Category: Interviews (Page 88 of 113)

WOLFGANG FLÜR Interview


Following a sold out appearance at London’s Hoxton Bar and Kitchen in January, electronic pioneer Wolfgang Flür returns to the UK and brings his ‘Musik Soldat’ show to Epic Studios in Norwich on SATURDAY 20TH JUNE 2015 with support from Glasgow’s ANALOG ANGEL.

Herr Flür was one of the first musicians to be widely seen playing a self-built electronic percussion set on German TV Station ZDF when he joined KRAFTWERK in 1973.

Together with Ralf Hütter, Florian Schneider and Karl Bartos, they formed what has been universally regarded as the classic line-up of KRAFTWERK. Together with the albums ‘Autobahn’, Radio-Activity’, Trans Europe Express’, ‘The Man Machine’ and ‘Computer World’, the quartet conquered the world with their vision of the future and changed the course of music forever.

However, after a frustrating five year gestation period for the lukewarm ‘Electric Café’ album, Flür left the band in 1987. His many adventures during his time at Kling Klang were documented in his enlightening and entertaining autobiography ‘I Was A Robot’, published in 2000. More of his memories have been recollected in ‘Electri_City-Elektronische_Musik_Aus_Düsseldorf’, the new book by Rüdiger Esch which chronicles the history of the city’s music scene.

Herr Flür’s last full length long player was ‘Time Pie’ issued in 1997 under the moniker of YAMO. While a solo album is currently being completed, some of his recent musical adventures have included ‘Activity Of Sound’ in collaboration with iEUROPEAN and ‘Staying In The Shadow’ with Jack Dangers, formally of MEAT BEAT MANIFESTO.

Wolfgang Flür kindly answered questions put forward to him by ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK about his upcoming Norwich date at Epic Studios and plans for his forthcoming album…

Photo by Richard Price

Photo by Richard Price

You have said your live appearances are not quite a DJ set but not a concert either. For the uninitiated, how would you describe it?

I show slides, videos, TV-recordings and play my taste of music to them. I’m not a DJ. DJing is another art. I’m an actor. I act my tracks physically by means of dancing, gesture rich movings.

After my show, I’m wet all over in my shirt and trousers and need a shower in my hotel.

Some people might think I’m crazy and I, yes, I am – for music! I cannot stand still with music, that’s my personality, my temperament. I inherited it from my mother.

You’ve described your new composition ‘Cover Girl’ as the sequel to ‘The Model’… what inspired this?

‘Cover Girl’ is indeed Mk II of ‘The Model’. Her story goes on and unfortunately shows her going downhill. She had bad experiences with drugs, alcohol and other things so had to dance in night clubs for earning money at least. A true story, a bad life… that’s sometimes the way how super models are knitting their career. Sindy Gunawan, our dancer in the video, was a former life dancer in my early German shows. Unfortunately she moved back to her homeland Indonesia, even though she was a German born. We had filmed her over the past years pretty often and I cut from such material, her life dance. This film on our current screen has a special paparazzi quality…

The YAMO album ‘Time Pie’ came out in 1997. Why has it taken so long to follow up?

That has to do with Germany, its pop culture and music-industry. In Germany, a pop artist has not that reputation like musicians in England I found out. I simply couldn’t find a fitting record company here. On the other hand, I worked not every day on lyrics, melodies and musical arrangements. I have written a book together with my wife Zuhal on the Germans (‘Neben Mir – Rheinland Grotesken’). A sixteen tales book, very weird stories and I had often been on book readings, instead working in the studio with partner Stefan Lindlahr. He owns a studio in Neunkirchen-Krahwinkel where Conny Plank had his famous place too. Since this year and many collaborations with other international musicians, I have a good and entertaining assortment of songs together for a whole new album. ‘ELOQUENCE’ is its name because of my story teller style inside most of the tracks.

One of your most recent releases has been the superb collaboration with iEUROPEAN called ‘Activity Of Sound’. How did this come about?

I met Sean Baron seven years ago when playing the Tivoli in Dublin. He was filming my show and sent the scenes to my home. Some years later he invited me into his iEUROPEAN project and sent me a soundtrack and some existing lyrics. I recorded those lyrics about sound and what it meant and included into the song. Sean made a final mix after that and it became a new track for iEUROPEAN. My contribution was spoken words only, no melodies or other sound additions from my side.

How does it feel to have electronic music enthusiasts still very happy to meet you, despite you having left KRAFTWERK in 1987?

It’s a totally cheering experience each time I still go on stage with my ‘Musik Soldat’ audio-visual show. I know what it is: I and also Karl represent something to our fans, it’s what they call The Originals. The original members of KRAFTWERK Mk I. We together with Ralf and Florian laid the cornerstone of what is called electro-pop, neue musik.

We are pioneers and went through all thinkable difficulties of former recordings, travels, experiences and friendship. This gives us safety in musical taste and inventive talent, new ideas. Listen to Karl’s ‘Atomium’ for instance. I’m coming up with something new my style in October…

‘Home Computer’ is one of the tracks in your set. Why does this KRAFTWERK track particular still resonate with you?

The funny thing is that we had no home computer when we recorded the song. The song describes the vision of what the humanity can await in the near future of 1978. What I play at the beginning of my show is a dance mix of that song. I like it very much, it has a lightweighted feel to the original and also shows where I come from (starting from ‘Autobahn’), my musical home.

You still have a very strong friendship with Karl Bartos. Have the two of you considered working together musically again?

Yes, often. We were not able to find a musical meetpoint. We developed too different in style and themes after our split from KRAFTWERK. But that’s not a problem between us, we are friends, good friends for a long time, and I appreciate every good advice he gives me. Karl lives in Hamburg since many years. We telephone nearly every week and speak about diverse things. It’s good to have a friend like him with the same musical past and experiences…

What interesting projects are coming up for you? Is there anyone you would like to collaborate with?

I have stopped YAMO as a musical project like for the ‘Time Pie’ album. All what can be brought out will be released from now under my personal name. ‘Eloquence’ for instance will have singers, spoken words, diverse additional musicians. I had much joy with collaborations like Bon Harris from NITZER EBB and Anni Hogan, formally from Marc Almond’s band. I also had a collaboration with Ramon Amezcua of NORTEC COLLECTIVE in Mexico and with Jack Dangers from San Francisco. All such co-ops happened during the last three years.

I’ll meet up with Bono of U2 in New York on 22nd July when he plays the Madison Square Garden. I was told that he’s a big KRAFTWERK fan. Let’s see what comes out of that meeting, I’m open for anything.


Of course, Düsseldorf has a huge musical heritage and you have contributed to Rudi Esch’s book ‘Electri_City – Elektronische Musik Aus Düsseldorf’ while your song ‘I Was A Robot’ is on the accompanying compilation. Why does the city have this marvellous artistic spirit?

