Posts Tagged ‘interview’

November 25, 2009 0

Interview – Renaat Vandepapeliere

By in Interviews

Renaat

Belgium is responsible for more than mere waffles and chocolates. With a roster that includes Aphex Twin, CJ Bolland and Derrick May amongst others, the legendary R & S Records has been making an impact on dance music since 1984. I was fortunate enough to spend a little time with label founder Renaat Vandepapeliere who, along with partner of 27 years, Sabine Maes, also created the Apollo label which has resurfaced in 2009 with a superb compilation album that includes classic tracks and new cuts alike. Such is his attention to detail, Renaat spent a year compiling the tracklist for the release. But why did the label disappear in the first place?

“I’ve been away because I was totally bored with the business side of music. At that moment, I though the whole dance music scene was repeating. I was listening to the same records with the same sounds, so I said ‘I’ve had enough. Bye, bye’. I could have been a very clever businessman and exploited it. I could have made much more money, but if I don’t feel something in my life – I stop.”

This strikes me as a somewhat unconventional view for a label manager, but this is simply part of an unusual history for the enthusiastic and engaging Renaat. “I’m a frustrated drummer!” he confesses. “That was my first ambition, but I didn’t have it in me to be as talented as heroes like Gene Kruper, Billy Cobham or Tony Roster Jr.

Like most children growing up, music was always around, and Renaat often found himself listening to the radio. His father, perhaps sensing his son was paying more attention to pirate radio stations than to his studies, took the radio away, smashing it in front of him. Nevertheless, that exposure to the diverse nature of radio undoubtedly set Renaat on his path to embracing a variety of music.

“I have a soul background, I have a jazz background – I listen to various kinds of music. You can’t put me in one category. Yeah, I love dance music as a DJ, but I can go from Metallica to Kraftwerk to Vangelis to classical music. For me, music has a time and place. Sometimes I can’t listen to dance music and sometimes, I can’t listen to rock. It has to fit with the right atmosphere and the right people: you have to capture a moment.”

This desire to craft moods becomes more apparent when Renaat graduated from DJing to the development of R&S Records.

“I worked in a record shop, but as a DJ I was getting very frustrated with the Belgian scene. The clubs were so commercial and American music just wasn’t accepted. The guys that were importing records here, they went straight into the studio and created a bad cover of it. I didn’t like that. I said ‘Respect the artist. License it in, and let’s have the original track’. That’s where the idea to start the label started, and it was New Beat that gave me the chance”.

As formed in Belgium, the New Beat genre was borne when Ghent’s Marc Grouls and Antwerp’s ‘Fat’ Ronnie Harmsen began playing 12″ techno records at 33rpm instead of the prescribed 45rpm. New Beat’s influence spread to the UK, with the NME devoting a front cover to this emerging form that would come to influence electronic artists such as The Prodigy, KLF and Autechre.

Never one to pander solely to fans, Renaat sought to expand the label’s catalogue by releasing incresingly eclectic electronic diversions.

“When you create a label, and you’re trying to do different stuff, your core fans don’t accept it. This was part of my frustration.” Releasing Aphex Twin’s seminal ‘Selected Ambient Works 85-92′ seemed to typify this. “It was very strange during that time: people thought I was crazy. Everybody said ‘Why are you putting Aphex Twin out?’ I remember the first year we sold twenty copies. But this is the sort of record that goes from hand-to-hand, and builds on word-of-mouth.”

The ability to tap into the musical zeitgeist was something that R&S became apt at, and Renaat himself is unable to recall how many releases from the label triggered scenes within the burgeoning dance explosion. The inexplicable intuition and diversification of R&S and Apollo’s output accounts for much of this ability. “Apollo was an escape for me, it’s balance. Dance music is something serious. I can have fun, I can drive home, but then I would put on an Apollo CD.”

Of course, you don’t need to have been out on a bender to listen to an Apollo CD, but the times have changed since Renaat’s been away. Drugs are different, cheaper and more accessible and though the intention of dance music has remained the same, its method of delivery has noticeably shifted with cultural and technological changes. So how does Renaat feel to be back in the game again?

“Now I feel vibrant again, I feel great again. I was preparing for a return anyway because I want to build a hi-tech club that travels the world. If you took ecstasy at that party – you’d die. It’d be too much!”

