Category: Interviews (Page 20 of 112)

A Short Conversation with HANNA RUA

Hanna Rua is a potential new star in the making. Her bright demeanour and morning sun are just the tonic right now to overcome life’s various curveballs.

Debuting with the positive pop narrative of ‘Don’t Cut Your Angels’, it was catchy and joyous in the way it hit all manner of scales.

But with her debut EP ‘Light Up Your Dark’ released on Aztec Records, within the infectious innocence and messages of motivation, the Brighton-based Swedish songstress displayed some of her more introspective possibilities on the brilliant title song.

Hanna Rua kindly stopped by for a quick chat with ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK about opening herself to all sorts of directions, embracing electronic pop and going disco…

How did you become to be captivated by electronic-based pop, as opposed to R’n’B or rock?

I have always been into pop music, growing up there was a lot of ABBA (which there still is), Spice Girls, Aqua and Kelly Clarkson. I’m not pretentious when it comes to music, I enjoy it when it’s not too difficult, songs with catchy clear melodies that you can easily sing along to, it can be both an emotional ballad or a happy dance song, as long as I can sing along I’m happy.

It wasn’t until I met my co-writer and producer Sam Martin that I started doing synthpop. Sam was experimenting with 80s inspired synth music and I co-wrote a song with him just for fun. Our collaboration worked so well and I liked the genre, it was nostalgic and fun. I felt like it allowed me to be playful and imaginative with the lyrics and vocals and that I could be a bit cheesy and theatrical, which I love. We decided to keep writing together and stick to this style, and that’s how the EP became to be.

Did you have a more traditional music background?

I’ve always been a lot of pop, Disney and musicals. When I started the music program at the gymnasium / upper second school at 16 and I had my first vocal lessons, I was mostly focused on musicals and pop ballads. Back then, my plan was to either become a Broadway star, a singer for Disney movies, or the next ”Celine Dion” and sing heartfelt power ballads. Now the main focus for me is to just make great music that I myself would listen do, and songs that are fun for me to sing.

‘Don’t Cut Your Angels’ was a fantastic first single, how did that come together lyrically and musically?

Thank you! Sam sent me a rough instrumental backing track of the song for me to write something for. I liked the melody and the synth lines so I gave it a try and came up with a topline. Sam then helped me polish the lyrics. I recorded the vocals in Sweden in my old room with my home studio equipment, Sam was guiding me on how to record the vocals properly. I then sent him the vocal stems and he put it together in Brighton.

How would you describe your creative dynamic with Sam Martin?

I think we complement each other well. My strength is to write toplines, and Sam is brilliant at creating soundscapes, melodies and arranging songs, he’s also good with lyrics. There’s been times when I’ve doubted myself and my abilities and Sam has been a great support in those times, he’s pushed me to believe in myself, to not listen to the gremlins in my head, and to also challenge myself vocally and sing in ways I’m not used to.

We actually wrote all our songs remotely. It was during the pandemic and Sam was in Brighton and I in Sweden. It was tricky but since we work the way we do (he sent me backing tracks for me to write to), it worked well for us.

Talking of Martins, what do you think of the more synthpop based material that Max Martin (with Oscar Holter of NECRO FACILITY) is doing with THE WEEKND?

I love THE WEEKND’s synth album, especially ‘Blinding Lights’ and ‘In Your Eyes’. This album is actually something that Sam and I used as inspiration for the EP.

There was some confusion initially about what artist moniker to use? Was this prompted by the need for an online presence in the modern music world?

Hanna was just too generic, there were too many artists with that name which would make it hard for people to find me, and I felt it wasn’t exciting enough. Hanna is my real name and I wanted to have an artist name that would separate my personal self from my artist self. Therefore I added the Rua.

How have you been handling the social media attention you have received since ‘Don’t Cut Your Angels’?

I was pleasantly surprised that so many seemed to love ‘DCYA’. Radio stations were playing it, it got great reviews from music blogs and friends and family were loving it as well. It was humbling and touching. However, it’s been harder than I thought it would be to spread the song further, maybe I had hoped that the song would get a ”life on its own” and just magically spread. I think it’s a great song that deserves attention, so I’m still hoping for that big break.

‘Tears On Your Pillow’, a song about unfulfilled dreams and encourages the listener to “get up again”, do you write from a personal perspective or in a narrative?

Like with almost all of the other songs for this EP, this song is about finding the light in the dark. I have written it from a narrative more than from my own experiences. I of course have days where I struggle like any other person, but I’m in general a joyful person with a positive outlook on life.

I think I have my spirituality to thank for that. I believe that we’re all souls living a temporary human life and when we die we just go somewhere else, we never actually truly die. I believe that things happen for a reason, good and bad, and that on a grand scale – all is well. This is what I’ve tried to communicate through these songs.

‘Hear Me Now’ is airy angelic pop which allows you to project a scaling vocal style, how big is your range and what do you consider in the studio when deciding how best you use your voice?

I have a wide range, I can sing alto, mezzo soprano and soprano, but I am most comfortable in the middle. The songs in this EP are quite up there though, so I’ve had to push my vocals more than I’m used to in order to reach the higher notes, it’s been challenging but worth it. ‘Don’t Cut Your Angels’ were initially in a lower key but it sounded much better higher, it made it sound brighter and more energetic.

Your debut EP ‘Light Up The Dark’ features a wonderful title track that recalls ‘Cynisk’ by Swedish veterans LUSTANS LAKEJER, are you familiar with their work or is this “unga moderna” something you would prefer to leave with your parents’ generation?

I’ve heard of them, but am not familiar with their music. I listened to ‘Cynisk’ now and you’re right, it does have similarities to ‘Light Up Your Dark’. ‘LUYD’ is an unusually dark song to be coming from me, but I think it’s nice to show some variation, even though I personally prefer the happy songs. And LUSTANS LAKEJER, I think I’d rather leave it with my parents 😉

You made an online video of you singing ABBA’s ‘Don’t Shut Me Down’, what did you think of the return of Agnetha, Björn & Benny and Anni-Frid? Are you intending to see the ABBA-tars ‘Voyage’ show?

ABBA is my favourite band and I loved that they put out another album and was eager to hear it. I am not that eager to see the show though, maybe I will sound a bit old-fashioned but I like my artists to be present on stage, digital avatars scare me a little to be honest. If only I could have gone back in time and see ABBA in their heyday, that’d be something.

What is next for you? Are you intending to perform live at all?

I am currently working on new songs with a writer and producer called Villemann, and we’re going a slightly different direction. We’re making funky disco music, dance floor songs. I love dancing and I love disco music (the more strings the better) so this is something I think was bound to happen sooner or later.

With my EP ‘Light Up Your Dark’, I wanted to encourage people to think positively, now I just want to make people dance and not think at all! I am putting together a live show at the moment and I already have two gigs booked for this autumn, location and date will be announced soon…


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to Hanna Rua

Special thanks to John Feltham at Aztec Records

‘Light Up Your Dark’ is released as a digital EP by Aztec Records, available via https://hannaruamusic.bandcamp.com/releases

https://www.hannarua.com/

https://www.facebook.com/hannaruamusic

https://twitter.com/Hannaruamusic

https://www.instagram.com/hannaruamusic/

https://open.spotify.com/album/3ZcifuP5TRKg3YRPec3fwz


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
20th September 2022

A Short Conversation with ULTRAFLEX

Nordic duo Kari Jahnsen and Katrín Helga Andrésdóttir had made music under their respective solo monikers of FARAO and SPECIAL-K but felt the need to move away from their more arty introspection.

Coming together as ULTRAFLEX in 2020, the Berlin-based twosome released a sexy sport and fitness inspired debut long player ‘Visions Of Ultraflex’. With their kitsch conceptual weirdness and ambiguously sexy overtones, it was groovy escapism set to an electro-disco beat.

ULTRAFLEX have described their new album ‘Infinite Wellness’ as “naughty”, with the saucy duo teasing their faux innocence on a record that features more live elements such as drums, guitar, bells and saxophone compared with its predecessor, although the high concept kitsch and coy playfulness are maintained.

If ‘Visions Of Ultraflex’ was their Berlin album, then ‘Infinite Wellness’ is the Mediterranean one. Their new single ‘Under The Spell’ is an expression of girly hedonism with a breathy seductive charm. ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK had a quick chat with ULTRAFLEX about their development from visions to wellness.

How would you describe the approach to ‘Infinite Wellness’ compared with ‘Visions of Ultraflex’?

More time, more attention to detail, more variations in style, more pop and more experimental at the same time. More is more ❤️

‘Infinite Wellness’ has much more of a Mediterranean feel, it’s very Italo disco, funk, soul even jazz?