Do you believe I would reveal something to you? Listen to ‘I Was A Robot’ when it’s out in England by October and you’ll find out.

Who were your own favourite acts to have emerged from Düsseldorf?

DER PLAN, DAF, MICHAEL ROTHER and NEU!


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its grateful thanks to Wolfgang Flür

Special thanks also to Stephen Roper and all at Epic Studios

http://www.musiksoldat.de

https://www.facebook.com/musiksoldat


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
2nd June 2015

MIDGE URE Interview


Like many graduates of Synth Britannia, Midge Ure first became interested in electronic music when in 1975, KRAFTWERK’s ‘Autobahn’ hit the UK singles charts.

Already using Yamaha’s flagship SG2000 guitar, in 1977 he was able to negotiate with the Japanese company to make his first synth purchase, a CS50, at half price. At the time, he was a member of THE RICH KIDS with Glen Matlock, but with THE SEX PISTOLS refugee preferring Hammond organs and brass sections to Minimoogs, the inevitable musical differences ensued.

Breaking away with drummer Rusty Egan in 1978, the pair recruited Steve Strange as vocalist and formed VISAGE. It became a platform to create modern electronic dance music influenced by the likes of DAVID BOWIE, KRAFTWERK, LA DÜSSELDORF, YELLOW MAGIC ORCHESTRA that could be played at Egan and Strange’s ‘Club For Heroes’. Another band who Egan and Ure loved from that period was ULTRAVOX; their multi-instrumentalist Billy Currie was invited to join the sessions for VISAGE’s debut album and this eventually led to Ure joining ULTRAVOX.

In 1985 while juggling ULTRAVOX and his work with the Band Aid Trust, Ure released his debut solo album ‘The Gift’ which spawned the rousing No1 single ‘If I Was’. Two further albums ‘Answers To Nothing’ and ‘Pure’ followed.

But in 1993, he went ‘Out Alone’ on an intimate tour which saw Ure performing on his own, accompanying himself primarily on just an acoustic guitar. In 1995, his fourth solo album ‘Breathe’ signalled a new direction with a more Celtic feel and traditional instrumentation. Although initially the album had a slow start, Swatch chose the title track to accompany a well-received advertising campaign. As a result, the album became a massive seller all over Europe.

Ure has been particularly busy over the last 6 years. The successful live reunion of ULTRAVOX with the classic line-up of Warren Cann, Chris Cross and Billy Currie in 2009 led to the recording of 2012’s ‘Brilliant’ album. 2014 saw the release of ‘Fragile’, his first solo album of original material for over 12 years. A striking return to form, it included a number of poignant songs such as ‘Become’, ‘Dark Dark Night’, ‘For All You Know’ and ‘I Survived’.

But for 2015, 20 years on from its original release, Midge Ure is performing the ‘Breathe’ album its entirety as part of an ongoing concert tour, augmented on stage by Cole Stacey and Joseph O’Keefe from INDIA ELECTRIC CO. He kindly took time out from rehearsals and chatted about the ‘Breathe Again’ tour and much more…

Out of your solo albums, why have you chosen ‘Breathe’ as the one for the full length live showcase treatment?

A lot of my solo albums go through hell before they’re actually released. ‘Fragile’ took a long time to come and ‘Breathe’ was one of those albums where the record company, in their infinite wisdom, decided to A&R me after all these years! They wanted me to not use the same musicians, not to record in the same studios, not to produce the album myself… so they asked me to gather a whole bunch of songs which I did and I ended up with a producer I could work with, Richard Feldman who had done an album for the model and actress Milla Jovovich which was a great album.

So I made ‘Breathe’, it was fantastic and I delivered the album, only to have it sit on a shelf for a year while BMG started sorting out their internal problems. It was a hideously frustrating process to go through, and when it finally came out, the first two years of its life, it was the worst selling record I’d ever made.

So until Swatch came along and picked up the title track thanks to a fan in Italy, the album was an absolute disaster. But because of a TV commercial, it turned the entire thing round. It bounced all around Europe and was a big record eventually. I thought how good it would be to play the album in its entirety because I’ve never done that before.

At the time it was released, it was a departure from what you were known for, with a lot of traditional instrumentation?

It was more organic… there was still electronics involved with samples and stuff like that, but I think it’s just what you end up doing. You try to run a million miles from what you’re known for and it’s all part of the process of finding your own feet and trying to decide what you are and what you want to do. Part of that process would have been turning my back on the standard synthesis and rediscover my Scottish roots.

So the idea of doing something more organic had a bit of oomph to it, and was quite appealing at the time. I don’t think you’re the same person your entire life and you go through phases like chapters in a book. So when you get to chapter twenty five, you’re a very different person to the one who started off in chapter one. It was just another phase of discovery. To me, the important part of it was the quality of the songs, not just necessarily the instruments enhancing the songs.

A lot of ‘Breathe’ was recorded in America?

It was, yes… Richard Feldman is an American guitarist / producer and we did an awful lot of it at his place but a good chunk of it at mine in Bath.

There appeared to be some Country music vibes creeping in?

You know what, I’m not quite sure about that… I think Country and traditional music are all very intermingled. Country music is just music from the country it’s sourced from. So country music would be Scottish or Irish or whatever, and it was when it got to America, it became Western. Country & Western music is based in roots music, it’s all the stuff I would have been taught as a kid in school.

The title song turned out to be one of the biggest songs of your career internationally, yet it is one of your lesser known ones in the UK?

Yeah, very much so… quite simply, the TV advert didn’t run in the UK, only on satellite channels so it didn’t get the same exposure here. And of course, good ol’ Great Britain, the radio didn’t play it even though it was No1 in the whole of Europe.

There was a European chart that was an overall one for the whole continent including the UK, and for months and months, it was the No1 record! Yet UK radio chose not to play it! So there’s nothing much you can do about situations like that. You put it out and hope for the best. And sometimes you don’t get the best…

You roped in Robert Fripp to play on ‘Guns & Arrows’. What was it like working with him?

It was great, he’s lovely guy and a brilliant guitarist. You know, to have the guy who played on ‘Heroes’ play on one of your tunes is quite spectacular. It was very fortuitous actually, because he was in Los Angeles when I was recording there and I went to Dave Stewart’s studio just across the road from where I was. Robert was there and he said “of course I’ll play on the track, but do you mind if I bring 20 Japanese guitar students?”; I said it was fine and I had this bizarre scenario of Robert playing his fabulous Frippertronics thing in the recording room and in the control room looking through the glass window were these Japanese kids, all jotting down everything he did and said, with him lecturing “this is Midge… this is his song… I’ve known Midge a while… what I’m going to do is this…” – so he’s playing these textures and explaining it to these Japanese kids, it was most surreal but a great thing to happen.


