with the gold leaf.

Any rituals before a show?

Amber Webber: I pee like five times.

SM: We don’t do soul circles – no group hugging and apologising for all the bad things we’ve said to each other.

AW: I would actually like a soul circle.

MC: OK. We can try it sometime for you.

JW: I try to get my blood moving around my body so there isn’t such a harsh contrast between sitting around all day and then suddenly playing the drums.

Are you going to do any short songs?

SM: We’ve got one on our new record, which is only a minute and a half. But we never play it live because somehow we always fuck it up.

JW:
It’s too short with too many chord changes.

MC: We’re used to taking a long time to make a statement.

AW: Plus it’s on acoustic guitar so Steve would have to switch guitars. It would take like 30 seconds just to swap guitars and then the song is only a minute and a half anyway, so there doesn’t seem much point.

What’s playing on the tour bus stereo at the moment?

AW: We haven’t played a single tune yet. We’ve only been on the bus for two days.

MC: Our driver isn’t part of the usual touring crew and he doesn’t seem too predisposed to listening to music on the bus.

JW: We don’t have any idea what kind of music he’s into yet.

SM: I think we’ll have figured it out by the end of the tour.

MC:
It’s going to be like Rammstein or something.

JS: Yeah, it’s definitely some Euro industrial metal shit.

MC:
We’ve got to get in there before he gets in there.

If you had to have one extra member… who would you pick?

AW: We could definitely use someone to dance round the stage and add some theatrics.

SM: What about Stacia, the topless dancer from Hawkwind?

JW:
Or Bez from The Happy Mondays?

MC:
A laptop might be useful.

Photography: Ben Rayner
Words: Ben Cobb

This article first appeared in Wonderland #15, October/November 2008

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John Galliano and Jeremy Healy /2008/10/23/john-galliano-and-jeremy-healy/ Thu, 23 Oct 2008 12:45:49 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/beta/?p=438 Two boys from Peckham. John Galliano – the wunderkind behind Christian Dior. Jeremy Healy – frontman of 80s pop sensation Haysi Fantayzee and one of the most famous DJs on the planet. Over the past twenty years, their collaborations have reinvented the fashion show and provided the industry with some of its greatest runway moments. […]

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Two boys from Peckham. John Galliano – the wunderkind behind Christian Dior. Jeremy Healy – frontman of 80s pop sensation Haysi Fantayzee and one of the most famous DJs on the planet. Over the past twenty years, their collaborations have reinvented the fashion show and provided the industry with some of its greatest runway moments. In a Wonderland exclusive, the two old friends talk shop, Charlie Chaplin and playing with eels…

