Author: electricityclub (Page 10 of 416)

“I don’t like country & western, I don’t like rock music… I don’t like rockabilly! I don’t like much really do I? But what I do like, I love passionately!!”: CHRIS LOWE

“Good taste is exclusive”: NICK RHODES

SCANNER Interview

Photo by Jonathan Stewart

Describing himself as a “Global travelling explorer and flaneur electronique”, independent electronic musician Robin Rimbaud has been releasing music as SCANNER since 1993. His moniker came as a result of using police scanner devices that he had purchased from a friend in a hunt saboteur group in his live performances and recordings.

Born in London, Rimbaud immersed himself in avant garde literature, cinema and music from a young age, discovering the works of John Cage and Brian Eno via his piano teacher. He began composing in 1982 and has since been active in sonic art, live performance, event curation, installations, dance production scores, video, recording and academia.

An early adopter of the internet, Rimbaud’s experimental approach has seen him collaborate with the likes of Bryan Ferry, Michael Nyman and Laurie Anderson. His back catalogue is vast, taking in ambient, contemporary classical, art pop, jazz, glitch, IDM, soundtrack and experimental fields. 1997 saw SCANNER featured in the prestigious ITV arts magazine series ‘The South Bank Show’.

With no less than three albums ‘Alchemeia’, ‘The Phenol Tapes’ and ‘The Berklee Sessions’ already released in 2024, ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK had the pleasure of chatting to Robin Rimbaud about those and other aspects of his decades long role as a creative catalyst…

How did you become interested in electronic music?

Technology always appealed to me. I was playing with tape recorders from a very early age and borrowed synths from older boys at school as I couldn’t afford such things. The world of electronic music on record appealed to me in such a magical way, but, of course, I’m of a generation from the 60ds and 70s that heard strange and eclectic electronic music on TV shows as the soundtracks, for science programmes and so on, so it was always there, ever present.

What was your first synth and do you have a favourite one?

I couldn’t afford one for many years, so my first ‘serious’ synth was a Yamaha SY22 in 1990 which can be heard all over my records at the time. Just checking the details online regarding this synth, it’s reported that it was used by “MOBY, SKINNY PUPPY and SCANNER”. Well, that made me smile.

Now a few years later, I have significantly more synths and many favourites. One I have loved since I first bought it is the Kilpatrick Phenol Synth, such that when I travelled to Captiva in Florida in 2017, it was the only instrument that I took with me. More on that in a moment. Minimalism at its best 😀

Photo by Sophia Stefelle

You’ve released three albums in 2024 so far but have always been prolific, are you able to summarise your ethos and energy?

If I had a simple answer, I suppose I’d be setting up a course for others to attend to learn, but it’s mostly about discipline. Personally, I feel that I could do so much more, that I’m quite lazy, but others have commented on this aspect of my output. I wake up early each day, between 05.30 – 06.00, eat breakfast, take a walk, then begin work early, and work all day until around 17.30. I never work in the evenings or at the weekends.

Perhaps it also helps that I’ve never drunk alcohol, tea or coffee, never smoked, or taken drugs. You’d be amazed how many hours are extinguished for some people because of such addictions.

I’m able to get a lot done before the day really kicks in a sense. I also work efficiently. I have various systematic approaches to ways of work and remain true to them and so am able to achieve a fair deal in a short space of time.

‘Alchemeia’ pays tribute to electronic library music of the 60s and 70s, did you set yourself briefs for each composition or was it much freer than that?

The ‘Alchemeia’ concept began as an idea of exploring this music that I had heard in my sonic landscape as I grew up and somehow paying tribute to it, in the most respectful way. I kept in mind the composers whose work I admired as I began creating in the studio, people such as Tod Dockstader, Ron Geesin and Delia Derbyshire.

I also did my utmost to use dusty old, often unreliable and noisy, analogue gear to create the music too, in a sense remaining true to the source of the inspiration. Whilst must of this music was heard on TV and not the key focus, I wanted the background to become the foreground here. It led to a most playful and fun album that hopefully remains affectionately nodding towards its influences.

‘The Phenol Tapes’ has longer progressive pieces and was recorded on one synth and one guitar pedal in a wooden hut in Florida, how do restrictions alter your creative mindset?

Well, conscious that I was going to be living on an island for 6 weeks, at the invitation of the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation, and with little access to technology I had to make certain key decisions, especially given the size of equipment to take with me. I’ve always been rather a minimalist in terms of what I pack to travel so this was a great challenge.

Less can most definitely be more though. I would sit in this former fisherman’s hut in the heart of the landscape every single day and explore different aspects of the instrument. It was a very mediative and rewarding experience, especially sharing it with such wildlife as woodpeckers, osprey and woodpeckers, some of who guest on the album, almost unintentionally!

Such restrictions are invaluable though, where you are forced to rethink processes and possibilities and certainly not relying on software and plugins to embellish everything! This entire experience ended up simply being called ‘The Phenol Tapes’, after the name of the very technology I was using at the time.

‘The Berklee Sessions’ takes a wild excursion into jazz, how did this come about?

