SAGE FRANCIS BEN WATT IBIBIO SOUND MACHINE SUUNS IAN
Transcription
SAGE FRANCIS BEN WATT IBIBIO SOUND MACHINE SUUNS IAN
VU-zine No. 2 SAGE FRANCIS BEN WATT IBIBIO SOUND MACHINE SUUNS IAN STEVENSON KIASMOS TONY ALLEN WOOZY DELS PETALS HAVE FALLEN ★ ★ ★ ★ – The Times “Album of the Month, 4/5" – Mojo “9/10” – Clash Magazine ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ – Metro ★ ★ ★ ★ – Timeout London “Back, ten times stronger” – The Fader Contents & Credits 2 Ian Stevenson In Four Shots 4 Sage Francis Staying Sharp at 40 6 Ibibio Sound Machine Birth of Ibibio 8 VULX Tracking the Portuguese tongue 10 Ben Watt Everything but the second album 12 VU Live A few photos from our world 14 Di Mainstone Human Harp Playing suspension bridges 16 Woozy Walls The greek graff scene vs Shoreditch 18 Kiasmos Colliding classical with electro 20 Suuns Interview and Interference 22 Tony Allen Moving on with Afrobeat 24 VU Listings Who’s coming to play THE NEW ALBUM OUT NOW (LP/CD/DL) With production by Kwes., Bonobo, Blue May & Micachu Guest appearances by Rosie Lowe, Kerry Leatham & Tirzah 26 Kate Tempest After the media storm settles Editor: Dan Davies Design & Cover illustration: Kieren Gallear Contributors: Ava Szajna-Hopgood, Woozy, Leo Almeida, Juliet Spare Photographers: Abi Dainton, Zoe Klinck, Ross Brewer, Carla Cuomo, Rich Hendry, Pablo Rivera, Jaroslav Moravec, Jessica Arneback, Marcus Peel, Daddy’s Got Sweets, Djim The VU Massive: Auro Foxcroft, Josh Greene, Dermot Hurley, Jorge Nieto, Kath Khan, Jack Foxcroft, Ty Vigrass, Lewis Howell, Radek Kieczka, Dominique Activille, Declan Cosgrove, Ania Buesdorff, Mariana Duarte Silva, Jowan Sebastian, Biba (cover star), Glenn Max, Laura Killeen, Alda Petersone, Adam Peters, Theo Dominian, Gregory Timbers, Keelan Warr, Joey Jenkins, Jozef Garcala, Amelie Snyers Promoters: Bird on the Wire, C2C, One Inch Badge, Erased Tapes, Serious, Black Atlantic, The Hydra, Fuse, All Tomorrow’s Parties, Rinse FM, NTS, Earnest Endeavours, Soundcrash, SJM, Mixmag, Mixcloud, Comono No, DHP, Metropolis, Bugged Out, Two for the Road, Eat Your Own Ears, Communion, Magic and Medicine, City of London Sinfonia, Black Butter Records, Resident Advisor, Rockfeedback, TrouwAmsterdam, Erased Tapes, Bird On The Wire, KiliLive, Magic and Medicine, Parallel Lines, Group, Secret Sundaze Press Support: Shaun Bronstein, Will Lawrence, Fanny at Kartel Kreative, Kate Warren, James Heather villageunderground.co.uk vulisboa.com vuevents.co.uk vuzine.villageunderground.co.uk 2 IAN STEVENSON In Four Shots ‘Timothy is a pervert’ (above): People say my art is childish or naive but I like to look for a double meaning. Look at Timothy all innocent without the writing. Then you look at him with the sign, he’s suddenly quite sinister. Look at him, trying to appeal to kids. Pervert. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED’ (above): This is from an exhibition called Satisfaction Guaranteed about subverting words you see all the time by putting them in a different context. There’s one I want to do which says “Buy Now, Pay Later”. To me that seems really dark. ‘HAPPY HOUSE: now open’ (below) This is something I’ve been doing quite a lot lately. I like to go out with just two colours (keep it cheap) and paint things. I kept going past this place on the bus and kept thinking it looked like a face. So I walked back and painted a simple line and there it is. A face. ‘Revolution is now’ (below): I wanted to be involved with Russell Brand - he seemed like a good guy, his morals are in the right place. And when I read the book he did seem to be promoting change. Humour always gets in there, even though I try to be serious, I can’t. ianstevenson.co.uk 4 SAGE FRANCIS Staying Sharp at 40 SF: Haven’t you heard? I’m a wet, wet boy in a dry, dry state. No, I don’t think I’m particularly slick. But as far as email interviews go, I feel like this would be any writer’s preference. This is how we communicate best. When I’m pushed into giving answers on the spot I feel forced to fake my way through an explanation or answer. This is the kind of shit some people get off on. It’s not for me. DD: The new album, Copper Gone, remains pretty passionate – why are you still raging? SF: I still care about the operations of this world and creating inspirational works. It still excites me to get in front of a crowd of people and have the ability to entertain them. Despite all my rage, I’m still just a fat guy named Sage. DD: Do you think that your work is worth SF: Apparently, yes. But not really. My work is art. It’s what the art represents that is So it breaks down like this... Ahead of his London show at VU we were offered an interview with Sage but by