I asked Renaat why he felt the need for this travelling ‘superclub’.

“When I go out, it’s not the same vibe any more. Maybe it’s me, because I’m so spoilt, but don’t get me wrong – I don’t want to live in the past, I’m not nostalgic. For me, I see the kids and I think they’re missing something. Now you get a list of very expensive DJs, big lights, and a big soundsystem, but when you walk in – you can smell the money. There was a certain passion and love put into the old parties. When those guys put something on, they were ready to be slaughtered: their hearts were in there!

Looking to the future, Renaat continues to develop new artists. “I don’t care what it is, so long as it’s done from the heart – not a McDonald’s product! I can smell that a mile off.”

In running from that hideous, ubiquitous, corporate smell, Renaat has stumbled across Irish quartet, The Plea and has now started his own indie label, Bull Records. “Hopefully, I can do R&S jazz!” he laughs. His enthusiasm for music and risk-taking is deeply infectious. But what of the result?

“Let the consumer decide – let the people decide. Not me! Who am I? Who the fuck am I? Nobody! I’m just Mr Nobody. I like music, and that’s it.”

History is sure to judge this specific loss to percussion a significant cultural gain.

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October 14, 2009 0

Win a limited edition Gallows Tee

By in Interviews, Random

Gallows_Shirt_Design

COMPETITION IS NOW CLOSED!

Want one of these? Well, Topman have convinced Lags from Gallows to create a design specifically for them as Gallows roll through Topman’s CTRL. There’s only 50 in existence and I’ve been offered one as a prize to give away.

SO, if you’re a fan of the band (and after their album ‘Grey Britain’ earlier this year why wouldn’t you be?), drop me a line through the contact page with the answer to this simple question: 

What is Gallows’ drummer Lee’s favourite Metallica album?

HINT: Read the following interview with Lee and Lags from the band.

CTRL:  Gallows Interview

 Q:  OK so new bands then, give us a few off the top of your head…

 Lee:  The first band is probably Sharks we’re taking them out on tour in November December… They’re a bit different you know, they’re like a mix of Joy Division and kind of a new….

 Lags:  ….Undertones.

 Lee:  Yeah, Undertones, a lot of like more Indie Brit pop influences, they put on a really good show too.

 Q:  Are they still quite heavy as well?

 Lags:  They’ve got a real new wave feel to them, which is cool cos’ there aren’t too many new wave bands around today, like they look as though they should be in the Smiths or something not Kings Of Leon like most other bands these days.

 Q:  Are they going to confound the expectations of the Gallows crowd?

 Lags:  I think what we’ve always done in the past, like when we took out Lethal Bizzle, is show our eclectic taste in music, we don’t want to be one of those bands that gets thrown in with every heavy punk hardcore band.

 Lee:  Also on this tour is Trashtalk  - this Californian hardcore band, and you need to check out their live shows on Youtube because they are just insane.

 Lags:  I’ve got a feeling there will be some sort of competition – who can destroy themselves the most?

 Q:  What is the worst gig related injury sustained by Gallows to date?

 Lags:  Well I knocked myself out recently on stage, there are loads! Hit myself in the face with my guitar, Frank’s been knocked out…

 Lee:  …I broke a rib stage diving!

 Q:  Any other new bands? Anything else you’ve heard recently?

 Lags:  This band called More Than Life who are from the West Country – they’re farm boys.  The thing about the UK hardcore scene is that I think a lot of it sounds the same whereas these dudes bring a bit more musical edge to it.  The songs are quite catchy but are still really heavy and raw.

 Lee:  I’m gonna mention our bass player Stu’s band, this other band. They’re called Spycatcher. It’s actually 3 or 4 of our friends from back home are in that band. What does Mitch play? Guitar doesn’t he?

 Lags:  Yeah

 Q:  Can you see yourself shifting towards other styles as the band goes on?

 Lags:  Oh yeah definitely. I mean if you listen to our new record there is big piano and orchestration and stuff on it, which I wrote myself.  I’m really into the idea of writing soundtracks and more epic soundscapes as it were

 Lee:  I think it could go any way really, I don’t really know what’s going to happen with our new record. It could end up even heavier!

 Q:  Shall we talk about places around the world – maybe its places you’ve visited, certainly venues that you’ve enjoyed playing around the world, or maybe scenes that you find inspirational.