Yes, our sources of inspiration for this album have been quite varied – during the recording process we listened to a lot of International Music System, Alessandro Alessandroni, Usher, Deniece Williams, Lijadu Sisters, Christine Lewin… we took our favourite elements from all of these different genres and pushed it through the ULTRAFLEX filter.

There appears to be more use of naturalistic sounds and guitar this time round rather than synthetic ones?

We wanted to balance out the electronic elements a bit and ended up hiring our favourite drummer Maggi from Iceland who recorded percussion for most of the beats on the album. Also, our friend Tumi came over and recorded some sweet saxophone and another friend Bjarní played guitar on a couple of tracks, channelling Enrique Iglesias.

‘Relax’ is a salute to Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response, how did you discover this dose of tingles and how has it improved your wellness?

We’ve been aware of the phenomenon for a while, although none of us had really gotten into it until we discovered these soap cutting videos on Instagram (especially hypnotising when hung over). The visual form of ASMR caught our interest and we really wanted to incorporate it into a music video as it perfectly captures the fine line between gratifying and gross – just as we want to do with our music.

‘Rhodos’ celebrates those favourite sunny destinations such as Mallorca, Ibiza and of course Rhodes, what is your favourite holiday of this type?

The only experience we have with this kind of holiday is when Kari went to Lanzarote when she was 16. She partied the whole time, stocked the fridge with litres of Bacardi Razz and Sprite, hung out on the beach with pink British people and absolutely in no way, shape or form tried to experience the local culture nor show respect to the people who actually live there. She had a good time but can’t really remember any of it.

You had a holiday romance and produced a ‘Baby!’, but what was this song actually about?

Although the song is about romantic endeavours, we realised afterwards that it is also about our artistic collaboration. It emphasises the importance of taking risks (otherwise “you’ve already lost”) and indicates that whatever happens tomorrow, we’ve got each other right now, and that’s what counts – the power of the moment is worth whatever the future brings, whether it’s happy-ever-after or heartbreak.

So what is the best way to flirt on the dancefloor?

It’s all about eye contact obviously.

‘Mi Vuoi’ means “you want me” in Italian, but have you ever become romantically involved with someone whose language you couldn’t speak, and they unable to speak yours?

Well, we’ve always been fluent in body language, so it has never been a problem 😉

‘Melting Away’ is very soulful, were there any artists you had in mind when producing this sound?

The song started out as a cover of Usher’s ‘Climax’, but it soon developed into a club rap version of the short story ‘The Husband Stitch’ by Carmen Maria Machado, wrapped up into a mashup between Spice Girls’ ‘2 Become 1’ and Madonna’s ‘Live To Tell’.

‘Ultrasex’ is a play on your name but also a quite provocative song?

Beyond the title, the song is innocent enough if you ask us. No lyrics and no moans, just pretty sweet, classy melodies. However the groove of it, the emotional saxophone and the ‘wah-wah’ effect on the guitar can remind people a bit of a 70s porn soundtrack.

‘Run’ has this gorgeous sweetness about it, how did it come together in recording and why is it only 2 minutes?

This was a difficult song to find the right production for as we kept trying to make it work with a pretty intense Italo beat – it took a while before we were able to leave that idea behind. By the end of the recording process, Kari made a new beat that was way more laidback and cute to fit the vocals. So much is happening in the chord progression and the vocals so we felt like 2 minutes was enough.

Your first shows centred around fitness, so how will songs from ‘Infinite Wellness’ be presented live?

We have a few tricks up our sleeves, you’ll have to come to our show to see!

What is next for ULTRAFLEX?

‘Melting Away’ is being released late September, with an ambitious video, and then the whole album in the beginning of October. We’ll be playing this fall / winter in Vienna, Paris, Hamburg, Trondheim, Reykjavík, Berlin and more to be announced!


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to ULTRAFLEX

‘Infinite Wellness’ is released by Street Pulse Records on 7th October 2022 as a vinyl LP, pre-order direct from https://www.roughtrade.com/gb/ultraflex/infinate-wellness

https://www.facebook.com/ultraflexband

https://twitter.com/ultraflexband

https://www.instagram.com/ultraflexband

https://www.tiktok.com/@ultraflexband

https://ultraflexband.bandcamp.com/


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
Photos by Sigurlaug Gísladóttir
3rd September 2022

AUW Interview

Originating as the electronic musical vehicle of Dom Cresswell, AUW has now arrived fully synthwave enabled.

The first instrumental album ‘Across the Plains’ embraced that setting with uplifting melodies and lush reflective moods accompanied by crisp electronic rhythms honed through Cresswell’s past experience in techno, breakbeat and synthpop whilst also displaying cyberpunk elements.

The recently issued second album ‘Twilight Drives’ developed on that tradition with ‘Yellow & Confidence’ being a highlight.

Live, the DAWLess AUW has been augmented by the outlandish but welcoming persona of Seb Durkin and seeing an opportunity to stimulate business at eateries and venues following the pandemic, came up with Duskwaves, a family friendly daytime music event series that has taken place in Kent and London.

Dom Cresswell and Seb Durkin of AUW chatted about their abandoned uranium workings and thoughts on a number of eclectic topics.

ABANDONED URANIUM WORKINGS has been making music for over 20 years embracing techno, breakbeat, production and now synthwave, what prompted you to align yourselves to the movement so vividly?

Dom: Well, I am after all, an 80s child (the clue is in the hairline) so I’ve always felt very comfortable engaging the combination of modern and retro, in both music and gaming scenes. The first bits of synthwave I heard were courtesy of Seb sending me a link to NewRetroWave on YouTube around 2013/14 (he must have known me well). I didn’t really think of working in the genre at the time – if anything, I was on a break from writing music.

It was a few years later I had put some of the more chill synth stuff onto an Arcade cabinet of mine and thought “it would be nice to have something of mine on there” – next thing I knew, I was experimenting with elements of the sound, but all it did was give me the freedom to use a bunch of actual 80s synth sounds akin to Roger Limb in the BBC Radiophonic Workshop which would have been a bit out of place if I’d still been writing tech-house.

Seb: I’m not sure I would necessarily say I align in the strongest sense of the word. My background fundamentally is in “DIY / noise / sludge / doom” but predominantly I love music and I feel like if that’s the case, then anything’s on the table. I think I had a connection with the music Dom was making and the melodies struck me pretty immediately. All this said, there is a part of me certainly that warmed texturally to the genre. It’s given me an opportunity to sing too and whilst I still consider myself somewhat of a charlatan in that field, the endeavour I believe is good for me.

Dom, you produced the 2009 album ‘Navigation’ by ARTHUR & MARTHA, what was it like to work with your brother Adam on that? Is bitter sibling rivalry in music just legend or is it for real?

Dom: Seems like an age ago now… in hindsight, it’s nice to have had that experience together – although it wasn’t our first ever musical collaboration – we tried our hand at a few tracks together back in the 90s, I was sequencing on my Amiga, and he was recording to 4-track tape! If you’d asked me at the time, I’d have probably said it was quite a challenge, but certainly no rivalry, not then or now.

I do recall many time-consuming small mix changes that I’m not convinced anyone would hear anyway. I think we’re both quite detail orientated in our music writing so that probably wasn’t the most productive combination. I’d have to check which track it was that Adam and Alice asked for the end organ to have “the sound of a distant fairground” or something… I do remember they were happy with the result but it certainly felt like one of those Martin Hannett moments.

Your most recent album ‘Twilight Drives’ features an AUW remix of ‘Miscalculations’ from Adam’s current project Rodney Cromwell, how has technology moved on in your process over the 12+ years since ‘Navigation’?

Dom: I stopped using Cubase long ago in favour of Ableton shortly after that album, and I would have only used software samplers back then, never synths – now I’ll use anything. I still like to use the hardware where I can – particularly for layering, but the fact I can do a huge chunk of production and mixing sat on the sofa makes the whole process a lot more accessible, and far speedier, especially whilst not being a full-time musician.

I never really had a problem with software FX, but now there are so many more available, and some are so much smarter, Trackspacer for example is just genius. But also now, I have a small number of softsynths, but I try not to be one of those people hoarding 1000 plugins that I’ll never use. You can’t really refine ‘your sound’ if you don’t put some self-imposed limits in place.

The synthwave production aesthetics shine bright on a number of instrumentals from ‘Twilight Drives’ such as ‘Europa Dawn’, ‘Europa Dusk’ and ‘Yellow & Confidence’, how were these inspired?

Dom: Ah that’s cool to hear, because sometimes I don’t really feel like my sound fits too well into what some people call synthwave anyway. ‘Yellow & Confidence’ and ‘Europa Dawn’ both started as ideas during an incredibly productive spell in 2020; nothing more than writing some chord progressions and letting the ideas naturally grow around a sound I was enjoying, which was very much focused on having a positive, chill sound, rather than moody dystopian sounds.

