Archive for the 'Artist/Band Interview' Category

ELEPHANT MICAH

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Given the amount of competition out there these days, you have to respect any musician who is yet to have a myspace/facebook/virb page showcasing their talents. Elephant Micah is one of these people and it would seem he prefers the old fashioned ‘word of mouth’ method of getting his music heard. He has been going at it now for about 8 years but after I heard the album Alsation Sunlight I still can’t believe that he is not better known and so I am trying my best to get his music heard, by word of mouth of course.

At times he reminds me of some early Experimental Low, early Lo-Fi Smog and the sparseness of J Tillman and perhaps some Elliott Smith too, with the way he layers some tracks so all of those put together has to create something special surely !! Well it does believe you me, this is some of the best music I have heard in my life. If still available I want to get a hold of the album ‘and the loud guitars’ as there is a song on there called ‘Nobody Knows Rosie’ which I just love, got a Bonnie Prince Billy thing going on in that one.

But it’s quite difficult to explain what kind of music Elephant Micah makes because there is so much in there, Country,folk,rock,lo-fi,experimental. These days it would probably get classified as Americana but it doesn’t really matter because what you get at the end of the day is an extremely gifted songwriter who deserves to heard by a much bigger audience.

Elephant Micah has Granted YCD an exclusive interview and also has kindly supplied a couple of tracks for your listening/download pleasure which I am sure you will enjoy.

Please, out of all the artists I’ve written about so far, I would urge you to support this real independant musician who pretty much does everything himself and if you really want to support Elephant Micah then please buy his records and go and see him live. All links to his music are provided in the interview below.

This man just simply has to be heard, please do so.

YCD - So firstly, could you please tell us who you are and where you are from?

EM - My name is Joe, and I’m from southern Indiana, near Louisville, Kentucky.

YCD - Ok, might as well ask you now, promoting anything right now or recently released anything?

EM - The only promotion happening around Elephant Micah is by word-of-mouth. For the time being, I hope the music will speak for itself, and that listeners will let each other know about it through outlets like this blog.

In terms of what I’ve released recently, there are a couple of new discs. The first is a full-length CD called Hindu Windmills, and the second is a small edition hand-packaged mini CDR titled Alsatian Sunlight. Both are kind of sparse, “singer-songwriter” affairs.

YCD - So where can we get a hold of this?

EM - I have a sub-website called the Luddite Rural Recording Cooperative. I sell my music there as well as a lot of other people’s self-releases. Here’s the link: www.lrrc.elephantmicah.com. I try to make this stuff available through other mailorders as well. (Time-Lag, Boa Melody Bar, Norman Records, and Fusetron each carry some Elephant Micah titles.)

YCD - I think some of your music reminds me of the likes of Low and even some early Smog. Do you think this is a fair comment?

EM - ’m not an expert on either of those bands. It’s probably a comparison worth thinking about though. Maybe you’re responding to the subdued singing style. I can identify with their vocal sounds. They seem quiet but not breathy… not restrained sounding. So I wouldn’t mind being in that school of singers, as opposed to the whisperers or the belters.

YCD - After speaking with you before you mentioned you had played in my hometown of Brighton in the U.K, Firstly what do you remember of Brighton and Secondly, are you planning on touring again soon anywhere in the world?

EM - The show promoter took me on the Crazy Mouse rollercoaster. It was excellent.

A few years later, I was surprised to see an identical Crazy Mouse at the Kentucky State Fair. Anyway, it’s not the same without the sense that you might be plunged into the ocean.

I’ve done lots of tours over the years, almost completely on a do-it-yourself basis. I’m less tolerant of it now—I prefer either to have an audience or to be paid. At least one or the other. These things are hard to come by on self-booked tours. So, it’s hard to find the right opportunities to “gig,” as you say in England. I’m always on the lookout, though.

YCD - If there is one song you could steal and claim it as your own for ever which one would you choose and why?

EM - Well, not literally.

I keep thinking about Jackson Browne’s “Before the Deluge,” though. It never ceases to speak to this post-back-to-the-land existence.

Plus, it rocks.