I was actually working at MIT in Boston at the time on an Artist Residency, and my friend Neil Leonard teaches at Berklee College of Music, and set up this session one day in the studio there. He kindly invited other sympathetic players, we set up and simply played. Honestly, just as simple as that.

The joy of working with such professionals as this is that much of their lives have been spent working against the clock in sessions with Frank Zappa, John Cale and others, so they worked as efficiently as me which was so rewarding. Somehow, we recorded about 75 mins of music in our short day, but it then took me TEN years to work my way through the most complicated sessions!

When I listen to ‘The Berklee Sessions’ now, I hear a combination of electronic sounds united with more psychedelic rock than jazz, so it’s a hard one to label. Reviews have compared it to Tortoise, Miles Davis or The Necks, which is so very flattering.

Photo by IW Photographic

You have collaborated on numerous occasions; how does your process change in these instances?

I honestly don’t overthink it. It very much depends on the circumstances. I’ve now worked on around 70 dance productions, so fully appreciate how the process develops with choreographers, whilst working with an architect is often accepting that it might well take at least five years for the project to come to fruition!

Working with other musicians is usually the simplest. I love the ability to exchange ideas in the creative process. I enjoy taking risks too, so working in circumstances I’m not necessarily familiar or comfortable with is very rewarding. For example, I recently ran a week of workshops with dancers and actors in Ravenna Italy, exploring the use of the voice in composition and performance. I was utterly out of my depth, but it was an extraordinarily rewarding experience for everyone!

Is another song based album like ‘Scanni’ which you did with Anni Hogan and various guests a possibility in the future?

Actually, it’s quite possible that the next release on my label Alltagsmusik will be an album with a female singer from Sheffield in the UK, Sally Doherty, which is more like torch songs meets PORTISHEAD and THE BEATLES. I’ve always loved songs but rarely written any. Almost my entire back catalogue is instrumental.

Having said that, I recorded cover songs for my late mum in 2020 for a tribute EP ‘Jayemme’ and then sang for the first (and possibly last) time the same year in a collaboration with my friend, the celebrated Dutch composer Michel Banabila on ‘The Spaces You Hold’. I only wish I were brave enough to sing in front of the public, but that’s unlikely to ever happen, I think.

Aside from these new 2024 releases, which work is your favourite from your back catalogue?

I’ve rarely ever listened to any of my own music. I move on from each release and project, but your question has gotten me thinking. I’m especially proud of the album ‘Fibolae’ (2017), which was recorded after losing my entire family. It’s an angry, passionate and intense recording.

I also still enjoy ‘Lauwarm Instrumentals’ (1999), which is a mix of melancholic melodies with intensely rhythmic pieces.

You issued your first self-titled album in 1993, electronic music has developed and is everywhere now, how do you view these recent sub-genres that have sprung up like hauntology and synthwave?

I’m never quite sure how genres help music listeners at times, as they began more as a way for record shops and magazines to organise their record racks. I don’t know of anyone who labels their own record collections in that way! But I’ve loved seeing how expansive the electronic music scene has become, embracing so many possibilities. I’m still as inspired by new music as I ever was!

Music distribution has also altered considerably since 1993, do followers of your work have a preferred format? How has it worked for you?

It’s clear that many collectors love vinyl, often buying copies that remain sealed, which is a quirky idea, but so be it. I’ve issued music on all formats and unfortunately the sheer extortionate costs of producing vinyl, the waiting time to receive them, and the postage to send them out, has meant that for the time-being, I’m focusing on CDs and digital.

A lot of my supporters enjoy digital music, and I even set up a Fan Club at Bandcamp to offer exclusive works to those who want them. At present there are about 50 works that can’t otherwise be heard anywhere else.

Where do you stand on the “sound quality” argument of vinyl vs CD vs MP3 vs lossless vs cassette vs streaming?

I’ve never used any streaming services for music, but to be honest I’m happy just to hear music. Like countless others I’ve enjoyed watching YouTube videos on a phone in mono, and hearing bootleg tapes of bands I love recorded as if hiding inside a cardboard box. As long as I have access to music in all formats, then I’m happy. I grew up listening to cassette tapes so anything was an improvement on that 🙂

Photo by Sophia Stefelle

As an independent artist, how have you adapted to social media? Is it a necessary evil, do you wholly embrace it or does it take up too much time, especially this algorithmic preference for video reels?

Well, I’ve been sending out a newsletter every month, on the first day of every month, since 1996, so that’s 28 years of socially engaging with supporters. I have been embracing the possibility of connecting with others for all this time, so actively use social networks for good. My Instagram account is largely focused on sharing my enthusiasm for new music, visual art and books. I avoid being drawn into the politics of life and other diversive subjects.

Social media is always looking to reinvent itself in endless possible ways, so a particular emphasis at this very moment on one aspect will presumably change again in the near future. I remain positive that these tools can be used for positive experiences!

What about AI, have you investigated this for use as a tool in your music?

I was a beta tester for one company exploring musical possibilities and in a year of experiments failed to find anything of interest for my own purposes, but I’m well aware of other companies who have trained their systems to produce the most extraordinary, largely unoriginal music.