‘Europa Dusk’ was a little different because it started the same, but as I realised it had an incredibly similar chord progression to ‘Europa Dawn’, I started to borrow elements from that to make it a real evolution. It was the last one to make it onto the album, and in parts that shows, but it also has elements that call back to my first release as well.

The synthwave community is known for some of its gatekeeping as to what it is, so did you have to validate your credentials?

Dom: I really don’t know if I’ve validated my synthwave credentials at all! I think there are also so many sub and micro genres now that I think even the scene ties itself in knots trying to make sense of its own self – sometimes it depends on which social media echo chamber you’re in – even between Twitter, Facebook or Discord there seems to be quite a variation.

I think most scenes, particularly where you see a sudden rise in popularity or appearance in mainstream culture, tend to suffer the gatekeeping problem. In this case, it is largely those who seem to equate synthwave with a very narrow band of the scene (and hopefully they are in the minority) but to me that is just ludicrous, and actually detrimental to letting the scene grow, because all you end up with is a bunch of stale clones, and the more creative artists themselves move onto other things, or look to dissociate themselves from it.

I hope I’ve just let the music speak for itself. I think the modern elements and the occasional use of audible tropes act as a short-hand for some to associate use with synthwave, but actually I spend enough time watching 80s episodes of ‘Top of the Pops’ and enjoying NEW ORDER, ERASURE, PET SHOP BOYS, THE CURE or listening to 80s soundtracks and letting all of that soak into the sound anyway, and because I channel everything into synth sounds, surely that’s synthwave right?

But it gets a bit heated, surely it’s all just music using synths?

Seb: You know I think it’s the same with all genres. There’s a tribalism that occurs and if I’m honest I think it’s destructive. What’s the fear? That we’re a square-wave Trojan-horse hell bent on destroying something from the inside out? Or maybe people just feel like you have to earn your stripes before you’re allowed in. Either way, it’s preposterously hyper-masculine.

How can fresh blood offer anything other than variety and fresh perspective. Personally though, all the people (within synthwave at large) I’ve encountered so far, have been nothing short of cherishable. Maybe that suggests the only real gatekeeping is undertaken by hypothetical wardens of the digital realm. It’s certainly easier to be protective at distance. Right now, I’m just super excited to meet more people and play more songs.

The trouble is, “synthwave” has become this generalised term for music that doesn’t sound like it’s from the 21st century, whether it’s rock, indie, dance, synthpop or soundtrack in the same way “Italo” has now become any midtempo disco number with an octave shift “oompah” bassline… discuss!

Dom: Well this is a tricky one! It feels like it means something quite specific to a certain set of people for sure as I said earlier, but elsewhere there seem to be those with a more open mind. I define synthwave myself as nothing more than an umbrella term for synth heavy / electronic music that doesn’t fit into the usual EDM styles – although of course, there is always that retro element on top of it, but the extent of the retro, the chill, the dark sounds; they are what determine any sub-genre. I’ve actually started coining the term ‘retroclash’ when asked what one AUW falls into. I’ll leave you to fathom the semantics of that one!

Seb: Yes, this too can be confusing. For sure it feels like there’s a puritanical sect of “I was here first” synthwave fans screaming “This isn’t synthwave!” from the back of the room but pigeon-holing is just a shortcut to me finding what I want. And if I find something that I wasn’t sure I wanted, but that actually I love along the way, then who cares? Maybe we should just have done with it and describe ourselves as “oscillator pop”.

You’ve taken AUW out live, are you set to become Kent’s answer to FM-84?

Dom: Well I’d take their listener count for sure! I’m not sure Seb will appreciate being called a man of Kent though! *laughs*

I’d rather AUW stood on its own merit as something different. I’d say we’re creeping closer to NEW ORDER territory with some of the more recent live tracks, but there’s certainly a difference between what we play out, and what’s currently available on Bandcamp, Spotify and the rest. I blame Seb for that because he’s never happy with the studio recordings!

Seb: I think I’ve a burgeoning affection for the people and the county of Kent so I’ve an answer to anything then I’m happy to do it there! *laughs*

It’s trite but I think we just want to be AUW and right now me singing on some of these tracks just feels like a really good fit. It’s giving us the opportunity to perform and that’s wholly positive.

You’ve prided AUW in being DAWless live, but for those music enthusiasts who may not be technical, what does that actually mean?

Dom: In short, it means there’s no laptop on stage – ie no sequencer playing and everything comes from synth(s) / drum-machine. I didn’t really want AUW’s live performance to end up being a two man KRAFTWERK performance, otherwise I’d have just stuck to DJing.

I have no problem with those who do use DAWs live, but you’ve got to remember I was inspired for live playing by watching THE PRODIGY with Liam and his synths on stage in my formative years. Of course, I don’t really want to be lugging a bunch of synths around either at my ages, and the two little Rolands – the MC-101 and TR-6S have become the backbone of the live set.

Seb: What Dom said…

Dom: I can hear the cries of “Neeerrrdd!” from the back of the room *laughs*

Is there a hardware synth you still covet? What is your current set up?

Dom: How long have you got?? I’ve mentioned the MC-101 as a live tool, but it’s also a great machine to sit and try basic ideas out without firing up a laptop. I use it a lot as a sound module.

I still stick to my original Access Virus for a lot of sound layering, since it has such a rich sound. The Waldorf Streichfett will crop up a bit more in the next album too – one of my favourite new synths for pure sound – it reminds me of the work of Ken Freeman in the 80s.

The Novation BassStation and Korg Prophecy tend to feature more as ‘guest’ synths these days. I’d love to say I get the TB-303 in there too, but it certainly didn’t fit the sound of the last album… that’s not to say it won’t turn up again though. One of the biggest changes to my setup in the last few years was the removal of MIDI cables in favour of wireless MIDI – it was surprisingly freeing to remove a whole set of cables.

As for any I still covet… of course – there’s still loads out there I’d be happy to own and use! The question is really whether I need them. The Virus TI2 would be great to have – I understand it’s a step up from my original which would make it a beast. Roland have an annoying habit of bringing out more and more appealing compact synths – digital sure, but I know I’d enjoy the JD-08 and JX-08 and of course the Aira J6 (Roland’s answer to the Korg Volca) looks a lot of fun.

Seb: I think synthesis is fast becoming the most exciting field of musical instrument creation. I’ll stop short of quoting Alice Deejay but I think strung instruments understand their limitations. They’re design classics but synths still have so much more to give us. The explosion of the modular synth market a few years ago was a real signifier that synthesis was approaching a new age of appreciation and the endeavours people are making now are just stunning. If we’re talking coveting though, Moog’s Subharmonicon is pretty high up the list along with pretty much anything “mutable instruments” have ever made.

How did the brainwave for Duskwaves happen?

Dom: Honestly – Seb and I just wanted to play some gigs.

Seb: Yeah, exactly that. We knew that we enjoyed the fruits of our labour and we knew that if we could be excited by it, then maybe others could be too. That’s what leads you to want to play things live. I think sadly, playing shows for promoters you know nothing about is both a necessary evil and a roll of the dice all at the same time. It just sort of makes sense that we can create something for ourselves. A sort of plain where we get to set some of the parameters. Is it more work? Definitely! But it’s also comes with a lot of reward. We’re trying to provide a platform and in doing so, people are returning the favour. That’s actually so wonderful.

Dom: We’d not long come out of the 2021 lockdown and there wasn’t a lot of options available, and of course, one thing I’d seen working with Adam was that the whole synth scene looked a bit broken to me. It was London-centric, didn’t cater anything close to synthwave and seemed to be full of artists who appeared like they either didn’t want to be there or thought too much of themselves. The grass-roots style approach really appealed to me, giving relative unknowns a chance to put themselves forward, and then the idea of making it a daytime event kind of fell into place off the back of that, leading to the name!

Afternoon gigs really are the future, it appears to be working as a concept…

Dom: I hope so. I really enjoy it, and it’s a much more accommodating atmosphere for everyone, and let’s be honest a large portion of fans of this kind of music have families now and probably don’t want to be out till 3am and damaging their ears even more. The great thing about this, is you’ll only have a terrible hangover if you really want it, and you still get the evening to unwind too!

Seb: Definitely the future. As Dom mentioned, we’re kind of in a time of our lives now when spending an hour taking in the N207 night bus home has sort of lost its shine (if indeed there was any shine to begin with). We’re just happier now knowing that we can be accommodating and still leave people with their evenings to focus on other stuff. That’s not to say we don’t want to do shows after dark. Of course we do but it’s nice to give people options.