YCD - With so many new genres cropping up all the time now how would you best describe your music?

Are new genres cropping up, or is it just new genre names? I honestly don’t know. But I’d say that the way we are subdividing and sub-subdividing music has a lot more to do with extra-musical social signals than actual sound values. Basically, we “package” music to create the experience of distinctiveness whether or not the music is substantially distinctive.

Hopefully what makes my music distinctive is not its genre or style but its content and meaning.

Maybe if I had to invent a classification for Elephant Micah I’d do so by grafting “recordist” onto the old singer-songwriter designation. The self-recording process is a major part of what’s made Elephant Micah what it is, so maybe I can call it recordist-singer-songwriter music.

YCD - What are your hopes and fears for you in the future, musically?

EM - I’d like to make Elephant Micah a viable listener supported entity. I’m thrilled by the enthusiastic response to my music over the past eight years, but it remains a struggle to record, release, and distribute the recordings effectively. Things are moving at a snail’s pace, but I hope that the merits of the music will continue to attract people in spite of its low media visibility. I also have to hope that new listeners will recognize Elephant Micah as dependent on grassroots support, and will take an active personal interest in contributing through buying recordings or donating for downloaded music, as well as through spreading the word about my music to other music fans.

YCD - Finally, I notice you don’t have a myspace page yet you have released quite a lot of stuff. Is this because like me, you find it’s no longer a platform for new music and has been hijacked by the big music companies and their artists or is it just because you can’t be bothered?

EM - I just really can’t stand the word “myspace.”

 
 Elephant Micah - Detailed Cathedral [3:45m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
 Elephant Micah - Wild goose chase [4:51m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Sunshone Still - Ten Cent American Novels

Where do I begin to describe Sunshone Still. The beginning, a very dear friend of mine first introduced me to Chris Smith (Sunsone Still) about a year ago. He had just released his first album Dead Letters. At first he had somewhat of a reminiscent sound to the likes of Nick Drake and Elliott Smith, both of which I love, but the more I listened the more I fell in love with his voice. Dead Letters spent the summer with me in the car, I was particularly drawn to a song called “Damn You California”. I’ve often been asked if that song was written about me, it was not, but that could be our secret Chris.

Today seems to be the day of interviews so please forgive me if the post is long I have an independent review on this album and and interview with Chris Smith himself. Thank you Chris for taking the time to answer my questions. I wish you the best of luck.

YCD: What is the major difference between TCAN and your previous album Dead Letters?
CS: The cinematic nature of TCAN as a whole. Dead Letters will always be really special to me because it feels very authentic and honest to me – as evident in the lo-fi quality of the recording. Since TCAN is a concept album covering a complex history, it needed varying sounds to represent the varying themes. For example, “Blood and Thunder” is a song about self-hate, so it needed an angry, cathartic build and release to it. On the other hand, “Blue Bead” is the start of the peaceful denouement to the story and needed to be quiet and thoughtful.

YCD:Why did you decide to do a concept album? In particular this story.
CS: In the past few years, I’ve really come to admire well-done concept albums such as Willie Nelson’s Red-Headed Stranger and Sufjan Stevens’ Illinois. I guess the concept album approach had been fermenting in my mind. Last fall/winter, I started writing a “new” album, but it was going nowhere and I felt like I was re-hashing a lot of the same personal themes from Dead Letters. I wasn’t doing anything new. I guess I had writer’s block. Around the same time, I had just heard an interview on NPR with Hampton Sides’, author of Blood and Thunder. From that interview, I knew I wanted to write a song about Kit Carson and his first Indian wife, Singing Grass. After reading some of Sides’ book though, I just knew that this was the story I had to tell. Sounds too simple and cheesy of an explanation, but I just had this feeling that this part of the Native American story was my challenge.

YCD: What is your hope for this album?
CS: That’s hard to answer because I hope to see many outcomes. I’ll give a couple though. First, in this small way, I’d like to remind people, particularly US leaders, that genocide happened under the direction of our OWN government. The greed and arrogance that caused the destruction of the Native American still persists today as seen in our current foreign policy and energy policy (i.e., Iraq, Global Warming, etc). Another hope would be simply to sells some records, so I can pay off the awesome debt I accrued in just making the CD. I don’t ask for much.

