interview with LAKE

February 8, 2013 in interviews, LAKE

LAKE

3659717_3659717-R1-037-17

I attacked this profile from every  angle, I symbolized, I mythologized, I literalized and still I could not boil the essence of what LAKE is or what LAKE means to me, down to something simple and compact.

By the mid 1990‘s the boom of the Grunge years had begun to decay, and by the late 90‘s we were reading it’s obituary.  The great tradition of music in the Northwest didn’t die, it was simply struggling to find it’s place in a post grunge world.  In the mid 2000‘s a new generation of artists living and working in the PNW emerged, finding their way to a new and hungry audience.

In 2009 I was living in Los Angeles and had been removed from the burgeoning music scene of the PNW.  It was sheer accident that I stumbled upon the song On The Swing, a hauntingly beautiful fantasy of a song by LAKE.  Soon after I took a trip to Amoeba records, and as if placed their by the hand of fate, I found LAKE’s catalog of music waiting for me.  A year and a half later when I decided to move back to Seattle, one of my first thoughts was how much closer to their music I would be.  Who were these people that made this music that so easily destroyed me?

LAKE: Lindsay Schief, Ashley Eriksson, Kenny Tarantino, Eli Moore.  That these disparate artists would find each other in the same city, let alone the same band, is so serendipitous that it sounds like I made it up.  Lindsay was a recent transplant to Los Angeles from Michigan, when through a friend of a friend she met Ashley.  Through Ashley she would meet Kenny, Markly Morrison, and Andrew Dorsett who was a transplant from Florida.  It was on a whim that Lindsay would move to Olympia Washington, where she met and collaborated with Eli Moore who was originally from Whidbey Island.  When Eli took a trip to California to visit an uncle, Lindsay suggested that he meet up with Ashley, and miraculously he did.  Soon after Ashley would move to Olympia, and not long after that, everyone else would follow.

By 2006 LAKE had recorded and self-released their first album the self titled, LAKE.  Recorded by Karl Blau in Anacortes at the now defunct Department of Safety, it would be the first of many albums and collaborations with Karl who is like the Neil Young to Crosby Stills and Nash.  Their second album simply referred to as Cassette (after the fact, because until recently it was available only on cassette) was recorded with members of the Portland band Typhoon.  Originally these recordings were seen as raw demos to be polished and refined later, but in the end they contained too much “spontaneous magic,” and the album was left as is.

Their next album was Oh The Places We’ll Go, originally self-released, before Calvin Johnson founder of the infamous K-Records expressed interest in re-releasing the album under K.  They would release two more albums for K in the coming years, Let’s Build A Roof and Giving and Receiving.  This past year the band recorded two more albums both of which are in the process of being completed.

Magic is a word that I often think of in reference to LAKE, whether it’s their unlikely formation, the sound of their music, or their glaring passion and talent.  I find myself at a loss for words when it comes to meaningfully describing the music of LAKE, one part the jazzy softness of Steely Dan, one part the endlessly addictive melodies of Fleetwood Mac, and one part R. Stevie Moore quirk, the rest?  As banal as it sounds… magic.

If there is a cradle for that magic you could say it’s in the band’s ability to collaborate.   There are no defined roles in LAKE, songs are constructed by exploiting members strongest attributes.  It’s birthed in the writing process and continues all the way through to live performance.  A song could be written, played, and sung by anyone on any instrument.  This can be challenging for live performances, as song beaks become Chinese fire drills, wherein everyone dashes to find the instrument needed for the next song.

LAKE is at their best when they work in conjunction to one another, alone they are all amazing musicians, each of have appeared in other music, Baby Island, Skrill Meadow, Solid Home Life, among others, but something happens when they come together to write music.  I often think of their album titles as being perfect representations of what the band stands for, Oh, The Places We’ll Go, Let’s Build a Roof, Giving and Receiving, it’s obvious.  It’s possible to imagine that the emotions I feel when listening to LAKE pales in comparison to the emotions the band feels when they finish writing a song together.

I originally contacted Eli about an interview back in February of 2012, at the time the band was just beginning to work on the first of the two albums recorded last year, and Lindsay was still a member.  By April the band would have moved on to a second recording in Phil Elverum’s Unknown studio, and Lindsay would step away from the band to attend Evergreen State college.  I interviewed Lindsay in the midst of all this transitioning, it was a bittersweet time for everyone it seemed, the first LAKE album not to feature Lindsay would turn out to be improvisational(esque), thrown together in just a matter of days.  Even in a changing landscape LAKE took their collaborative efforts to new heights.

