Sunday 31 January 2010

DEAD LIKE HARRY - How to make an album without spending a cent

DEAD LIKE HARRY




DEAD Like Harry have serenaded a stranger's girlfriend, played to nothing but the sea when the ill-timed tide came in too fast and will soon hit Camden's most celebrated bowling alley.
Named after an eccentric uncle, the Sheffield six-piece, who place themselves somewhere between Fleetwood Mac and Bruce Springsteen, play Bloomsbury Lanes on February 25.
But the real story is how they managed to cut their debut album Know The Joy of Good Living (released Feb 15) without spending a cent.
Vocalist Sam Taylor, whose brother Matt is also in the band, said: "Without the backing of a major label it's hard to finance a professional album. It wasn't like we could do it in our rooms, we needed that big sound."
They approached Alan Smythe, who produced Arctic Monkeys, Reverend and the Makers, Richard Hawley and Pulp, and made him an offer he couldn't refuse.
"We asked him for a bit of a deal. We knew he wanted a new studio but also knew he was low on finance. We proposed the six of us would work for free and we'd get an album made at the end of it. For three months we lifted plaster board and made new walls in an old factory space and at the end of that we recorded our album. Alan put his heart and soul into it."
The end product is something to be beheld: "It's as vinyl as you can get. We were listening to classic albums and I just got obsessed with making a record sleeve. I talked to designers and came up with even the crinkly paper when you take the CD out. When you put the record on you think you're going to be listening to something which has that earthy feel. Nearly everybody listens to music on their i-pods and you have to accept that but some people want a souvenir or something tactile you can pass to your friends."
He describes the band's sound as being "rooted in traditional genres, blues, rock and coloured by a pop sentiment", adding: "It has the pop sensibilities like Fleetwood Mac meets the anthemic ideas of Bruce Springsteen or something like that - Born to Run mixed with something a lot more subtle, I'm not quite sure what."
Their moniker is in tribute to lead guitarist John Redgrave's great uncle, after he neglected to tell his mother Harry had died for some weeks.
"Harry was an eccentric, the crazy uncle who walked down the stairs at 7am picked up the whisky bottle and sat down with a cigar, the sort of guy who asked me and John when we were about 12 to go to off-licence for him, not realising the crazy thing he was asking us. Harry passed away and the message wasn't passed on. It's in tribute to the fact that the way Harry ended was similar to the way he lived - wild and
quite chaotic."
They decided to play Bloomsbury Lanes on recommendation from Jamie from Goldheart Assembly, who was full of compliments about the place, only adding to the eclectic venues they've played so far.
"In Chester a guy asked if we could play for his girlfriend. He gave me £20 and said he really wanted me to play next to the canal. It was a bit weird him watching me play his girlfriend a song along the canal."
Then at the Beached Festival in Scarborough, they soon realised their crowd had disappeared: "We were onstage as the tide was crawling in but increasing quite fast and so there was nobody stood in front of us for a while. We were just playing to the sea, to the lapping waves against the stage. I think they timed it a bit wrong. A nice moon, in the middle of the bay."

RECORD OF THE WEEK - LOS CAMPESINOS! Romance is Boring

LOS CAMPESINOS!
Romance is Boring




LOS Campesinos’ Gareth lost it when their album was leaked on the net before Christmas. He posted an emotional explanation for his reaction on the band’s website prompting a torrent of guilty admissions from fans who'd downloaded the album but promised to buy it when it was officially released - yeah right.
Single Romance is Boring (out Feb 15) is a taunting taster with a catchy chorus akin to a gang of schoolkids' playground jibes. The album's out on Monday, so here’s a chance to do the right thing and pay for it yourself – though it’s not about the money Gareth did insist.

I spoke to Ellen from the band this week and she told me they were surprised by the fans reactions - "It became like a confessional," she told me.
Read full interview on Friday.

Monday 18 January 2010

FIELD MUSIC EXCLUSIVE! Part 2 - WARNING! Ice can seriously damage your rock career.

SUNDERLAND band's David Brewis tells how he nearly lost the band's master for new album Field Music (Measure).



THE BBC's sound desk is temporarily down and the brothers behind Field Music are taking advantage of the break by revealing how the icy weather nearly killed their new album.
They're recording a session for Rob da Bank at the Beeb's Maida Vale studios, ahead of their biggest ever headline gig at Scala on March 3.
Their third album - Field Music (Measure) - a generous 20-tracks, considering their last album was a mere 30 minutes - is out on November 15.
But it nearly didn't happen, younger brother David Brewis says: "Before Christmas I slipped on the ice and smashed the screen on the laptop. We do all our recording on our laptops - almost everything on the album. The press lost the CD master so I had to somehow burn a new master from my laptop even though I could only see the top third of the screen.
"The people repairing the laptop told me there’s something wrong with the CD drive as well so it's quite possible we’re sending an album out with some kind of terrible errors - but I’m sure they'd have spotted it."

Next time wear your snow boots!

Sunday 17 January 2010

EXCLUSIVE! Field Music's third album threatened by ice - see tomorrow's post

I interviewed Sunderland brothers Field Music on Friday ahead of their largest ever show at Scala in Kings Cross.
They told me how the hazards of the icy weather almost put their third album in jeopardy.
Full story tomorrow.
In the meantime listen to their new single Them That Do Nothing here.

RECORD OF THE WEEK - HURTS Wonderful Life

HURTS
Wonderful Life


I've sadly abandoned this page for the festive season but as January fades away my eyes are opening and I'm returning to the real world.
Should have posted this one before Christmas.
Hurts have evoked the best of 80s electronica with this simple, authentic track.
What do you think?