Then again, I’ve already been using it with certain mastering software such as iZotope and in Logic Pro, and believe that it can offer us something very positive, but right now we are in the moment of discovery which is always unsettling and newsworthy, if only for the negative aspects.

What is next for you?

I have many commitments for 2024-25. I have at least 3 more albums to come out this year, plus a beautiful special art edition on vinyl which features scores for British artist and designer Ben Kelly. This can currently be seen in the Reverb show at 180 Strand in London.

I have a huge multimedia installation opening at Pompidou Centre in Paris on 3 December which will run until the close of the museum in March 2025, then tour the world for some years. It’s a work I made with the late Mike Kelley, an incredible American artist.

I also have two books that I need to return to and prepare for publication. And, in between, productions, soundtrack work and catching up with projects that never seem to be finished!


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to Robin Rimbaud

‘Alchemeia’, ‘The Phenol Tapes’ and ‘The Berklee Sessions’, along with the SCANNER back catalogue is available digitally direct from https://scanner.bandcamp.com

https://scannerdot.com/

https://www.facebook.com/scannerdot

https://x.com/robinrimbaud

https://www.instagram.com/robinrimbaud

https://www.youtube.com/@RobinRimbaudScanner/videos

https://open.spotify.com/artist/7FEmduuEjfoagq6Qrgviji


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
13 July 2024

UTAH SAINTS Interview

Just as affordable synths from Japan from the likes of Korg and Roland fuelled the rise of Synth Britannia, it was affordable samplers manufactured by Akai fed the rave revolution…

UTAH SAINTS were pioneers of what came to be known as stadium house, a term coined by Bill Drummond of THE KLF; comprising of Jez Willis and Tim Garbutt, the pair become known for their melting pot of influences. Elements of synth, art pop, funk, disco, soul, R’n’B, rock, metal, techno, breakbeat and hip hop were sampled, remixed, edited and processed to produce their own distinctive brand of electronic dance music which euphorically sat in between the underground and the mainstream.

Their 1993 debut self-titled album spawned the hits What Can You Do for Me’, ‘Something Good’, ‘Believe in Me’ and ‘I Want You’, leading to them to open for U2 on the stadium leg of their ‘Zoo TV’ tour. Their self-referencing catchphrase “UTAH SAINTS-U-U-U-UTAH SAINTS!” became ubiquitous, so much so that in an indicator of their profile at the time, alternative comedy pairing Baddiel & Newman sent up the duo in an ‘MTV Unplugged‘ sketch.

Work towards the follow-up to their Top10 debut long player took a number of years and ‘Two’ did not emerge until 2000. But in the interim, the remix commissions came flooding in and included THE HUMAN LEAGUE, SIMPLE MINDS, JAMES, BLONDIE, HAWKWIND and THE OSMONDS alongside soundtracks for computer video games.

While there has not been a new album since, UTAH SAINTS have kept busy with standalone digital singles, more remixes, worldwide DJ appearances, curating festival stages and promoting their own events, often showcasing new talent. Their best known track ‘Something Good’ continues to have a life of its own and became a hit again as a 2008 remix featuring new vocals by Davina Perera. More recently, their ‘Two’ opener Sun’ was used on the end credits of the 2022 Steve Buscemi film drama ‘The Listener’.

With a busy 2024 schedule and plans to release new music, UTAH SAINTS collectively answered questions put to them by ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK about their past, present and future…

How did UTAH SAINTS begin? Was it scene or tech related, or both?

Jez Utah was in electronic based bands MDMA, CASSANDRA COMPLEX and a surf band – SURFIN DAVE & THE ABSENT LEGENDS. He came to UTAH SAINTS heavily influenced by European electronic music such as FRONT 242 and THE YOUNG GODS, and Metal – MOTÖRHEAD, AC/DC and THIN LIZZY. He was also DJ-ing 70s disco and funk, having started as a mobile function DJ when he was 14.

Tim Utah was heavily influenced by 80s hip hop and late 80s/early 90s house. He was a DMC Turntablist semi-finalist when he was 17. The mutual crossover was PUBLIC ENEMY and THE KLF. When rave took off, it combined all of our musical interests, and was DIY – this ticked all the boxes for us, so off we went.

Martyn Ware has recalled he had a choice of buying a synth or learning to drive back… the availability and affordability of Akai samplers and Atari computers must have helped but did you have any similar choice dilemmas?

Yes, it was a car or a sampler.

One of the statements on the first album was “TAKE CONTROL OF THE MACHINE NOW!”, was it important for UTAH SAINTS to have a manifesto of sorts, even if was just for yourselves?

Yes, very important – we were just saying get on the tech now, or be left behind. A very similar message applies now, 30 years later.

You were quite bold and went for quite high profile vocalists to sample from the off, how was the process of clearing them? Was it more straightforward back then or did it open up a can of worms?

Like now, it varied as everyone has a different opinion on sampling. Kate Bush was obviously a very sensitive negotiation that we stayed out of as we were new and she is such an amazing icon.

Whether it was Annie Lennox, Gwen Guthrie, Kate Bush or Phil Oakey, while the voices were recognisable on UTAH SAINTS’ tracks, the manipulation of these created your own glossolalia, would you have been doing the sampler equivalent of “jamming” to create these?