When finally I caught up with Ashley, Eli, and Markly (Andrew couldn’t make the taping) it was mid November and much had changed since my original email.  I’ve come accustomed to taking the trip down I-5 south to interview artists, coincidentally Ashley and Eli’s house was just blocks from where Lindsay and Angelo Spencer live.

It was a surreal experience to be sitting there talking to a band that just a few years earlier I had only envisioned in my head.  What wonderful and delightful people, I interview artists because I’m fascinated to hear what they have to say about music and get a small peek into their artistic process.  I keep interviewing artists because they have all been such welcoming and generous people.  An enormous thanks to everyone for taking the time to sit down with me and talk about themselves, without question, every artists least favorite topic.

As always, what follows is just a slice of what you’ll hear in the full podcast interview.  So take a listen to the podcast here or in itunes.  And don’t forget to “like” us in facebook and subscribe to us in itunes.

4887717_4887717-R3-025-11 

Brian Snider
When I interviewed Lindsay Schief, she was in the process of playing her last few shows with the band, before moving on to attend Evergreen state college.  What has it been like moving on without her?

Markly Morrison
She’s an element that we miss.  It’s a tough void to fill, but it’s forcing us to think more creatively.

Eli Moore
We did an album without her in Anacortes with Paul Benson (Ever Ending Kicks) filling in.  The feeling was different for a multitude of reasons, but it was more experimental, it was very therapeutic to do something and hear it, and still have it sound like LAKE but be different.

Markly
We Kind of Pulled it all out of thin air.  We went into the studio with next to nothing, and largely made it up as we went along.

Ashley Eriksson
It felt really healing to do it at that time, instead of moping.  It was fun.  They [Eli, Andrew, & Markly] would sometimes just record the songs and I would be outside working on lyrics.

Eli
A third of that album is music that we wrote collaboratively, including lyrics.

Brian
You recorded the first LAKE album in Anacortes with Karl Blau, and at this point you’ve worked with him so often that I see him almost as a member of the band.  What about his process keeps you going back to work with him?

Ashley
We really connect with his aesthetic and admire his openness.  He’s really into finding the beauty in first takes.  He tries to keep this raw element and not over-producing, even though that’s our tendency.  It’s nice to have him to balance that out.

Markly
Karl has a really good ear for spontaneity.  I’m always surprised by the things he singles out and wants to focus on.  He’ll come up with ideas for our songs and he’s back there at the controls.  Captain Karl wants us to try something and we’ll go for it, whether it flies or not.

Eli
It’s real faith based, if there’s a mistake he’ll trust that it was supposed to happen, and rather than try and correct it, he’ll try and bring it out.  There’s one song we did where on the very last note, someone played this note that wasn’t in the key of the song.  We were like, “let’s just punch in that note.”  And he was like, “I think that’s supposed to happen.”  So we ended up all punching in, and the song had this outro that’s in this really bizarre key.

Brian
During live shows it’s fun to watch you all shift instruments.  I assume that has to do with how the song was written, and who played what.  Is there a reason you don’t have defined roles?

Ashley
We’re all multi-instrumentalists and we really enjoy playing different things, and get bored playing the same instrument all the time.

Markly
When we’re working on something new, one person will be like, “I hear a keyboard, or I hear a good bass line.”  And that person does it.

Eli
Sometimes someone will write a part on an instrument and then decide to switch.  It’s also skill, some people can play certain things on guitars that others can’t.  Some people can play a certain funkiness on the bass, some songs Andrew’s better on drums…

Ashley
It takes a long time to switch between songs, so it’s not totally idea from an entertainment aspect.  We’re not doing it as a gimmick.  Sometimes it’s frustrating.

Eli
It gives people a chance to look at their iphones.

Brian
After you finished recording Giving and Receiving you found that the tape it was recorded on began to disintegrate.

Eli
We had to save it, so we transferred all the tracks to the computer.  We ended up adding more tracks because we had more available to us.  It led to the album, maybe being over-produced.  We probably never would have transferred it to the computer.  We would have finished it on tape, and it would have been slightly rawer.  The reason I prefer tape has more to do with process.  I think projects go faster, I like the limits of tape, it’s a creative limit.  But with digital the possibilities.  The first album [the album recorded at K with lindsay in 2012] is all on the computer at this point.  It’s the first album we’ve made where we’ve been able to try every idea we’ve thought of. It’s been a cool freedom.

Brian
After you finished Oh, The Places We’ll Go, you were approached by K-Records about releasing it.  What was it like back then to have a storied label like K want to release your music, and then more of your music in the future?

