Archive for the ‘MusicGeek.org’ Category

An interview with Nusuth

An Idea Of a Horse is sometimes staggeringly hard, and sometimes flowing and ambient-like. How did you manage to combine your influences to make something with such variety?

Too much coffee! That’s the secret behind all of the madness! Seriously though, I think it was half really concerted effort and half complete hair-brained chance and experimentation. Both Shannon and I draw inspiration and influence from more sources than we could even name, many of them in the realm of literature and various visual media, and we simply tried to create an amalgamate from all of the noise floating around in our informational spheres that accurately reflected where we were at those specific moments in which we created the songs. Does that even make any sense? It sounds a little hippie-tastic to me… It’s really hard to describe the sonic stew that “…Horse” came out of.

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An interview with Philip of Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin

What were your reactions upon discovering that Broom was in the top 200 CMJ? Were you at all surprised?

Well, the promotion company thought it would chart…but we were still surprised. I think we’re still surprised when someone REALLY likes us. There are lot of things to like in the world…in general. So that, alone, tends to help us out. I mean, you can like anything you want.

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An interview with Boy in Static

Do you have a favorite track on Newborn?

Each song does something different for me. There’s something about “Warm Blooded” that I can’t quite describe. When I finished that song, it seemed to live and breathe on its own. Something bigger than the individual words and sounds I put in. It is also one of the strongest songs live.

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An interview with Meg and Dia

A lot of the songs on the Our Home Is Gone are acoustic; what made you decide to switch from that style to a full instrumentation?

Meg and I have always liked the sounds of drums and bass…and all other instruments for that matter: piano, cello,etc. However, in a lot of our songs, Meg still plays the electric/acoustic, so we are sticking to our roots.

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An interview with A Pilgrimage to Save This Human Race

What are your major musical influences?

I think some of my more obvious influences would be Casiotone for the Painfully Alone (for awhile I was unsure whether I was being overly derivative of his style until I began writing a few folksier songs), as well as Beat Happening, Daniel Johnston, Kimya Dawson (whom I’ve met a few times and is an absolutely delightful person), David-Ivar Herman D?ne’s solo ukulele stuff is just wonderful, and I know he’s influenced me some. Plan-It-X Records, Friends and Relatives Records, and all those kids in Bloomington, IN are just so inspiring that I think going to a house show up there would make anyone want to be a musician. Matty Pop Chart and Dennis Driscoll would probably be my two hugest influences lately. I like musicians who aren’t out to save the world with their music. (more…)

An interview with Dreamend

What inspired you to have a differing photograph inset for As If By Ghosts?

I like the idea of these complete strangers being immortalized whether they like it or not. I have a stockpile of 20 or so that I have not been willing to part with. I think the possibility of someone photographed seeing this album on their grandson’s desk and realizing it’s them, is fucking brilliant to me. I?m sure they wouldn?t feel the same way though. (more…)

Billy Corgan – TheFutureEmbrace

Billy Corgan’s former band, The Smashing Pumpkins, are known mostly for their contribution to mainstream alt-rock of the mid-90s. Although garnered with success after the release of their albums Siamese Dream (1993) and the double-album epic Mellon Collie & the Infinite Sadness (1995), drug problems, among members, led to the deterioration of the band. Since then Corgan has struggled with music, having previously disbanded from the alt-rock ‘super group Zwan after only one album and a short tour. TheFutureEmbrace marks the beginning of Corgan?s solo career.

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Broken Social Scene – You Forgot It In People

You Forgot It In People isn’t Broken Social Scene’s latest release, nor is it their best, but it is a noteworthy release, at the very least. From the packaging to the first moments, Broken Social Scene creates an undisputably hand-made image, though the actual authenticity of such an image remains mostly in the head of listener as Broken Social Scene produces an ultimately synthetic album, the electronic sound has a clear conflict with what you are visually presented with. Of course, this can still have an enormous impact.

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