Yes, we would sample anything and everything music-wise, and layer and loop to see what worked – took a lot of influence from the Shocklee brothers’ approach.

‘Believe In Me’ was quite mad as you had Sylvester sparring off Phil Oakey next to CROWN HEIGHTS AFFAIR, did this reflect the broad musical church of UTAH SAINTS?

Yes, as broad as we can get – it’s all sonically useful, and some of the most interesting sounds come from combinations that might not be too obvious.

After all the art pop, synth, soul and disco, ‘I Want You’ used samples of heavy rock band SLAYER, where did that idea spring from?

Jamming with the sampler. One thing that held us back a bit was trying to reinvent our sound track-by-track as opposed to album-by-album, which is what we probably should have done. Also that’s where THE YOUNG GODS’ influence arrived.

You covered SIMPLE MINDS ‘New Gold Dream’ but this appeared to coincide with U.S.U.R.A. ‘Open Your Mind’ which sampled it. Did you ever think about conceiving a sample based track before settling on doing a cover version?

No, we wanted to cover one of the biggest live tracks we could think of at the time – that was a stadium track, and helped us when we played live, especially when we opened for U2 in actual stadiums. The U.S.U.R.A. track is great, really nice sampling.

How did you feel when UTAH SAINTS were later invited to remix ‘I Travel’ by SIMPLE MINDS in 1998?

Honoured, excited and a bit intimidated – early SIMPLE MINDS was so groundbreaking, such a great band.

There was a remix of ‘Crazy Horses’ by THE OSMONDS in 1996 which was quite appropriate…

Yes, that’s why we did it, they also paid us with an Akai 3200, so that we could fully sample what we needed for that remix.

Your remix portfolio is wide and has included BLONDIE, THE WEDDING PRESENT and GIRLS ALOUD, do you have a favourite out of all the ones you’ve done?

Tricky, but probably ‘Little Bird’ by Annie Lennox.

Photo by Martyn Goodacre

Did you feel any affinity with other British dance acts of the period like THE KLF, LEFTFIELD, THE PRODIGY, ORBITAL, UNDERWORLD and THE CHEMICAL BROTHERS? Was it a bit brothers in arms or had there been some rivalry?

Love all of them, total privilege to be associated with those names. No rivalry from us, just awe, respect and an ambition to be as good as them.

It took 7-8 years to follow-up the debut album but then this wasn’t unusual among dance-based acts as LEFTFIELD, THE PRODIGY and STEREO MCs proved, but were you worried about becoming too formulaic? Was there an existential crisis?

Yes, we were pulling ourselves in all directions, and the business wanted us to be NINE INCH NAILS for the USA and THE KLF for the UK. We are The Utahs, and we did our own heads in a bit, trying to work out what that meant.

On top of that we heard ‘Born Slippy’ about a year before it came out, and THE PRODIGY released ‘Jilted Generation’. Both those things happened when we were making the second album, and made us re-assess what we were doing yet again.

The ‘Two’ album featured a diverse cast including Michael Stipe, Christie Hynde, Edwin Starr, Chuck D, Joyce Sims and Iggy Pop while there were also samples of METALLICA and AVERAGE WHITE BAND, what are your memories of putting this body of work together? Was there a sense of freedom, relief and adventure after the shelved second record?

Yes, we had nothing to prove at that point, so we spent two years, all day every day making that album, it’s a very complex album, but probably only us who see it that way. Amazed to get all the samples cleared, again a great honour.

‘Power To The Beats’ featuring Chuck D from PUBLIC ENEMY was quite different to what had gone before on the debut record? It reminds me a bit of ‘Afrika Shox’ by LEFTFIELD and Afrika Bambaataa, but was the influence much deeper rooted in the pioneering era of rap and hip-hop.

The idea was to make a track that had both those parties on. At the time there was a big debate in the USA about Napster allowing free downloads of music. There was a debate in The Senate and both Chuck D and METALLICA testified there. It was reported as them being on different sides of the argument – Chuck pro-Napster, METALLICA anti. That wasn’t the case at all, they both wanted similar things. We thought it would be interesting to make a track with both of them sampled. It worked, but no-one got the Napster reference…

You are still touring extensively, what can people expect from a UTAH SAINTS show today?

Essentially heads down DJ-ing with effects, playing as much exciting music as we can pack in – ours, other peoples, and special edits of known tracks…

Are there any proudest moments or achievements UTAH SAINTS?

That we were part of the emergence of rave music – as well as Utah music, we have promoted over 1500 events, booking hundreds of electronic DJs and acts. After that, we’re just happy that we still feel relevant to the electronic music scene – a lot of current dance music is emulating the earlier sounds.

What is next for UTAH SAINTS? Will there ever be a new album, does the long playing format have a place any more in the modern music environment?

We’re planning that, if we can get out of our own way and trust our own judgement when it comes to our own music, then yes, there will be new music – we currently have over 25 tracks on the go. The album concept is interesting – if we finish maybe 10 tracks in a similar timeframe, which is the aim, then we will release an album. The Long Player does have a place, just perhaps not the driving force it once was…

Will AI play a part in the future of UTAH SAINTS, in music making, DJ-ing or live presentations? Have you used it for anything yet?