Markly
I was really excited.  When I moved up here that was a goal I had envisioned.  Wouldn’t it be cool, specifically if K wanted to put this stuff out.

Ashley
When I was first making music in Santa Clarita, I had barely any idea of what indie record labels were.  I knew two, K-records and Saddle Creek.  I moved to Olympia not ever thinking that I would end up having music on K-Records.  That was really cool when that happened.

Eli
When I moved to Olympia in 2002, I was a huge K-Records fan, I felt awkward when I saw people associated with the label at the co-op.  It was a very natural progression for them to ask us.  It wasn’t like it came out of nowhere, because we’d been collaborating with Karl, and we played as the backup band for Adrian Orange.  Not to say that we deserved it, or that we knew it would happen.  K is very community oriented, we were a part of the community at that point.  I think Calvin [Johnson] appreciates people who are a part of the community and not just passing through.

Brian
Did you look at the band different after that, that this wouldn’t just be something you do for a few years, that there was a real vision for the future?

Ashley
It’s hard to end a band and start again.  Once you have a name and an identity, it feels so good to have that and keep going.***

4887717_4887717-R2-013-5 

Oh, The Places We’ll Go, Let’s Build a Roof, Giving and Receiving, as well as some special singles and b-sides are available through k-records.  You can download LAKE’s earliest albums through their bandcamp page, at laketheband.bandcamp.com. They’ll be performing live at The Shakedown in Bellingham Feb. 22, The Waldorf Hotel in Vancouver BC on Feb. 23, and the Treefort Music Fest March 24.  And keep a look out for two new albums later in the year.

Back in mid 2011 when I decided I wanted to conduct podcast interviews I did so with LAKE in mind.  In fact I came up with the website after I did a review of Giving and Receiving, it’s safe to say that without LAKE I wouldn’t be doing what I’m doing now.  There’s so much I could thank them for, but what I thank them for the most is the unending inspiration they have given me.  A big thanks to everyone in LAKE, past and present members.  Don’t forget to listen to the full audio podcast of our interview here or in itunes.

 

LAKE: website/facebook/bandcamp

interview with angelo spencer

July 3, 2012 in angelo spencer, interviews

photo by Joseph P. Traina

You could say that my musical re-education in Pacific Northwest artists began with Angelo Spencer.  It was 2009 and k-records, the label releasing the self titled Et Les Hauts Sommets, was beginning to promote its up coming release.  It was around this same time I discovered Karl Blau, LAKE, Old Time Relijun, and so on.  The album was an instrumental affair that blended punk rock with wavy surf guitar and tribal beats.  Later I would come to recognize the finger prints of many k artists on that album, but at the time the Et Les Hauts Sommets and Angelo Spencer were a mystery to me.

In the year that I’ve been interviewing musicians in the PNW one passion ties them all together; a desire to create new sounds working within and around established genre’s.  Angelo is a beautiful personification of this desire.  Perhaps more than any artist I’ve met thus far the word cultural magnet comes to mind, in an extreme display of polarity, music from around the world is attracted to him.  The tribal music of Africa, or as I learned in our interview Bollywood.

Angelo grew up in the French Alps, a landscape which has stuck with him to this day.  Et Les Hauts Sommets (the high summits) is an obvious reference to the Alps.  At age four he discovered Ennio Morricone’s classic soundtrack to The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, an obvious influence for the music he would later create.  Those two loves would blend into a love of music with a natural landscape feel.

While his French background would seem to be the perfect worldly addition to a career in the PNW surrounded by artists with similar goals, he had to overcome some serious insecurities concerning French music.  In France you either listened to music in French or you pushed back and listened to American and British bands singing in English.  The two groups didn’t co-mingle and you had to make a choice.  Angelo chose English, and years later as he approached his appropriately titled World Garage album he accepted the challenge of integrating French into his songs.  A concept he’d been uncomfortable with until that point.

This is what I most admire about Angelo; his willingness to challenge himself to do something new and unique.  Once he feels he’s lived inside that challenge enough to get an understanding for it, he pushes forward to something else that’s been nagging at his cerebral cortex, and he attempts to live inside that.  Name another indie musician willing to utilize the quirky art of auto-tune.  It could have been disastrous, Angelo was willing to leap right in and integrate it seamlessly.

Just listening to him describe his intentions for his next sonic adventure gave me goose bumps.  What would he do next?  In what way would Angelo Spencer expand his sound by doing something that no one else is willing to even attempt.