 Lags:  One of my favourite places is Austin in Texas, we’ve done it twice, with south by south west, and we also played there again on our last headliner US tour.  The atmosphere is electric and there is such a creative vibe and buzz about the town and we have so many friends there, and like all my favourite times hanging out with people have been in Austin.  And the girls are beautiful!

 Lags:  Another place, which is just amazing, is Japan, if you want to go somewhere and feel like you’ve landed on another planet, then Japan is probably the ultimate place.  Its just got such a crazy atmosphere, when we’re hanging out in Tokyo, and we’re going around all the shops and the cool parts of town, everyone is just dressed as if they are going to go on the biggest night out ever, but that is just how they dress everyday.

 Q:  What is the scene like for you out there?

 Lee:  It was actually really weird when we touched down the first time we went over there, like literally two or three minutes after we’d left our hotel a gang of Japanese kids came up to us, they knew who we were and they had all our records ready for us to sign, and that totally blew our minds, like no one recognises us in England.

 Q:  How do you go down in the rest of Europe, where about are the kind of hot spots for you?

 Lee:  Milan is also awesome.

 Lags:  I really like Berlin, I think Berlin is an awesome city, its quite a big place but there is a lot to do.

 Q:  Do you get much of a crowd in Berlin, it doesn’t really seem like that much of a rock city?

 Lags:  Last time we played Berlin we were supporting Korn and Machinehead so it was a bit of a weird gig, it was in some fort just outside of the city, some castle where you have to cross a moat to get in.

 Q:  Cool, shall we talk about albums that you either grew up with or there are stories associated with.

 Lags:  You’re going to say Bowie aren’t you.

 Lee:  Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars!  My dad is a huge Bowie fan and he took me to go see him when I was about 4 or 5.  Its like 11 tracks of the best rock and roll music you’ll ever hear- the production is awesome considering it was made in the early 70’s and every track on that record is a classic and I’ll never get sick of listening to it.  If anyone doesn’t have that album then they need to buy it or their house will fall down.

 Q:  What other Bowie albums come close?

 Lee:  A lot of his older one’s come close, like Hunky dory is great and I really like Low even though it is a bit more experimental, I like every record he’s put out to be honest.  I think he is just one of the greatest artists of all time, well the best Britain has ever produced anyway.

 Q:  Which Metallica album stands out to you?

 Lee:  The Black album is the one I remember.  I was in my early teens back then and I’d not really heard any heavy music.  I remember going into Virgin Megastore in Watford and you were working there..

 Lags:  Right..

 Lee: … and I remember asking if I could listen to the ‘Black Album’ and you put it on for me on the listening post and I remember thinking this is the best thing I’ve ever heard.  It was so heavy and sounded so tight.  Being a drummer, I’d never even heard much double pedal, I took it home and listened to it everyday for about two years.  I still listen to it every week – its one of my all time favourite.  Its still not as good as ‘Justice For All’, but The Black album that’s the one with a story for me behind it.

 Lags:  I think the Beatles are such an inspirational band, they are one band who have created modern music to me anyway. They came just after the whole rock and roll boom but they just took music and made it pretty much unreachable for other bands at that time.  For me I think ‘Revolver’ was that change and songs like ‘Eleanor Rigby’ and ‘Tomorrow Never Knows’, and I just think that back then that was probably the craziest thing that any band could ever do and they were doing it and they were all the more successful for it, and so for me like that album definitely set the bar for every other band to follow them.

 Q:  Have you ever seen McCartney play live?

 Lags:  Our second Gallows gig was in London and we were walking past EMI in Soho Square, or Apple, well whichever office, and Paul McCartney was walking out and that was the closest…

 Q:  You didn’t run up to him then?

 Lags:  No there was already a million Beatles fans there with records.

 Q:  Was classic British metal important to you or not?  You share management with Iron Maiden.

 Lee: I think they put on one of the best live shows out of any UK band.

 Lags:  I’m a huge Sabbath fan.  I know people have argued that the first heavy metal songs were The Kinks ‘You really got me’ or even The Beatles ‘Helter Skelter’.  But Sabbath, they created heavy metal as we know it from the imagery to the music and the first album.  They recorded that album in like two days, so at the same time they are inspirational to other musicians out there to just get tight and play instruments and don’t rely on Pro Tools.