Is the plan eventually to do a ticketed evening event?

Dom: For Duskwaves, I’d prefer not to, but never say never. I’d rather just do events in more interesting places. It’s nice that on a couple of occasions we’ve now found other ways of paying artists and rewarding them for being involved, thanks to some Arts Council backing, and rewarding those who are involved is the only incentive I would have for a ticketed event. If we were do something more evening based, I’d like to think we’d do something new with it, or instead hopefully just get involved with some of the others doing this kind of thing like Electric Escape.

Seb: Potentially but that doesn’t seem to be what people require of us at the moment. One of the first things we were asked when we made the announcement to our peers that we’d play live was “can I bring the kids?”, now happily we can say “yes”. I think that’s important.

Do you have a dream line-up for Duskwaves?

Dom: Emil Rottmayer because I’m a massive fanboy, plus someone else who we’ve never heard of yet, AUW of course and all of our regulars just to show them how much we appreciate them!

Seb: Truthfully I really appreciate that anyone wants to play. It’s all been pretty dreamy to date.

So ‘Drive’ is an overrated film with an overrated soundtrack? Discuss! 😉

Dom: Maybe that’s taking it a bit far! I’ll admit I only recently watched it, and I guess it’s a bit artistic with good cinematography, but I don’t really understand the association with the synth scene. Maybe there’s more on a soundtrack CD or something, but I only counted about 4 or 5 tracks? And there’s no laser grids or stripy sunsets to be seen at all! I think it really needed a Steve McQueen in the main role. I can see why some fans enjoy it though, and I will say that the fact it starts as a brooding arty movie with hardly any dialogue that isn’t mumbled, and yet still has wider popularity is something I find quite reassuring… it’s a far cry from the likes of ‘Fast & Furious’!

Seb: More a ‘Crash’ (Cronenberg) man than a ‘Drive’ guy!

Dom: That’s totally YOU Seb *laughs*

Speaking of driving, the tug of love in F1 between Alpine and McLaren for Oscar Piastri, what a mess! So is this a bit like trying to negotiate to get an act to play an event while a rival is circulating, and then the act decides to play that other event?

Dom: Wow – that has to be one of the most forced topical-metaphor questions I’ve ever had! What is this, ‘Have I Got News for You?’ *laughs*

Synth event rivals? That never happens right? What was the question again??

Seb: Synth promoter love-rival montage, soundtracked by AUW? I’m here for it!

Did THE WEEKND steal that arpeggio from MAKE UP & VANITY SET on ‘Take My Breath’? Can you copyright what is actually a technologically driven function?

Dom: Yes. Maybe – next question please!

Seb: Steal my arpeggio just don’t steal my taleggio *laughs*

What is next for Duskwaves and AUW?

Dom: Let’s start with Duskwaves – we have more artists on the books, and more promoters helping out, so that’s great to see, and we are grateful to them for wanting to be involved; we must be doing something right. I’ve always said I’d be happy to support anyone looking to organise a Duskwaves event wherever they like, and the idea was always to try and help artists and venues make those connections within the scene – maybe there will be more in that direction in the future. We are looking at a little bit of a break before lining up some Winter events – I’ll hold off on saying where until they are properly firmed up, but it’ll be all over the socials as usual.

For AUW there’s always more in the pipeline. I’m not quite done with ‘Twilight Drives’ just yet, and I’m looking at a live stream performance for it in the near future. After that, Seb and I need to get some recording done so that all those songs we keep playing out live can make their way out as releases. There’s a slightly moody reflective album to come out of that – currently titled as ‘Windowed View’ which has at least 5 of our live tracks on it. Then for other new tracks, I kind of have an idea what’s next with a couple of instrumental EPs and another vocal-centric album full of collabs. This could keep us busy for quite a while yet….

Seb: We’ll see what the future hold but just want to keep playing and writing more songs. Music will always be my first and most probably last love, so I have to honour that by giving what I can back. There’s already so much to be getting on with and I’m really excited about it.


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its sincerest thanks to AUW

‘Twilight Drives’ is released by RetroSynth Records / Synthetix, available as a download from https://abandoneduraniumworkings.bandcamp.com/

https://www.auwmusic.co.uk/

https://www.facebook.com/auwmusic

https://twitter.com/auwmusic

https://www.instagram.com/neoncentipede/

https://open.spotify.com/artist/32pxdEG7cNA03psePU5e5c


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
27th August 2022

Vintage Synth Trumps with SPRAY

Sibling duo SPRAY continue their adventures in the subversion of pop with their new ‘Untitled Covers Project’.

Ricardo Autobahn and Jenny McLaren first terrorised the mainstream as members of THE CUBAN BOYS who topped John Peel’s Festive 50 with ‘Cognoscenti vs. Intelligentsia’ aka ‘The Hamster Dance’ and took on Cliff Richard’s ‘The Millennium Prayer’ in the race to be the 1999 Christmas No1, only to lose…

However, their main project was SPRAY, set up to ride on an anticipated resurgence in synthpop with two albums ‘Living In Neon’ and ‘Children Of A Laser God’ issued respectively in 2002 and 2007. Finding a home at US label Ninthwave Records, just about the only record company in the world at the time interested in anything synthy that even HEAVEN 17 signed to them for the release of ‘Before/After’ in 2005, as it turned out, no-one was interested in either SPRAY or HEAVEN 17. It was left to LA ROUX to cash-in on the synthpop revival with a No1 single in ‘Bulletproof’ in 2009 and a Grammy for ‘Best Dance Recording’.

SPRAY would not return until 2016’s ‘Enforced Fun’ and since then, they have been regularly releasing albums with the most recent being 2021’s ‘Ambiguous Poems About Death’. Since the start of 2022, the sister / brother pairing have been releasing a cover version per month to build a new collection of work. So far, there have been reinterpretations of THE DETROIT SPINNERS, BLINK182 and KISS as well as ‘Diamond Lights’, the surprise 1987 hit by England footballers Glenn Hoddle and Chris Waddle!

Over a game of Vintage Synth Trumps, Ricardo Autobahn and Jenny McLaren chatted to ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK about dragging seemingly incongruous songs from yesteryear kicking and screaming into the SPRAY Universe and how electronic acts covering DEPECHE MODE is not a particularly good idea…

The first card is a Korg MS20, as used by BLANCMANGE on ‘Feel Me’…

Ricardo: I’ve always liked BLANCMANGE without ever being a big fan of them, they’re one of those bands, a bit like CHINA CRISIS. You can’t imagine them being someone’s favourite band. I always thought they had a great sense of rhythm and got World music into synthpop in a more authentic way than most people. I like Neil Arthur’s solo songs as well, I love ‘I Love I Hate’ which is fantastic.

LADYTRON used MS20s too and started around the same time as SPRAY back in 2000, ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK has always credited them as being the first of the newer wave of synthesizer bands, as opposed to electronic dance acts…

Ricardo: Of all the modern synth acts that aren’t EDM, LADYTRON seemed to be the most melodic and threw in the most over-the-top production gimmicks and things, people at the time seemed to think themselves too cool to use certain sounds whereas LADYTRON were happy to do what sounded great, that’s what I always liked about them. But what I always hated about them, which was something I hated about all synth acts of the 21st Century is that when THE CUBAN BOYS were kicking around, we tried to get people interested in SPRAY; we said to people that there was going to be this big synth revival but nobody listened to us or took us seriously… I was irate that other synth acts made it big in the mid-noughties other than SPRAY, one of them was LA ROUX! *laughs*

Jenny: Oh yes… *laughs*

Ricardo: I said to THE CUBAN BOYS’ manager that there was going to be this big synth revival coming but he poo-pooed it and laughed at me… he went on to manage LA ROUX, leaving us in his wake!

One of the things that struck me most about LADYTRON was girls were singing lead vocals on synthy stuff and it wasn’t a blokey thing anymore…

Jenny: Definitely, yeah, I think female voices always sound better generally on pop and electronic music, I enjoy a lot of rock music, men on that is fine, but the more women, the better as far as I’m concerned!

Yes, male voices just don’t grab me that much anymore on synth based music because it was done to death back in the day…

Ricardo: There a few things here; they all tried to sound like Dave Gahan, there was that synthpop voice which was sort of deep and nasal, and everybody wanted to be like DEPECHE MODE. But there is this thing about frequency response, if you’ve got your kick drum and bass drum in the low frequencies, you’ve got your doomy industrial DM synths in the mid-range, if you have a mid-range voice, then everything’s concentrated to those frequencies. BUT if you bring a female voice in on top of that, you’ll spread the spectrum.