John Galliano: Wonderland want us to talk about music, about how we work together. We don’t really ‘work’ together, though, do we? Is this work?
Jeremy Healy: To be honest I am amazed its lasted this long! So which show do you want to talk about?
JG: They’ve done a shoot based on the Dior Cruise show that we did in New York…
JH: Oh, the Madonna, JLo, Christina Aguilera mix? Well, basically that was a really quick conversation because the Madonna album had just come out and you said, ‘Use these, they’re great!’
JG: [Laughs] Yeah! But sometimes it’s more difficult…
JH: Sometimes it’s a total nightmare John! It’s different each time. You never totally know so you can’t say there is a certain way we do things…
JG: It’s like those mixes you were doing when we first met…
JH: Do you want to tell the story or shall I?
JG: You do it. I’ll interview you for a change… Jeremy, how did we first meet, do you remember?
JH: Well, John, this is the famous fish story! [Both laugh] Was it 1985?
JG: Autumn Winter 1985/86 so, yes, February-ish 1985.
JH: Anyway, I remember I first met you ‘cos a girlfriend of mine was modelling in your first show and she was going on and on about it and eventually she talked me into going…
JG: The Ludic Games show at Olympia. Do you know we had to do that show twice because we had so many people turn up? So many crashers! My first show at British Fashion Week!
JH: Yeah, that’s right. I wasn’t really into the idea of going… It was 2½ minutes long, a total mob scene to get into, she had a tree in her hair and all the models came out swinging dead mackerels that they then threw into the audience! I was totally gob-smacked! My mouth was just like hanging open… I’d never seen anything like it! Strangely enough there was some bloke who looked like Mr. Spock standing in front of me, which added to the whole weirdness. I was just thinking, ‘Did that just happen?’ – and it takes quite a lot to shock me.
JG: [Laughs]
JH: I was totally blown away so I went backstage…
JG: And I knew you from your club nights, from the mixes you were doing…
JH: I was using audio effects, scenes from films mixed with beats, music…
JG: I saw you and I was like, ‘I know who you are… I want you to work with me!’
JH: And that was it!
JG: Easy! And you’ve done the music ever since. We must think of something really hard for you to do next season… OK, what was the first record you ever got?
JH: Oh that’s easy! I was seven years old and it was “Space Oddity” by David Bowie.
JG: Cool! That’s a pretty good start.
JH: Well, I got it when getting a record was still something special. I remember I got two records that Christmas from my uncle. I got that and Return Of Django, you know, Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, The Upsetters… I asked my uncle to get them for me and those were my two records. They lasted me a year. I played them and played them – the A side, the B side. I bet I still know every word to them to this day…
JG: I’m The Upsetter… Why are you so ambitious? Why are you so malicious?…
JH: Exactly! People think we’ve known each other longer than we actually have, if that’s possible. We sort of have but we didn’t know… I remember, about five or six years after we’d been working together, sitting together in my council flat just chatting about how we’d got to where we were, our childhood, where we’d grown up, that kinda stuff…
JG: We were only doing one show a year at the time so we didn’t get to hang out all the time, not like now. [Laughs]
JH: It’s like a full time job now! Anyway, I remember telling you about how my Nan had got the original Young Americans LP, and how it still even had the price on, and how she’d got it from Jones and Higgins in Peckham…
JG: Oh my god! Jones and Higgins! OK and I said, ‘I remember that store! I used to go there all the time when I was six!’
JH: Yeah, and we both discovered that we’d both grown up in Peckham and pretty much done the same things…
JG: Gone down the high street…
JH: Gone to the pet shop, played with the eels. And the greatest thing of all was when he would…
JG: Stir them up! [Both laugh]
JH: Exactly! Stir them up! And do you remember the big parrot? I know you do ‘cos one of the highlights of all your shows for me was the first show you did at Dior and you did the Peckham Parrot! There was a coat with it embroidered on it. I saw it and I knew… it was a beautiful moment.
JG: From Peckham to haute couture! But yes, we had pretty similar upbringings, didn’t we? Similar experiences…
JH: Yeah but we didn’t really work this out till about five years later. Well, it’s not the first thing you talk about…
JG: Do you have a favourite show?
JH: Well, no, not really. I never expect them to be less than brilliant. I’ve been lucky; it’s been great. You’ve never ceased to be amazing. Plus doing the shows has given me lots more toys to play with than music alone would have.
JG: But which show stands out for you?
JH: Well, Dior’s 60th anniversary show was a nightmare!
JG: It was ambitious!
JH: Nightmare! We’d done live strings; we’d done live flamenco; and live gospel… but never all at once! We sort of bit off more than we could chew and just kept chewing!! It was the biggest logistical nightmare! It was in that huge venue…
JG: Versailles…
JH: The different groups were spread about 100 metres apart from each other. It was literally a complete…
JG: Nightmare!
JH: It was really stressful.
JG: But so worth it.
JH: But I think if I had to choose one show, the first time we used a gospel choir, back in 2001, was really cool. I remember Malcolm McLaren coming up to me afterwards and saying, ‘One million dollars for a show and you gave it away!’ That was great, that was cool… And that was the show I met Gwen Stefani at – it was cool to work with her. And then there were the Kodo drummers – that was amazing! They were so incredible to work with. They were such perfectionists. They /so/ got it. I remember flying to Japan to have a conversation with them and then two weeks later they came over – fifteen drummers – and did the rehearsal. There were no clothes, just the music and we all just sat there and it was perfect. It was amazing.
JG: It was major.
JH: And that was before anything else.
JG: Before the acrobats, the staging, the clothes, the hair, the make up… the whole dramalatta.
JH: That is definitely a highlight… Sometimes you get so inspired by your research trips that when you tell me what you’ve seen, it inspires me, changes everything.
JG: Well, finding those drummers was just so inspiring. I always say the music enhances and defines the show – it gives the clothes colour.
JH: ‘Give the clothes colour!’ I know, I know, you always say that… Sometimes, though, it’s a bit like Charlie Chaplin; he doesn’t speak but he does something really funny despite the music being really sad. Sometimes you mix it up like that. Well, that’s how I see it. That’s what is so great about you – you like to mix it up, alter it; tweak it just before you can predict what will come next…
JG: So what are you listening to now?
JH: You!
JG: Good answer. No seriously…
JH: Air conditioning… I listen to everything. There is everything out there but it’s different now because the Internet has everything. You only need to know a few lyrics, a few names and you can type it in and find it. Your record library used to be your base, your inspiration, but now everyone can access everything all the time. What you have to do is use your /nous/ – keep it all up here – and bring it out at the right moment… Do you remember the show White Horses?
JG: On white horses let me ride away… to my world of dreams so far away… Of course I do! Sung by Jacky?
JH: Exactly. That was our era. So I would play you tunes like that and I would see your eyes well up. These were theme tunes from our childhood. I would hunt out songs like White Horses, songs that meant something to us, to growing up. Songs you knew, remembered…
JG: Oh I /so/ remember that show. That’s why music is so important. Do you remember when we had the Blue Peter theme for the cardboard cut-outs collection?
JH: I think it’s really important to have a sense of humour, to see the funny side. That show was mental.
JG: But there are no rules?
JH: Not with you mate! As soon as it gets predictable, you flip it. And that is what’s important. We’ve done the dance thing for a while but why do the normal thing, you know? I like the clash of couture and rock, music and frocks. You have to have great music to set off the clothes. When I started doing this some of my mates in record companies thought it was a joke. They told me to go write a pop song or something. I’ll never forget that. But I really liked doing it – can’t say why – so I put a lot of effort into it, really spent a lot of time. And now, thank god, it’s all finally paying off.
JG: How long does it usually take to compile the music for the shows?
JH: Well, that all sort of depends on you. A normal collage-like mix is about fifteen minutes so I guess that will take about four days but you also have to know what music, the vibe and what to use…
JG: You usually send us ideas, tracks and stuff for us to listen to in the studio…
JH: Exactly. And then you’ll pick out what you like and we’ll go back and forth and take it from there.
JG: Who’d have thought two boys from Peckham would have turned record swapping into a career.
JH: You said it, not me!
JG: So what you got for me this season…
JH: John!!!