You also had Shankar playing a blistering violin solo on ‘Live Forever’, how are you reinterpreting the album on the ‘Breathe Again’ tour with the guys from INDIA ELECTRIC CO?

The INDIA ELECTRIC CO guys play a variety of instrumentation and there’s only two of them. So there’s three of us on stage but we manage to cover a lot of stuff. For three people, we’re making quite a big noise. Joseph O’Keefe who plays violin is just spectacularly good as a musician. He’s one of these guys who can hear in a cacophony that one string is out of tune. Him and Cole Stacey are both incredible, but they’re so versatile and jump between instruments all the time.

I’m very pleased with how it’s gone. Even though the album wasn’t a huge success in the UK, the reaction it’s had so far has been phenomenal. The response of people has just been great, whether they knew the album or not. I was a little wary of going in and playing an entire album live of material that some of the audience wouldn’t know at all, but it seems to be irrelevant. They seem to be hooked on the textures, the melodies and the atmospheres. So maybe I’m just under estimating the audiences taste.

Of course, ‘Breathe’ is only so long, so you will also be playing material from throughout your career. How are you deciding which songs to play, especially as a fair number of your best known songs are synth based and are being rearranged for a more organic setting?

Well, I think that the song itself will dictate whether it can fit in that format or not, but I’ve been quite surprised at the ones which really sell; ‘Fade To Grey’ works brilliantly in this format as does ‘Lament’. And ‘Vienna’ works well! You would think, how could you recreate a song like that and get away with no drums, no bass, no whatever… you treat it differently, you just look at the song as an entity, it is its own thing and it’s like a salad; it changes flavour depending on what dressing you put on it.

So a song just changes it flavour by whatever dressing you put on it, so it changes whether you’re doing it electronically, doing it with a rock band or doing it with acoustic instruments. The song should be malleable and pliable, and still work as a song. But I have to say, some stuff we’re doing that’s not from the ‘Breathe’ album is working a treat. In fact, some of it is going down better than the ones designed to be played in that format.

Has there been a song you’ve loved and tried to do in this organic three piece line-up but that hasn’t worked?

Not really, although I shied away from doing ‘Dancing With Tears In My Eyes’, because I’m not quite sure how it would work in that format… maybe that’s just me being a coward. But then again, I’ve been doing it solo acoustic for quite a long time now and it seems to work when it’s stripped right down. It’s down to the quality of the song.

I remember when the ‘Breathe’ album came out at first, and with the band I’d got to back it up, we couldn’t get ‘Live Forever’ to work. It just didn’t sound right and I scrapped it. So we never played ‘Live Forever’ live; but with the three piece, it works brilliantly! Don’t ask me why! It just does, it gels and has become a firm favourite in the current shows. I don’t know, maybe the ones you suspect will work, don’t! And the ones that won’t, do! You just have to be surprised and go with the flow! *laughs*

You released the excellent album ‘Fragile’ in 2014, how do you look back on its reception?

It was better than I expected in a lot of areas and no worse than I kind of expected. Some of the great stuff was really great. But there was one review that called it “Ultravox lite”; I didn’t get that at all because I think it’s a very different animal to ULTRAVOX.

A lot of places got it, The Huffington Post review put it in the Top 10 albums of 2014, even in America which is spectacular for an album that maybe a lot of people in America wouldn’t understand. But I think because it was something real, raw and honest, I think I came up with a very interesting album with a very good, strong batch of songs. I think some of the songs are the best that I’ve ever done. I spent a long time on it and poured my heart and soul into it. I didn’t listen to anybody outside telling me or guiding me how to do it, I just did exactly what I felt at the time.

Tracks like ‘Wire & Wood’ and ‘Bridges’ reminded people of your aptitude for instrumentals, so would soundtrack work interest you in the future?

It’s always interested me but it’s never come my way properly, other than a few small independent movies, that was good fun and great to do. I always thought ULTRAVOX should have been doing soundtracks with that Germanic synthesizer feel.

People like Trent Reznor who have been involved in electronics are doing soundtrack work… it never came ULTRAVOX’s way, but maybe we wouldn’t have been very good at it! Who knows? But the music kind of lent itself to that cinematic openness and atmospherics.

Are there any intentions to perform songs from ‘Fragile’ with a full band rather than in an acoustic setting?

We’re doing ‘Become’ and ‘Fragile’ in the ‘Breathe Again’ show… ‘Fragile’ lends itself well to that format because it’s a delicate little thing. I would LOVE to do the entire ‘Fragile’ album with a band, but it’s down to necessity, demand and cost… putting a full band together and major rehearsals, it’s a very costly thing to do. And I’m wary of piling on the ticket price to make an audience pay for it. So it’s something that would have to be well thought out, to do it properly and do it well. But I’d love to get my teeth in there and play the entire album.


You used Melodyne for both ‘Fragile’ and ULTRAVOX’s ‘Brilliant’ album but got some criticism for it. I find it quite strange that some electronic music fans have a problem with voice processing technology, especially when you used the equivalent period aesthetic on the third verse of ‘New Europeans’ for example… how do you see it?

I think anyone who cuts out processing or techniques in any form is just stupid! It like saying “why would you want to record on a computer when you’ve got tape machines?” or “why would you want to record digitally when you’ve got analogue?”. People don’t progress that way!

If I was somebody who couldn’t sing and had to pitch vocals or do all sorts of stuff to make it sound in tune, of course, then I should be pilloried for it! But I’m not!

I use it for effect… my hearing pitch has got better and more refined over the years, so anything that’s slightly out for me, I want to get that right! But that nobody else can hear it… I used to drive ULTRAVOX crazy! It’s a bit like with my new glasses that are scratched in the middle of the lens, nobody can see it but I can!

So there’s nothing wrong with effecting something to make it the best it can possibly be, if that’s what you want to achieve. It’s very different hiding behind something because you’re not good enough. And it’s very different from being good enough, and making it better.

I don’t use it all the time, it’s a tool and no different from any of the plug-ins that I use when I make music. It’s a bit like saying “why do you use reverb on your voice?”… well, it’s because it suits the song and makes it more interesting.

And when you you’ve already recorded something and then think “oh, I wish I’d played that as a minor!”, why wouldn’t you use a tool that would allow you to do that without having to re-record the entire thing? You can adapt it and change it… music should be malleable, you should be able to play it ‘til you’re blue in the face. Some people are just anal to tell you the truth! *laughs*


How was the ‘Brilliant’ experience for you and recording with ULTRAVOX again? It seemed reinvigorate you?