YCD:Do you write your own lyrics and music? How important was the addition of instruments to this album? (I love the composition of this album, horns, strings, it’s just beautiful!)
CS: Yes, I write the lyrics and music. I’m kind of selfish in this regard, but it’s truly because I want an uncompromised artistic outlet for myself. Certainly, I worked with and relied on the other players to come up with their own parts for their instruments, but the basic chord progressions, melodies, and lyrics were my job – for better or worse. I asked a long-time friend, David Chenu, to take my “Ten Cent Theme” and compose a string arrangement for “Ten Cent Theme Outro”. He also wrote the horn arrangements on the album. He’s a musical genius. And I’m not just saying that.

The addition of other instruments, like strings and horns, was necessary to properly tell the story. For example, the second track, “Manifest Destiny”, is a song about our so-called Divine Right to spread the ‘great experiment’ of the US from sea to sea. That song had to be huge and bombastic. It had to slap you in the face and say, “Here’s a great idea – Let’s conquer the rest of this land at all costs.” Adding horns and strings to this song created that sense of urgency.

YCD: What are the biggest obstacles you feel a singer/song writer faces today?
CS: Getting heard. Yes, the Internets (Stephen Colbert reference, anyone?) has made it easier to get your music out to people at a relatively low cost, but there are so many other independent singer/songwriters (some good, some bad) and bands out there competing for your ears. Anyone can make a record now, so they all naturally want you to listen to their creation. So it’s hard getting a potential listener to filter through all those other options and find me. Not to mention all the other forms of media that sit in your palm. It is so easy to get distracted these days.

YCD: When are you coming to Los Angeles?
CS: I don’t know. My hope is to do a West Coast tour sometime in 2008. Can I crash at your place? YCD: Mi casa, tu casa!

YCD: Will you be touring soon? If so when?
CS: At present, I’m playing shows close to home, Columbia, SC. Can I be completely honest and put down the ‘Hey, I’m a highly sought after singer/songwriter’ wall? OK. First, I still have a serious day job, so it’s hard to travel outside of the Southeast for any great length of time. Second, I’m still relatively unknown in the Southeast, so it’s hard booking gigs at the better venues. Did I mention I still book my own shows, am not good at it, and hate it? So yeah, I still have some obstacles in my way. We’ll get there though.

YCD: Anything you would like to tell new listeners about your music, you etc.?
CS: Buy the damn album and you will have good luck and sex for seven years. Plus, it may help me play in a lovely city near you soon. Burning it from a friend or enemy is OK too – just spread some love about the record. But don’t blame me if you have bad sex for seven years.

Independent Review by Chad:

I’m a big fan of concept albums and will usually give the creator of them the benefit for even attempting to pull one off. The more apparent the concept, the better, and the more difficult. It’s gonna be easier to write 10 songs about love than it is to write 10 songs about loving the cute redhead in the flowery skirt who broke your heart at the Stevie Nicks concert. But to even add to the difficulty, think if that redhead was a cult leader who was bent on massacring anyone who had lawn seats before her. And make her a sympathetic character. It ain’t easy.

Taking a historically controversial character and writing a concept album is not something a novice should do, certainly not what one would expect for a sophomore album. But just add that to the joyfully unexpected things to come out of TEN CENT AMERICAN NOVELS. Coming off of Dead Letters, you’d expect his follow up album to be another batch of moody, heartbreaking, sad songs (that’s not a bad thing). TCAN is dense in lyric content, instrumentation, and emotion. It’s as if Sam Beam had a kid with Sufjan Stevens and they let Steve Earle raise him (not sure which is worse, the musical comparison or the sexual allusion).

It’s easy to think that you can make a good album by adding more ’stuff’, bet it more lyrics, more songs, or more instruments.Well, it’s not. And it’s also not easy to add more stuff and make them cohesively speak to the same idea. The horns on TCAN speak to the passion with which Kit Carson lived, the violins let you know that he experienced the breadth of emotions that a man can feel, and the electric guitars never let you forget that Kit Carson was a man’s man.