Words: Camilla Morton

A full version of this article first appeared in Wonderland #15, Oct/Nov 2008

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Lindstrom and Prins Thomas /2008/10/23/lindstrom-and-prins-thomas/ Thu, 23 Oct 2008 12:23:26 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/beta/?p=433 From neighbouring studios in the heart of Oslo’s red-light district, two Norwegian musicians are busy ensuring that disco never dies. For the past five years Prins Thomas and Hans-Peter Lindstrøm have championed the Nu-Disco cause, both as solo artists and as a producing-writing team. Together they have injected the form with a raw, live element […]

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From neighbouring studios in the heart of Oslo’s red-light district, two Norwegian musicians are busy ensuring that disco never dies. For the past five years Prins Thomas and Hans-Peter Lindstrøm have championed the Nu-Disco cause, both as solo artists and as a producing-writing team. Together they have injected the form with a raw, live element that is light years away from its synthetic past…

Thomas Moen Hermansen is disciplined. He has to be. When he’s not in his studio – producing, remixing and running record label Full Pupp/Internasjonal – the 33-year-old father-of-two DJs all around the world as Prins Thomas. “I have a strong work ethic,” he insists. “If I didn’t, I’d have ended up just a grumpy local DJ in Oslo. I really don’t believe in sitting around and waiting for inspiration. You have to go into the studio and record and record and record.”

