http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/collective/A3895806
Autechre on music, technology and egg custard.
In the midst of preparation for their first tour since 2002, and on the
eve of the release of their eighth album, Untilted, Rob Brown from arch
electro-experimentalists Autechre answers questions submitted to
Collective by fans and sceptics alike
Steve Shaw asks: Why have you decided to return to more repetitive
rhythmic structures in Untilted? Did you have dancefloors more in mind
for this album?
RB: Its hard to know when someone calls your stuff repetitive, because
you know that its not. Compared to the last album, Untilted is warmer.
Its fuller, weve got the production a lot better. Its wider, its
tougher and more sensitive all in one. Does that make sense? Ive always
been into emotional, hard music.
Evilfons asks: Did you start making music because you think everything
else is crap, or not exactly what you want? Is it made out of some
frustration?
RB: When we were listening to tunes we had an ear for what we were into.
Then we started mixing up peoples music, like DJ mixes that were more
customised than the norm. To the point where they were so customised
that it was basically our drum patterns, our samples and our scratching
and beats all over the top. To the point where were didnt use anyone
elses material anymore and we realised we were making our own tracks.
And I guess it was because we thought there was room for something that
sounded like this. Maybe we were listening to Todd Terry and Mantronix,
and Brian Eno, Kraftwerk, and loads of soul and stuff that was current,
trying to find the best bits for us. It was quite rare to find them. So
we were trying to put these bits together not in a conscious way, but
coming at it with no musical training. We just got some kind of results
and those results stuck out like a sore thumb to us.
Jefferson Petrey asks: Many listeners I have spoken to have been divided
about your most recent work. Half express profound inspiration about
their experiences with the recent albums, and the other half seem to
yearn for you to return to your earlier sound. Have you encountered this
and what do you have to say in response?
RB: Its funny because its one of the things weve often had levelled
at us since Incunabula, our first album on Warp. The first album was
more of a compilation of old material. So when we came out with Amber,
which was genuinely the first album we put out on Warp, everyone was
like, Whoa youve gone all ambient, whats happened? Then two albums
after that, when Chiastic Slide came out, they were like, Oh this is
really cold and computery, not warm and lush like Amber. So basically
we get this domino flip every time we release something. We just have to
come to terms with it. People are polarised completely. Some people
wont accept the new album until theyve come to like the last album,
and some people say, Draft was horrible, it was really cold and edgy.
And then a year later when you put a new album out they say, Oh I hope
it compares to Draft cos Draft was brilliant. This time weve had a
lot of warm responses from critics and the media, or whoever gets in
first, I just think you cant help but divide people.
Alex Maske asks: If you were non-musicians growing up, do you think that
had a negative or positive effect on your role as musicians, or approach
to composition/listening, now?
RB: Its got us where we are now. We know things about music now. You
find recurring themes and you go, Why does this seem familiar? Then
youll do a bit of research and youll find youve stumbled across what
most people consider a musical rule. When youve got no idea about these
rules or musical dictates youre pretty open to anything. My friend
Darryl, who helped us start up, gave us the keys to his studio and his
music shop, just so that we could use some gear that wasnt rubbish. We
were like, This guys a nut. What does he want? But it turned out he
was a really musically well-trained classical kind of guy, really good
on the keys, but at the same time he was like, You cant do that, that
sounds weird. And we were like, This is brilliant, this is the best
thing yet. I guess its a good way of keeping things open, not knowing
what keeps most people closed. But we do have taste. Its all quality to
us. We like to do things properly, but whether properly is the way
that people have decided is a rule or not is irrelevant. Weve been at
this so long that we dont want to skimp on quality, or taste or style.
All these things come from a hip-hop, graffiti, BMX background where
youre showing off what you can do. Practising loads. I can appreciate
that mentality. You know, when you see young kids skating, falling and
getting up again and again in the most extreme environments - speed,
concrete, sharp edges - Ive always appreciated that theyre just trying
to get it right. It might mean a few bumps into a few walls here and
there, and musically we probably do that all the time. Some classical
musician probably thinks, god what a racket and then other people say,
Oh thats totally Wagnerian. Its got us where we are now and were
comfortable with the fact that sometimes we dont know anything, and
sometimes were exploring areas where other people wont go because it
doesnt fit black and white textbook stuff.
Akeefee asks: How do you feel about LP5 being on the HMV recommended list?