 Q:  Okay, lets talk about favourite things.

 Lee:  Well I’d start with my parents and my girlfriend, family.  They are probably my biggest fans.  My dad comes to near enough every show- he likes to think he’s the fifth member of the band sometimes.

 Lags:  I’ve got a mum and dad tattoo and then I’ve got family on my wrist.  I can’t believe how supportive my mum and dad were, even when they had doubts that I was ever gonna get anywhere in life.

 Q:  How did you expect your parents to react to the announcement that you were jacking everything in to be in a band?

 Lee:  I think they were a bit resentful at first that I was sitting around some days when we were not on tour doing nothing.  My dad was still going to work and I used to just laugh like ‘yeah I’m just sitting here getting paid for it you know’.

 Q:  Maybe that’s why your dad wanted to become the fifth member of the band!

 Lee:  Yeah but then they realised that the band’s an every day thing- that even when we’re not playing, the band is our lives.   I think it’s hard for any parent really to understand that their son or their daughter is going to be in a band and tour the world.  It’s just something you don’t expect!

 Q:  Better than working in an office then?

 Lags:  The problem with rock and roll is that there are so many vices connected to it – parents are bound to be scared that you’re gonna go on tour and come back a heroin addict or whatever.  But they know us so well and they know that we’re not the kind of people to fall into any trap, whether it be drugs or alcohol or women.

 Q:  Okay that’s a good entry, what’s number two?

 Lee:  I’m gonna be really geeky and say my collection of Batman comics, they are a favourite thing of mine because I’ve spent about the past 6 months to a year building up my collection so I now pretty much own them all.  I’ve got a batman tattoo so, it’s just a personal thing to me!

 Lags:  Definitely my music collection.  I remember when I was buying CD’s growing up my mum would go spare that I’d be spending all my pocket money just buying music.  Even today I’m not the kind of guy who would download something, I have to have the physical format.

 Lee:  My season ticket to Tottenham is probably one of my favourite things.  I’ve had it for about 10 years now.  Football is my main passion other than the band.

 Also, I think our laptops should probably be in there somewhere..

 Lags:  Yeah everyone has got to have an laptop, I don’t think I could survive without it, if you’ve got it on tour its just the ultimate tour accessory; you’ve got movies, music, you can record guitar riffs, you know it can do everything, you just compile all the things in your life into it.  If it could cook for me, it’d be amazing.  If I could just press a button and sushi rolls started coming out!

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May 10, 2009 0

Akira the Don – Interview

By in Interviews

The sudden loss of furniture wasnt as much a problem as the hole in his jeans.

On Sunday May 10th and across the internet, I had a chat about hip-hop, Vanilla Ice and Bill and Ted comics with a hungover, G.rap-fruit eating Adam Narkiewicz, where I discovered a soulful ambition driving this lucid, multi-faceted talent.

Born in West Brom, raised in Wales – on the playground is where he spent most of his days…

So you support West Brom, then?

ATD: My Dad does. Birmingham City Football Club, mayne.

You’re a bluenose?


ATD: Oui. Couldn’t tell you shit about what’s going on since ‘98 though. No time.

Script writing, rapping, writing, drawing – what don’t you do that you wish you could?

ATD: I wish I could play the piano like Billy Joel and I wish I could do astral projection. And I’d like to ride a horse.

Apart from Chris De Burgh, you appear to have excellent music taste – but what’s the beef with The Beatles?

ATD: Deaded! The beef is dead, I am happy to say. It was born out of rage and frustration and more the fault of their Britpop era copyists than themselves, la. That and Paul McCartney wound me up

Generally? Or with his music?

ATD: Oh, all of it. His stuff I found unbearably saccharine, and his face annoyed me. I was emotional as a youngster.

Emo?

ATD: Haha! Emo didn’t exist then. It was a different time

Aye – it were all METAL

ATD: HM Gear catalogue

Skid Row.

ATD: Youth gone wild. And Pornograffitti, mayne.

Extreme? You fancied Nuno.

ATD: My mum did.

Extreme III was shite.

ATD: It was a terrible shame. I bought it, all excited, on vinyl and it sucked balls. It was Queen’s fault. That Freddy Mercury gig went to their heads. That and Brian May saying they were the new Queen.