the time the clearance was given he was up late and trying to get some sleep before on his European tour. He offered to do the interview so Dan Davies sent through questions which we hoped he might not have been asked before or that might provoke answers that he hasn’t answered in his music. Good to his word, the answers were returned. DD: I know you have had trouble with sleep in the past. Is it still bad and do you have a way of making this easier on a world tour? SF: I can’t remember the last time I had a predictable sleeping pattern, but touring kind of forces the schedule. We’ll see how it works out with the international touring. So far, so not good! DD: I liked what you said about e-mail interviews, that they’re only dry when you’re dealing with a dry person – what keeps you slick? DD: You’ve mentioned different selves that you represent in rhyme – who are we speaking to now and what does he think of your other selves? Will you ever be done with hip-hop? SF: You are speaking to the puppeteer of my other selves. He will never be done with hip-hop. It’s too ingrained in his DNA. However, some of the puppets he presides over are done with hip-hop forever. He, the puppeteer, is happy about that. DD: Will hip-hop ever be done with you? SF: Hip-hop probably wanted nothing to do deal with me. DD: I liked your press conference video, how often do these lame questions get asked from you? SF: The press conference video was incredibly cathartic to create. I got to express a lot of things artists say behind the scenes on a regular basis, but you can’t just come right out and say it without looking like an unappreciative asshole. I’m glad we those questions that typically get asked are ridiculous in nature. DD: Is thoughtlessness the most annoying character trait? SF: I believe that inconsideration is the most annoying character trait. I suppose it’s more about carelessness than it is about thoughtlessness. DD: Hollywood stars have an incredible capacity to trot out the same information have you ever been able to master this ‘art’? SF: I mean no disrespect with this answer as you have been a particularly interesting interviewer, but a lot of interviewers trot out the same kind of questions about an artist and their work. The burden is then put onto the interviewee to make it seem fresh for whoever reads the interview. I don’t know if I’ve mastered this art but I probably do it better than most. The honest Sage Francis landed at Village Underground on 21st October, for the full version of this interview please head to http://bit.ly/VZSage. 6 IBIBIO SOUND MACHINE trouble maker and she didn’t like the idea of us watching half naked girls gallivanting about the stage. It wasn’t until I got much older that I actually started listening to his Making human music music and appreciated what he was talking about. Even though he was quite political, there was a lot of truth in his music. He was saying a lot of things that made sense. You can Afrobeat though. You can hear Talking Heads The Cracked Backed Tortoise “The studio was obviously the birthing of the project and taking it on the road is like It was in the studio, recording with her friends bringing it forth to the audience,” says Eno “So Max Grunard, Leon Brichard and Benji Bouton you’ve conceived it, then you’re breathing life that Eno Williams started telling the tale of into it by performing on stage.” Western electronic music with African music.” the Cracked Backed Tortoise. Although Eno World of music and dance was born in London, this ancient African story was told to her when she was growing up in gig below. She talks quickly, bursting with Nigeria. Different versions of this myth exists in other parts of Africa and even amongst some native American tribes. The Ibibio version is a bawdy retelling that involves a the way her project has been received. WOMAD festival and I was surprised how varied her dedicated audience was. Playing Not an obvious child the red tent it was a world away from the leafy arboretum. I wonder what she thinks about cunning tortoise who receives a beating after he cheats a king out of all of his money. “It’s was great to have a receptive audience being considered ‘world music’. because everyone in the band loves the music The South Eastern Nigerian language is and is passionate about it too. The music is “I would say it’s like human music… I’ve been naturally lyrical and as Eno unravelled the about celebrating and bringing to life – the really taken by the way the audience takes tale, she slipped into her mother tongue and Afro music and fusion of electronic sound to the music. Sometimes I teach them a few sang parts to add extra comedy emphasis. all mixed