Posts Tagged ‘Moondog’

11 Questions – Simian Mobile Disco

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Jas and James

Although the origins of Simian Mobile Disco lie in the relatively prosaic rock n’ roll territory of a bust up of indie band Simian at a fish restaurant in Texas, the depth and breadth of James Ford and Jas Shaw’s passion for electronic music is apparent on listening to their diverse but focused catalogue.

Below is a mix James and Jas have given us for our soundcloud page. We hope it’s a good indication of where their “wobbly, psychedelic, atonal techno” will be going this season, both on the Terraza and in the Discoteca. It’s apparent on listening how their sound has developed from “hip-house crunkadelic poonstep” to a love of unadulterated, long-form, four to the floor acidic beats.

SMD will be releasing a series of 12″ singles on their new imprint Delicacies. Each track in the Delicacies series “will take the name of an exotic, and often bizarre, delicacy from around the world.” The first release is Aspic / Nerve Salad a set of driving instrumentals, dark beasts with enough futurism to keep your brain occupied.

You will find Simian Mobile Disco playing an exclusive residency in Ibiza for We Love at Space this summer on the following dates – Sunday 4th July, Sunday 8th August, Sunday 5th September and Sunday 19th September. They bring an infectious brand of hypnotic minimalism meets maximal electronica and their sets are guaranteed show-stoppers from start to finish. So come on down for an act you won’t find anywhere else in Ibiza this summer.

You’ve got something to do while you listen, take a read of SMD answers to our 11 Questions. James and Jas, over to you…

Is there one book that you have read that has been life-changing for you?

James: The first book I really remember having and impact on me was The Twits by Roald Dahl. It was gruesome and funny and really opened up my imagination as a child.

Jas: Über Sinn und Bedutung by Gottlob Frege is one of the most interesting books I’ve read. Not exactly a page turner but it outlines an alternative logic to that set out by Aristotle. The paradigm is not without it’s flaws but it was instrumental in opening up enquiry into the basic logic of language and meaning rather than assuming it to be sound.

Did your parents encourage you to work in music?

James: There was always a lot of music in the house when I was growing up and my parents forced me to learn piano, which I hated but now I’m thankful for. My dad played in a band so there were often instruments around the house that I could learn on. I was playing in a band by the age of ten so my parents had no option but to support me, although they often asked when I was going to get a “proper job”.

Jas: No, quite the reverse. In fact they still ask me when I’m getting a proper job. Slightly annoying but I can’t really blame them, the music industry is irrational and unfair and not something that you would recommend anyone to get involved in. That said, I love making music and never forget what a privilege it is to be paid to do something that you love.

How do you apply your past experiences to what you do today?

James: The good thing about music is that you can never totally figure it out. It’s black magic. Every day you learn something new which you apply the next time you make music but just because something worked once, it doesn’t mean it will work a second time. The more experience of making music in different circumstances, with different people, the better. Every day’s a school day.


How did you begin to work professionally in music?

James: I have played music from a young age and been in many different bands ranging from a 20 piece Sun Ra type outfit to playing in clubs. The first time I earned decent money was probably when I started drumming for 808 State in Manchester, although I was still at college. I suppose I became “professional” when our band Simian got a record deal after college?

Jas: I’ve been making music since I was a kid, playing violin then guitar and keys in bands. At college I got into recording and James and I started building a studio with some friends. The first time I could really have been called music my profession was when Simian got signed but I had been doing music seriously for many years before that.

Where is your current studio and what is it like?

James: The studio where we make SMD tunes is in Hackney. It’s a room basically filled with analogue synths, drum machines and odd sound processing boxes we pick up on the way. Each bit of equipment has a quirk or an interface that alters the musical decisions you make at every level. We have a computer but we try to use it like a tape machine. Most of the sounds are made with real machines and our hands. I think it makes you use a different part of your brain than when pushing a mouse around?

Jas: It’s slowly grown from a dodgy computer and an old mixing desk with a few guitar pedals in a bedroom to a rented room in a rehearsal studio with pro-tools, a vocal booth, tons of synths and some nice bits of outboard and a better mixing desk. Many of the old guitar pedals that we started off with still get a lot of use though and I still think that a bedroom studio is a valuable thing. All the fancy gear in the world is no help if you can’t get at it when you have an idea in the middle of the night.