The density of the concept is impressive not only in the lyrical content, but in the liner notes, the song titles and layout, and even the only Sunshone Still photo. You won’t wrong yourself if you pick and choose songs from this album to listen to exclusively. Each stand on their own as well crafted, interesting, and inspiring. But taken as a conceptual whole, TEN CENT AMERICAN NOVELS is as impressive an album as I’ve heard, regardless of the creator’s notoriety.

Official Release date October 30th! Go buy the album. I have several favorite songs, one which I’ve posted for download, but you can listen to a few off his Myspace Page.

Buy

 
 Damn You California - Dead Letters [2:00m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
 Klamath Lake (It was a perfect Butchery) [5:19m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Matt Jones

Matt JonesWhile browsing the web searching for information about Chris Bathgate in order to write a decent introduction, I’ve been teasing by the frequency of the name : Matt Jones. Curiosity once again won ! After crawling under many pages about a homonym sportsman, i’ve finally loaded Matt Jones’s myspace page, labeled as indie, acoustic, folk…

Some rare singers have the gift to captivate at first notes, this is Matt Jone’s case. But this initial attraction is progressively converted into a complete addiction as Matt is offering more than just a great songwriting ability. His unique voice - which could sometimes could be compared to Tom Brosseau - is a perfect match on his rich acoustic concept.

Thanks Matt for taking time to answers these questions:

YCD : Singer, drummer, guitarist, pianist… Could you please tell us your story with the music ?
Matt : I started piano training at age 8, and continued for the next 12 years. I hated classical music, and the day I was planning on telling my piano teacher that I was quitting, she gave me a book of Scott Joplin’s piano rags. I fell in love and began playing, and listening to all the ragtime I could get my hands on. From there, I started playing the euphonium in school (my mother’s side of the family consists of many circus musicians, most of whom played the euphonium under the big top), switched to tuba, then switched to skateboarding, and guitar. I don’t know where the drums came in. I was a lefty drummer for a while just because I didnt know how to set up the kit. I’m really not very good on drums- I just bang shit really hard and try to catch vibes. every act that requests my drumming, I feel sorry for. But I also feel like I must really be a great actor. I played electric guitar for a while in my jam-band phase (I’m pretty sure everyone has one), and pared it down to acoustic when I realized I couldn’t control everyone in a band. playing by myself was easier on my control issues.

YCD : What did you grow up listening to ?
Matt : I was a pretty serious nerd growing up, without any real exposure to pop music till high school. I skimmed over a lot of jazz, but always had a ragtime cassette somewhere nearby.

YCD : Is there a song that you’re proud to have written?
Matt : I have probably been proud of all of them at one point or another. ‘Vampires’ is a favorite of mine, as is ‘Right To Arms’. the song i’ll probably never take out of the rotation though is ‘Earthbound’ (the secret song on the ep). The words were written by the poet Suzanne Hancock, a friend of mine. While some might flunk me for effort, I would state hands down that writing music for someone else’s words in infinitely harder than for your own.

YCD : Is there a song you wish you had written ?
Matt : “Rita Mae” by Misty Lyn. Elliott Smith’s “Coast to Coast”. Great Lakes Myth Society’s “Big Jim Hawkins”. Richard Buckner’s “Oscar Hummel” anything by Tom Turpin.

YCD : What’s your favourite thing about performing live?
Matt : it’s definitely not getting paid. I think its walking in to the club early, even before the sound person shows up. taking stock of the place you are going to be for the next 5 hours. If you play a lot of these shows, you realize that those smoked-out, loud, stinky rooms are the places you choose to pour yourself out to other people. To people you dont even know! Sometimes its ironic to the point of paralysis. So I like to get there early, just to walk around by myself, and get a look at the character of the place before I have to be nervous, and small-talkey with the people who are going to fill it up. I also like playing live because I’m huge and for at least a few minutes, any audience will pay attention to the huge guy on stage, dwarfing his guitar till it looks like a ukelele.