together. It was a case of creating lines and they sing along. It just goes to show Her friends who are from different countries something new and unique. That’s what you how universal music is as long as the spiritual and couldn’t understand the phrases, but see in the live show.” content is good and people can vibe with it, through Eno. In a twinkle of an eye Ibibio Eno has been in the studio all day and is still Sound Machine was born. impeccably dressed, climbing up VU’s narrow over the top, of course not go crazy but give it spiral staircase to the tube carriages in a pair a bit of a visual oomph if I may say so.” people just want to celebrate…and dance.” Bringing up baby of stunning stilettos. Her black and white Ibibio Sound Machine quickly grew in size, VUzine. On stage her clothing and physical Beyond Fela taking extra brass and percussion from Tony would be too easy to compare her to Fela Kuti. Hayden, Scott Baylis and Anselmo Netto. It was also able to run before it walked thanks “I’ve seen lots of shows, musicals and concerts to the wisdom and wicked guitar licks of and one thing that always takes me back is the “Both my parents loved Fela when we were legendary Highlife guitarist Alfred Bannerman. visual,” says Eno “What you see apart from just growing up but we as children weren’t But it was through touring that ISM really the music. There’s so much more to putting on allowed to listen to him. My mum in particular found its feet. a show. I thought it would be nice to go a little thought he was quite controversial and a Ibibio Sound Machine play Village Underground on 27th November. Tickets are £13.50. For our video interview and full article visit: http://bit.ly/VZibibio 8 Pass Me The Lusophone Taking poetic license with Portguese speaking hip-hop up by the spread of my native language across from a shared language was a link that brought us the globe and I believed that the world needed to together across continents. We had fun pointing hear the message. out how the language had been translated with different accents and differing dialects changing In 2006, I started a TV show which featured the meaning when spoken, even if they look the live music performances by other lusophonic same written down. acts. Vinicius Terra wrote “Programa Na Rua”, the music for the opening credits of the show. Together we planned some interviews with Terra walked with us in Chelas, on the streets where as the interviewer. Musical link-ups were made using his own tracks accompanied by other hard. Then, we met José Mariño, an important talented lusophones on the rap scene. journalist who promoted Lisbon rap in its mother tongue. Other names like General D, Dama I quit my job as an AV director this year to pursue Bete, Eva Rap Diva, Dealema, BPM, DJ Alfaiate, this project full time. Strapped for cash we had Mundo Segundo, Maze, and Expião shaped the to think about how we could further spread documentary in a way I never imagined. I threw the word with a tiny budget. My plans to live my script away and started to live the spoken in Canada and study 3D Visual Effects quickly history. Now I talk to them not as a director, but morphed into three airplane tickets to Lisboa. as a friend and listener. When we landed in Portugal my documentary “Versos que Atravessam” came out of the Off the back of this documentary we’ve formed shadows and into the light. and Portugal Mixed). This October we travelled We suddenly received the help from creative through Portugal playing in cities across the people on the ground. When Daniel Medeiros, country. Today, we’re beginning to think that the Art Director and rap fan said to me “I’m in”, we handful of dates that BPM performed weren’t became more powerful than ever. Raphael Peres enough. We’ve discovered a new underground came to the crew as First Assistant, and Frederick history, we’ve found a global community of Portuguese rappers and now we have a bigger camera in his hand luggage and photographer Only a few months after Village Underground the spotlight whilst a DJ laid down beats. Not the Lisbon opened its gates, it has already attracted most game changing set up, admittedly but there a range of national and international creative “cenarium” to research. numbers on his smartphone. The link between Brazil and Portugal is only one Even though we were penniless we shared a line in the Portuguese and rap diaspora. Next businesses. Like its London sister, this has made was more than just a guy with a microphone. passion to do the best job possible on a project we’re going to look for connections in Africa and the venue an inspiring place to work and play. He was potentially a man who could front a we loved, which