Roughly a year ago I sat down with my legal pad and generated a list of musicians, artists, authors, comedians, and so forth that I would like to interview.  Angelo was at the top of that list.  As I began to understand, you’ve got to take opportunities when they appear, and it wasn’t until April that I drove down to his house in Olympia to interview him.

Not so coincidentally it was just a week after I’d driven down to interview his girlfriend Lindsay Schief (LAKE, Solid Home Life).  Once again I set up my equipment at their dining room table, while Angelo made some absolutely delicious tea.  Again with the eyes of the Papier-mâché Fox were trained upon us as we had our conversation.  Occasionally the neighbor cat would casually walk in through the front door march around the kitchen like he was supposed to be there and exit out the back.

Angelo could not have been more hospitable and I relished our conversation while the tape was rolling and our lengthy discussion afterwards about recording in Anacortes, favorite lyricists, and my impending trip to Sasquatch.  I’m trying something different this time and instead of releasing the podcast after the interview excerpt, I’m  publishing it first.  Therefore the podcast has been available for sometime now and I highly suggest you give it a listen, there’s so much that you’ll miss if you only read this heavily abridged interview.  You can find the podcast on our website or in itunes.

Brian Snider

You grew up in the French Alps (you’re our first international guest), what was it like to grow up there?

Angelo Spencer

It’s pretty neat, I’ve never really been to the Rocky Mountains, but it’s probably the same as Colorado, I would say.  The same environment.  It’s a lot of small little towns and valleys and mountains.

How do you think that effected you musically?

I like mountains, I can’t imagine myself living in a flat part of the world.  I like the feel of the desert, there’s no trees, just a bunch of rocks like glaciers… not a lot of life.  And I always like music like, landscape music.  Ennio Morricone’s The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, was my first memory of listening to music and being like, “wow, this is good, I like this.”  I was 4 or 5.  I like music that brings you images of desolate landscapes.

What brought you from France to the US and more specifically the Pacific Northwest?

A girl.  We hung out in France and started dating, and we decided to have a kid together.  I was still in France and her parents were going to move from New York to Seattle.  I was like, “well, let’s move with them.”  Previously I did a cross country [trip] from New York to the west coast, and I really liked it there.  I went to Anacortes, Seattle, Bellingham, Olympia, Portland.  I liked it way better than the East coast.

On World Garage you use English, French, and Farsi Lyrics.

I wanted to experiment with French because I was never able to write anything in French before.  I was just too shy to sing in my own language.  Now it feels more natural.  English?  I don’t know why… it was just in English, it just happened that way.

Did you listen to many French bands when you lived in France?

Not so much.  There’s two groups of people, those who listen only to French music, and the other group is only going to listen to American or British music, and those two groups of people don’t mix.  So for the artists it’s a statement to sing in French.  Or you start your own band and sing in English.  I was part of the snobs listening pretty much only to American music.  I grew up in that environment, so to start a band and sing in broken English, your friends don’t understand it anyway, it doesn’t really matter.

I never really considered that there would be a bias or a divide like that.

Only a few bands do the crossover.  Recently this happened to me.  I have this booking agent who asked this venue for a show for me, while on tour, and the venue listened to my new album and was like “oh no, there some songs in French, we don’t want him.”  They just want pure exotic American music.  It’s bizarre.

How do you approach recording your albums?

I brought some ideas, and we just made things up.  There was nothing rehearsed beforehand, it was just on the spot happy accidents and building things.  Some really cool stuff happened, really weird happy accidents that totally made some songs.  There was a plan but nothing official.

You use a fair amount of auto-tuning on World Garage, which surprised me.  It’s not really associated with indie music.

I discovered that people in North Africa have been using it for years, and it mixed so well together.  It has a bad rap now.  All those people in North Africa still use a lot of phaser on guitars, which was popular in the 70’s and 80’s.  I think auto-tune’s going to come back.  When you have a weak voice like me it’s like singing keyboard.  It’s hard to control, so there’s always weird flickering.  There’s always a surprise in there. I don’t know what it does to my brain, but I love it.

What are you working on now?

We started recording a new album in Anacortes last July, but I got so busy.  I was to record an album soon.  With Lindsay [Schief] we were talking about writing some songs together.  I want to do an album with a lot of back and fourth, male and female singing, kind of like Bollywood style.  I want to make a really happy album, I don’t want some whiny singing, I want really full of life singing.**

 

Until Angelo told me so, I had no clue that his albums were essentially the product of improvised recording sessions.  That speaks volumes about how talented a musician he is, as most songs sound well thought out and carefully designed.  It also speaks to the artists that he has surrounded himself with over the years, far too many to list here.  Angelo Spencer is a true gem of the Pacific Northwest and though not a native, he’s just as good as one, we’re lucky to have him right here in our back yard making music.

