Tag: John Fryer (Page 4 of 4)

COLD WAR NIGHT LIFE Interview

Following the success of ‘An Evening With The Swedish Synth’ last March, Nordic friendly blog Cold War Night Life have announced their next live event ‘A Secret Wish’ on SUNDAY 19TH APRIL at The Lexington in London.

No2 in an occasional live series, the event again has a Swedish flavour and is headlined by SISTA MANNEN PÅ JORDEN (SMPJ).

Also on the bill are VILE ELECTRODES while making a special DJ appearance will be acclaimed producer John Fryer.

‘An Evening With The Swedish Synth’ was one of the best of the best live events of 2014 and a fine example of what could be achieved when an electronic event was actually curated by an electronic music enthusiast. With the dedication and care that Cold War Night Life take with their projects, ‘A Secret Wish’ promises to be one of the must attend events on the synthesizer calendar.

Simon Helm of Cold War Night Life kindly chatted to ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK about his website, his love of all things Nordic and ‘A Secret Wish’…

What would you say is the ethos of the Cold War Night Life blog?

The site’s tagline is “electronic music and culture”, but we’ve covered everything from Moog50 to 23 SKIDOO via William Orbit’s spoken word show.

If it’s good, it is worth talking about, so we are open to a guitar artist like JENNIE VEE but don’t cover most EDM.

That said, when a DJ like Sandra Mosh does something special, we’re there. From the beginning, it has been inspired by little touches: the care that Vinyl-on-Demand put into their box sets.

How did you get into electronic pop music?

KRAFTWERK’s ‘Autobahn’ and ABBA’s ‘Voulez-Vous’ were milestones, but Gary Numan performing ‘Cars’ on ‘Saturday Night Live’ in 1979 turned everything upside down. When JOHN FOXX’s ‘Metamatic’ and OMD’s ‘Organisation’ arrived, there was no turning back. As a teenager, I started working in record shops, managing a local synth band, producing a cable TV show and writing about the music that was coming from Europe. To this day, I can’t recognise Top 40 hits from the commercial radio of that time, because I was so wrapped up in the sounds on the first two HUMAN LEAGUE albums.

Cold War Night Life is named after the debut album of Canadian band RATIONAL YOUTH. Why has this particular band inspired you and how do you equate their standing in the history of synthpop?

RATIONAL YOUTH are from Montréal, which is the most European of Canadian cities and was the first to absorb the synth music of the 70s, like KLAUS SCHULZE and CLUSTER. It was the right place for a couple of electro-pioneers to find each other. When RATIONAL YOUTH released ‘Cold War Night Life’ in 1982, they were easily on the same plane as OMD, John Foxx or DEPECHE MODE.

Bill Vorn had a System 100 and Tracy Howe programmed sequencers using equations, but their songwriting was also world-class.They were on a tiny local label, so they didn’t have the commercial reach they deserved, but wherever the record landed, it launched more bands. When RATIONAL YOUTH toured Sweden last year, hundreds of people were singing along in three different cities, which all grew from one person getting a vinyl copy in 1982 and copying it for friends – a rare example of home taping nurturing music. The choice of name was in tribute to the legacy of that record and the spirit that created it.

Canada is doing very well with new electronic acts such as AUSTRA, GRIMES, TRUST, PURITY RING, ELECTRIC YOUTH, CHROMEO and LOLA DUTRONIC. What do you think of these artists?

It’s great that there are so many new artists coming through – and not just followers of RUSH and NICKELBACK! I actually learn about a lot of these bands through TEC, but the one that both confounds and interests me most is TR/ST.

How did you get into the Swedish side of things?

I did a university degree in Stockholm and discovered a vein of music that is still to be mined properly. Bands like RATATA and NASA made amazing music but are not well known outside of the country. They lived in ABBA’s shadow. We have some great Swedish contributors, who are enthusiastic about music and sharing their discoveries. It means that we get can get a story about a new band that has just debuted at a local café, which can be more interesting than a report on the most recent tour by a big name act.

I’ve been asked this question… so what’s so special about Sweden then, and which acts do you rate?

The Swedish synth scene is incredibly loyal. It hasn’t changed with fashion, so it has been possible for artists to grow together with the scene. That has given a long life to acts like LUSTANS LAKEJER, TWICE A MAN and PAGE, while fostering terrific artists like ALISON, EMMON, JULIAN & MARINA and THERMOSTATIC. The bands that Eddie Bengtsson has written for are all very special, because his songs are so good: PAGE, S.P.O.C.K. and SISTA MANNEN PÅ JORDEN. KORD and ACUTE ONSET are two current acts I’d love to see live.

Cold War Night Life’s first live event was ‘An Evening With The Swedish Synth’ with PAGE, MACHINISTA and TRAIN TO SPAIN. How do you look back on that event and how it was received?