Hermansen’s studio sessions are often free-form affairs that give him the opportunity to play with conventions. “I was doing some work on a track for Justus Köhncke, a producer on the Cologne label Kompact, and I wanted a string quartet on the record but I didn’t want it to sound very good so I got my younger brother and some friends in to play it.” Even his two sons (Edvard, 13 and Olav, 4) have ended up on a Prins Thomas record. “I was playing drums and they were banging around on some cymbals in the background,” he explains. “They’re not exactly /talented/ but they enjoy music.”

His own childhood in Hamar – a town on the shores of Norway’s largest lake – was infused with every musical influence imaginable. Aged ten, Hermansen combined cello lessons with mixing his own hip-hop at home on two mismatched turntables and a tape deck. His stepfather played him Iggy Pop and Bach. As a teenager, he taught himself guitar, bass and drums, and in 1992 he started playing in bands, the “coolest” of which was a punk group called Kefir Killers.

“The best parties are where people come to have fun and dance and not just check out what the DJ is doing,” reckons Hermansen, who began his own DJ career playing techno and The Thompson Twins at a friend’s club. “It’s always been that way in Norway, where it’s about catering for all kinds of people, of differing ages. I guess some of the diversity in my music comes from this.” He’s tried the same open-minded policy on foreign dance-floors – with varying degrees of success. “Once I was playing in New York to a crowd of 4000 people… I put on T Rex’s Get It On and cleared the entire place.”

It was one such off-kilter selection that initiated his first meeting with Hans-Peter Lindstrøm, his disco partner-in-crime. “I was DJing in an Oslo club in 2001,” he recalls, “and he came up to compliment me on playing Wham!’s Club Tropicana.” Since 2004, the duo has released a crate load of singles and remixes together, as well as their self-titled debut album in 2005. They are currently working on material for a follow-up album, II.

Hermansen’s close alliance with Lindstrøm (“He’s on the other side of the wall!”) allows him to indulge his teenage passions. “I run around the room playing drums and bass while he concentrates on the melodies and chord changes,” he explains. “I always think of our music as the result of happy mistakes. And if our studio sessions produce less-than-happy results, we can always blame the other one.”

PRINS THOMAS’ TOP 5 PICKS:
1. Afro Punk Reggae Dub by Steel An’ Skin – “Really amazing reggae disco.”

2. Try To Find Me Vol. 1 by Unknown – “Just bought this and I know I’m going to be playing it a lot.”

3. Love Is On The Rocks by Lama – “High energy Italo-disco.”

4. Last Dear by Siriusmo – “It’s from earlier this year but I missed it the first time around.”

5. One Nation Under A Groove Remix by Timmy Regisford – “A really tacky house version.”

Hans-Peter Lindstrøm hasn’t made any new music for months. “I’ve been expanding my studio,” explains the 35-year-old sheepishly. “I needed more space because I have become obsessed with old 70s equipment: vintage synthesisers and reel-to-reel tape machines. Plus I’ve moved a whole new drum kit in here. I need to get organised.”

Lindstrøm likes to take his time. “Finishing music has always been hard for me to do,” he says. “I can write a track in one day but it can take months to get it to the mastering stage.” He is clearly not a man to be rushed: the title track on his second solo album – “Where You Go I Go Too,” released earlier this year – runs at a leisurely 28 minutes. Happily, though, since blazing a trail through the world of dance music with his laid-back synth-disco sound, Lindstrøm is now able to cherry-pick new projects. It’s a turn of events that still makes him smile: “I never expected to even make a living from music… it was just a hobby for 20 years.”