It’s a tool, but until bio-computers arrive that can grow their own brains, AI in the context of creativity is re-active at the moment, not pro-active. What the world really needs is new ideas, not rehashed old ones, and that is probably a few years off with AI.

It’s an exciting time though!


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to UTAH SAINTS

The ‘Utah Saints’ and ‘Two’ albums are still available in the usual formats

UTAH SAINTS 2024 DJ dates include:

Middlesbrough Save The Rave (13 July), Maidstone Revival In The Park (14 July), Bromyard Noz Stock (19 July), Clitheroe Beatherder (20 July), Halifax Piece Hall (27 July), Nantwich Deva Fest (9 August), Escot Park Beautiful Days (17 August), Silloth Solfest (22 August), Morbeth Party In The Park (25 August), London 100 Club (14 September), Folkestone Quarterhouse (21 September), Minehead Shiiine On Weekender (16 November), Birmingham Hare & Hounds (13 December)

http://www.utahsaints.com/

https://www.facebook.com/UtahSaints

https://x.com/UtahSaints

https://www.instagram.com/utahsaints/

https://open.spotify.com/artist/2KB6LGMBaOYYYdvvgyptFH


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
8 July 2024

HEAVEN SENT The Rise Of New Pop 1979-1983

Unlike “New Romantic”, “New Pop” was a term that never truly stuck… it was coined by Paul Morley, then a polarising writer for NME. It was used to describe forward thinking music that, while rooted in post-punk, was accessible and looked to overthrow rockist conventions by unashamedly blending a variety of styles.

The acts who found themselves considered as part of this movement included THE CURE, SIMPLE MINDS, OMD, JAPAN, CHINA CRISIS, THE HUMAN LEAGUE, SOFT CELL, HEAVEN 17, EURYTHMICS, TEARS FOR FEARS, A FLOCK OF SEAGULLS, FUN BOY THREE, SCRITTI POLITTI, THE STYLE COUNCIL, ALTERED IMAGES, DEXY’S MIDNIGHT RUNNERS, MONSOON, THE TEARDROP EXPLODES, ABC, HAIRCUT 100, THE PALE FOUNTAINS, EYELESS IN GAZA, BLUE RONDO A LA TURK, RIP RIG & PANIC, JOBOXERS, THE HIGSONS and even THE STRANGLERS.

This was a broad church that many would not have granted a common association but that was the point. Even in what appeared to be traditional band formats, new technology meant synths emulated brass sections or funk basslines while drum machines took the place of conventional sticksmen and it could all be recorded in a DIY fashion with portastudios and the like.

New Pop was about the aspirations of those disenchanted with the Winter of Discontent and then the Conservative government under Margaret Thatcher to pick up musical instruments without any formal training. The intention was to be heard, whether in the clubs, on the radio or in the charts. The ever dependable Cherry Red present ‘Heaven Sent – The Rise Of New Pop 1979-1983’, a 4CD collection compiled by the team who curated the ‘Musik Music Musique’ sets.

Of the artists that ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK would appreciate, there are fine choices that are off the beaten track away from obvious hits; THE HUMAN LEAGUE are represented by the excellent ‘Boys & Girls’ which was the first single after the departure of Martyn Ware and Ian Craig Marsh while the latter pair’s HEAVEN 17 contribute the locomotive snap of ‘I’m Your Money’. OMD have ‘Red Frame / White Light’, the lightweight ditty about the 632 3003 phonebox which served as their office in their formative years.

But synthpop was taken to the next level with the gritty social commentary of ‘Bedsitter’ proving that SOFT CELL were more than a one hit wonders and could chart with self-written material. A sign of how angst ridden youngsters were expressing their existential and political concerns to music came with fine debut offerings respectively from TEARS FOR FEARS and CHINA CRISIS but while ‘Suffer The Children’ and ‘African & White’ were not Top40 hits, they were hints of their mainstream success to come.

A year before they subverted the singles chart with ‘Party Fears Two’, ASSOCIATES were peddling the more challenging ‘Q Quarters’ while on THE CURE lightened up with ‘Let’s Go To Bed’ in the first of their fantasy singles trilogy that would later include ‘The Walk’ and ‘The Love Cats’. And prior to DEAD OR ALIVE becoming a HI-NRG disco act, they were a brooding goth band with ‘The Stranger’ in its original Black Eyes Records incarnation as wonderful evidence of that.

Maturer acts who made an impression during this period like M, THE BUGGLES and NEW MUSIK are all present and correct with their biggest hits while one song that deserved to be a hit was the bizarre but brilliant techno-swing of ‘An Englishman In New York’ from 10CC refugees Kevin Godley and Lol Creme.

Capturing two acts in transition, fresh after departing THE TOURISTS, EURYTHMICS get served by their first German influenced single ‘Never Gonna Cry Again’ while the 7 inch single edit of ‘The Art Of Parties’ by JAPAN and its brass-fuelled exploration of more rhythmic territory makes a rare digital appearance.