Angelo is taking a break from performing in order to work on new material and hopefully record a new album.  You can purchase all of Angelo’s music at Krecs.com and you can hear him lend his talents to numerous projects including (but not limited to) Ruby Fray, Arrington De Dionyso, Kimya Dawson.  You can stay up to date on all Angelo’s comings and going’s at angelospencer.com.

And don’t forget to check out the podcast for this interview, either on the website or in itunes.

song of the week: dog problems~ christmas

October 20, 2011 in song of the week

And now for something completely different.

Weeks one through three of our song of the week series have been, well, very similar.  Americana, folk, indie rock at it’s absolute best.  This week I take you along a very different trajectory because just as it’s good to eat a variety of foods, and have a variety of friends, it’s good to listen to a variety of music.  So I present to you Christmas.

Despite a name that makes it nearly impossible to simply google, they are unique by todays standards.  Twenty years ago they would have drown among the hundreds of sound a-likes rising like flood waters in Olympia Washington.  Today I’m hard pressed to think of who else they might sound like.

This is punk rock at its core.  Enough treble to make your ears bleed, off beat drums, and guitar riff’s played by a guy having a seizure. The major difference between Christmas and the hundreds of other female lead’s of yesteryear, lead singer Emily Beanblossom can sing.  These aren’t the screechy or demonic vocals of Bikini Kill, Dickless, or Hole’s first album, these are soft melodic and dare I say, sexy.

Quite honestly her vocals are so beautiful, you almost feel they’re being wasted on a raw punk band like Christmas.  But then again Christmas is a classic punk band without a lot of nonsense and it’s Beanblossom’s vocals that make their music special.

Dog Problems is featured on their first full length album.  To me it’s the polaris on the record, it highlights their punk roots, and Emily’s voice perfectly, and seems to be the direction that all the songs are trying to move even if they don’t quite get there.  First albums are often rough and sometimes unfinished, while that works to Christmas’s favor here, I look forward to seeing how they develop.

One possible direction is heard in a song they recorded at k-records dub narcotic studios, Namiot.  This is a cleaner more polished version then what is heard on their album, and you can find it on itunes, which I highly suggest you do.

Christmas is just was is needed for that special someone who is looking for a newer classic punk band with a vocal twist.

giving and receiving

April 13, 2011 in album reviews, reviews

check this record out you won’t regret it

I haven’t had a new favorite band in quite some time, well really since Nirvana.  So it’s been about eighteen years since there was a band in my life that had me impatiently waiting for their next album release.  It’s been an equally long amount of time since I found a band so enjoyable to listen to an entire album from start to finish in one sitting as a pure singular experience for just enjoying.

LAKE was born (like so many bands on the k-records label) along the I-5 corridor but known mostly as an Olympia band.  Though I would not say that it is glaringly obvious there is no mistaking that their sound is a product of the region.  To date they have four records easily available on Amazon.com and itunes.  Their most recent release Giving and Receiving was released on Tuesday by k-records and was well worth the wait.

I am not a record reviewer and have nothing similar that would even qualify me as such, in writing this post I wanted only to share an incredible band and an incredible record with my fellow internauts.
I don’t know if this is the right term to use but it seems to fit, LAKE is indie pop at its absolute best.  Not intending to turn anyone off if you either love or loathe, but picture them as what the Mamas and the Papas would have sounded like if they were from Olympia.

Giving and Receiving does not quite live up to their first K release Oh, the places we’ll go but it is unquestionably better than anything else I’ve heard in the last eighteen years.  Hip swinging bass lines, simple and soft guitar riffs, subtle brass that fades in and out, foot tapping drum beats, and an omnipresent keyboard that swirls from 80′s electronic synthesizer to an early 70′s jazz organ to piano.  Their lyrics are soft and beautiful, the album is split between male and female voices occasionally both together.

The sounds form less of an urban sound scape than that of something natural, it belongs in the wilderness.  This is probably why they so strongly remind me of my second apartment in Los Angeles, warm summer evenings in Griffith park with my wife and dog.  If I was to create a camping playlist this would be it.

I can’t urge you strongly enough to check them out.  Their easy to find on itunes and amazon there are two spectacular songs available for free download at rcrdlbl.com.  If you find that you love them as much as I do then you may want to see them live, they are currently touring for the release of Giving and Receiving and if you live in the Seattle area they will be performing at the Tractor Tavern in Ballard on May 15th.  I’ll be there for what is sure to be a truly memorable experience.