Like his friend and collaborator Hermansen, Lindstrøm spent his formative years exploring all that music had to offer. At ten he was a classically trained pianist and choirboy at the local Lutheran church in the mining town of Stavanger. In the early 80s he discovered a love for pop music through British acts like Nik Kershaw, Limahl and Japan. In the 90s he played piano in an Elvis-inspired gospel act; the Hammond organ for a Deep Purple cover band; and the guitar in a series of folk and country groups. Then in 1999, aged 26, he decided to take a sabbatical from music, sold his record collection and moved to Oslo to study literature. It didn’t last.

A friend lent him some 12-inch dance records, he started DJing, bought a sampler and got to work. “I had no idea what dance music was supposed to sound like,” laughs Lindstrøm. “I was more used to song-writing than arranging repeated bass lines. But I guess that’s why my music stands out.” His 2003 debut EP and his first 12-inch with Thomas in 2004 – both released on Lindstrøm’s own label Feedelity ¬– ushered in a new genre of expansive, slow tempo disco. His first live show, though, was a disaster. “I was in front of 16,000 people at a festival in Poland,” he squirms. “I was supposed to be playing on my laptop with a live drummer and bassist accompanying me. At the last minute the crappy laptop packed up so I had to play a CD on a portable machine and look like I was doing something on the laptop. But the CD suddenly started skipping.”

Miraculously Lindstrøm wasn’t permanently scarred and still relishes performing live. After giving up DJing four years ago, he has now decided to put remixing on hold – previous commissions include Franz Ferdinand and LCD Soundsystem – and focus on his own material. “Thomas is itching to get back to work on our new album,” he laughs. “He knocks on my door and says, ‘Can we record something yet?’ I’m /almost/ there.”

LINDSTRØM’S TOP 5 PICKS:
1. My Bloody Valentine – “I’m rediscovering them now because I spent the 90s listening to folk and country.”

2. Queen – “One of my favourite bands of all time… Every album they put out from the early 70s to the mid 80s is perfect.”

3. Bob Ezrin – “He produced Kiss’ Destroyer album and Alice Cooper’s The Nightmare. I love them both.”

4. They Don’t Know by Tracey Ullman – “It’s a great track but it has a very fuzzy 80s sound… I’d love to do a remix.”

5. The Evil Eye – “I listened to them at high school but I didn’t understand it then. Now I’m ready for their minimal sound.”

Words: Ben Cobb

A full version of this article first appeared in Wonderland #15, Oct/Nov 2008

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Black Mountain /2008/10/23/black-mountain-2/ Thu, 23 Oct 2008 12:04:28 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/beta/?p=424 Stephen McBean, Amber Webber, Matt Camirand, Jeremy Schmidt and Josh Wells are five longhaired Canadian stoners on a crusade. When they’re not unleashing epic psychedelic rock on bleary-eyed revellers as Black Mountain, they’re busy helping out at Insite – a Vancouver-based charity for the chronically poor, drug addicted and mentally ill. Not many bands can […]

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Stephen McBean, Amber Webber, Matt Camirand, Jeremy Schmidt and Josh Wells are five longhaired Canadian stoners on a crusade. When they’re not unleashing epic psychedelic rock on bleary-eyed revellers as Black Mountain, they’re busy helping out at Insite – a Vancouver-based charity for the chronically poor, drug addicted and mentally ill. Not many bands can mix a punishing schedule of tour hedonism with a keen social conscience. But Black Mountain have a knack for straddling extremes: they’ve managed mainstream success – their song “Stay Free” was featured on the Spider-Man 3 soundtrack and they supported Coldplay on their 2005 US tour – whilst still retaining their hard-rocking credibility.

Describe your sound in one word?

Josh Wells: Wide.

Stephen McBean: Ecclesiastical.

Jeremy Schmidt: Minus the really heavy religious connotations.

Matt Camirand: But with the gold leaf.

Photography: Ben Rayner
Words: Ben Cobb

Any rituals before a show?

Amber Webber: I pee like five times.

SM: We don’t do soul circles – no group hugging and apologising for all the bad things we’ve said to each other.

AW: I would actually like a soul circle.