Yes, in the old Synth Britannia days, you’ll have done that with a higher end synth melody which is WHY that era of music worked… like let’s swing it the other way, what about blokeys who sing falsetto? That to me is old hat now!

Ricardo: We are big SPARKS fans so we’ve got used to the falsetto but Russell Mael always realised it was a gimmick and his tonal quality changes left, right and centre from low to high. There was a period in late 80s pop when singing in falsetto was a by-word for “soul”, the worst offenders being BIG FUN in that ridiculous way! *laughs*

Jenny: It was just showing off… but one of my favourites with falsetto is Morten Harket from A-HA, he showed his range very much like Russell Mael; Morten and Russell know how to place certain types of singing in the music, how certain types of voices suit certain types of songs.

That’s a good point Jenny, Morten Harket, Russell Mael, Jimmy Somerville, Andy Bell, they knew how to do it, there was a degree of restraint, they knew where to place it, whereas others do that overblown thing…

Ricardo: This is WHY those singers you have mentioned were successful. Morten Harket knows which songs to sing high and which songs to sing low on, so you’ve covered the frequency range.

If you sing in the same frequency range in ALL your songs, regardless of what your music is doing, people will get sick of it very easily.

A good example is A-HA ‘Summer Moved On’, Morten Harket does a 21 second falsetto note in it, but it’s not the centrepiece on the bridge that it’s in, it’s there but it’s not pushed in your face, it’s not the dominant part…

Jenny: Yes, it just happens and then you go “OH MY WORD, THAT’S INCREDIBLE” but mixed in with the rest of the music, it’s perfect. It’s an example of it being done well.

Another card and it is a MemoryMoog…

Ricardo: I’ve never had a Moog, but I have been tinkering with VIEON’s Moog Grandmother recently. It was very atonal, I was noodling and he was tinkering away and I felt like I was in Karl Bartos’ book *laughs*

It was a beautiful moment of things melding together in a ray of light, this is the sort of thing that makes music great, analogue synths that sound robotic but there’s humans playing them and it was great fun, I must get one! But the synth wasn’t THAT special to be honest, it’s good synth but I didn’t think I was playing a Stradivarius, it was good but they’re all the same!

Has the iconography of Moog meant anything to you as synthpop purveyors?

Ricardo: It IS a cool name, if I was to buy one, it would be to look cool on stage. I bought one of those reissued Korg ARP Odysseys just because that Helvetica font looks really good on stage. We wrote the song ‘Félicette (Space Cat)’ on that.

Jenny: Yes, Moogs are the cool one…

This highlights how iconic these synth facias with “Moog” and “ARP” are from ‘Top Of The Pops’ because you have “Fairlight” on your live keyboard controller…

Ricardo: I tried to borrow a Fairlight from someone but they wouldn’t let me take it down from their loft, so next best thing, I customised my keyboard to look like a Fairlight… now who had done it before me???

Yes, it was Martin Gore who put “Fairlite” on a Casiotone MT-30…

Ricardo: I didn’t know that! I think it was inspired by Ron Mael from SPARKS who put “Ronald” instead of Roland on his keyboard… the thing about that is it gets across SPARKS’ sense of humour very easily. That’s why I loved SPARKS so much and why they are such an influence on SPRAY. They have a sense of humour that is sadly lacking in pop music these days, I don’t mean novelty acts or comedy bands but artists who include jokes and light hearted asides in their songs…

Jenny: …and write songs that aren’t necessarily about girls and boys and love and that, they talk about other interesting things that happen in the world.

Ricardo: Having Ronald in Roland font on his keyboard was a very good indicator that they were not just any old band.

Just out of interest, where do you stand on people wearing T-shirts of synths they don’t own, who are often those who complain about girls who wear T-shirts of bands they don’t listen to?

Ricardo: Oh it’s fine, it’s aspirational isn’t it! It’s like wearing a T-shirt with a Ferrari logo on it or British Leyland! *laughs*

Again, it’s like Ronald and Roland, it’s showing your personality, what you’re interested in, what you care about and what you maybe don’t care about. I’ve worn T-shirts with “Muzak” written on them, I don’t like Muzak a great deal but I love the concept of Muzak and I like the word and the font they use as well.

I bought an Akai T-shirt to wear ironically cos I have no Akai equipment, it just looked good…

Ricardo: We bought two Akai S5000s in 1999 with THE CUBAN BOYS and we made our entire album on them…

Jenny: Oh yes!

Ricardo: They were very basic, they didn’t have any external memory, we just used the floppy drive to load the samples and it was a massive thing. It cost about two and a half grand back then, I remember saying it was more expensive than the car I was driving at the time! We were using the Soundblaster 16 card in a PC to do the demos which was how the John Peel stuff was done, so to move to the Akai was mindblowing. But again to reference Karl Bartos, when you have a limitless horizon, your creativity suffers and that was a problem too because we didn’t have any boundaries to work with.

A point I’d like to bring in about the whole sampling issue in reference to Karl Bartos was he says in his book that ‘Numbers’ was inspired by the intro beat to ‘Do Ya Wanna Dance?’ by Cliff Richard, only he programmed his interpretation into his machine, got it slightly wrong and out came as ‘Numbers’. But today, you would actually sample the beat of inspiration wholesale, and that defeats the object of any actual artistic creativity, there’s no individual variation or happy accidents now… that’s why I struggled with the ethos of sampling, I find it difficult to have an emotional attachment although I can appreciate the technical innovation…

Ricardo: The thing about KRAFTWERK in the 70s was it sounded robotic but was done by humans but after ‘The Mix’, it sounded like computer demos more than anything. So yeah, the pre-digital era is clearly the best era. With things like THE ART OF NOISE in 1985, sampling was very exciting from a technical perspective, there was ‘19’ by Paul Hardcastle as well. I’m not sure anyone has actually had an emotional response to ‘Close (To The Edit)’ despite it being fantastic. But that 1985 sampling sound got tired very quickly and it became “that thing” as a loop on a record rather building a record out of bits.

SPRAY are songwriters at heart, but when you heard KRAFTWERK for the first time, what did you actually think?

Jenny: I liked ‘The Model’ and ‘Computer Love’, but I didn’t relate to it enough because it wasn’t vocally exciting cos I enjoy a singalong. I do love them but my formative music was more vocal-led.

This is the point I’m trying to get at, my sister and my cousin thought KRAFTWERK went on a bit and just kept repeating the same words, so I understand why girls aren’t into KRAFTWERK…

Jenny: It’s not because I’m a girl, I think people might find it boring… *laughs*

Ricardo: But then you’re not a fan of the 12 inch mix either generally…

Jenny: It’s very rare that I will listen to a song that’s more than four and a half minutes… I was shocked to learn that the tracks on more than half of FAITH NO MORE’s ‘The Real Thing’ are five minutes and over, I don’t think I’ve got the capacity for that! I like a nice snappy pop song, Eurovision style, three minutes, on-off-done!

Ricardo: When we were doing THE CUBAN BOYS, we had very little interest in the project, we were more interested in getting SPRAY away. While we were having great success in the charts and EMI were happy, we were more about the pop songs that SPRAY were doing.

Weirdly, I’m in that zone, I find the whole 12 inch mix thing tedious, yes I’ve got a lot of 12 inch singles but only for the bonus B-sides… so back on the subject of songs, what inspired you to do a covers album?

Jenny: What was it that kicked it off?

Ricardo: We had these cover versions we’d recorded over the years but never released, mainly because we can’t be bothered to do all that licensing business! So it’s always just easier to put out original stuff on platforms. But then we did a Halloween cover for a radio show last year, ‘Come Back Haunted’ by NINE INCH NAILS for our friend Terri MacDonald’s ‘Cabinets Of Curiosities’ podcast… it was so easy to do so we thought, why not do a few more and this gimmicky idea of one per month was partly to keep our focus through the year and partly because it’s a good way to get stuff out without overloading people. There’s no real need for a new SPRAY album just yet *laughs*

Jenny: It’s keeps us posting stuff, especially for our ‘SPRAY Social Mondays’ doing little things to keep us in the public eye… public yeah, the three people who follow us… *laughs*

…and who come to ALL your shows! *laughs*

Ricardo: God love ‘em! *laughs*

Jenny: It gives them something to look forward to each month and other people then get into the idea…

Ricardo: It’s the classic situation, as much as PET SHOP BOYS put out an album and four singles over a year, that’s just not like that anymore, it’s all about content and driving the algorithm or what have you. So we thought this was a fun idea to make sure nobody forgets us! *laughs*

So how does one choose a suitable song to arrange in an electronic pop aesthetic, one that is not a bloody DEPECHE MODE cover? *laughs*

Ricardo: It’s all very accidental apart from when we did THE OFFSPRING ‘Self-Esteem’ for the SPRAY live show, this was a few years ago. We did it because the chords are real Europop major chords, it sounds absolutely fantastic as a HI-NRG record.

