sexta-feira

9

maio 2008

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XLR8R, Maio/2008

Written by , Posted in Imprensa, Música

Matéria que escrevi sobre o Late of The Pier para a edição de maio de 2008 da revista XLR8R.

Silver capes and sampler-mashing straight from Castle Donington’s fresh-faced upstarts.
words: Bruno Natal

Yes, Late of the Pier is another weirdly named band of British 20-somethings, totall hyped though they don’t even have a record out yet. Your first reaction might be just to ignore them. But praise from Digitalism, and Erol Alkan’s involvement in producing that yet-to-be-released album, might be enough to get you to one of their gigs. And that, my friend, may lead you to the center of a kaleidoscopic, psychedelic, noisy, stop-start dance-rock maelstrom, where you’ll find yourself surrounded by 18-year-olds and wearing a pair of band-distributed “rainbow trippy goggles”.

On stage, Late of the Pier has so much going on at the same time that it’s almost hard to describe: silver capes, metallic guitarr riffs and screams, frenetic, MPC-triggered 8-bit effects, post-punk drums, distorted disco basslines, and layers and textures from synthesizers that have been carefully placed in golden foil-wrapped boxes. And all of these elements are neatly rolled into recent singles on their Zarcorp label, including “Bears are coming” and “Bathroom Gurgle” (a remix of which shows up on the latest taste-making Kitsuné compilation).

“I think a lot of people that hear us are interested because it just sounds a little bit odd; familiar but… just slightly odd,” explains bassist Andrew Faley. “That confuses them into listening to us a bit more. And that’s when we sink our musical claws into them.”

The foursome’s live set-up — guitar, bass, drums, two synths, and one MPC — came naturally, says Faley. “We originally played just straight bass, drums and guitar. We all listened to a lot of electronic music, from Prodigy and Daft Punk to Lamb, Chris Clark, and Autechre, but never really thought about playing it as a band. Sam [Eastgate, the guitarist and lead vocalist] was sequencing, sampling, and producing electronic music himself and eventually the two collided.”

The Midlands-based band finally decided to add electronic elements into its sound after a group outing to Cut Copy’s first U.K. gig. “They were using a MPC-1000 sampler live. Next week, Sam bought one off eBay and [keyboardist Sam] Potter went from playing one key on a keyboard in one song to mashing a sampler [into everything we do,” says Faley.

If it all falls apart, there is a plan B. “Ross [Dawson, the drummer], is going to be a gravedigger after LOTP, and Potter wants to be a glass blower,” explains Faley, who’s obviously been given the task of remembering the band’s retirement plans after some drunken night.

“Sam’s going to collect glass that Potter’s blow. We’ll all still be connected though — I’ll make a film about Ross’ grave-digging, for which I’ll use special glass lenses in the camera. These I’ll buy of Sam, who’ll have collected them from Potter. And the band played on…

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