I reckon you’re the UK’s most political rapper. How say you?

ATD: Depends what you mean by politics I guess.

Everything, really. Not just Labour, Conservative etc. You have an opinion that’s not balls.

ATD: I do have an opinion, and I am not bothered about disguising it behind nonsense I suppose. Hunter S Thompson always used to say: “Politics is the art of controlling your environment.” He was onto more than he knew, I think.

Did you stay up to hear the results of the US elections?

ATD: I did! I drank a whole bottle of Jack Daniels that night. It was disgraceful.

That is very Guns n Roses.

ATD: I was at my girl’s friend’s house. They had an election party, and I was yelling “HE’LL STILL MURDER THE BABIES!” at her Dad. But I was pleased cos I like it when people get to be happy for a short while – even if it is a hollow kind of joy.

Which life are you currently trapped in amongst the Omega Sanction?

ATD: Good question. I think that since I figured it out, and completed The Life Equation, that I am out, but I might be in another one and not know.

What’s your favourite tune on the mixtape?

ATD:‘Steam‘, ‘The Omega Sanction‘; ’18‘ too and…well it is all pretty fresh!

You sound pretty loved up and happy on this record…

ATD: In places, yeah – prolly the newer stuff. Life is as kind as you let it be.

I know you lost a lot of data when recording it – you held it down though.

ATD: Man, I had to restart the mixtape AND the album twice. I lost what was going to be the second album in New York. 30 odd songs fell off a table. Bang! Start again, and it came out much better so I am glad.

Can you briefly sum up the writing process?

ATD: In general?

Please. Tis vague I know.

ATD: It is often different these days. A lot of times I’ll be cycling and a song will appear, pretty fully formed, in my head, and I have to sing it into my phone and try not to crash.

Or I wake up with one in my head; or I’m going to sleep and one appears and I have to get up and record it; or I do the Tom Waits thing and sit down at the keyboard and hit chords; or I make a beat, and something appears over the top; or I’ll hear a record, and a new song will appear on top, like a harmony, so I sample it. I bet there’s other ways I’m not thinking of.

Songs are everywhere. The air’s full of them, they’re like ghosts. I get what Stevie Wonder means when he says he doesn’t write them; he gets them from God these days. Cos it’s pretty much like that.

Are you religious at all?

ATD: Man is a religious animal, but I don’t subscribe to any, no. I suppose I have my own.

Akiraism?

ATD: Haha – that’s a good one. I am very interested in religion. I think the ancient wisdoms we have forgotten must all be hidden in the major texts, and I intend to study them all.

Could you have managed to fit any more songs on the CD?

ATD: No. I left off about 2 CDs worth. There are songs that didn’t make it that some might say are better, but I was trying to create something that flowed, had structure, and told a story, even if its not that obvious at first. It’ll make more sense when The Life Equation‘s out.

Are you a gearhead?

ATD: As in techie, or man wot does lots of drugs? I’m too poor to be a gearhead, but I love what I have, and I’m interested in what’s out there. I get excited when people show me new stuff like Ableton 8. And Trigger finger wot Joey2Tits (collaborator) showed me the other day, wot is fucking awesome and will change the way I make musics.

What instruments do you play?

ATD: I play rudimentary most stuff. Like, enough to paste together into a song. A bit of guitar, bass, keys, xylophone…that sort of thing. Nothing with any great level of skill.

Auto-tuning. Please explain the prevalence of this effect on the Omega Sanction.

ATD: Is there a prevalence?

Well – on a few tracks.

ATD: I hadn’t noticed. Oops. Ummm. its FUN!

Thought you’d be listening to Cher a fair bit, that’s all.

ATD: Haha! Philip Oakey and Giorgio Moroder. I swear they were using autotune. The backing vocals sound like robots. I love that shit, though it’s not for everyone. I wish Mef hadn’t bothered, but I am of the arrogant opinion that i can do whatever the fuck I like!

Any predictions for Hip-hop in 2009?

ATD: Drake‘s looking good; Eminem‘s looking bad; Wayne will be better than any of us I expect. Big Narstie‘s album is amazing and Max B will release a classic.

What’s the beef, chicken and lamb with TV?

ATD: Fuck a TV.

Could be tricky.