The epitome of New Pop has often been seen to be ABC with ‘Poison Arrow’ and with the band plus assorted session musicians tracing the pre-programmed guide track helmed by Trevor Horn with live instrumentation, modern production was born where funk, soul and orchestrations could sit alongside the mechanised synthpop that had achieved a wider breakthrough in 1981.

With New Pop, funk was often a constituent and FAD GADGET’s ‘Make Room’ brought that in spades alongside the synth, while COLOURBOX had a cross of electronics, funk and reggae in ‘Shotgun’, although both were perhaps too idiosyncratic to crossover to wider audiences.

There’s also the inclusion of the first Thomas Dolby single ‘Urges’ co-produced by XTC’s Andy Partridge and the boxed set’s title song ‘Heaven Sent’, Paul Haig’s excellent take on SIMPLE MINDS ‘I Travel’ polished for the New York dancefloor by producer Alex Sadkin; to have the former JOSEF K frontman and his song originally written for the band in this position is fitting as Paul Morley had designated Paul Haig “the enigmatic fourth man” in a quartet of New Pop saviours which also included Billy Mackenzie, Jim Kerr and Martin Fry.

The delight in these boxed sets is to rediscover music that has been largely forgotten over time and one is ‘Dance Sucker’, an electro-funk stomper by SET THE TONE; a combo featuring one-time SIMPLE MINDS drummer Kenny Hyslop, it was he who taped the track ‘Too Through’ by BAD GIRLS off Kiss FM in New York that inspired the band to write ‘Promised You A Miracle’; SIMPLE MINDS themselves feature with the underrated ‘Sweat In Bullet’ from 1981.

One nice surprise is THE UNDERTONES’ synth flavoured ‘Beautiful Friend’ where they appear to have actually got THE HUMAN LEAGUE in to advise them while Pauline Murray with THE INVISIBLE GIRLS are delightfully rousing with the Martin Hannett produced ‘Dream Sequence 1’. Another fine inclusion is Edinburgh’s TV21 and their Mike Howlett produced single ‘All Join Hands’ with its combination of sequencers and strings.

By 1983, THE STRANGLERS had shed their more aggressive tendencies with the pretty ‘European Female’ but harking back to those days, Hazel O’Connor’s cover of their ‘Hanging Around’ begins as an enigmatic Casiobeat cover with the ‘Breaking Glass’ star trying to be Grace Jones before morphing into a more routine reinterpretation with synth and sax. And speaking of Grace Jones, her reggae cover of JOY DIVISION’s ‘She’s Lost Control’ has to be heard to be believed.

One hit wonders from THE FLYING LIZARDS, DEPARTMENT S and THE PASSIONS add to the fun but some of the inclusions have not aged well. ‘The House That Jack Built’ by Paul Weller protégée Tracie Young is frankly dreadful while the embarrassing ‘John Wayne Is Big Leggy’ by HAYSI FANTAYZEE only gets a free pass because Kate Garner and Jeremy Healy comically subverted Top Of The Pops by performing this song about anal sex with unambiguous actions to boot!

Not everything on ‘Heaven Sent – The Rise Of New Pop 1979-1983’ will satisfy the majority of listeners but what cannot be denied about most of the inclusions is that they are largely inventive and exciting. It is a period to savour because what then comes after is the bland sophisti-pop and cod soul meanderings of SADE, SIMPLY RED, GO WEST, SWING OUT SISTER, HUE & CRY, CURIOSITY KILLED THE CAT, WET WET WET and LIVING IN A BOX with their far more musically conservative (with a small ‘c’) disposition.


‘Heaven Sent – The Rise Of New Pop 1979-1983’ is released by Cherry Red Records as a 4CD boxed set on 26 July 2024

https://www.cherryred.co.uk/heaven-sent-the-rise-of-new-pop-1979-1983-various-artists-4cd-box-set


Text by Chi Ming Lai
3 July 2024

PATRICIA WOLF The Secret Lives of Birds

Patricia Wolf is one of the emerging talents in electronic ambient music having begun her career in the acclaimed synth duo SOFT METALS.

Based in Portland, in early 2022 she released her debut album ‘I’ll Look For You In Others’, a bittersweet work documenting a period of bereavement, heartbreak and disconnect. The swift follow-up ‘See-Through’ was one of the best records in the genre that year and offered a more hopeful and joyous approach which led her to a place of life embracing lightness.

Combining modern and natural worlds, one key aspect in the music of Patricia Wolf is her use of field recordings and this shapes her new album ‘The Secret Lives of Birds’ more than previously. Having recorded various bird songs and calls, curiosity led her to become a bird watcher and conservationist; this record reflects this passion. While the music is very beautiful at times, there are darker moments of angst and sadness driven by concern. The end result is like a soundtrack for an as-yet-unmade wildlife documentary.

Photo by Edward Pack Davee

Self-explanatory and with synthetic droplets simulating contact calls, ‘The Secret Lives of Birds’ title piece sets the scene for the album. A range of gentle and sharper arpeggios represent ‘The American Dipper’ as windy sweeps glide into the backdrop while ‘Rufous Hummingbird Dive Display’ swoops and hovers as the influence of the late Ryuichi Sakamoto pays a visit.

