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I-view
w Geoffrey Sparks 4/98
sparks@ac.grin.edu
the Creature--Grinnell College, Grinnell, IA.
1. With the new album coming out, why did you guys
decide to release
four instrumental eps? Are they more along the lines of session
out
takes, or was their any sort of goal in mind when you guys where
playing?
Not session outtakes, but rather more like the parallel universe we exist
in, making records for a major label and also running now our own indie-label.
Basically, one SY LP every year to year and a half just doesnt seem
like enough output anymore, and we wanted an avenue to release all the
other sorts of avenues we tend to go down, musically, in the rehearsal
room. Some of the best music weve made over the years has been heard
by just we four, in rehearsal (practice to Mike Watt). Now
we have the facilities to release this kind of material in high-quality
sound.
Rather than outtakes, I think of it as more experimental studio practice:
excerpts from free-playing sessions, electronic stuff, tape loop and manipulated
pieces, collaborations (the Jim ORourke one being only the first
of these).
2. Ive heard that the new album is all vocal
tracks, should we expect the
usual two or three track with you singing, or will there be more?
Ive got 2 vox on the new LP, Hoarfrost and Karen Koltrane are the
titles.
3. How was the recording process for the new album? Who produced
it, and how do you feel about the producers work so far?
We produced it, once again, with our friend and cohort Wharton Tiers,
in our recently developed studio. A very natural process, not much studio
trickery, just transcribing the sound of the band as naturalistically
as possible.
4. How do you think the band developed in writing
the new material for
the album?
SY is in constant evolution, and pendulum swings of mood or desire lead
both towards song format on the one hand, and extended extrapolations
on the other. we follow our whims, muses, etc. We've gotten very comfortable
with what we do of late, and having our own studio has contributed to
this--no more recording against the clock. Thismusicis what
we do, and we are relaxed into the process at this point. So the luck
of being able to explore sound-forms at a leisurely pace works to our
mood right now.
Inspiration? A whole host of things, old and new. It's cool to see many
younger artists turning their back on indie-song-form at the moment, digging
into 20th cen works such as Xenakis, P. Schaeffer, P. Henri, Stockhausen,
Cage, Bayle etc, rather than just looking back to rock music fr 20 yrs
ago and recycling that.
Personal Stuff:
1. Do you still do any producing? If so, who?
A year or so ago I produced the first record to come out of our studio,
for my friend Christina Rosenvinge, who is a Spanish/Danish singer-songwriter
popular in Spain and Spanish speaking countries. Steve played drums on
it, and Wharton engineered. It was, in a way, the test drive
of the studio before SY came in to do the Suburbia soundtrack in Jan 97.
I like producing, but there isnt time for much at the moment. Before
Christina, I did a few records with the Australian group You Am I.
2. Working outside of SY, what are your goals as
an artist with your
solo work both as a writer and musician?
Mainly just to keep evolving and working on stuff. I enjoy the writing
process, and continue to be active with that. Leah Singer and I are working
on a more complete book of Moroccan writings and pix, to follow up the
limited Moroccan Journal chapbook we did this last year about visiting
the Master Musicians of Jajouka over there. There are a couple of book
projects in the works, and a few CDs will probably be released this year,
the most recent being my solo Amarillo Ramp, and CLOUDS, w Wm Hooker,
Jim ORourke, and Gianni Gebbia.
Its also been fun playing with some new people; gigs in the last
year with both Christian Marclay, and DJ Spooky have been a real blast.
I hope we can do more.
3. Who are you listening to these days?
Will Oldham, Xenakis, Elliot Smith, lots of Coltrane as Im studying
him at the moment, Modulations and Transformations on the Mille Plateaux
label, Spiritualized, Sleater-Kinney, all 3 records by Fuck, Charlemagne
Palestine, Ali Akbar Khan, Miles acoustic quintet, etc, etc.
4. I have hear that you were once a Deadhead, Is
this true, and what
turned you towards the New York scene in the late 70's/early 80's?
Yes, I was way into the Dead in the 70s, and still maintain that there
is a similarity in their approach to musical extrapolation, and ours (not
the sound, the approach). It seemed that back then I wasnt much
interested in much of the inflated 70s arena style rock, and by the time
punk hit in 77 it was with an explosive power which put all the charge
back into both playing and witnessing music. It wasnt long after
that I moved to NYC to see for myself...
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