Norient TIMEZONES
TIMEZONES PODCAST-SERIE AUF RADIO X
Die Podcast-Reihe TIMEZONES erkundet die vielfältigen Realitäten von Künstler*innen und ihrer Praktiken weltweit und stellt die Frage: Was bedeutet es heute, in verschiedenen Ländern, Städten und Kontexten im Bereich Kultur und Kunst zu leben und zu arbeiten? Die Reise geht von Nairobi über Rio de Janeiro bis nach Beirut und Mount Makiling auf den Philippinen / die Ukraine und verarbeitet die Gedanken und Stimmungen der Künstler*innen, ihre sozialen, politischen und intellektuellen Realitäten und ihre(Lebens-) Philosophien zu künstlerischen Audiocollagen.
TIMEZONES spielt dabei mit Formaten und Inhalten: der Podcast bewegt sich zwischen Journalismus und Experiment, Dokumentation, Ethnografie, Fiktion, Klangkunst oder Improvisation. Georgrafische Grenzen, Zeitzonen, Genres und Praktiken sollen überschritten und mit neuen künstlerischen Formen des Austauschs, des Zuhörens und des Erzählens experimentiert werden. Gemeinsam mit lokalen Produzent*innen und Künstler*innen entstehen dabei sehr persönliche Portraits und aktuelle Geschichten aus Städten rund um den Globus, die einen sehr subjektiven Eindruck in das weltweite und aktuelle Musik-und Kunstgeschehen ermöglichen.
TIMEZONES ist ein gemeinsames Projekt des Goethe-Instituts und Norient, dem weltweiten Redaktionsnetzwerk für zeitgenössische Musik- und Medienkulturen.
Radio X ist neu als Partner mit an Bord: Als Weiterführung der im 2022 gestarteten Sendereihe airtime!, die künstlerischen Stimmen aus dem Globalen Süden und Osten Gehör verschafft, strahlen wir einmal im Monat eine Podcast-Folge aus.
26. April NAIROBI: Nairobi’s Next Generation Music Producers and Performing Artists Speak Out
24. Mai BEIRUT: Traces of a City – A Pod Poem
21. Juni RIO DE JANEIRO: Staying Creative Between Beauty and Chaos in Rio de Janeiro
19. Juli MOUNT MAKILING: Ears on/of Mount Makiling
23. August BUENOS AIRES: Relations Condensed in Practice
ENG:
The TIMEZONES podcast series plunges into the world of artists and their practices, asking: what does living and working in culture and the arts involve in different countries, cities, and contexts today? The experimental journey goes from Nairobi via Rio de Janeiro to Beirut and Mount Makiling in the Philippines/Ukraine and brings the he artists’ thoughts on their moods, their social, political, and intellectual realities and their philosophies (of life) into experimental audio collages.
The TIMEZONES podcasts run the gamut of formats and content, from straight journalism to experimental and documentary approaches, ethnography and fiction, sound art, and improvisation. The series endeavors to create new artistic forms of storytelling, listening and exchange across the boundaries of geography, time zones, genres, and practices. Together with local producers and artists, the podcast creates very personal portraits and current stories from cities around the globe, which allow a very subjective impression of the worldwide and current music and art scenes.
The Timezones Podcast Series is co-initiated and co-produced by the Goethe-Instituts and Norient, the worldwide platform and network for contemporary music and media cultures.
Radio X is now on board as a partner: As a continuation of the series airtime!, which was launched in 2022 and which makes artistic voices from the Global South and East heard, we broadcast a podcast episode once a month.
