NEWS

Audio: Cat’s Eyes cover Grinderman

Check out this great cover of Grinderman from our favourite choral droners! They play in London for the first time tommorow and we are beyond excited.



Interview: SPIN vs The Mountain Goats

VIA SPIN

The Hold Steady may have sung the words “Me and my friends are like / The drums on ‘Lust for Life,’ ” but John Darnielle lives them. As he speaks in his living room in Durham, North Carolina, it’s easy to understand how he has ascended to cult-hero status as one of our greatest lyricists: He is as educated and evangelical about unexplored corners of art and culture as his fans are toward his own work. He name-checks obscure movies (“You’ve seen the three-hour Cannibal Corpse documentary Centuries of Torment, right?”) and reads a whole passage from his newest obsession, a Polish novel called The Mighty Angel, by Jerzy Pilch (“It’s a book about alcoholism; only 150 pages long, and I keep stopping because I don’t want to be done”). He has been profiled in The New Yorker, he enlists the death-metal heroes of his youth to collaborate on contemplative acoustic rock, and when the spirit moves him, he writes about hockey for the local alt-weekly.

For a guy who lived through child abuse and heroin and speed addiction, he’s pretty at ease with himself, and as evidenced by the Mountain Goats’ 16th full-length album, All Eternals Deck (his first for hometown kingpins Merge Records), he’s the rare ’90s survivor making his best music in his career’s second decade.

What was it like where you grew up?
As a little kid I lived in San Luis Obispo [California], which kinda had a hippie population in the early ’70s. Eventually I lived in Claremont, which was not cool by L.A. standards, but it is a cool little college town. It’s where David Foster Wallace spent the last six years of his life.

Did you feel connected to music and art there or did you feel isolated from it?

There’s a lot of music culture in Claremont. At my high school there were always kids carrying acoustic guitars around, which is why I named my band the Mountain Goats. I didn’t want to seem like one of those guys who brought his guitar to the party whether you asked him to or not.

You’re not the guy who busted it out?
No, I’m still massively uncomfortable with that. It doesn’t happen as much as it used to, but I used to be in airports out on tour and people would be like, “Hey, play me something!” “No, what I do is not really like that.” They always assume you’re just shy, like, “Oh no, I’m sure it’s great.” And I’m like, “No, no, really, no.”

Your 2005 album, The Sunset Tree, is about your experiences with domestic violence at the hands of your stepfather. If you could have told your 12-year-old self, “This will pass,” would you have believed you?
Nope. People told me that all the time, and it’s not something you need to hear. Because it doesn’t matter. “Someday you won’t be hungry,” is not something you tell a hungry person. You have to break it down so that you’re telling yourself, “It gets better by the end of the day. It gets better in half an hour.” I didn’t believe I was going to live to see 21.

Your drug period didn’t necessarily coincide with your music-making period.
No, it didn’t. Those were not creative times for me. I was writing poetry and the Mountain Goats was an outgrowth of that. But the idea of drug-fueled creativity is weird to me because I think a proper addict puts his creativity into his using: “Why should I worry about making something when I could be getting high?” You can’t court two mistresses, you know? I was sober by the time I started doing the Mountain Goats. In fact, there was actually a period of five years when I was clean on all fronts except for cigarettes and coffee. I wouldn’t even have a beer at all until I got into touring. You wound up having a beer once you got on tour.

Your first two releases were on a cassette-only label called Shrimper. Did it seem like a big deal at the time?
I had moved to Norwalk [Connecticut], where I was living on the grounds of a hospital. My friends were all back in Claremont, and they had met this guy named Dennis Callaci, who was trying to start this label. He was putting together a Beatles tribute tape, and I told him I couldn’t play a Beatles song, but he said, “Just give me one of your songs and we’ll give it a Beatles title.” So I gave him one he called “Within You Without You” and he put it on there. Wait! I have to show you something — you’re about to freak out. We’re doing a tape, hand-colored by yours truly, like the other 999 of them. The first 1,000 [All Eternals Deck] vinyl LPs will come with demos for the album on this lovely cassette.

And cassettes are making this weird, cultish comeback.
I went in [to the Merge office] and drew a cover. It was exactly like the old days, the same mind-set: Sit down, start drawing something, put a sticker there, go to the Xerox machine. I put it next to [his 1992 cassette release] The Hound Chronicles, you would think they were released on consecutive days.

You made a lot of music for Shrimper on a four-track.
Not a four-track, that’s a common misconception. [Holds up a boom box] I made them on that. There’s no overdubbing, everything you’re hearing on those records is 100 percent live.

So you’ve gone from about as primitive as it gets to full studio recordings. Would you ever go back to the primitive?
Now that it’s more of a band than just me, no. When I was writing what became [2002’s] All Hail West Texas, I thought the tape deck was broken. Then I tried again one day and it was working, so I used it to make that record. That was a good conclusion for that style.

Erik Rutan of the death metal band Hate Eternal produced four songs on the new album. How did that happen?
Something I’ve learned being in this industry for so long is that if you want to work with somebody, call them up. Very few musicians have any illusions about genre boundaries. They are useful descriptive terms, but they don’t really bind musicians. So I wrote to Rutan, and he wrote back 24 hours later and said, “Yes! I listen to all kinds of music — nobody ever hits me up for anything but death metal. I would love to do something else.” That dude had amazing stories — his first night of touring ever was when he was with Morbid Angel opening for Pantera on a world tour.



Video: Steve Mason

Take a look at this great acoustic performance of one of our favourite Steve Mason songs. The man is back for us soon and he seems to get better every time we see him. Don’t miss it!



Electrelane back after hiatus

We are thrilled that ELECTRELANE are back to play two live shows for Eat Your Own Ears. We’ve been waiting 3 long years to enjoy their intense, brilliant shows again. Full details below:

ELECTRELANE
Plus special guests

Tuesday 19th July 2011
Doors 7.30pm

Academy 3, in Manchester University Union, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PR

ELECTRELANE
Plus special guests

Thursday 21st July 2011
Doors 7.30pm

Scala, 275 Pentonville Road, King´s Cross, London N1 0207 833 2022

Tickets £14.50

Tickets from:
www.seetickets.com
0870 264 3333
www.ticketweb.com
0844 477 1000

http://www.myspace.com/electrelane



Audio: Dave Sitek remixes Dels

One of the best producers around at the moment Dave Sitek (TV on the Radio) has remixed DELS. The album drops soon and Dels plays for us shortly too. Looks like it will be unmissable, as is this remix, streaming below:


DELS – ‘GOB’ (David Andrew Sitek remix) by Big Dada Sound