YCD : Where do you see yourself in ten years time?
Matt : I don’t even want to speculate.

YCD : What’s on your stereo at the moment ?
Matt : Great Lakes Myth Society s/t; Magnolia Electric Company boxed set; Pet Shop Boys; Nina Nastasia’s the blackened air.

YCD : Is there any way to buy your first EP : ‘Right to Arms’ ?
Matt : Local record shops have it. You can get it at live shows, and rumor has it that you can actually buy it at www.cassanovatemptations.com

YCD : Susan from Fox on the Hill, told me that your first full length is plan to be released by the end of the year ?
Matt : Truth. Many tracks need only mixing. Others need much more. Its my first experience in a real recording studio (Jim Roll’s Backseat Productions) and it has been wonderful, frustrating, and terrifying. im shooting for some pretty big arrangements, so it has taken a little longer than anyone expected.

It’s time to give him voice with the first following track entitled ‘Right to Arms‘ - from his debut EP released in 2005. The second one called ‘Nothing Joyful‘ is a live performance recorded this last winter at Keweenawesomefest - Houghton, Michigan. This complete set is available on the WTMU website and it’s a higly recommendation.

 
 Right To Arms - Matt Jones [3:19m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
 Nothing Joyful - Matt Jones [4:50m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

This second post about Michigan scene won’t be the last. The Ann Harbour folk scene is abounding in talents and my curiosity has been rewarded more than once ! Misty Lyn will be our next stop.

Artist : Matt Jones
Label : unknown.
If you like : Iron & Wine, Ray LaMontagne, Matt Jones will become a favorite !
You should also enjoyed : Joshua James, Mattias Hellberg, Lou Barlow

Josh Ritter on NPR

From Josh’s myspace:

Josh is on Today’s “Weekend Edition” on NPR Radio!

Airing today (Sunday, October 14th) is an interview and peformances by Josh on NPR’s nationwide program “Weekend Edition Sunday.” You can hear it on your local NPR radio station!

Find your station/air times here.

You can also watch an amazing live performance from the Paradiso, amsterdam here http://www.fabchannel.com/ from Sept 2007.

Clear Tigers - Brutal

Clear Tigers - Nathan and friends

To be honest, i’m not able to find my way back to cleartigers.com while browsing the web couple days ago, but I’m sure my email address has already been subscribed to their mailing list.  I am eagerly awaiting for their debut full length album.
I’ve found some new information about this band and my curiosity guided me to their contact form asking them a couple of questions.

Here’s the transcript.

YCD : Could you please introduce Clear Tigers ?
Nathan Akin : Clear Tigers is my recording project. My name is Nathan Akin. I live in Brooklyn, New York. I compose music and write songs. I wrote some
songs and recorded them myself at a friend’s studio here in Brooklyn.
Then I recruited some other friends to help me perform the music in
order to promote it. When playing shows, I’m joined by Tim Traynor,
Jeremy Schoenherr-Lachance, David Sanderson, Catherine Herrick, and Lisa Baker.

YCD : Influences ?
Nathan Akin : My influences are Terry Riley, Lightning Bolt, Joni Mitchell, Elliott Smith, Neu, Aphex Twin, techno on the Force Inc label, Spacemen 3, and many others. I also love french composers Faure and of course Debussy.

YCD : What’s on your stereo at the moment ?
Nathan Akin : Right now my stereo’s broken, but I’m listening to Ariel Pink, and I also like Feist.

YCD : Projects ?
Nathan Akin : As for projects, Clear Tigers is definitely planning to release the full length, “Brutal”, later this month.

I’d like to thank Nathan for taking time to answer these questions and allow us to post the two following songs from their first hand-screened eponymous E.P.

 
 Igloo - Clear Tigers [3:27m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
 Spook House [2:39m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Clear Tigers - EP coverSorry to inform you that the Clear Tigers EP that launched this September on Catbird Records is no longer available : so all you have to do is send your email/subscribe to their mailing list and wait for their imminent release !

Artist : Clear Tigers
Label : Catbird Records
You should also enjoy : Sea Wolf, Rock Plaza Central, Arcade Fire