The idea was to give Londoners a view of the current Swedish scene and a chance to connect with it. PAGE are still very current, but originally go back to the early 1980s. MACHINISTA and TRAIN TO SPAIN represent the new generation. The event was successful: TRAIN TO SPAIN got picked up by a label on the night, while a lot of musicians checked it out. The local crowd was very welcoming, which gave it a good vibe.

Your next event ‘A Secret Wish’ has a Swedish flavour in SMPJ but also, looks closer to home with VILE ELECTRODES and John Fryer? Were there any particular reasons for the change in concept?

John Fryer lives in Oslo, so we couldn’t pair him with SMPJ and call it a Swedish Synth event. VILE ELECTRODES are perfect to match with SMPJ, because they are fearless and have immaculate analogue credentials.

How did you come to your chosen line-up?

John Fryer made ‘Speak & Spell’ and ‘A Broken Frame’ – he sat in the studio with Eric Radcliffe and Daniel Miller, working out how to get the sounds on tape in that magical way. He also produced FAD GADGET and COCTEAU TWINS. John’s DJ set is going to focus on his work for 4AD and Mute. When a member of THIS MORTAL COIL is playing the music he has worked on at two of the most distinctive labels, in his own mix, you know it’s going to be special.

SMPJ are legendary in Sweden, because their music is so catchy. Their sound is somewhere between GIORGIO MORODER and SPACE, rebooted for the 21st century. VILE ELECTRODES are a great fit, and they showed at TEC003 that there is really no-one in the UK who can touch them. The secret wish is to see them all on the same stage.

For those who are undecided, what can they expect from ‘A Secret Wish’?

Half-decent music. OK people. Alright beer. Some understatement.

Any chance of Cold War Night Life’s playing host RATIONAL YOUTH for No 3 in your occasional live series?

I would love to see RATIONAL YOUTH in London, and would be happy to be a part of making that happen.

What next for Cold War Night Life or yourself in terms of music related projects?

There is a RATIONAL YOUTH tribute album in the pipeline. The main focus, of course, is on sharing the stories that go with the music.


‘A Secret Wish’ featuring SISTA MANNEN PÅ JORDEN, VILE ELECTRODES + John Fryer takes place on SUNDAY 19TH APRIL 2015 at The Lexington, 96-98 Pentonville Road, London N1 9JB. Doors open at 6.00pm

http://www.coldwarnightlife.com/

http://www.moonbasealpha.space/

https://www.facebook.com/vileelectrodes

https://www.facebook.com/John.Fryer.Official


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
18th March 2015

JOHN FRYER Interview

JOHN FRYER is the renowned producer, engineer and musician who was also a member of THIS MORTAL COIL.

He cut his teeth with Daniel Miller and Eric Radcliffe at the legendary Blackwing Studios co-engineering the first recordings of FAD GADGET. Fryer achieved mainstream success when he was asked to co-engineer a fledgling synthesizer band who had just signed to Mute Records. That band was of course DEPECHE MODE and he was involved in their run of Top 40 singles between ‘New Life’ and ‘Leave In Silence’.

Fryer also co-engineered YAZOO’s debut long player ‘Upstairs At Eric’s’. He soon used his engineering experience to become a producer in his own right, working with COCTEAU TWINS, MODERN ENGLISH, SWANS and NINE INCH NAILS.

Simultaneously, he was also the only constant along with 4AD founder Ivo Watts-Russell in the musical art collective THIS MORTAL COIL who featured Elizabeth Fraser, Lisa Gerrard and Alison Limerick among its highly regarded cast of guest vocalists.

He also recorded with STRIPMALL ARCHITECTURE singer Rebecca Coseboomas as DARKDRIVECLINIC, releasing an album ‘Noise In My Head’ in 2011.

His latest project is SILVER GHOST SHIMMER with vocalist Pinky Turzo, the sound of which is described as “inspired from the vocal groups of the 60s like THE SHANGRI-LAS with a twist of Glamour and Decay to their Sugar Coated Noise Pop Couture”.

Fryer will be making appearance at ‘A Secret Wish’ on SUNDAY 19TH APRIL 2015 in London with a special DJ set that will cover the range of his work for 4AD and Mute.

Hosted by Nordic friendly blog Cold War Night Life, ‘A Secret Wish’ follows on from the success of last March’s ‘An Evening With The Swedish Synth’; the line-up will also feature live sets from SISTA MANNEN PÅ JORDEN and VILE ELECTRODES.

JOHN FRYER kindly chatted to ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK about his varied career and what he may have in store for his DJ set at ‘A Secret Wish’

How did you first become acquainted with recording synthesizers?