How much have you had to consider marketing issues since embarking on your career and how has that affected your creativity?

Jas: We don’t worry too much about marketing, I’m still a fan of the idea that good material sells itself.

James:I think any modern musician is aware of marketing to some extent. It’s hard not to be. There is a danger of being too self-aware though. I’ve been in a few situations where trying to second guess peoples expectations is detrimental to the music making process.


How would you describe your work?

James: When we started SMD we were aiming to make “good old fashioned analogue party music”. We have strayed through many genres including electro and pop but at the moment we are aiming to make techno. Wobbly, psychedelic, atonal techno.

Jas: I feel lucky to say that my work involves messing around in studios and then playing the results in some of the best clubs around the world. It really is fantastic and I don’t take it for granted.

Who were your teachers?

Jas: There was a shop in Manchester called Pop records and the guy in there recommended me a new record every week. Some I liked immediately, some it took a while to get my head round. He got me into many great bands, nice second hand vinyl copies as well.

James: Lots of people have inspired me. Some of them I have met, some I haven’t. The ones that come to mind are: Joe Meek, Brian Eno, Phil Spector, Graham Massey, Conny Plank, Rick Rubin, Vangelis, Aphex Twin, Oliver Huntemann, Carl Craig, Moondog, Prince, Raymond Scott, Delia Derbyshire, Sun Ra.

Your home is burgled but fortunately the culprits are caught and your possessions returned to you. What would you deem a suitable punishment for the burglars?

James: It really depends on the situation, what was taken, was any violence used, what were their motivations? To a certain extent, it someone was desperate and trying to feed their families then you wouldn’t want them to be severely punished. I would leave it to a judge and jury. Someone who spends their whole lives trying to administer fair punishment is surely in a better position than me to decide what should happen.

Jas: They’d have to wire my studio back up.

You have to make one species of animal extinct. Excluding insects, which species would that be?

James: Excluding insects makes it difficult, as I would definitely get rid of wasps. I hate wasps. Pointless, spiteful creatures. I’d maybe get rid of rats instead then?

Jas: Let’s go for chickens. A strange choice you might think but lets face it, everything tastes like chicken; we are not going to miss it. Yes, eggs are nice too but other animals lay eggs and they are just as nice.

If you could spend one week in any period of history, which period would you choose?

James: I reckon the week leading up to man landing on the moon would have been pretty exciting. That, mixed with the late sixties cultural explosion and acid would make for a pretty fun week.

Jas: Quite probably a week working at Moog Music in the 60s, tinkering with synths and establishing the logarithmic 1-volt-per-octave pitch control and separate pulse triggering signal.

Many thanks to James and Jas for taking time out of their hectic schedule to answer our 11 Questions, check out below to get an idea of the kind of thought process which goes into every aspect of their work…

Simian Mobile Disco – DJ Profile

Simian Mobile Disco – Official Site

Office Listening – #16

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Mull it over

The ants are on manouevres to their summer home, slowly making their way through the living room and up the stairs of Casa Broadbent sparking an insect based selection from Mark. Sarah clearly having an 80′s moment this week, Julie goes with Gallic folk and modish pop, Andy thanks Bicep for providing the Led Zep re-edit while thinking outsider the box, and Ruairi gets an extra choice because it’s Paddy’s day (and Julie only chose two).

Sarah…

Talking Heads – Once In A Lifetime
Echo & The Bunnymen – The Killing Moon (Up All Night Mix)
Eurythmics – Here Comes The Rain Again

Ruairi…

The Dubliners – Finnegan’s Wake
The Chieftans feat. Ry Cooder – The Sands of Mexico
Thin Lizzy – Warriors
Pat Daly – Old Fenian Gun

Julie…

Black Eyed Peas – Meet Me Halfway (In 3D Mix)
Tete – A la Faveur de l’Automne

Mark…

Tom Caruana – Wu Tang vs. The Beatles – Got Your Money
Dubstep Devils – Beatles Fucked In The Ass
Tom Waits – Army Ants