Jenny: We deliberately don’t try and find electronic records to cover, we try and find things that we think might sound good as an electronic poppy record, would you agree?

Ricardo: I would agree but also we are arrogant enough to believe we can make anything sound good, so sometimes we will find something that is bloody atrocious because if we can’t make it worse, we’ve got to make it better! *laughs*

Having listened to the cover versions so far, what has been particularly interesting about the majority of the choices is they have a degree of familiarity but at the same time, they sound new, which is quite a difficult thing to pull off… a good example would be ‘The Rubberband Man’?

Jenny: It was in ‘Guardians Of The Galaxy’, I didn’t know it and you suggested it… so it’s one of those that’s in people’s consciousness but not overly, so it’s something we can remind people of very gently.

Ricardo: It’s 70s funk which we’re not into at all but it’s got those really pronounced dramatic chords in the chorus which are really poppy, which you can always tell will work in a synthy style.

So when you are recording a cover or any song for that matter, do you do the quality control yourselves or do you have some trusted confidantes who you will run things by?

Ricardo: NO! We never have trusted confidantes, if you do that, you’ll never release anything! We care, it’s all that matters, if anybody else likes it, then that’s a bonus as they used to say in the NME in 1991! *laughs*

I’ll do a basic arrangement of a track, then Jenny will record a vocal and then I’ll build something around it. So we get away from the original straight away, we try to forget what the original sounded like if we can…

Is there a danger in forgetting the original that you could leave out what was good about it in the first place? For example, this British independent electronic artist did a cover of ‘Blue Monday’ recently, so mistake No1, he picked an electronic song. Then he tried to change the familiar elements of it, so the rhythm structure lost its funk as it become a straight four. Thing is, despite it being mechanical, NEW ORDER’s ‘Blue Monday’ has a weird groove because of the way Bernard Sumner sequenced those off-notes that just sat there. So this cover now has no groove and because he did away with the familiar hooks, he made up his own, which were frankly not very good!

Jenny: Yes, you want to put your own spin on a cover version, you have to give it a different feel, otherwise there is no point at all. With FAITH NO MORE’s ‘We Care A Lot’, it features a rap so it has no tune whatsoever so I did try to give it a more melodic slant. It was trying to change it a little but not change it, just add to it. You can change little bits and add little quirks, like I sing with an English accent so a lot of the American things we do, there’s a different thing straight away.

My funny FAITH NO MORE story, well it may not be funny to you, is when I first heard ‘Midlife Crisis’, I thought the verse was in German! I was confused, for years I thought they were from Germany! *laughs*

Jenny: If you can’t place immediately where a band is from, I think that can only be a good thing! *laughs*

How did ‘That’s What I Want’ by Lil Nas X come to be selected?

Ricardo: I love it when I hear something I like on Radio1 because it means I’m not old yet, Ava Max is also great, it’s refreshing and I sometimes think SPRAY can still have a hit if we sound like Ava Max these days but we haven’t quite managed that yet!

Jenny: She’s fab!

Ricardo: Covering Lil Nas X proves that we still listen to pop radio…

Jenny: It’s R ‘n’ B but quite poppy, he’s quite genre busting, that ‘Old Town Road’ when he sampled Miley Cyrus’ dad, I didn’t really like it so I didn’t really appreciate him until he was doing the pop stuff. His videos are incredible, he’s very risqué shall we say…

So here’s another card, a Korg 900PS, do you use Korg?

Ricardo: I bought a Korg Wavestate just before lockdown, it’s like a John Shuttleworth keyboard but made by NASA! You can do your one-fingered accompaniment, drums on one key, bassline on another. The idea was that we’d be able to do a whole show on this one synthesizer with no backing tracks. It would be the closest thing to SPRAY Unplugged, but with just one plug! If you open it up, there’s nothing more than a raspberry pie in there *laughs*

You have covered some more familiar tunes for the project, one of which is KISS ‘I Was Made For Loving You’…

Jenny: What a song!

Ricardo: Anybody that says they don’t like rock music, listen to that! That’s my kind of rock, DISCO ROCK!

It’s not really a typical KISS track though is it? But perfect for an electronic pop cover! I first knew the song from German band QUEEN OF JAPAN’s electroclash version which appeared on a TOO MANY DJS mix CD…

Ricardo: I wish KISS had done more songs like that, I always think this of bands who have a hit with an unrepresentative song, why not write a load more songs in that style? They could have a hit factory! KISS never really had hits in Britain until the late 80s…

Yeah, they had a hit with ‘God Gave Rock & Roll To You’, which funnily enough was a cover…

Ricardo: ARGENT wasn’t it, it was bloody terrible! *laughs*

Jenny: That was the one from ‘Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey’…

You’ve done a sparse reinterpretation of BLINK 182 ‘All The Small Things’…

Ricardo: This is one of Jenny’s favourites from yesteryear with her being the rock fan…

Jenny: I do like a lot of rock and as I mentioned earlier, it’s more difficult to do an electronic pop cover of electronic pop songs and make then your own. ‘All The Small Things’ is pop punk and its fast, so to slow it down like that, you have be careful not to do that twee girl with ukulele thing like a John Lewis ad, but you can do that and do it well, so that you can hear the song itself rather than all the fireworks.

Ricardo: We first recorded ‘All The Small Things’ about 20 years ago as a demo or the first SPRAY album and forgot about it. One day it turned up on the hard drive, we took the vocal acapella and experimented around it to see what we could come up with, but in the end, we had to re-record the vocal due to the earphone bleed! Using the vocal first and then shaping the music second was why it’s such an unusual cover.

Jenny: I think it came out really well, it’s one of my favourites so far.

Bringing Karl Bartos back into the conversation, he did a rather radical speeded up vocodered electronic cover of Eddy Grant’s ‘Baby Come Back’ as ELEKTRIC MUSIC…

Ricardo: I remember at the time being very excited at this because ‘The Mix’ was in 1991 and Karl Bartos had left by then, but then in 1992, the NME charity cover compilation ‘Ruby Trax’ came out and ‘Baby Come Back’ was Herr Bartos’ comeback on that. However, it was pretty awful… c’mon Karl, spend more than an hour on it please! It clears up why KRAFTWERK were so unproductive, they couldn’t be bothered really, they were too picky! They spent a week writing ‘Electric Café’ and 5 years mixing it! *laughs*

‘Gentle On My Mind’, as made famous by your late friend Glen Campbell, what did you think of Gil Trythall’s radical Moog modular version for ‘Switch On Nashville’ from 1972?

Ricardo: That reminds me of what I said earlier that of that roboticness but with a human feel, I do like 16ths and stuff as heard on ‘No1 Song In Heaven’, I think it’s marvellous, you can hear humans playing but it’s still technical.

Now Glen Campbell did quite a few Jimmy Webb songs, you have covered ‘The Highwayman’ before…

Jenny: Yes, we’ve done it live and it’s gone down incredibly well…

Ricardo: Originally in 2003-2004, we were going to record it as SPRAY featuring Glen Campbell. But it never came to pass because I don’t think he quite understood what we wanted him to do, which was record vocal and send it to us. My previous recording session with him to do ‘Rhinestine Cowboy’, I flew over to his house and I think he assumed that was what I was going to do this time! *laughs*

So will ‘The Highwayman’ come out on this cover project?

Ricardo: It’s on the Bandcamp download version of ‘Children Of A Laser God’.

What else is on the cards with these covers?

Jenny: There’s five more to come… one is ‘Love Rears Its Ugly Head’ by LIVING COLOUR, it’s very funky and jazzy, we have yet to get it finished but about a month ago, it came on in the car and I was like “oh my God, we need to do this…”

Ricardo: This should be a successful one cos I hate the original! I always say that about earnest American rock. So after Jenny sends her vocal back and I get my hands on it, it should be a little bit more interesting to get away from the original.

Jenny: I think the vocal will sound very different…

What about the other ones?

Ricardo: We’ll probably put out that NINE INCH NAILS one, ‘Come Back Haunted’ to tie in with Halloween but ‘Born To Be Alive’, the old Patrick Hernandez disco record is in the running. We started it a few years ago but never finished it, but I did get a guitarist to play the riff for me so as it’s on file, we may as well use it.

Did you know who programmed the Roland System 100 sequence on ‘Born To Be Alive’? To give you a clue, an electronic music fan, you’ll probably guess the band he was because they were connected to SPARKS!

Ricardo: It’s not TELEX is it?

Yeah, Dan Lacksman from TELEX!