Yeah, it’s funny because people think I did ‘Fragile’ after ‘Brilliant’, it was 80% there! But ‘Brilliant’ was what sparked me up to actually finish it.

So a lot of the textures, sounds and character of the ‘Brilliant’ album kind of stemmed from my dabblings on ‘Fragile’ where I’d run out of steam… I didn’t see the point of finishing it, I was making an album that only a handful of people would appreciate.

It was just me being a twat really, but that’s the feeling you get! You think “what’s the point of putting your heart and soul in it?” So doing the ‘Brilliant’ album with the guys was the spark that I needed. It gave me the incentive to think “WOW! There’s something still there!”, because any artist is full of self-doubt… the first thing you think isn’t “the record company were crap” or “the radio are rubbish for not playing it”, but “maybe I’m not good enough”. You look at yourself first and foremost.

That’s the process I went through and the whole get-together with ULTRAVOX was just such an enjoyable thing. I’m very proud of that record, I think we did a great job and it gave me the boost I needed to get on and finish my own record.

What is the state of play with ULTRAVOX?

I haven’t seen Billy since we walked out of the O2 after the SIMPLE MINDS show, I haven’t seen Warren as he’s in Los Angeles but Chris has just texted me. We always said we were never getting back together to take over the world as a band and pretend we were a bunch of teenagers, we all have other things that we do.

And we said that if and when something interesting pops up, we would get-together and do it. But right now, there’s no “yes, we’re doing something” and there’s no “no, we’re never doing anything again”. It’s just there resting on a shelf.

You’ve under taken quite a number of collaborations recently with MOBY, SCHILLER, LICHTMOND and JAM & SPOON, have you any more planned?

I’ve never planned a collaboration to tell you the truth, it sort of lands on your lap. All of those you mentioned, they approached me and if I find it interesting, I’ll work on something, especially these days when it doesn’t involve jumping on a plane and disappearing from home for a week. It’s all done via the internet these days, someone sends you an idea for a track and you stick it on your computer. You start chopping it around, write new bits for it, do some lyrics, record a vocal, email it back to them and they assemble it at their place. It’s making collaborations much easier.

What’s been your favourite collaboration?

My favourite collaboration? KATE BUSH ‘Sister & Brother’… what a joy to go to my grave knowing that KATE BUSH and I are on the same piece of music, how cool is that?

Photo by Paul Cox

Was further collaboration with the late Mick Karn ever a realistic proposition following ‘After A Fashion’ in 1983, other than those aborted JBK sessions that spawned ‘Get A Life’ and ‘Cry’ on your ‘Little Orphans’ rarities CD?

We did some stuff in Montserrat, Mick came out for a couple of weeks and did some basic grooves, textures and backing tracks… there’s a copy of it somewhere but I’ve never tried to complete any of it. We never got round to doing it, it was just one of those things. We talked about various projects, but we never got over the dabbling stage and never got seriously into it, which is a pity.

The JBK thing never got any further than those two tracks, all those guys who were in JAPAN are incredibly talented, and that would have been an interesting collaboration, but it never really happened. The idea was to put a band together, but I didn’t want to be the singer and we could never come up with someone who could take over the vocals. If I sang it, it would have been too much like me or ULTRAVOX, so it kind of fizzled out.

You wrote ‘Personal Heaven’ with Glenn Gregory of HEAVEN 17 and recorded it with X-PERIENCE, have you ever considered doing a collaborative EP or anything with him?

We’re probably better mates than collaborators! But yes, nothing is out of the question, especially with somebody like Glenn, he’s such a joy to be around and a lovely guy. And these days, you can do it without confusing people… you can go off and just do a little sideline. But back in the ULTRAVOX days, you couldn’t really do it, that’s your band, that’s what you do and you should never step outside that. So these days, it’s great to just go out and collaborate with people, I fully enjoy the whole process. So it’s a good idea Glenn and I getting together and doing a few songs ever so often, to see what we come up with.

Photo by Gabor Scott

Of course, your best known collaborative project was VISAGE and we lost Steve Strange recently. Have you had a chance to reflect back on that clourful period at The Blitz Club?

You can’t help for all that stuff to go around your head, it was a major part of my life and Steve was a major part of that period. It was just dreadfully sad, the whole thing… it was just pathetic and horrible. Y’know, I’m not sure what he was doing towards the end, VISAGE was never meant to be a live act.

It was a studio project and meant to be a ‘Willo The Wisp’ thing that you couldn’t really grab hold of it cos it disappeared… that was the whole concept Rusty Egan and I came up with, it was just a passing thing. But Steve looked like he was having fun doing it.

I hadn’t seen Steve for a year and a half, two years or whatever prior to his passing, so it sparked off all the memories and all the fun stuff. Like the challenge of putting something like VISAGE together from a variety of different bands who were all still in existence and touring. So trying to put them all in the same place at the same time was a tall order.

The majority of the initial VISAGE recordings were done in Martin Rushent’s studio which was a little house in the bottom of his garden which had all his equipment in. Martin used to come down and watch we were doing, he’d never seen or heard anything like it, all these electronics. He used to hang about every night watching what Rusty and I were up to, watching Billy doing his sequencing and things like that, it was great. He was coming down with notebooks to learn how it all worked, and then went off and made THE HUMAN LEAGUE’s ‘Dare’ album! *laughs*

It was very beneficial, he gave us studio time because it was his label who was originally putting the stuff out, but he won because he got to make ‘Dare’ which was fantastic.

What’s next for you after the ‘Breathe Again’ tour?

There’s some dates in Germany and Dubai at the end of the year. But I’ve got to get back in the studio and carry on writing, now that I’m fired up. I want to keep that momentum going, I don’t want it to be another 12 years… I’m not sure I’ve got another 12 years, so I just want to get on with it! *laughs*


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to Midge Ure

The ‘Breathe Again’ Tour 2015 includes:

Gateshead Sage (27th June), Southport Atkinson (28th June), Bury St. Edmunds Apex (17th September), Andover The Lights (September 18th), Redhill Harlequin (19th September), Falmouth Princess Pavilion (1st October), Porthcawl Grand Pavilion (2nd October), Cheltenham Tithe Barn (3rd October), Wolverhampton Wulfrun Hall (4th October), Preston Guildhall Charter Theatre (14th October), Ulverston Coronation Hall (15th October), Leamington Spa Assembly Rooms (16th October), Hunstanton Princess Theatre (17th October), Lincoln Drill Hall (22nd October), London Union Chapel (23rd October)

http://www.midgeure.co.uk/

https://www.facebook.com/midge.ure/

https://twitter.com/midgeure1


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
1st June 2015

DE/VISION Interview

Thomas Adam and Steffen Keth have been making music under the DE/VISION umbrella since 1988.