MC: OK. We can try it sometime for you.

JW: I try to get my blood moving around my body so there isn’t such a harsh contrast between sitting around all day and then suddenly playing the drums.

Are you going to do any short songs?

SM: We’ve got one on our new record, which is only a minute and a half. But we never play it live because somehow we always fuck it up.

JW: It’s too short with too many chord changes.

MC: We’re used to taking a long time to make a statement.

AW: Plus it’s on acoustic guitar so Steve would have to switch guitars. It would take like 30 seconds just to swap guitars and then the song is only a minute and a half anyway, so there doesn’t seem much point.

What’s playing on the tour bus stereo at the moment?

AW: We haven’t played a single tune yet. We’ve only been on the bus for two days.

MC: Our driver isn’t part of the usual touring crew and he doesn’t seem too predisposed to listening to music on the bus.

JW: We don’t have any idea what kind of music he’s into yet.

SM: I think we’ll have figured it out by the end of the tour.

MC: It’s going to be like Rammstein or something.

JS: Yeah, it’s definitely some Euro industrial metal shit.

MC: We’ve got to get in there before he gets in there.

If you had to have one extra member… who would you pick?

AW: We could definitely use someone to dance round the stage and add some theatrics.

SM: What about Stacia, the topless dancer from Hawkwind?

JW: Or Bez from The Happy Mondays?

MC: A laptop might be useful.

A full version of this article first appeared in Wonderland #15, Oct/Nov 2008

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Quiet Village /2008/10/23/quiet-village/ Thu, 23 Oct 2008 11:13:00 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/beta/?p=419 Joel Martin, aka DJ Zeus, is a former film editor and one of London’s best respected record collectors. Matt Edwards is the man behind the moniker Radio Slave and Berlin-based label Rekid. The pair met at Sir Dunstan’s College in South East London but it took a car journey to drum’n’bass club Metalheadz one Sunday […]

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Joel Martin, aka DJ Zeus, is a former film editor and one of London’s best respected record collectors. Matt Edwards is the man behind the moniker Radio Slave and Berlin-based label Rekid. The pair met at Sir Dunstan’s College in South East London but it took a car journey to drum’n’bass club Metalheadz one Sunday night in 1995 for them to realise a shared love of pillaging car boot sales for oddball vinyl. As Quiet Village, Martin and Edwards proved themselves early on as remix wizards for The Gorillaz and The Osmonds. With their debut album Silent Movie, they take Italian soundtracks, down-tempo disco and exotic rock samples and create a series of Balearic wonders, complete with screeching seagull sound effects.

Who is your music for?

Matt Edwards: We’d love everyone to get into it. It’s the first music I’ve made that I can actually play to my parents and they appreciate it.

Joel Martin: My mum trainspotted one of the samples. I was really pleased by that.

Do you ever argue in the studio?

ME: Not really. We’ve known each other long enough that things run pretty smoothly.

JM: Actually, didn’t we recently have an argument about the tempo of music?

ME: It was a discussion. I make a lot of dance records so with the Quiet Village project I’m always saying, ‘Let’s leave out the drums.’

JM: And I want to hear some drums.

Are you competitive about your record collections?

ME: Joel digs a lot harder than I do.

JM: Not harder. I just have more time than you. I love sharing music. That’s what friends are supposed to do.

ME: We were both going to the same car boot sales back in the day but didn’t know each other. After we met through mutual friends, I’d pick Joel up every Sunday at about six in the morning and we’d go hit the booters together.

Where do you find your records now?

ME: Touring is good for finding stuff. But I always think, ‘Do I really don’t need any more records in my life?’ And suddenly I’ve got one hundred records in my hotel room.

JM: We’ve been to The Record Show in NYC for four years in a row. At one, Matt walked up and whispered, ‘I need to go and buy a flight case. There’s a guy over there who just sold me fifty Japanese super-amazing, high-end audio sound effects records for $30!’ These are now items that we’ve come back to time and time again for Quiet Village. If you want the sound of a humming bird, it’s on there.