was priceless. Asia. But for now, we’re heading back to Brazil with a lot of unpublished material from Portugal’s movement. In the next decade we become real hip-hop scene with a history to tell. A history that Underground’s cultural fertility is Sensemedia to represent his rap. But this story is bigger than and Gustavo from Village Underground. They begins with two friends talking of a bigger dream, which needed a Lisbon base to put together a the two of us. loved the idea of a lusophony documentary that is now a reality. documentary on the burgeoning Portuguese and when we needed a location to shoot our speaking (“Lusophone”) hip-hop scene pioneered We came up with the idea of communicating the interviews and performances, it was natural to by Brazillian rap ambassador Vinicius Terra. lusophone rap over a beer - but this was an idea shoot it at VU Lisboa. It became the spiritual Director Leo Almeida explains how his mutual that came from the classroom. Vinicius Terra’s home of the project. This was our spot. This synchronicity of life provided us with the best a movement. how urban environment was shaping the speech contacts in town. And for one crazy insatiable and verse of rappers in Brazil. I was fascinated month, Daniel’s artistic vision led us further into I met Vinicius Terra at Madureira, a Brazilian and I believed it wasn’t just happening in Brazil some very cool places and unique situations. neighbourhood, in 2004. He was a lone MC on but in every urbanized Portuguese speaking Portugal fed off the Brazilian’s hip-hop artists’ stage, rolling out smart Portuguese rap behind happiness - and the idiosyncrasies and in-jokes “Porquê sempre e adiante do princípio é o verbo”. For more information about co-working in Lisbon please visit vulisboa.com 10 BEN WATT 30 Year Revolution In what way does the new album echo where you were at the beginning 30 years ago? vintage Solina all over the album. Often it is The interface of folk and Brazilian and rock still fascinates me. I grew up discovering artists like Joao Gilberto, John Martyn, Nick Drake, Neil Young and they still leave a big imprint on me now. My dad (a big band arranger and jazz composer) was always playing jazz in the house. I also listened to mid 70s Eno stuff like Before and After Science and Another Green World, I loved the ambient textures, the buzzing polysynths. We used that as background texture on Hendra. Solo albums can be singular pursuits but this album has some great contributions. How important to you is collaboration with good musicians? As you’ve completed your 20 year musical orbit around electronic music what is your relationship with it now? In 1983 Ben Watt released his debut album North Marine Drive on indie label Cherry Red. Then he met Tracey Thorn and they formed folk-infused venture Everything But The Girl. In the early nineties the band collaborated with Massive Attack and 1996’s Walking Wounded melded with future-facing collaborators Howie B and Spring Heel Jack. This diversion won Watt a nomination for producer of the year at Q Awards and started a loop into dance music. Thirty years later he’s seemingly got round to recording his second solo album. diverted for 30 years? The album had been in the back of my mind on and off for years. I had an emerging career aged nineteen back in the early eighties where I had recorded with folk mavericks like Kevin Coyne and Robert Wyatt in spite of my relative youth. Then I met Tracey and took a fork in the road. I thought it would be for three months. It took 20 years. But someday I knew I would return to a solo record of some sort. In the end I wrote it out of a kind of compulsion because of certain triggers in my life, and I just tried relaxed, with good stories to tell. buzzing around the edges. I turn to people when I need them. I knew I was writing in a very loose impressionistic – and at times melancholy – way on the record, and yet the lyrics were quite heavy, so I decided I needed a counterpoint in the music, a darker voice, some grit. So I turned to Bernard Butler. He brings the edge, the distortion, the foil. The plateau of creativity you’ve said you I was completely absorbed by it for a long time. But somehow I hit a plateau a couple of years ago. Things seemed to be either running out of control with EDM, or returning to where I was at the beginning of my DJing with people asking me to play all my early Lazy Dog deep house records again, and it felt like a turning point. I hit the pause button, and realised what I really wanted to do was write again – words, songs. Another beginning perhaps, perhaps even an older one, but it felt like a fresh one. day or moment when you felt you had to return