Numerous albums later, they are still very successful in many countries, including their native Germany but also throughout Europe, the US and South America. In Deutschland, they have achieved superstar status, but remain friendly, approachable and fun to be around.

Having fought DEPECHE MODE comparisons throughout their career, they found a unique sound which prevails across their albums from ‘World Without End’, through ‘Fairyland’, the superb ‘Devolution’, ‘Noob’ and the critically acclaimed ‘Popgefahr’. Writing albums in between the extensive touring diary including their recent US gigs, looking after their own record label and having families on top of it all, keeps the duo grounded and humble. With the DE/VISION sound, there’s always “time to be alive, to be alive”, as they’re forever “the flavour of the week”

Having been an enthusiast of their music for years, Monika Izabela Goss had the pleasure to first meeting the band backstage at their Berlin gig in 2010 and on numerous occasions since. Following ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK’s Lost Albums feature on ‘6 Feet Underground’, it is a great pleasure for her to be able to speak to Thomas Adam of DE/VISION…

You formed in 1988, much has changed in the music industry since then?

Yes, indeed, much has changed… and undoubtedly the internet had the most significant impact on the music industry. It had both positive and negative effects… illegal downloads, for example, plunged the industry into a grave crisis…

I know that many people out there still buy CDs, I’m one of them. But CD sales will be going down sooner or later, CDs will become more and more insignificant, most of the kids don’t buy CDs anymore, they’re downloading music…

Back in the old days, you had to have a record label if you wanted your music to be heard. Nowadays, you can become a star on the internet and you don’t need a label or a lot of money to achieve that. Yes, times have changed…

Do you mind being described as a synthpop band, or would you rather be labelled differently?

No, we don’t mind at all… whatever you prefer… although I think synthpop describes perfectly what we do: we make pop music that is based on synthesizers. But there are many labels for this kind of music. It also depends on where you are, people label us differently in different parts of the world. When we came to the USA for the very first time in 2008, I was rather surprised when people called us a Goth / Industrial band…

Around ‘Void’ (2000) and ‘Two’ (2001), your sound changed incorporating more rocky sounds. It certainly caters for more discerning tastes. Why did you take that direction around those two albums?

Why not? We’re not the kind of guys who want to do the same thing over and over again. In my humble opinion, most of our album releases vary significantly, but especially around ‘Void’ we wanted to do something we had never done before… we wanted to present DE/VISION in a new and different light by broadening the band’s musical horizon… there are enough bands out there who keep repeating themselves. For us, it is important to reinvent ourselves every once in a while…

‘6 Feet Underground’ is my personal favourite of yours. Any thoughts on how the album was conceived?

I don’t remember what the idea behind ‘6 Feet Underground’ was, or if we ever had a concept for it. But usually we don’t have a plan when we start working on a new album. We might have a rough idea of where we want to go, but it’s not that we develop a strict concept which is then translated into music. It rather works the other way round. We start writing songs and after a while we take a look at what we have, then we think about what we can do with it.

I think most of our albums are quite homogeneous, ‘Fairyland’ on the other hand is rather eclectic… it offers a variety of different electronic music styles… ’Unputdownable’ for example is a mainstream pop song, but songs like ‘Beside You’ and ‘Take Me To Heaven’ are the exact opposite. But like I said before, I don’t remember if there was a concept behind that album or if we simply picked the songs we liked most.

Between ‘Noob’ (2007) and ‘Popgefahr’ (2010), you had a three year break, so far longest between albums. What was the reason for this?

Until 2007 we released a new album every 18 months. The fans were glad about that constant output, but for us it’s been quite exhausting. Once we had finished one album, we started working on the next. It was time to break this routine… we needed a break… time to collect new ideas. I’m not saying that we tried to avoid music. We played a lot of shows in those three years. In 2008 for example, we toured North and South America for the very first time. Then we started our own label Popgefahr Records in 2009, I think… we were quite busy during this break.

Germany is packed with interesting and innovative synth acts, who do you rate the most?

Thomas: My all-time favourite electronic band is KRAFTWERK. The older I get, the more I’m impressed by their timeless and visionary art. CAMOUFLAGE is also a band I always adored. Another German band I warmly recommend is called MODERAT. I love their analogue sound… they’re quite famous in the club scene… check out ‘A New Error’ from their first album… this is probably the best piece of electronic music I have heard in years.

How is Popgefahr Records working for you?

There’s no need to complain… after all, it was a very wise decision to start our own label. Until recently, we released exclusively our own music on Popgefahr Records but the label was never meant for DE/VISION only. In January, Popgefahr Records released the single ‘Save Me’ by the American singer/songwriter GARRETT MILES, a beautiful and very melodic synth pop song. And a few weeks ago we released the new album ‘Pieces Of Machinery’ of the German synthpop band BEYOND OBSESSION. Fortunately the label is busy…

Any news on a follow up to ‘Rockets And Swords’ (2012)?

We are already working on a new album which will be released in 2016, but this project is still at an early stage of development, that’s why I can’t really give you any further information. We don’t know yet where our journey will take us this time…

 

On your latest Soundcloud release, your sound goes back to your beginnings. Is that what we are to expect from the new album?

I guess you’re talking about our latest single release ‘Brothers In Arms’ and the B-sides… these songs were written about two years ago and have nothing to do with the new album… the new album is something else entirely… although I don’t know what it will be like, you shouldn’t conclude the sound of our new album from a couple of songs we released more than a year ago.

Finally, your relationship with the UK. We don’t see enough of DE/VISION here. Why is that? Certainly the fan base is plentiful…

We have some very devoted fans in the UK, there’s no doubt about that… however, the UK has never been our strongest market… I don’t know what the problem is, but we never really managed to become established in the UK…

Your last London gig was with MESH in 2013. Can we expect more presence in the UK with the new album release?

We will play a show in Basildon at a festival called ‘More Than A Party’ on the 27th of June… that’s all I can say at the moment…


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to DE/VISION

A selection of DE/VISION’s back catalogue is available on CD and download from Amazon

http://www.devision.de/english/

https://twitter.com/DEVISIONMUSIC

https://soundcloud.com/de-vision-official

https://www.facebook.com/pages/DEVISION/24741337633


Text and Interview by Monika Izabela Goss
28th May 2015

TORUL Interview

Earlier this year ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK reviewed ‘The Measure’, the newest production from the Slovenian trio TORUL.

Their debut album ‘Dark Matters’ was released in 2010 but it was their third album ‘Tonight We Dream Fiercely’ from 2013 that was their breakthrough; featuring the single ‘Glow’ and a menacing cover of TEARS FOR FEARS’s ‘Mad World’.

A tour supporting Bristol’s very own MESH that year also cemented their reputation as an exhilarating live act. Their rather good fourth album ‘The Measure’ is still being THE played record.