ATD: Just cut a hole in it, and line the thing with steak. EW, nah. TV though, really it’s like having a load of dickheads in your front room that won’t shut the fuck up, or talk about anything that isn’t poisonous bullshit.

But what about The Wire and stuff like that?

ATD: I download it. If something’s good, I’ll hear about it. And if I have time, I’ll download it, and enjoy it projected on my wall

RIP John Martyn. Good call on ‘I don’t wanna know…’ When did you first hear that tune?

ATD: Thanks! That was Joey2Tits actually. It was snow day when he sent it. I listened to it all day long and wrote it a fortnight later after it had settled into my unconscious. I must have heard the original tune when I was little: my Dad had it.

Who’s your favourite Streetfighter character and why.

ATD: Dhalsim for the same reason my favourite character in Soul Calibur is Voldo: they’re awesome, scary fuckers!

If bankers rhymes with wankers. MPs rhymes with…

ATD: MPs spent cheese…spent fleas. Poor bastards, its like a feedback loop.

Speaking of wankers – is the forthcoming Life Equation gonna make Interscope go for that?

ATD: -It’s gonna make them vomit in their mouths

You must still be sore from that. I know I would be.

ATD: Nah, not at all. Serious. I got so much out of that experience. It confirmed a lot of stuff I knew, I met amazing people, spent a year travelling America, got a studio. Lucky mud.

I see you still got love for Vanilla Ice.

ATD: Hells yeahs. I was really sad when I saw him dissing himself on that Virgin ad.

I thought ‘Roll ‘em up’ was really underrated.

ATD: What was that?

I can’t see it on youtube.

ATD: youtube has gone to shit lately. They took all the Wang Chung videos down!

ATD: Wow. This is gangster. Wow.

Yeah – his flow’s pretty good, right?

ATD: Always. He looks fucking terrifying. He just did a dope wiggideywizzack thing. Biggedy bone its oooown!

I love that triplet shit.

ATD: Yep. No-one does that shit anymore.

The Life Equation – so you believe existence is not futile?

ATD:
How can it be?

How can it be futile?

ATD:
Yeah.

I don’t know – I was inferring from the title. I thought you’d adapted the anti-life equation.

ATD: I did

Now I’m confused.

ATD: Haha. Well, I considered the opposite.

You considered that life was NOT futile?

ATD: I have always been of that opinion. I am the opposite of my father, in that respect. I see awesomeness wherever I look, and the potential for awesomeness; like the way some sculptors see the figure in the rock before they carve it.

That relates back to your approach to songwriting, really.

ATD: Yeah. It all links. Everything fits together perfectly, no matter how hard you analyse it.

Zen, baby.

ATD: Word.

Was Jack Kirby a big influence on your art?

ATD: Yeah, definitely. More so as I got older. I actually used to love that Rob Liefeld shit when I was 10. I have no idea why. You look at it now, it doesn’t even make sense. Just loads of ugly scratchy lines. Kirby’s work had such grace, it flows like poetry. Kirby was a true artist.

Why, in your opinion, are comics still so popular?

ATD: Comics as an artform or superhero stories?

As a medium and as something people continue to buy.

ATD: It’s a unique way of presenting something, of transferring an idea or an experience. It can do stuff no other medium can, so it has to exist because it has value. And the stories people tend to tell within its confines are the oldest stories know to man.

Unlike TV?

ATD: Well, TV has its place but its very limited. Comics have but one limit, which is the imagination of the reader.

Are you becoming Darkseid?

ATD: What’s the opposite of Darkseid?

I have no idea. Lightseid?

ATD: Haha! Well, it’d be nice to be becoming that. He had a dope helmet though…

What can we expect when the album drops?

ATD: You can expect humanity to evolve, all at once

I had someone else say that recently.

ATD: Who was that?

The guitarist from Blk Jks. He said he was searching for the ideal song to dissolve all matter.

ATD: Wow, I respect that.

It’s a bit Bill and Ted though.

ATD: I shall have to listen to them. I love Bill and Ted. They had a brilliant attitude. You ever read Evan Dorkin‘s Bill and Ted comics?

Nope. Bought the soundtracks tho.

ATD: GOD GAVE ROCK N ROLL TO YOU!

Would you be Bill or Ted, then?

ATD: Was it Bill with the hot Mom?

Yeah

ATD: Ted, then. Get the comic, it’s amazing.