Ricardo: I had no idea! Right, we’re definitely doing that then! Now, I want to do a cover of my favourite Italo disco song which is ‘The Different Story’ by Peter Schilling, It was produced by Michael Cretu aka ENIGMA. But we can’t do it because every time we try, it sounds either exactly the same as the original or to my ears, slightly worse!

I think Italo disco covers wouldn’t work as SPRAY are spiritually not that far removed from the form, it would be like you doing PET SHOP BOYS covers although Jenny singing would give it a twist…

Jenny: That would be the only thing though wouldn’t it? But we’d like to do ‘No1 Song In Heaven’ live, but that would be something we wouldn’t want to replicate unless we could do it properly.

Ricardo: So my three favourite songs are ‘The Different Story’, ‘No1 Song In Heaven’ and ‘Video Killed the Radio Star’, over the years I’ve tried to cover all of those but it just doesn’t work…

Jenny: There’s no point! *laughs*

Another card, and it’s an EMS Polysynthi, described by Vince Clarke as the worst sounding synth ever made…

Ricardo: Didn’t Jean-Michel Jarre use an EMS? I like the colours on it…

Yeah, it’s the best thing about it, tried one at college, no matter what knob you twiddle, it still sounded rubbish!

Ricardo: It’s cool, it would look good on stage and that’s why I’d get one! *laughs*

So why have you covered Chas & Dave’s ‘Ain’t No Pleasing You?’

Ricardo: Someone suggested it as a joke but we did it anyway…

Jenny: I think it was Terri MacDonald…

Ricardo: On her ‘Cabinets Of Curiosities’ podcast, she had a SPRAY Song of the Week, these little internet radio shows that spring up out of nowhere, some are quite good so we associate ourselves with them like Terri’s.

Jenny: I miss her show, it was very good.

Ricardo: So she suggested Chas & Dave, we changed the rhythm to 4/4 and it worked out ok.

Football songs, so why ‘Diamond Lights’ and not ‘Ole Ola’ or ‘World In Motion’ or ‘Top Of The World’ which was utter rubbish despite being co-written by Johnny Marr? *laughs*

Ricardo: All football songs are terrible, including ‘World In Motion’ , yes it’s the best football song but it’s the worst NEW ORDER record, the lyrics are appalling !

Jenny: But ‘Diamond Lights’ is fabulous…

Ricardo: It’s such a strange record to have been made in the first place, that why I’ve always liked it, it was released on Radio Shack!

So it was connected to Ian Levine?

Ricardo: He wasn’t involved but it’s a late 80s gay disco record by two footballers, there was only the most oblique reference to football in the lyrics, what a strange thing to be a success. They were called Glenn & Chris, but Hoddle & Waddle would have made a better moniker…

This isn’t really a football record as such as it’s not about winning or beating someone, this is more Ant & Dec as opposed to PJ & Duncan; it was never as good when PJ was with Harvey cos the stuff was really gloomy and miserable…

Ricardo: I used to have a really big collection of Ant & Dec and PJ & Duncan CD singles, they used to sell them dead cheap for 99p! I sold them as a job lot on eBay and some bloke came round in a Range Rover and took them off my hands, good times! Back to ‘Diamond Lights’, we did it totally straight, there’s no irony involved, we covered it as a fantastic pop song.

Jenny: Oooh, I’ve only just seen it but Glenn Hoddle and Chris Waddle have commented on Twitter about it.

Ricardo: Them both commenting leads me to believe that they have been talking about it behind the scenes.

Jenny: But I think you sent it to them it to them *laughs*

So your process? When you decide to do say ‘Diamond Lights’, are you sourcing sheet music or working it out by ear?

Ricardo: I play by ear, I use my hands, but I play by ear! You work out the chords, programme them into FruityLoops and then forget about the original and start tinkering like you are writing an original song.

What advice would you give to electronic acts that are looking to do cover versions as an extra string to their bow or for publicity or whatever?

Ricardo: Well, nobody wants our advice, after 20 years, I couldn’t really offer any… but if I was to, gimmickry is not a dirty word. Do something that is not in your usual style but turn it into your usual style.

Jenny: I think that’s pretty much what I would say, but also, don’t listen to us because we don’t know what we’re doing! *laughs*

Final card, the Oberheim Matrix 12…

Ricardo: What a great name, if there wasn’t already a synth called the Oberheim Expander, I would name an album that, it’s such a glorious collection of syllables. I’ve a plug-in called OPX which is a knock-off of the Oberheim OBX and got all the VAN HALEN presets, it’s got RUSH and the ‘Tom Sawyer’ bass, and the ‘Love Beat’ organ which was used by THE SPACE BROTHERS in the dance hit ‘Shine’.


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to SPRAY

Updated at monthly intervals, ‘Untitled Covers Project’ is available as a free download from all good newsagents and directly from
https://spray.bandcamp.com/album/untitled-covers-project

http://www.spraynet.co.uk/

https://www.facebook.com/spraynet/

https://twitter.com/spraypopmusic

https://www.instagram.com/spraypopmusic/

Vintage Synth Trumps is a card game by GForce that features 52 classic synthesizers

https://www.juno.co.uk/products/gforce-software-vintage-synth-trumps-2-playing/637937-01/


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
23rd August 2022

INFRA VIOLET Interview

INFRA VIOLET are the Brighton-based duo comprising of Beth Munroe and Toby Campen.

Adversity often fuels emotive creativity and INFRA VIOLET were a product of the worldwide lockdown. With dynamic self-production of a high standard for an independent release, their synth rock flavoured debut album ‘Dream Tether’ issued in Summer 2021 has been well received with Munroe’s heartfelt vocals being singled out for praise.

Making a lot of noise for two people, INFRA VIOLET provide a warm injection of enthusiasm whenever performing live, aided by their inherent musicality and instrumental versatility with an aim not to get trapped by on-stage computerisation.

Having just returned from the first live tour of the UK, INFRA VIOLET spoke about their musical journey so far to ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK before heading back into the studio to write new material for their second album.

INFRA VIOLET have a quite eclectic musical background, how did synths become part of your sound?

Beth: It was Toby that got me into the synthwave sound, before that, I was doing my own thing as a fingerstyle guitarist / indie solo artist until Toby sent me a message at the beginning of lockdown. I loved the combinations of our sounds straight away.

Toby: My parents were big fans of new wave music so I was brought up on a lot of synth music and played piano from a young age. Although I was in a lot of rock bands prior to INFRA VIOLET, I always had a curiosity for synths and when I heard CHVRCHES’ first album, that re-ignited my love for more modern synth music. Along with growing up listening to alternative / rock adjacent acts like NINE INCH NAILS and THE PRODIGY.

What VST emulations have you particularly taken to? Is there a vintage hardware synth that you covet?

Toby: In the studio, we use a lot of the Arturia and Native Instruments emulations, I’m a big fan of the Roland Juno and Jupiter synths as you can probably hear in our music, along with the Korg Mono/Poly and MS-20. Growing up, my dad had a Yamaha DX7 and Korg M1 in the house so I have fond memories of those. Live I play a Roland JDXi, as we prefer not to rely on laptops at the moment.

The fretboard soloing that INFRA VIOLET use is perhaps more closely associated with The Blues which gives you an unusual sound?

Beth: Some of the solos might sound a bit like classic rock which comes from Blues I suppose. The tapping that you see comes from acoustic fingerstyle, playing with both hands that you might typically see on an acoustic guitar, we’ve been experimenting with moving that over into our genre on electric, with mixed results but it gives a good show.

How would you describe your creative dynamic?

Beth: We both come up with original ideas that we take to the other. The first few songs, including ‘Polaroid’, Toby just presented me with this polished track that just needed vocals. As we worked together more, I put forward tracks as well. Overall, I’m really good at starting songs, and Toby’s really good at getting them finished and actually sounding good, but our roles are pretty fluid.

From your first single ‘Polaroid’, INFRA VIOLET were quickly embraced by the synthwave community, did that surprise you?

Beth: Yeah it really did, coming from a rock / singer songwriter background, those genres are so oversaturated that there just isn’t a community there anymore. I was so blown away from the support we got right from the start, how lovely everyone was, and how interconnected the UK synthwave scene is. It feels very hopeful for the genre.

Toby: Yes it was a pleasant surprise. There are a lot of musicians in this genre putting out great music, so to be noticed quite early on in our journey was very rewarding and for our first venture into this type of music as well.

Was there a need for you to study the synthwave form as it were? Did you have any particular inspirations or acts who you looked up to?