Eclectic, loaded with quality alternative tunes and superb production, it is all layered competently to create the canvas for Jan Jenko’s gripping vocals. It doesn’t disappoint and with the songs like ‘Difficult To Kill’ having been featured on a number of influential radio shows, the band is continuing to grow its popularity in the UK and Europe.

Torul Torulsson, Borut Dolenec and Jan Jenko spoke about the album and all things TORUL.

What prompted the title of ‘The Measure’?

Torulsson: The simple idea came from the lyrics of ‘The Balance’, which is asking “What’s the level of your happiness, what do you need, what you’re giving — simple questions, hard to answer, where’s the balance, what’s the measure?” I liked the title for being so open, and maybe listeners will get something more about it from the rest of the lyrics. As a band, we are always trying to figure it all out – where to go next, what’s there for us, who will listen to us; I think once one stops being curious and excited, the magic may be gone.


You use a variety of approaches and techniques in songwriting. What’s the main inspiration?

Torulsson: Well, there is no pressure in between the albums, we try to mark each period of our existence with a new album.

So there’s always a clean sheet before we start working on a new album, even though there haven’t been any longer breaks in between. I’m glad to see there is still interest for albums as a complete art form, especially in alternative music genres.

The main inspiration… well, I could say that having a blank sheet in front of you before creating something is still very intriguing, very exciting, as you can go wherever you want or feel. All the options basically lay in front of you… you just have to dive into it and of course, try to enjoy the process.

What makes this album different from its predecessor?

Torulsson: People say ‘The Measure’ is more compact, the sound fuller, maybe it’s easier to dance to… a lot of songs have that kinetic element. The melancholy stays, well that’s who we are, but it’s not too sad or a depressed album, it’s longing for a new hope, for love, understanding and symbiosis. Even inside the band, we are always learning how to function, as we are three different people, with different skills and different backgrounds.


Which have been the particular favourite songs from ‘The Measure’ for you?

Jan: The first encounters with ‘Discrepancy’, ‘Hearts’, ‘Difficult To Kill’ and ‘All’ were memorable on a different scale than others. Not to rate songs with numbers, there was just a different pleasant emotional chemistry.

Dolenec: ‘All’, because it makes me feel the things that life in this unfair era mostly tries to supress.

Torulsson: As an author and producer of the album, I find this really hard to answer. There were also some other songs that didn’t make it to the album, which means that I must have liked all of them in some personal way and they brought up some happy moments when I was working on them.

Many artists clearly inspire TORUL and that is audible on your recordings. Who has influenced you most and why?

Torulsson: The variety of the inspirations is quite vast. Besides listening to various music genres, I was (and still am) also much into techno /electro / tech-house scene and also IDM, so more clubbish vibes. So here’s where the love for the beats and bass comes from. I love music that has a strong rhythmical impact, although this is not the rule of a thumb.

To name some music that had influence on me, without any order: early stuff from THE CURE, THE XX, IRIS, THE JESUS & MARY CHAIN, SIOUXSIE, DEPECHE MODE, GLASS CANDY, KRAFTWERK, DREXCIYA, Detroit stuff, some early ANTHONY ROTHER, SUUNS, TORTOISE, PIXIES, APHEX TWIN, DJ HELL, DMX KREW, PLASTIKMAN, some rare Italo disco stuff, M500, LADYTRON, THE YOUNG GODS, MASSIVE ATTACK, NYPC, COCTEAU TWINS… some Gigolo records stuff… and so on 🙂

The tour with MESH must have been something to behold, how did that come about?

Torulsson: Well there was an idea that we could be a perfect match, it came from our booking agencies. And so it was. We were very well accepted as an opening band, but also our chemistry was right – we had a lot of fun on the tour together! We’ve made nice friendships, laughed a lot, MESH also let us extend our performance for ten minutes whenever that was possible! So, yeah, it was an excellent match in that way.

Did you feel at home while in the UK?

Torulsson: I personally was a tad insecure about it. Having had some great gigs in Germany, we hadn’t really expected much in the UK, because we knew almost no-one would know about us there! But to our surprise, it was much better than that – while it was true most of the crowd never heard of us then, we got some attention and met some really nice people, who we still see following us and spreading the word! This is really cool. I hope we can play in the UK again anytime soon, but we’ll see.

Dolenec: The sushi was better than at home and there was actually more sun in UK than back at home 🙂 We learned a lot about what it means to be prepared well for the gigs, because our soundchecks in the UK were a totally opposite experience then the soundchecks in Germany or at home. It was fun to realise that we were actually able to perform a proper gig, with a good energy and without a proper soundcheck. We somehow anticipated that the venue crew would be late 2 to 3 hours, so in Manchester and in Newcastle, we had just a few minutes for a line-check and then we already had to start the concert. We needed this experience, it is how we grow and we would love to come back to UK as soon as possible.

Jan: Yes. Home is where the energy sums up to a pleasant experience. The shared emotions were uplifting and memorable.

The new single is ‘The Balance’. What is that one about and how did you conceive the video?

Torulsson: I think it has quite simple and self-explanatory lyrics, so we’re not really into explaining them further on top of that. But in short, it’s about searching for one’s own balance all the time, looking for a good combo of things in our lives that could make us happy and… well, balanced. It’s these times of chaotic events and imbalance of everything in the world, we are asking ourselves, how one finds his own happiness, reduces stress and co-existence in this world. Dolenec and I came up with many ideas for the video, but the one that you can see now has turned out to be the best…

Dolenec: Producing our own videos within our DIY Initziative production group is an important part of TORUL project. We always take time and do a lot of brainstorming when creating the story for the next video. For most of the videos, we usually come up with at least a few different scenarios but then we choose one that suits the song best and is somehow compatible with our current production capabilities. We still have a handful of scenarios in stock. With ‘The Balance’, I have to admit that it was not an easy process because we had a very limited time available for the whole production. In the English language I think there is an expression: “belling the cat” ie to perform a very dangerous or very difficult task. It’s taken metaphorically from a fable about a mouse who proposes to put a bell on a cat, so as to be able to hear the cat coming; ‘The Balance’ was all about “belling the cat”. In the middle of the process, we had 4 or 5 different scenarios but the whole production would be too difficult to create a proper video within DIY Initziative.

Torulsson and I knew that we have to invest a lot of time in the pre-production process in order for it to be well thought of and well organised. We didn’t have time to complicate. It was really some kind of symbiosis between the two of us and later on we also included Darko Štante – the director, Iztok Medja, the DOP and all the others. The only time we could rent a slot at the Daktari club in Ljubljana was on March 1st from 3 am to 11 am. All of the crew was great, almost everything was in balance and the energy during shooting was just beautiful. We couldn’t do it the way we did if there was a single person missing. The challenge was also to book all of the crew for 5 days before the day we had the video-shooting, and to shoot the whole video material in only 6-8 hours we had to use 4 cameras at a time. So you can imagine that the editing process was also all about “belling the cat”.