RB: Thats five or six years old that album, and its true, a lot of
people have sighted it as a classic Autechre album because it bridges
the gap between the guys who liked our old stuff and the guys who got
propelled on to our new stuff. Back then there were fewer elements that
were dictating quite big things. Now there are more elements that are
dictating small essences of the vibe, but in concert theres a really
nice collection of things going on for us.
Fudi myo asks: When do you work best? Late at night? Afternoons?
RB: Its changed over the years. Weve been doing well lately. Getting
down to it in the afternoons but really hitting the spot early evening.
Not wearing ourselves too thin till six in the morning like we used to.
David Atkinson asks: When you write a track do you have preconcieved
ideas about how you want it to sound, or do you just jam it out?
RB: I used to the love the idea that you could capture the ideas in your
head. You know, when youre going to sleep and youre just about to drop
off, I used to hear the maddest music. You could imagine it flowing,
everything seemed to segue into the next really well, and things would
fold, really nice yet intricate and clever and impossible at the same
time. I used to think you could get those ideas down. But its really
hard. Using words to describe stuff is always quite difficult. When
were in the studio well just turn on a bit of gear that maybe we
havent used for a while and try and explore it, see if theres
something left, something latent that we can get out of it. Wed rather
not let our minds dictate before we get to the equipment. There are
loads of possibilities when you turn on an old sampler or an old drum
machine. Some things stick and you can feel your way through, and a path
starts to develop and you get little branches and ideas that make it
better. Its never about saying I want to do a beat that goes like this.
Brisk asks: What is your current ringtone on your mobile phone?
RB: One of our own. Its called Maphones - Meldrum.
Fudi Myo asks: Are you trying to be innovative or do you just do what
you do in an Autechre bubble and ignore everything else out there?
RB: No matter what we say or do, we are essentially pleasing ourselves.
We cant please everyone because wed be doing something other than what
were doing now. We wouldnt have started doing what we did then for the
same reasons. Wed have been trying to get on XL recordings on the back
of Prodigy or something. We went to a label in Manchester that
distributed XL. The guy there was like, Yeah, you need to measure it up
more squared like every 16 bars, maybe get a vocal loop in there, maybe
a rock stab would be fresh. And were thinking, Shut up! This isnt
what we do. The best thing he said was, It reminds me of Brian Eno.
But that was an insult from him.
Weve always been up against this kind of its great that you do it
your way, but its not great because youre too self-indulgent
attitude. You cant have it both ways. Youve got to be your own best
critic because if it all implodes then at least you were doing it for
the right reasons. And youre not being led up the garden path by a
sycophant or somebody who couldnt care less, or who just wants to go
with the flow.
The only bearing we have against whats happening elsewhere in music is
the latest Apple hardware or Akai samplers, or the latest speakers. When
you really boil it down were in a very contrived technological
environment, because theres a board of directors in control of, say,
Yamaha or Akai or whatever, and these bits of gear are probably
pre-empting a certain kind of music because they are filling it with
certain kinds of behaviour. I guess weve always tried to circumvent
that as well. We know there is a latent possibility in all this
equipment.
cichly_bass_tard asks: Kalpol Introl is part of the soundtrack for the
excellent Pi, directed by Darren Aronofsky. If you could choose to
compose a soundtrack for the re-release of a movie, which one would you
choose and why?
RB: Some of the films would be untouchable simply because of the
soundtrack. It would be blasphemy to want to do it again. Can we redo Pi
but keep the soundtrack the same? Id like to collaborate with someone
like Angelo Badalamenti. He does some great music for David Lynch.
Sixtyten asks: Would you ever consider producing instrumental tracks for
a hip-hop artist. If so, who?
RB: Seans really into Sensational (ex-Jungle Brothers), but hes got
his own production down. Theres guys in Britain like MC Alkaline. Weve
always thought it would be nice to work with someone with his kind of
character. Its difficult because theyve got so much persona embodied
in their voices and their words. You could do a nice 16-bar loop and
just loop it with cuts, in and out, and youve got a rap instrumental.
That seems to be the norm. But I think ours would be more involved than
that, so Id worry that what were doing is an Autechre track with a
guest vocalist. Then you end up in Two Lone Swordsmen land, and thats
not really our bag. I really like Saafir, hes down with Hyroglyphics.
There are a few, were quite open. Wed like to work with quite a few
vocalists as long as they are open as well, as long as they dont just
want a dope backing track. Theyd get that, but theyd have to work a
bit harder than just laying a few doubletracks over the top of it.