Well, that’s an easy question, as soon as I walked through door of the studio for my 1st recording sessions, as it was Daniel Miller making a SILICON TEENS song.

You first become known co-engineering FAD GADGET with Eric Radcliffe. What are your memories of being in the studio with Frank Tovey and do you have any particular favourite tracks of his?

It was great working with Fad (Frank) even though he was making electronic music; he had a punk ethos, so anything goes. One of my best memories of Fad was, he was doing a song called ‘The Box’ and he wanted to have a claustrophobic vocal sound, so we recorded him in a box (well, a flight case) to get the boxy close sound.

What did you think when you were first presented with DEPECHE MODE by Daniel Miller?

They were four very shy guys and Daniel thought they were the future of synth pop, and he was right.

The sounds on the ‘Speak & Spell’ album sit neatly within the mix. Did they require much treatment or did you get the opportunity to give feedback and suggestions to Daniel or Vince as they programmed?

‘Speak & Spell’ was made on a 8 track tape machine, so lot of tracks had to be recorded together onto one track, or bounced together once they had been recorded, we didn’t have the luxury of what you had today in the digital world. So a lot of time and careful planning had to go into the recordings.

What was your own preferred or most flexible synthesizer during your time at Blackwing Studios?

That’s a hard question, but one of my favourite things was the sampler when it came out, as it opened up so many new doors of how to record and anything that made a noise became a new instrument.

By ‘A Broken Frame’, the equipment became more sophisticated with things like the PPG Wave 2, Simmons drums and Roland TR808. What were those like to work with?

Technology was moving so fast in the 80s and it was great to be working with Daniel Miller, because as soon as there was a new synth or drum machine out, Daniel would bring it into the studio.

I remember Daniel driving out to Roger Linn’s place to pick up one of the first Linn Drum Machines so we could use it on the album.

You also co-engineered YAZOO’s ‘Upstairs at Eric’s’ at around the same time, how different was this compared to working with DEPECHE MODE? Did you get embroiled in any of the tensions at the time?

It was so different working with Vince and Depeche. Vince wanted to go super pop, he wanted to be the new ABBA and Depeche now with Martin writing wanted to go darker. They both wanted to record at the same time and it was best they were kept apart, so Eric decided to make a new studio in his house for Vince, hence ‘Upstairs at Eric’s’. Why it was called upstairs I don’t know, as the studio was on the ground floor?? I stayed working at Blackwing with the other three.

You went on to produce COCTEAU TWINS, as a well being a member of THIS MORTAL COIL. How were you achieving those ethereal textures that were predominantly sourced from using guitars rather than synths?

By the time 4AD started using the studio on a regular basis, the AMS RMX16 Digital Reverb had been made and it became my trade mark sound on the 4AD records. As for guitar sounds, a lot of the sounds come from Boss Pedals, so everything was saturated with FXs so you couldn’t really hear the source sound and had no idea if it was keyboards or guitar. Still doing the same today…

Did Elizabeth Fraser have any vocal techniques that presented an interesting challenge for you as a producer?

No, Elizabeth is a great singer, no problem with her voice… it’s just that she was so shy, it was painful to see her struggling with her shyness at times, but once she started singing everything was fine.

You co-produced on NINE INCH NAILS’ debut long player ‘Pretty Hate Machine’. What was Trent Reznor like to work with and was that focus and single minded determination that he is known for now, present in him even then?

It was great working with Trent, we had fun pushing the envelope. We tried to make the album as hard as possible at the time of recording.

We were very proud of the sound of the record and couldn’t wait to play it to the head of the label (Steve Gottlieb) when he came by the studio.

After listening to the play back of the album, his face was full of horror and his mouth was wide open and all he could say was, “you have ruined this record” so we were super happy with that… job well done.

Which recordings that you have worked on, are you most proud and why?

Well of course, my album by DARKDRIVECLINIC and my soon-to-be released album by SILVER GHOST SHIMMER, you can check out our new video of ‘Soft Landing’ on Youtube….

What can people expect from your DJ set at ‘A Secret Wish’?

It will be a pimped up set of 4AD and Mute tracks like you’ve never heard them before, and the only way you can hear the tracks like this is when I DJ them.


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives it grateful thanks to JOHN FRYER

With additional thanks to Simon Helm at Cold War Night Life

JOHN FRYER will be appearing at ‘A Secret Wish’ hosted by Cold War Night Life on SUNDAY 19TH APRIL 2015 at The Lexington, 96-98 Pentonville Road, London N1 9JB. Playing live will be SISTA MANNEN PÅ JORDEN and VILE ELECTRODES.

https://www.facebook.com/John.Fryer.Official

http://silverghostshimmer.bandcamp.com/releases

http://www.coldwarnightlife.com/


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
24th February 2015

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