Other than LAIBACH, Slovenia doesn’t strike the UK electronica fan as your common synth breeding place, what is the music scene like there?

Torulsson: Slovenia might be too small to form the real ‘scene’, some real global movements. Well, there are some small scenes, I’m mostly talking about the alternative scene and some club scenes, mostly DJ and event-based. But the opening and closing of clubs and other venues happens really often here – it’s hard for a venue to keep up with a constant program as there may be not enough visitors for every event. However, there are many individuals who are trying to pave their way to the international scene, which isn’t a very easy thing nowadays. So yeah, there is a creative force, but who and when will see the light is impossible to predict now. But there already are or have been some big bands or individuals from Slovenia, such as BORGHESIA and UMEK.

Any plans on trying to conquer the US?

Torulsson: Um, well not at the moment, but that could change in the future. We can’t do it alone, but we are looking for options. I really can’t say much about that, but we will be exploring this in the future probably.

The German electronic scene is the one of the most celebrated in Europe, is that a statement you’d be in agreement with?

Torulsson: It’s kind of a fact. Germany is quite open to a vast amount of music genres, lots of them based on electronica. I’d say there is enough of a critical mass and interest from people so that many artists have a chance to introduce their work. Nowhere is perfect really, but I think that Germany is close to it, hosting artists from all over the world all the time. If there’s another UK in Europe regarding the size of the scene, it must be Germany.

In the era of soft, digital synths, do you still reach for analogue, the real thing?

Torulsson: Of course, whenever there’s a need and a chance. We’ve worked with synths such as the MS-20, ARP Odyssey, Teisco, Roland TR and TB series, Junos and Jupiters, Yamaha CSs and many others. But also a lot of soft synths and other plug-ins have become very very good in the last seven years. I am very fond of Diva, for example, and Korg Legacy collection, but also use a variety of other, sometimes strange and interesting free plugins. Also, the plugin sound processors have improved; for example I love the Elysa stuff, it’s amongst my favourites. I’m coming from the all-hardware background, having started with Atari ST + synths and samplers and an analogue console, but I’ve embraced the possibilities of a digital environment quite fondly.

What next for TORUL?

Torulsson: We are not rushing. Although we’ve been quite productive in the last years, we want our music to spread constantly, but slowly, at the right pace, only wishing for people to really dig into it and feel our story, our specific sound, and we would like to continue exploring, what we can do and where else we can go. Certainly there’s much more to come.


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to TORUL

‘The Measure’ is released by Infacted Recordings, available in CD and download formats

http://www.torul-recordings.net/

https://www.facebook.com/torul


Text and Interview by Monika Izabela Goss
Photos by Torsten Geyer and Nina Kovačič
16th May 2015

An Interview with WALL OF SOUND’s Mark Jones

Walls Have Ears…

Big corporations may have a stranglehold on the modern music industry, but it’s the genuine music enthusiasts with their independent labels and knowledge of their respected genres who feed it by their intuition to recognise talent. One of the most successful has been Daniel Miller with Mute Records; his ambition brought DEPECHE MODE, YAZOO, ERASURE, MOBY and GOLDFRAPP to the world.

And in the current climate, there are others too; in Europe, there’s George Geranios whose Undo Records has given us electro delights such as MARSHEAUX, MIKRO, NIKONN and KID MOXIE. And here in the UK, there has been Mark Jones, impresario of Wall Of Sound Records.

The label began as a collaboration between Jones and Marc Lessner, when Lessner employed Jones at his music distributor Soul Trader. Compilations and club nights followed. Wall Of Sound turned first PROPELLERHEADS and then RÖYKSOPP into Top 10 album acts while the label also launched the career of Stuart Price aka LES RYTHMES DIGITALES.

Belatedly getting a hit single in 2004 with ‘Jacques Your Body (Make Me Sweat)’ following its use in the ‘Transformer’ Citroën C4 TV ad, Stuart Price’s influence on the shape of 21st century popular music cannot be under estimated… read the production credits of albums by MADONNA, THE KILLERS, TAKE THAT and PET SHOP BOYS if you’re unsure!

Comparatively more recently, Wall Of Sound have released albums by GRACE JONES, THE HUMAN LEAGUE and BEF.

As a long-time fan of electronic music, Mark Jones’ success also led him to becoming involved with BBC6 Music under his Back To The Phuture banner, with programmes that have recognised the history of electronic pop. BTTP also hosted the ambitious ‘Tomorrow Is Today’ event featuring GARY NUMAN, JOHN FOXX, MIRRORS and MOTOR in Spring 2011.

With Wall Of Sound now celebrating their 21st Anniversary with a compilation entitled ‘Walls Have Ears – 21 Years of Wall Of Sound’ featuring the label’s highlights and previously unreleased BBC sessions, Mark Jones chatted to ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK…

What was the music that inspired you when you were growing up as a teenager, and how did this shape Wall Of Sound as a record label?

OK, well I reacted against what my brother and sister were into, as you do, which was rock and reggae at the time. I was transfixed by electronic music and got my Mum and Dad to get me a Yamaha CS01 from the Grattans catalogue. I painted my bedroom black and sat up there making noises. The sounds and scapes made it all work. I’ve always loved melody too and been hooked on hooks. Some of the music that made me do it…

THE HUMAN LEAGUE – Every single track / album they created from the beginning 🙂

BLONDIE ‘Parallel Lines’ – I was obsessed with the band and Debbie Harry as a teen.

THE NORMAL ‘TVOD’- Electroid post-punk that inspired me to make the first ever Wall Of Sound single, as Daniel Miller did with this and Mute Records.

DEPECHE MODE ‘Just Can’t Get Enough’ – The first synth riff I learnt and still is with me every minute of every day, I followed them around Germany in 1983 🙂

STEELY DAN ‘Do It Again’ – The band that brought all the Wall Of Sound artists together bizarrely.

The label’s first Top 20 single was ‘History Repeating’ in 1997 with PROPELLERHEADS and SHIRLEY BASSEY. It was quite an eccentric idea although in many ways, it was an obvious one given the duo’s interest in Bond themes. Whose idea was it to bring in her in?

Well, we had talked about getting vocalists and the idea was rinsed out in the very early hours in some dodgy Belgian hotel. Alex Gifford and myself were both a bit obsessed with getting her on the track. Alex had recorded a basic vocal through a pitch shifter and it sounded more like BILLIE HOLIDAY than SHIRLEY BASSEY. We then pitched it to Shirley’s management and she was digging it in very first listen… the rest is history… repeating.