Worst gig?

JM: San Francisco. It was peak time on a Friday night with an up-for-it club crowd. We were slightly confused as to why we were asked to play as our show was this weird audio-visual extravaganza. We got asked by the promoter to end the set early. He said, ‘I wouldn’t want to come and see this!’

If you could teach the world to sing, what would you teach them?

JM: The theme to Sesame Street. We’d like to do a mix of children’s records at some point.

Photography: Ben Rayner
Words: Ben Cobb

A full version of this article first appeared in Wonderland #15, Oct/Nov 2008

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Black Lips /2008/10/23/black-lips/ Thu, 23 Oct 2008 10:58:22 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/beta/?p=410 Black Lips call their sound “flower punk”. Live on stage, however, there is not much that’s flowery about Cole Alexander, Jared Swilley, Joe Bradley and Ian Saint Pé. Antics include vomiting, inter-band tonguing, pissing in their own mouths, spitting in each other’s mouths, fireworks, nakedness and a dancing chicken called Popcorn. These boys are smart. […]

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Black Lips call their sound “flower punk”. Live on stage, however, there is not much that’s flowery about Cole Alexander, Jared Swilley, Joe Bradley and Ian Saint Pé. Antics include vomiting, inter-band tonguing, pissing in their own mouths, spitting in each other’s mouths, fireworks, nakedness and a dancing chicken called Popcorn. These boys are smart. A series of raucous 2002 performances in their hometown of Atlanta, Georgia saw Black Lips banned from several venues, helped label them the state’s most notorious act and got them their first recording deal. Now signed to VICE Records, the four-man team supported the Raconteurs on their US tour earlier this year – and managed to keep a check on the exchange of bodily fluids.

Where are the other two?

Jared Swilley: I dunno.

Joe Bradley: Somewhere else.

How would you describe your music?

JB: [Burps]

JS: Like psychedelic pop… kinda.

JB: It’s rock but we take influences from lots of different places. I’ve been known to get inspired by classical Japanese composers.

JS: He means video-game composers.

JB: Hip-hop, sink taps and the sound of cars pulling off. You got to take influence where you can get it.

JS: We make it short and simple. I don’t like it to be intellectual. The music shouldn’t be too hard to get your head round.

What other band would you want to be in?

JS: If I had the talent or the voice, I’d be in The Falcons, Wilson Pickett’s first band. Actually I’d be in The Stones. Those guys are still like the happiest people on Earth.

JB: That’s because they’re rich as fuck.

JS: We have some friends who know them and they say those guys think everything is funny no matter what. I would too!

JB: They’re like, ‘Look at that microphone stand! Hahaha!’

JS: My whole life would be one big joke if I had that much money.

JB: Yeah, if presidents were coming to meet you, why wouldn’t you be happy?

Who’s the hardest in the band?

JS: Probably Ian. Ian’s the biggest.

JB: Yeah but Cole’s the scrappiest.

JS: But Ian could kill Cole. And Ian has a really tough older brother that he learned to fight with. I’ve seen Ian beat people up and I wouldn’t want to fight him.

JB: Ian doesn’t fuck around. But, see, we always fight together.

JS: We’re like fire ants. It doesn’t matter if one guy gets in a fight. We all fight. A little bit like the Three Musketeers but we’re not as gay as that.

JB: Or as fashionable.

JS: And there’s four of us.

What’s the last album you bought?

JS: The last one I actually spent money on was a 60s Jamaican compilation called Studio One Rockers.

JB: I bought an album by Brimstone Howl – they’re a band from Lincoln, Nebraska.

JS: You bought that?

JB: Yeah because I wanted to help them out. I was at their show in Omaha. They’re on Alive Records.

If you could teach the world to sing, what would you teach them?

JS: Living In America by James Brown.

JB: That came out so naturally. I concur.

Photography: Ben Rayner
Words: Ben Cobb

A full version of this article first appeared in Wonderland #15, Oct/Nov 2008

The post Black Lips appeared first on Wonderland.

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