Is it different to a graphic novel?

ATD: Yep.The guy who did Milk & Cheese did it. He’s a g.

Gangster or genius?

ATD: Both. Double G. You can get the comics collected in a graphic novel. I recommend highly.

What can we expect from an ATD live show?

ATD: Ooooh, sheeeeeeeeee-it. This one’s gonna be awesome. We’ve rethought the whole thing, stripped it all apart, and put it back together in optimal form for the night specifically. It’s gonna BANG!

What’s this I hear about Zombies?

ATD: We’re filming the I Am Not Dead (YEAH!) video cut scenes.That’s a zombie film. I wrote 6 months ago. It’s gonna be ace. Me and my band are le resistance fighting the zombie plague with super-soakers.

Discover Simple, Private Sharing at Drop.io

www.akirathedon.com

Akira The Don & Fiends play Dawn of The Don.
Live at The Gaff, London, May 29th

You can order the 74 minute, 23 track, Omega Sanction on CD or MP3 now.

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April 14, 2009 0

Thunderheist – Interview

By in Interviews

Hailing from Canada, Thunderheist find themselves teetering on the edge of global acclaim. Signed to Ninja Tune affiliate, Big Dada, and with a song featured in The Wrestler, I was fortunate to snatch a few moments with the team of Isis (vocals and lyrics) and Grahmzilla (producer).

So where are you now, and how was SXSW?

Grahmzilla: I’m at home eating leftovers, preparing to tour, and loving sleeping in my own bed. SXSW was a blur, but I do remember some crazy gigs and maybe too much Texan BBQ.

For those of us who have yet to witness the live show, can you outline what to expect?

G: Sweat, blood, screaming and pregnancy.

Favourite TH tracks right now?

G: The new stuff we’re working on…

Are you working on your own individual material? As I understand it, you didn’t start out together as TH.

G: I do remixes whenever I get a chance. I’ve got some coming up for Little Boots and Erup. Truth be told, I cant really commit to much more because of the TH schedule right now.

I heard you were conceived in the Olympic Village. How do you think that’s influenced your steez?

G: Well, I think that being the son of an Olympian has taught me that you can do anything if you give it your all. Fuck all the haters, just do it!

And in terms of production influences, are we talking electro, pop, hip-hop, rave?

G: We’re talking 15 years of DJing! I’ve played raves, hip-hop shows, skid bars. You name it; I’ve played it. That’s the biggest influence on me.

Isis, how long have you been MCing, I understand you stole your brother’s rhyme book? Did you steal his style?

Isis: I’ve been MCing since I was about 13, and yes I used to bite from my older bro. Later, MC Lyte , Nas, ODB and whoever else I was in love with then. When I hit 18, all of those styles came together to give you what you hear now.

Apart from Nas’s Illmatic, are there any albums we should hear to understand TH any better?

Prince - Purple rain
Michael Jackson - Thriller
Elephant Man - Let’s get physical
Fleetwood Mac - Rumours


Isis – any female MCs you especially admire?

MC Lyte, Roxanne Shanté, Invincible, Jean Grea and Lauryn Hill

Musically, what’s good in Canada at the moment? How do you rate K’Naan?

G: K’Naan is dope! He’s being himself and people are listening.

You enjoying using Twitter?

G: cant talk right now need 2 twitter about my breakfast also i had to stop using punctuation and proper grammer in order to fit inside the 140 char limit i think this is the death of society

I: Under 140, the answer then is ‘Yes’

We’re looking forward to seeing you at the Secret Garden Party in the UK – you been to any UK festivals before and are you looking forward to touring?

G: Naah! No festivals yet… definitely looking forward to those! I know the UK is like Mecca for  music, so I’m sure it’ll be a blast!

I: I’m looking forward to playing somewhere other than London, and it’s always exciting to play outside of your own city - much less country.

Are TH up on the UK grime / dubstep scene? Thoughts?

G: There’s definitely some ill stuff coming out of the UK right now. Dubstep is making waves over here, but it’ll be interesting to see if it really crosses over. I mean, they said grime was gonna be huge but it never really went global.

Thunderheist’s debut is out now.

www.myspace.com/thunderheist

Thanks to Grahmzilla, Isis, James at Ninja Tune and Tash at Future Classic for their help in putting this together.

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