Toby: Being children of the late 80s / early 90s, the nostalgia element of this sort of music comes quite naturally. When we started making music as a duo, we weren’t really that aware of synthwave as a genre, until people started comparing our song ‘Polaroid’ to acts like The MIDNIGHT and Dana Jean Phoenix. When I first heard these acts, that was it, I was hooked. It mixed synthpop with lots of the 80s soundtrack music I loved like ‘Blade Runner’ and ‘The Terminator’.

‘Grow’ has become your most popular track, what was its genesis and realisation?

Beth: Toby gave me the track, it was originally a lot slower and more ambient, and when talking about a lyrical brief, we both agreed it would be quite nice to have an environmental song, with both of us being environmentalists. I wrote the lyrics about how it actually feels to be in this generation and see the ecosystem and life sustainability of the planet dissolve around us, rather than getting on a soapbox about it. Over time we sped up the track and found the groove of the song, and it all came together.

Toby: From a musical standpoint this song is definitely more post punk / dark wave inspired. I’d been listening to a lot of JOY DIVISION and NEW ORDER at this point in time, along with some newer bands like PALE WAVES and KORINE. However I knew once this was given to Beth with her vocal and guitar style it would transform into something a little different. She suggested making it more upbeat and dancey which helped tackle the difficult subject matter of the lyrics.

Is the confessional of ‘Mess’ autobiographical or do you write as characters?

Beth: All of the songs come from a very personal space, and all of the stories within them are true and mine.

Toby: One thing I have always quite liked about Beth’s lyrics is they are very personal and written from life experience. Quite a few bands in our genre write fictional lyrics so if this sets us apart a little, that’s not a bad thing.

Your debut album ‘Dream Tether’ was very well received and got reviews in mainstream media, it was released in all the usual formats including cassette while the vinyl has sold out. As independent artists, how did you decide what formats to go with and how much of a gamble is it?

Beth: It was my idea to push cassette tape, as I noticed when touring as a DIY artist previously, lots of people started asking for tape, what I didn’t expect was to sell out on our cassettes as well, that was absolutely wild.

Toby: It was a bit of a gamble to do all the formats on our first album, as Beth mentioned our cassettes moved pretty quickly and as a format cassettes are having quite a resurgence right now, especially in electronic music. I think I pushed more for the vinyl as it has always been a dream of mine to put something out on vinyl and in all the bands I’ve been in over the years (going on 20 now) this is the first to do so. Due to huge backlogs in getting vinyl pressed, we went with lathe cut from a company called Lathe To The Grave who I can thoroughly recommend and this made it faster to get our run made. They were a very limited run but we might make more if there’s a demand… message us and say!

Which are your favourite songs on ‘Dream Tether’?

Beth: I like ‘Water’, it’s one of the first we wrote together, and I love the sense of power and gravitas it has, although so much of that is Toby’s production. I like ‘Run’ and ‘Mess’, my two little fingerstyle experiments as well, with the really personal lyrics they both have a nice sense of fun to them. I’m proud of all of it honestly.

Toby: It’s hard to pick as I’m also very proud of it as a body of work. ‘Grow’ will definitely always be a favourite of mine, but some of the lower key songs like ‘Radio’ and ‘Gold’ are also personal favourites because of the way they came out production wise, and also Beth’s lyrics. It’s not on this album but our new single ‘Easy’ is probably one of the songs I’m most proud of to date and it has quite a different sound.

INFRA VIOLET have taken to playing live with aplomb, but what have been the challenges in bringing your sound to the stage?

Beth: It’s definitely very different from anything I’ve known playing live before. Playing to a backing track with in-ear monitors gives a very different feeling, and there’s a lot of tech that could go wrong. Luckily Toby is there to sort the technical side, we’re still finding our feet live for sure, but it’s getting there.

Toby: Initially working out how we would perform everything was a challenge and deciding whether to sequence hardware or go the laptop route etc. In a perfect world everything would be performed as a bigger band with more musicians, but right now that’s just not logistically ideal for us. Our songs also have quite a few patch changes from start to end, with lots of different synths and samples as we write to make the songs the best they can be, then worry about live later. So we are tied to using backing tracks for now, but for me the way we perform with the main synths, guitar and vocals gives enough of a show visually and we can still be entertaining and have fun performing live.

INFRA VIOLET released an instrumental versions EP, but was there any pressure on you to do this as there is this strange line that’s been drawn between vocal and instrumental synthwave. Just taking off a vocal from a song does not necessarily make it a good instrumental track, which is why a number of synthwave instrumentals sound like someone has forgotten to sing…

Beth: I mean I definitely agree, instrumental tracks require texture, melody, and some sort of theme or build that keeps the reader engaged. If you’re going to remove the texture and melodic layer of vocals, you need to either replace it or shift the track around to accommodate the empty space and keep us interested. Toby’s a fantastic producer, and I’m lucky to find someone who knows what they’re doing and can pack the track full of these interesting sounds and textures and little harmonies and hooks that you don’t always notice at first. It’s something not everyone gets right in this genre, so I’m glad Toby can.

Toby: Agreed, I think initially we did feel the pressure to release some as instrumentals and we did actually get requests from people to do so early on. When we do release instrumentals, I’ll remix the songs to suit this format, but we haven’t released all our songs this way for the very reason that some of them would just be boring without the vocals.

But INFRA VIOLET have specifically written instrumentals and contributed ‘Nightmares’ to the soundtrack of the short ghost film ‘The Understudy’. How did that come about, did you compose to moving images and would you like to do more of this kind of commission?

Beth: Yes, we also specifically write instrumental music for film and TV, and we’d love to do more. We wrote ‘Nightmares’ which was a lot of fun writing a spooky synthwave tune with lots of heavy distorted guitars. Our instrumentals are also going to feature in the upcoming documentary ‘Cult Of VHS’ and we’re working on another horror soundtrack at the moment as well. It’s a world we’d love to get more into.

Toby: As my day job I’ve been working in film and TV as a sound designer for most of my career, so some of these opportunities have come via directors that I know. We’d definitely like to score more films as INFRA VIOLET and when we do we compose to the picture as a Hollywood composer would. In that world of film composition, I’m largely influenced by the work of composers like Geoff Barrow, Trent Reznor, John Carpenter

If you were a ‘Stranger Things’ character, who would you be most like?

Beth: I’d be Dustin, I think. He’s my fav, I relate to his clownery and silly upbeat attitude a lot.

Toby: Probably Hopper because I’m partial to a Hawaiian shirt.

So DEPECHE MODE or NINE INCH NAILS?

Beth: I would actually say DEPECHE MODE, but only marginally more my favourite, I love them both.

Toby: For me definitely NIN (if that’s an unpopular opinion) as I grew up listening to a lot of their music and although it’s maybe not audibly obvious, the work of Trent Reznor is a big influence on my music.

How supportive have your parents been in your pursuit of a music career? Have they offered any friendly advice or guidance?

Toby: Mine have been very encouraging of me being in bands. Music has been in my family for many generations, so I had piano lessons as a young child and learnt other instruments after that. My dad was also in numerous synth bands over the years – namely GREY PARADE who were on Numa Records, and you can see that recently mentioned on ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK’s social media! He’s given me a fair bit of music industry advice over the years and been a good sounding board for song ideas.

Beth: My dad taught me some fingerpicking acoustic guitar when I was younger, I think you can still hear echoes of that when I play now. My mum bought me my first electric guitar and CD player so I could play along to MUSE and GREEN DAY. They’ve both been very supportive of me since, and only a little disappointed I didn’t become a writer instead.

Your most recent single ‘Easy’ appears to have entered more countrified direction? So what’s in store for your next body of work?

Beth: I think people might be a bit surprised when they hear what we have in store after ‘Easy’. It didn’t occur to us ‘Easy’ sounded a bit like country, but it makes sense with the upbeat vibe and the guitars. We’re working on a few different things, and still figuring out our sound, but our next release is likely to be a lot darker and more deviant, I can’t wait to see people’s reaction.

Toby: As Beth said some of our yet to be released songs have taken us in some unexpected directions so we have some darker and lighter sounding ones in the bank. After our first album we’re now taking some time to experiment and see where we can take our sound.


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its sincerest thanks to INFRA VIOLET

‘Dream Tether’ is available in various formats direct from https://infravioletuk.bandcamp.com/

INFRA VIOLET play Duskwaves at Electric Medway in Rochester Victoria Gardens in Chatham on Friday 19th August 2022 from 1.30pm to 6.30pm – entry is free, info at https://www.facebook.com/events/s/electronic-picnic-with-duskwav/1076694056270892/

https://www.facebook.com/InfraVioletUK

https://twitter.com/infravioletuk

https://www.instagram.com/infravioletuk/

https://linktr.ee/infravioletuk


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
12th August 2022

« Older posts Newer posts »