Frog-v asks: I really think your music is very architectural. Do you
think there is some kind of connection between architecture and your
music, or electronic music in general?
RB: It doesnt make us want to write tracks, put it that way. I studied
architecture and we love lots of architects (he later cites Felix
Candela, Santiago Calatrava). I can appreciate when some people say our
music gives them a sense of space it would. Mine and Seans senses are
developed to know from a sound what kind of space were in, and that
gives us untold amounts of freedom. If we can make things sound spatial
for a reason then we will, but its not directly influenced by
architecture. Its just an aesthetic.
jonharttrup asks: Autechres live shows seem to attract two types of
people. The ones that stand still, stroking their beards and really
getting the music, and the ones that leap about spasmodically in a
vain attempt to dance. Which do you prefer?
RB: I guess we want people to dance. Weve asked for danceterias for
this tour, so well try and get people moving. There will be people who
just stand and watch but maybe their brains are doing all the work,
maybe theyre dancing in their heads. Id do both. Were very complex
organisms, arent we? Although I guess me and Sean are quite hardened to
it. I think its terrific dance music. I do get excited by it
physically.
And we dont have any visuals. Weve always kept things to a minimum,
weve just been concentrating on the music. People take if for granted
now that you need an AV live set, but I hate the way people just stare
at the front. It seems to immobilize people. If we were doing a lush
ambient piece and everyone was going to lie down then maybe wed project
it as a cine-360, like Alton towers or something. But for us its just a
stereo live set. No distracting visuals.
Chris Hopcroft asks: PC or Mac?
RB: Both. Mostly Mac, just for convenience and quality. The build is
better. But its not as customisable. With a PC, if you're a real geek
you can get ahead of everyone with loads of components. Apple is cased
in concrete, but it is concrete nonetheless and you can rely on that
sometimes.
Toni Ahvenainen asks: How do Autechre know when their idea is finished
music ready to be published, and when not?
RB: We try and see a track through to its end. Some tracks just end up
getting shelved if we cant agree, and some tracks will stand the test
of time. Well pull them off the shelf and say, Yeah thats really
good. But its unlikely that tracks like that will end up on the album.
Albums tend to be tracks worked on from one day to the very end, even if
its over a period of a year or two.
Birgir asks: Do you care about getting praise or not for records? Do you
care how it's gonna do in sales and reviews?
RB: Praise is a funny one because some people love it who you wouldnt
have expected to. So to aim your sights on something like praise or
respect is a good way to undermine yourself I think. Its hard for us to
get dirty with these kinds of attitudes when were on the other side of
the public line. And were pretty ambivalent about sales. We dont find
out what our sales are. Its pretty hard to get any idea of what your
sales are going to be. I have no idea whether this album is going to
sell well or not. Theres been a really warm response to it, but that
never counts for CD sales. It might matter whether a guy in a local
record store likes it or not, he might swing against us because hes got
a rose-tinted view of what we used to be like. Weve got no control over
that and that happens all over the world.
Amorphy asks: Do you see your music as political? and should music be
political at all?
RB: Its hard to do it with instrumental music. We did it with the Ante
EP, where we managed to make a track that wasnt repetitive, against the
Criminal Justice Bill, that cited repetitive beats.
But without words and pictures, and literal stuff, its hard.
myriad asks: Was the sixth track on your album EP7, Dropp, created
during a time that was difficult for one or both of you? This particular
song evokes a great sadness in me.
RB: No, I think we feel that Dropp is a nice fat little, train kind of
track really. Its quite emotional, but its a bit more of a diesel
track to me. More of a linear design. I dont honestly think we put that
much direct emotion into tracks. We dont go, I feel sad, lets do
sad. We obviously take every mood seriously in a track, because thats
part of capturing the track and making it work really well. But we try
not to undermine the strengths of the track to portray something thats
in our heads. I almost feel that its a bit cheesy to put something in a
track that almost transcribes my emotions. Wed rather explore hybrid
emotions. I feel quite comfortable when people say, Its dead sad but
dead hard. With instrumental music its easy to tap into emotions, but
its not easy for people to know which feelings are being tapped.
Without lyrical content, saying this song is about being lost or
whatever, even our titles are left open.
teledynepost asks: Do you like egg custard?
RB: I love egg custard. Sean would probably puke, but I love it. I
nearly bought one today. Thats a great question. Were not as serious
as people think we are.
15 April 05
Autechre - Untitled, released 18 April 05 on Warp Records. Tour starts
14 April 05. Check www.warprecords.com for details.
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