|
Nov. 7, 2005
"Success is so forbidding/but it makes me think I'm winning." -- from
"Over and Over Again (Lost and Found)"
In a season that has brought forth spectacularly well-funded and
mega-publicized releases by a great many artists from both above and below the
mainstream radar, one of the year's great success stories has been the debut
album by a little East Coast rock band that decided to make a go of things the
old-fashioned way. And by "old fashioned," I mean, of course, incredibly labor
intensive and difficult. Fortunately for the members of Clap Your Hands Say
Yeah, the self-release strategy that "was born of having no other option" has
launched them to national prominence. And though much of the attention they're
getting tends to focus on their relationship (or lack thereof) to the music
business proper, it's worth noting that the record they've worked so hard to put
out is a stunningly original and deeply pleasing collection of music. Catchy,
freaky and oddly welcoming, CYHSY draws on a wealth of bizarre pop influences
(Talking Heads and Violent Femmes are obvious points of reference here, but
artists such as the Cure, the Birthday Party and the Clean also figure into the
band's ebullient goulash) to forge a sound that feels very much in the present
tense. Singer/songwriter Alec Ounsworth took a few minutes out of his
between-tours downtime to speak to MSN Music about the past and future of Clap
Your Hands Say Yeah.
MSN Music: Things have gone conspicuously well for you guys so far.
Have you made records in the past or had other band experiences that weren't so
fortunate?
Alec Ounsworth: This is the first band I've been in. I've never endeavored to
be in a band before. I've played music since I was a kid. [Music] has always
been an obsession of mine. I've been writing songs for 10 years now. It was
shaping up that I was beginning to write songs that were more for a band, which
is to say: I built a studio -- a very modest studio -- in Philadelphia about a
year before the band started. And I started putting ideas together fully fleshed
out with bass and synthesizers and guitars and all this other stuff. It was a
little limiting just doing it here in my basement. I was satiated to a certain
extent, but I decided that needed a group of guys to fill it out, and it might
be fun to put it on stage and put it on an album and things like that.
Was the recording process collaborative once you found that group of
guys, or were the ideas you generated in your studio pretty much the blueprint
for the record?
Right now I'm down in the basement working on some songs that might be on the
next album, and it's mainly that. That's the root of it: I sit down and have the
ideas for the songs and bring them up to New York. Those guys are very talented
and they can execute based on what I have to bring them and what direction I
have beyond that. It's somewhat of a combination of ideas, but generally I have
everything in my head.
Speaking of the next record, how's it shaping up?
It should be somewhat different. I mean, right now I'm trying to keep it
together to figure out how I want it to feel. I have songs that could be on the
next two or three albums -- I have a lot of material. I don't necessarily think
it'd all fit, so I'm gonna have to do some work to come up with new material
between now and the time we want to record. But I think it should be different
in the sense that we're gonna be in a different studio, we're gonna have a
different engineer, and I mean it's not a conscious decision to make it shape up
like a different album, but it turns out that way.
Read more of this exclusive interview on page
2
|