April 26, NAIROBI:
May 24, BEIRUT: Traces of a City – A Pod Poem
June 21, RIO DE JANEIRO: Staying Creative Between Beauty and Chaos in Rio de Janeiro
July 19, MOUNT MAKILING: Ears on/of Mount Makiling
August 23, BUENOS AIRES: Relations Condensed in Practice
Destruktive Hoheit: Lithics mit Tower of Age
Auf dem dritten Longplayer der Portland Postpunks wird der Harmonie den Rücken gekehrt. Doch sind es die surrealistischen Poesiefetzen und deadpan Vocals, die berauschen wie ein nüchterner Acidtrip. Check out our interview! von Mirco Kaempf
Album der Woche - Lithics - Tower of Age
Der Turm der Subjektivität ist schwer zu stürzen. Folgen wir allerdings ihrem Aufruf, macht uns Tower of Age zu besseren Menschen.
Stellt euch vor, ihr lebt auf diesem sich rasant drehenden Planeten, lebt und lernt und gewöhnt euch an Gelerntes und irgendwann lebt ihr dann nur noch dahin, in eurem selbst erbauten Turm der Gewohnheiten und seid irgendwie Apart des Lebens geworden. Im Song Tower of Age singt Post Punk Poetin Aubrey Hornor genau hiervon und ruft dazu auf, diese Wände jenes Turmes des Gelernten und Gewohnten niederzureissen und so wieder in wunderlicher Manier Teil dieser Welt zu werden. So priesterlich, abstrakt und metaphorisch der Aufruf, so herrlich, chaotisch und herausreissend wird dies musikalisch von der Band intoniert. Es ist der ganz normale, surrealistische Irrsinn, den Lithics auch in ihrem dritten Album heraufbeschwören. Schaut umher! Nein schaut richtig hin! Was seht ihr? A Highly Textured Ceiling! Snake Tattoo! Mice In The Night! Es sind merkwürdige und dennoch koherente, dekonstruierte Wortgewalten, deren Eloquenz und Wichtigkeit kaum überzubewerten ist. Denn: Nur wenn wir uns fragen, was eigentlich ein Cricket Song Through Open Window ist, beginnen wir vielleicht wieder ein wenig mehr, unsere Welt zu sehen und verstehen. Folgt Lithics via Bandcamp / Instagram / Twitter / Youtube.
If I were to ask you, Who are Lithics, what would you say?
Bob: I would say Lithics is me Bob Desaulniers, singer Aubrey Horner, Mason Crumley with guitar and Wiley Hickson on drums.
That is a very pragmatic answer!
Bob: Yeah that’s literally who we are
Have Lithics always sounded like Lithics? Is there a specific signature sound you’re going for?
Bob: It would be nice to think that we had a sound you know, but I think for us it just kind of happened and we didn't overthink it too much. I think it’s just these 4 specific people in the room that make that sound.
How do you write a Lithics song - what's the standard process there?
Bob: It just so happens differently every time I guess but the general sort of processes is that we improvise a lot in our practices. We also record our practices so sometimes the Improv will turn out to be something we can work with and then we usually build it up from there and typically Aubrey's vocals and lyrics are the last part to get added. It's usually just kind of assembling it. Maybe we'll do some edits and you know, it's a pretty standard process.
You are a very tight sounding band and are obviously very versatile musicians. But there’s still another quality to it. I read that Aubrey used to be a drummer turned-slide-guitarist and some people would probably argue that your sound is actually really arbitrary. Do you think that a certain handicap in playing can be like a benefit or freedom?
Bob: Oh yeah I think so. Limitations can easily become a form of freedom where you know what you're working with and you don't have unlimited options as musicians but we can do what we do.
Is playing music for ever a battle for you?
Bob: It depends on the day (laughs) we go with the things that come together easily. Sometimes there's like an overwrought idea that just doesn't work out. We don't like to overthink anything musically.
It sounds like controlled chaos to me! How strict is your songwriting when playing these songs live? Do they always sound the same or are you jamming them to shambles?
Bob: No things are pretty rehearsed. We don't do a lot of improvisation live. We've had a few songs over the years that we leave room for improvisation in. Like there's a song Seven People on our first record and Dancing Guy on the second record… so we would leave some room for that in the performance you know which was kind of nice. I always enjoyed that. But most is composed.