Inspired by the wonder of its title, ‘Starling Murmuration’ captures these swirls and patterns in the sky through a cleverly constructed pattern of seemingly randomised textures and passages. Over a backdrop of delightful quacks, ‘Greylag Geese Through the Listening Sculpture at Tjörnin’ offers tonal reflection alongside metallic creaking in its aerial movement before ‘Bewick’s Wren’ presents a sound sculpture of minimal synth passages

Photo by Gina Roberti

‘Golden-Crowned Sparrow’ has something of a serene quality along with ‘The Ptarmigan and the Gyrfalcon’ although the latter is shaped by deeper ominous tones of loss in the web of life and the fable of these two birds in Icelandic folklore. ‘Mourning the Varied Thrush That Struck a Window and Died’ documents Patricia Wolf’s own personal experience of a bird hitting a window at her house and dying shortly after; embroiled in heartbreak, this is a haunting emotive piece.

‘Nocturnal Migration’ comes swathed in an airborne wash while reminiscent of CLUSTER & ENO’s ‘One’, Wolf utilises the Nuetone AI plugin tool on one of her field recordings to illustrate the depressing spectre of a future world where wildlife has gone extinct in its natural habit. Then rising high in the air, ‘Soaring’ has density as natural wave upon synthetic wave glistens and builds to conclude.

Patricia Wolf’s creative mission is to use music to “make people more sensitive to the world and maybe a little more careful with it”. An album to savour, ‘The Secret Lives of Birds’ is a fabulous thought provoking work with a variety of emotions that has a sense of purpose.


‘The Secret Lives of Birds’ is released on cassette and digitally by Nite Hive, available from https://patriciawolf.bandcamp.com/album/the-secret-lives-of-birds

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Text by Chi Ming Lai
28 June 2024

JULIA-SOPHIE Interview

After nearly achieving mainstream success as a member of rock band LITTLE FISH, Anglo-French singer-songwriter Julia-Sophie Walker became disillusioned and retreated into DIY music making as a solo artist.

The end result was three excellent EPs ‘y?’, ‘</3’ and ‘it feels like thunder’ which captured her anguish and pain. But despite the emotional anguish of her vocal expression, Julia-Sophie always has hope on the horizon in her style of absorbing electronic avant pop.

Now she takes the plunge into the long form with her debut album ‘forgive too slow’. Providing a deeply personal reflection on past relationships, these gently emotive songs combine traditional composition and experimental sound synthesis. One moment these songs can be ambient, then rhythmically skippy, then airy pop while sung in English and then spoken in French, each presents its own world weary character connected by Julia-Sophie’s fraught narrative.

With the release of the heartbreaking second single ‘telephone’ from ‘forgive too slow’, Julia-Sophie kindly took time out to speak to ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK about her creative process.

You opened your solo account with three EPs, did you regard these as an apprenticeship before you took the plunge with a full-length album?

Yes, the first three EPs I made were all about exploring sounds, seeing where my creativity would take me, who I was and wanted to be as a solo artist. This experimentation was crucial in developing my sound and style.

How do you look back on those EPs, particularly the first two which had the symbol coded titles ‘y?’ and ‘</3’ ?

Looking back on those EPs, I see them as pivotal moments in my artistic journey. They were experimental and raw, capturing my willingness to explore uncharted territories and express complex emotions through sound. ‘y?’ represented a phase of questioning and curiosity, while ‘</3’ delved into themes of heartbreak and vulnerability. These early works laid the foundation for my sound and continue to influence my music today.

 What were the various pros and cons in the solo creative and production process at first?

Initially, navigating the solo creative and production process was both exhilarating and challenging. On the plus side, I had complete creative freedom to experiment with different sounds and ideas, allowing my unique style to emerge organically. The ability to make decisions independently and work at my own pace was incredibly liberating.

However, the process also came with its challenges. Without a collaborative sounding board, I sometimes struggled with self-doubt and second-guessing my choices. It was easy to get lost in the technical aspects of production, which occasionally pulled me away from the pure joy of creating music. Balancing creativity with the technical demands of production required a steep learning curve, but ultimately, it was a rewarding journey that made me a more versatile and resilient artist.

In terms of tech, what are your favourite tools and why? Are you quite software oriented or is hardware the best most tactile way to make music?

Although I do use software, my go-to tools are analog synths and analog drum machines. I believe they offer more depth and a richer, more organic sound. For me, there’s an unparalleled warmth and complexity that comes from working with analog equipment, and the hands-on experience of tweaking and playing with these instruments often leads to unexpected and exciting creative outcomes.

Which artists and producers have shaped your approach to electronic music?

Several artists and producers have significantly shaped my approach to electronic music. Pioneers like APHEX TWIN and KRAFTWERK have influenced my appreciation for innovative sound design and pushing the boundaries of electronic music.

Contemporary producers like Four Tet, Bonobo, Thom Yorke and James Blake have inspired me with their ability to blend organic and electronic elements seamlessly. Additionally, the intricate production techniques of artists like Jon Hopkins and the emotive, textured soundscapes of Nicolas Jaar have deeply impacted my approach to creating immersive and emotionally resonant music.

‘forgive too slow’ is about relationships and you have dug deeper than before, how do you feel now you have finished it?