What was the reaction like during the climax of Britpop and chart dominance by tedious bores like TRAVIS and STEREOPHONICS to Wall Of Sound’s release of an electropop album like LES RYTHMES DIGITALES ‘Darkdancer’ in 1999?

Oooooooooh! Well, I’ve said this before, but I did get hate mail and death threats when we got ‘Darkdancer’ out there. Some peeps really didn’t get it at that time as they saw the 80s as an enemy. Literally!

How did you discover Stuart Price aka Jacques Lu Cont aka LES RYTHMES DIGITALES? And what’s it been like watching him rise to working with MADONNA and literally becoming the top record producer in the world?

He bunked off school and came to see me at Soul Trader with Adam Blake as they had the band ZOOT WOMAN who I listened to and loved. I signed them up and released them, it was the fifth ever single on the label. He then informed me he had some ‘other music’ which was his school music exam and played it to me; that was ‘Liberator’. We then created LES RYTHMES DIGITALES and Jacques Lu Cont, as I said he couldn’t be the same person and the French thing was buzzing. ‘Darkdancer’ really stands the tests of time.

He is one of, if not, my proudest signing ever to the label. Seeing him elevate to being one of the world’s leading producers, and working with the world’s leading artists is something that I am very proud of.

Is it true that you first approached Phil Oakey about singing on LES RYTHMES DIGITALES’ song ‘Sometimes’ which was eventually sung by NIK KERSHAW?

I don’t remember that, but I probably did 🙂

‘Dare’ was the album that changed Stuart’s life as he was pretty much listening to classical music before that apparently!

The sublime ‘Melody AM’ by RÖYKSOPP was a really important album for Wall Of Sound. How did you find them and what makes them so magically consistent?

RÖYKSOPP have never compromised their artistic integrity, and they never will. ‘Melody AM’ is the biggest selling album in the label’s history. They are who they are, and not someone else. They featured on a Norwegian compilation and we found them there. I flew over to see them and we made things happen.

How do you look back on signing THE HUMAN LEAGUE and the resultant album ‘Credo’?

Well, they say “Never work with your heroes!” but I thought “F*** that!”; so when the opportunity arose to give them the bounceboard and platform that they needed, I couldn’t say no! The band made me do what I do. ‘Credo’ is a great album and was loved by everyone that actually heard it. The band were / are great to work with.

Of course, you released BEF’s ‘Music Of Quality & Distinction Volume 3 – Dark’, continuing the association with HUMAN LEAGUE co-founder Martyn Ware. Would you be interested in releasing the new HEAVEN 17 album?

Yes! BEF ‘Music Of Quality & Distinction 3: Dark’ had some amazing guest vocalists. Martyn Ware is another inspiring artist who creates magical moments in music. A new HEAVEN 17 album would be great to hear.

You were a big fan of synth band MIRRORS, although they were on Skint Records and sadly didn’t breakthrough. What would you have done different with them if they had been signed to Wall Of Sound?

Yep, I loved MIRRORS. I’m not clear on what exactly happened though, I assumed the band split up so there was nothing the label could do. You have to understand exactly who a band are and what they want to achieve to make things happen.

You’ve been very critical of the ‘X Factor’ dominance on the music industry. But what are your thoughts on the more generic EDM that’s sweeping the US?

*adopts American accent* EDM?? It’s brand new, right ? 🙂

With EDM, the penny has dropped and the pills have dropped. Hopefully, they will be asking “where did this music come from?” sometime soon…

They need music in a ‘box / brand’ over there but hey, it’s finally happened and broken through. It is crazy. I’ve said this a few times too… when I first took music from the label over to the USA, most peeps I played it to said (*readopts American accent *) “This is not music! This is not ‘real’ music” because it didn’t have a ‘real’ instruments on it.

Then when we did PROPELLERHEADS and more, they were like (*American accent*) “Wait… is that a guitar?? Is that drums?? This is real music now!”; they had a bump there. Never played on daytime radio but it did well and connected to people.

What’s been your highlight with Wall Of Sound after 21 years?

Still being here… but it was apparently always my goal to get to this point. In every interview I did back in the crazy days when journalists asked “Why are you doing this?”, I answered “Cos I’m going to get to 20 years… and stick it up your ar*e!”

I am proud of all of the music that I have released on the label, and giving artists the platform to do what they do and be themselves.

What new electronic acts do you rate at the moment?

All the acts on the label obviously… but there are a few others 🙂

CHVRCHES
DENIS THE NIGHT & THE PANIC PARTY
MARSHEAUX

What’s next for Wall Of Sound?

A new RÖYKSOPP single…

EKKOES – like HURTS meets THE HUMAN LEAGUE

KILLSFLAW – THE CHEMICAL BROTHERS vs LED ZEPPELIN… rock ‘n’ rave or as I am calling it in the USA… RDM! (Rocktronic Dance Music) 🙂

KIDS ON BRIDGES – the album ‘Kidology’ is out there. They combine electronics and guitars
in a cool way too

PERFECT DAY – pop vs rock (prock), they are amazing 😉

There are some very new artists that I cannot announce at momento, as contracts not signed and someone will probably steal them!

Will Back To The Phuture ever return and would you be interested putting on another event like ‘Tomorrow Is Today’ featuring GARY NUMAN, JOHN FOXX, MIRRORS and MOTOR? If so, who would be the fantasy line-up?

Well, I’ve been focussing on the Wall of Sound fanniversary, the ‘Walls Have Ears’ compilation release and more.

But yes, Back To The Phuture will be returning, so many peeps have been asking me about it too. It looks like there will be some residencies around the world and more. There are too many phantasy line ups for me 🙂

Where do I start? BTTP places classic artists with new artists rather than being too retro-minded to. I have some cool ideas, but don’t want to mention them as they will deffo get borrowed. Phantasy line-ups… here are some that explore different electronic genres…

Line-up 1

THE HUMAN LEAGUE
HEAVEN 17
EKKOES

Line-up 2

KRAFTWERK
BBC RADIOPHONIC WORKSHOP
PUBLIC SERVICE BROADCASTING

Line-up 3

DEPECHE MODE
CABARET VOLTAIRE
THE NORMAL

Line-up 4

GIORGIO MORODER
JEAN MICHEL JARRE
CERRONE
YELLO


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to Mark Jones

‘Walls Have Ears – 21 Years of Wall of Sound’ is released as a double CD and digital download by Wall Of Sound through PIAS

http://www.wallofsound.net

https://twitter.com/WallofSoundUK

http://www.backtothephuture.net/


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
Photos courtesy of Mark Jones except where credited
17th April 2015

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