I listened to your solo accoustic album (Rose Water) which is traditionally speaking very ‘nice’ music. You could argue Lithics aren’t really nice to listen to. Why is it still nice to you?
Again, it's not something that we talk about too much in terms of like «oh let's do something that's really abrasive» you know. We don't think of our music as being that abrasive. I guess we're all pretty well acquainted with certain sounds and certain genres so it doesn't seem all that extreme to us. We are all pretty well acquainted with old rough trade records and things like that. So it's not like we aren't deliberately trying to sound atonal or something but we also aren't trying to make really poppy music either I guess.
I guess you can only play the 12 Bar Blues for so long?
Bob: Oh yeah well we never tried in this band
Are you ever concerned you may be imitating old sounds or concerned about originality?
Bob: The idea of starting a band where the goal is to be original seems to me like a silly thing. We're not going out of our way to sound like anybody in particular but I think that our influences are probably somewhat apparent. Like we definitely are big fans of old Fall and Captain Beefheart and stuff like that.
You said musically you don't think about it too much but lyrically it's another story. When I listened to Victim’s Jacket it struck me as some sort of an understated mundane madness. It’s mundane but surreal at the same time. Like a chair is a chair but if you think about the chair it's a really weird object. It makes me think of Albert Camus. Are you an existentialist Aubrey?
Aubrey: (laughts) No but I was reading a lot of Jackson Mac Low. He's a poet and he did a lot of interesting things with language and sort of like chance and it somehow comes off as like very funny and really interesting. Putting certain words together... and it was just really inspiring. Especially that song in particular.
Are your lyrics more like encapsulated disserations or absurdist nonsense?
Aubrey: Probably somewhere in between! Sometimes it’s things that are in front of you sometimes it’s chance. I do a lot of writing in notebooks and sometimes a thought will align and dawn on me and I just write it down. Then compose things later.
You used to tweet these one-liners until a couple of years ago like ‘The Terrain of A Highly Textured Ceiling’ and now that’s made it on the album.
Aubrey: Oh yeah that's funny!
There’s some songs that sound a bit different from the rest. Were these practise recordings?
Aubrey: Yeah on The Symptom we added vocals much later cuz we thought we would work that into a more structured song but we felt like the recording captured something really special and we couldn't really replicate it so I just ended up overdubbing vocals on that and it's pretty wild, like the lyrics are kind of all over the place… the other one [Half Dormancy] is a practice recording with improvised vocals also.
I'd like to speak about the recording process. You said that for the first time you tracked your recordings - also songs that you’ve been performing live already. Were you not concerned that the urgency of the record would suffer if you recorded separately from each other?
Bob: I think we were concerned about that cuz we've always recorded live, all together in the same room. With this record it was more about the sounds themselves – we wanted to take little bit longer to get a better drum sound or one that we were happier with. Cuz you know, when you record as a band (when you record live) it's like somebody is going to have a bad take. At least for us we would have a take that at least someone is not going to be happy with and so you have to compromise. This time we kind of decided that if we did the rhythm section first and then had the guitarist overdub we would be able to take our time a little more and get a take that everybody was was happy with.
Aubrey: Yeah have it be less stressful.
Bob: Less stressful and I mean, I love overdubbing and I like the studio process and I think it was kind of more creative this way because we weren't stressed out about how we all have to be on at the same time. So it was a little bit easier. We did it over the course of a few months and not in like 3 days.
Yeah but do you think the people will want to listen to relaxed punk musicians?
Bob: I guess what I mean by relaxed is that we were able to focus and actually play well but you know, it was more about the quality of the sounds and everything.
Be a bit more perfectionist?
Bob: In a way yeah. I mean it’s not possible to ever achieve perfection. Like you know, perfection is not our goal. It’s more about not listening back to a record you recorded and feeling that cringey feeling when you hear a mistake or the feeling like you could have done a better job or whatever. We just wanted to give everybody the amount of time they needed to be happy with what went down on the record.