Andy…

Led Zeppelin -Trampled Underfoot (John Daly Edit)
Babe Ruth – The Mexican
Moondog – Lament I, ‘Bird’s Lament’

Outsider Music – Moondog

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

Machines were mice and men were lions once upon a time; but now that it’s the opposite, it’s twice upon a time. – Moondog

Viking of 6th Avenue

Viking of 6th Avenue


Young Louis Hardin b.1916 (later to call himself Moondog) started playing home-made cardboard drums at the age of five, during his childhood he was exposed to the Native American instruments and rhythms that would shape his music. At one point Hardin’s father took him to a Native American Sun Dance where he sat on the lap of Chief Yellow Calf and played a tomtom drum made form buffalo skin. He also played drums in highschool before losing his sight in a farm accident involving gunpowder, aged 16. Principally self-taught, he learned the skills of ear training and composition. In 1943 he moved from his native mid-west to New York where he met classical luminaries such as Leonard Bernstein and Toscanini aswell as legendary jazz performers like Charlie Parker and Benny Goodman, who would influence Hardin’s work.
Howl at the moondog

Howl at the moondog


In 1947 Hardin adopted the name “Moondog” in honour of a dog “who used to howl at the moon more than any other dog I knew of.” He developed and embraced a worldview that embraced Norse mythology and Viking culture as the pinnacle of human civilisation. From the late 40s until 1974 Moondog lived as a street musician and poet, busking in Manhattan. Because of his proximity to the nightclub strip of 52nd street, he was well known to many jazz musicians and fans. In 1949 he traveled to a Native American gathering at the Blackfoot Sun Dance in Idaho, where he performed percussion and flute, returning to the Native American music he first came into contact with as a child. It was this Native music along with contemporary classical and jazz mixed with ambient sounds of his environment (traffic, ocean waves, babies crying) that created the foundation for Moondog’s music. In a search for new sounds, Moondog also invented several musical instruments, including a small triangular-shaped harp known as the “Oo”, another which he named the “Ooo-ya-tsu”, and (perhaps his most well-known) the “Trimba”, a triangular percussion instrument that the composer invented in the late 40s. His many hours on the street were his way of connecting with the sounds, voices and rhythms of the city. Taking inspiration from these street sounds, Moondog’s music tended to be relatively simple but characterised by what he called “snaketime … a slithery rhythm, in times that are not ordinary … I’m not gonna die in 4/4 time.”

Working in braille and often composing under his cloak and Viking costume (which included a horned helmet) he was prolific and eclectic, writing in an impressively wide range of styles: percussion-driven exotica, avant-garde jazz, folkish madrigals, neo-Baroque rounds and canons for both chamber and symphony orchestras. His layered minimalism went on to influence young collaborators Steve Reich and Philip Glass. In 1989 Glass invited Moondog to conduct the Brooklyn Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra, stimulating a renewed interest in his music. Acceptance as a recognised modern classical composer has always eluded him. The ancient and ancestral streak symbolised by his Viking helmet and garb can be heard in his music which was melodic and tuneful in an age where atonality in classical music often ruled.

In 1974 Moondog was invited to give two concerts in Frankfurt and visited Germany for the first time. He felt comfortable in the land of his music ancestors and despite having little money and knowing no German, he decided to stay until his death in 1999. He was, to the very end of his life, vital, active and creative. It is hard to define musical genius. Is it the quality of their music? Their role in history? Or simply hindsight? In this case it is a combination of Moondog’s unique story, unique mode of composition and unique way of looking at the world. It seems sad that it has taken the world this long to begin appreciating this sensitive musician. His music has recently appeared on Henrik Schwarz DJ-Kicks series and Ame, Dixon and Henrik Schwarz recent Grandfather Paradox album, both of which are highly recommended in their own right. You can download Moondog’s seminal self-titled album here.

Despite his handicap and under difficult circumstances, Moondog stubbornly struggled as a free artist, committed to his own ideas of life and music, regardless and yet as a consequence of the world around him. He was a true artist who wrote a most beautiful and peculiar music that still amazes listeners all over the world to this day. If nothing else who should be exalted for providing a tangible link between the somewhat genteel world of contemporary classical music and those on the margins of society. Moondog, we salute you.

Moondog – Discogs

Moondog’s Official Publisher