Finishing and releasing ‘forgive too slow’ feels quite exposing. This album delves deeper into the complexities of relationships than anything I’ve done before, exploring themes of self-destruction, tenderness, love, and emotional struggles. The process was challenging, raw, and cathartic, but now that it’s complete, I feel a little empty and vulnerable. Sharing such honest emotions with listeners is both daunting and powerful, but I have done it in the hope that it resonates with people on a deeper level and because I don’t want people who have felt or feel similarly to feel alone.

What was most different in your approach when doing an album compared with the EPs?

The most significant difference in my approach when working on an album compared to the EPs was the level of depth and cohesion I aimed for. With the EPs, I was more focused on exploring sounds and taking creative risks on individual tracks.

However, for the album, I wanted to create a more unified and immersive experience. The album format allowed me to delve deeper into storytelling and develop my song and production arrangements. This required a more disciplined and sustained effort.

‘numb’ is a striking statement and observers have commented on the intense bassline, how did the track develop, especially with its distinct sections and changes?

‘numb’ is indeed a track that evolved significantly during its development. The intense bassline was one of the first elements I created, serving as the foundation around which the rest of the track was built. I wanted it to convey the feeling of underlying, incessant tension. As the track progressed, I experimented with distinct sections and changes to mirror my experience of fluctuating emotional states, from numbness to overwhelm, back to numbness.

The introduction starts with a minimalist approach, gradually building up layers and shifting the intensity to more complex rhythms and textures, creating a feeling of escalating pressure and reflecting my inner chaos and loss of control. My hope was that this contrast would help capture the dynamic nature of human emotion, how it can oscillate.

In the outro, the track strips back down, almost to its initial minimalism, but with a deeper, more resonant sound. This return to simplicity after the intense middle section is meant to illustrate the cyclical nature of life and emotion, the different ways we navigate or experience emotional storms.

Another intense one is ‘lose my mind’ which has these buzzy rumbles and skippy rhythms, was doing this one quite cathartic for you?

Yes, creating ‘lose my mind’ was incredibly cathartic. The buzzy rumbles and skippy rhythms were designed to capture the chaotic energy and disorientation I was feeling at the time. Working on this track allowed me to channel those intense emotions into something tangible. The process of layering these sounds and experimenting with rhythms was both a release and a form of self-expression, helping me process and make sense of my inner turmoil.

‘comfort you’ has contrasting moods with frantic beats and heavy drones sitting next to parts that are almost acapella, what was going on in your head to inspire that?

‘comfort you’ reflects my experience of feeling contrasting emotions. The frantic beats and heavy drones represent the inner franticness and stress I often feel, whilst the almost a cappella vocals symbolising how I might openly communicate myself. They are very different. I wanted to capture these opposing states and illustrate how they coexist in my music – I guess it is a statement about how easy it is for us to be to missed.

There appears to be comparative relief with ‘wishful thinking’ which is more like a conventional electronic pop song, was this a deliberate gesture?

Yes, ‘wishful thinking’ was a deliberate gesture towards a more conventional electronic pop sound. After exploring intense and complex emotions in my other tracks, I wanted to create something that felt lighter and more hopeful. This track serves as a moment of relief and optimism within the album, reflecting a desire for simpler, more straightforward emotions. It’s meant to provide a contrast and a sense of balance, offering a break from the intensity and a glimpse of positivity.

Are there any pivotal or favourite tracks for you on ‘forgive too slow’ and why?

‘just us’ and ‘telephone’ are special to me. For whatever reason, they touch me profoundly and have an emotional impact that resonates deeply within me. Every time I hear them, I feel the intensity and vulnerability that went into their creation, often bringing me to the brink of tears. These songs are not just tracks on an album; they are emotional experiences that hold significant personal meaning for me.

Who do you hope ‘forgive too slow’ might appeal to?

I hope ‘forgive too slow’ resonates with anyone who has ever struggled with complex emotions and the intricacies of relationships. I believe it will appeal to those who seek depth and authenticity in music. I want it to reach listeners who feel misunderstood or alone in their experiences, offering them a sense of connection and understanding. Whether they are navigating the highs and lows of love, dealing with inner turmoil, or striving for personal authenticity, I hope this album provides solace and a feeling of solidarity.

What are you own hopes and fears both personally and artistically as the state of the world continues to be less certain?

As the state of the world continues to be less certain, my personal and artistic hopes and fears are intertwined. The broader global issues—climate change, social unrest, and economic instability—pose existential threats that impact everyone, and I worry about how these challenges will affect our ability to live as kind and loving humans, let alone create space in our lives that enable us to continue to create. I am committed to my journey of personal and artistic growth, I work hard to contribute positively by working to keep human connections with people authentic. This I hope, although not huge, will play its small part in creating ripples of positive energy in the world, that I believe is more important than ever.


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to Julia-Sophie Walker

Special thanks to Jamie Halliday at Audio Antihero

‘telephone’ is from the album ‘forgive too slow’ released on 26 July 2024 by Ba Da Bing Records as a turquoise vinyl coloured LP + download, pre-order from https://juliasophie.bandcamp.com/album/forgive-too-slow

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Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
Photos by Siobhan Cox
25 June 2024

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