You recorded the album on tape and have done some looping as well. Could you take me through that process as to what that entails?
Bob: Oh, the loops I recorded were done at home and they were really easy. I make like cassette tape loops where you just chop up a little piece of cassette tape and then make a loop of it I guess. Just within the cassette shell. I make some noise and sound art type of stuff on the side so Aubrey and I were goofing around and we did like Snake Tattoo and then the last track on the record was also a tape loop with my synthesizer. Sometimes with records (at least with us) it can be like song after song after song and I get burned out on the sound of a band over the course of a record. So I I wanted to kind of add some interludes and things that were sonically a little different – just to kind of mix it up a little.
Do you think there’s a difference between art or music – or is there a difference between song, sound and music?
Bob: I guess in general music falls under the category of sound for sure. But as a person who enjoys sound in general I feel like being limited to just song for the sound is sometimes inhibiting. I think with a band that’s obviously what you're doing but I think that for us, we’re open to going beyond that a little bit.
As a manifestation of sound, is there like an underyling motive for Tower of Age? Aubrey, you said in an interview that it's about tearing down the walls that one is building for oneself and it reminded me of like Pink Floyds The Wall.
Aubrey: (laughs)
Bob: Oh man yeah l guess that’s what they said huh.
Like just a punchier version of The Wall?
Bob: I would say probably not. We're not going for the conceptual Pink Floyd vibe.
Aubrey: Yeah it was like a personal idea I had. Like getting older and the things that you build up within yourself and in your mind and then just hoping that you can get through them and sort of like, tear it down a little bit.
Like when you grow older you are used to certain things and you know certain things and in your opinion one should always try to look at the world in your surroundings in new ways because that’s how you keep engaged and be the best possible human being you can be?
Aubrey: Yeah that’s a good way of putting it
Are you ever worried that you’re going to run out ideas?
Bob: Yes. (both laugh) You know, I think most bands have a lifespan, like creatively. And I think it's okay to, when you feel like you've kind of explored it enough to stop. There's been plenty of examples of people who have been able to continue on with a sound, revolve it and then go somewhere else with it. But I think there's been a lot more examples of people who went on way too long with an idea that should have stopped early on. You know most people say the bands first few records were their best. In most cases. But you know, that's the deal - you have an idea that's really pure and then it gets muddled after a few tries. And we’ve been such an intuitive band we don't agonize this music. We actually just come up with it on the fly and we don’t wanna get to a point where we’re overthinking it or it becomes too much of a laborious process or whatever.
Or getting too relaxed…
Bob: Or getting too relaxed – which we’re not trying to do.
Is Tower of Age a political record?
Bob: I mean it's hard to separate politics from any kind of idea now. Or any sentiment now. I feel like it's possible to connect politics to almost everything.
How about… is it more of a surrealist or a realist record?
Aubrey: I mean it’s not like there’s politicall subject matter that I’m singing about. So in that way we’re not talking about current events in the songs really. But yeah it’s a little bit surrealist I guess.
Do you have any plans for touring Europe in the next year if the world ever becomes normal again?
Bob: We don't know. I mean everything got turned upside down. We had some touring plans for the US for the upcoming year and then they all got postponed and then at this point probably pretty much cancelled so we’re just like everybody else. We're just waiting to hear what the best practices are. I think we're more concerned about what feels right for us. I mean this was a little bit of a wrench in our work but compared to the world scenario right now it seems like extremely small and inconsequential you know.
Are there any local Portland's acts you’d like to recommend?
Bob: Sure, there’s a band called Mope Grooves that we really love. There’s a band called Honey Bucket who aren’t really playing anymore but they were really great.
Aubrey : L.O.X.
Bob : And then there’s a band called LOGS that’s like a Portland super group with all our friends and they're really really cool.
Aubrey : And Collate.
Thank you very much and best of luck with the new record!