to writing and performing live? For Hendra did you work from your home studio or did songs come to you when you were elsewhere with a guitar? Always. Everything you ever do is done to make up for perceived mistakes in the past. I wrote everything for that record on one guitar or at the piano. I did basic old school demos. Tried to make sure they worked as Is there any electronic residue left behind? Yes, me and Ewan (Pearson) spent a long time on the background electronic textures on the record. The opening of the album actually starts with a heavy ARP chord, but we also used found sounds, old polysynths, It creeps up on you. The late nights, the travelling, the disappointing DJ gigs – you start to resent them, rather than brush them aside. In the end I felt my own self-expression change. business? If you could live any year of the last 31 again, which one would it be? None. The next one is always the best. The Ben Watt Trio perform at Village Underground on 10th November. For the full interview please visit: http://bit.ly/VZbenwatt Ben Klock, New Year Rock Festival, Imaginarium, R-Robot, Blondie Ben Frost, Secret Cinema, Blood Orange, Snakehips, Crowd for Zoé Credits: Daddy’s Got Sweets, Zoe Klinck,, Dan Davies, Marcus Peel, Rich Hendry Carla Cuomo, TMS, Abi Dainton, Ross Brewer, Pablo Rivera 14 DI MAINSTONE Bowing The Bridges When I lived in New York I found myself intervention outdoors, and in unexpected visiting the Brooklyn Bridge on a daily basis places. It made me think that I can’t wait and I was inspired by all the different sounds to take the new version of this contraption I could hear - the sounds of footsteps on outside. To test it on a bridge or attach it the walkway, chatter as people walked by, to the nearest tower block, and see what unexpected things happen. down below. I wondered if there was a way to create an instrument that would allow all of these sounds to be harvested, captured, and remixed. I then wondered if all of these journey sounds were travelling through the cables of the bridge, and if there was a way to create an instrument that would actually bow the bridge and release all of these sounds. Living in New York I felt like a very small person in a very big place. Creating the Human Harp seems like quite a big symbol of my visit there. A small person like me managing to strum or pluck the Brooklyn Bridge, seemed quite magical. I’m fascinated by that - the string connecting from the human body to something that’s giant and almost overpowering. Yet, somehow you’re controlling it and you’re making music out of we were right at the beginning of our journey, it. and all that we really solved was the answer of how to make a piece of retractable string My project at the Roundhouse in August make music, but we hadn’t really worked has massively accelerated my research and out how to unearth the sound of the cables development. It’s enabled ten of us to be yet. What we’ve managed to do this year is together, in the space, and talk and solve do a lot of experiments with that and I hope problems that if we weren’t together and that with the performance at Clifton. We’ll be able to play as a group, could take months truly playing the bridge like a harp, and we’ll Staring up from the street below at Village Mary University of London, and has spent the ordinarily. On top of that, it’s allowing be unleashing those hidden sounds that are Underground’s tube trains, it often looks last few years working with scientists and members of the public to swing by, pass running through the cable, pitching them up as if the carriages hover in the Shoreditch musicians to create new musical instruments through, and test and give us feedback, and to audible levels and releasing them to the skyline, forming a small collective in the EC2 that use body movement to trigger sound. for us to observe them in a non-contrived way. people of Bristol and all those who visit on troposphere. For a handful of artists, this is a After a month spent at the Roundhouse If we were to do it ourselves we know how the that day. slice of the city to own, because it’s a rare day developing her Human Harp, we wanted to device works, so to see someone cold test it is when London doesn’t feel overpowering. hear from the movician about the aspects very useful. of city life that have inspired her to create Capturing a part of the city, bringing it to heel her body-centric sonic sculptures, and how Seeing the Human Harp set up in a theatrical and training it, is precisely what appeals to this will inform her upcoming work at Clifton space was wonderful, and something we’ll Di Mainstone. Based at Village Underground, Suspension Bridge in March 2015 for its 150th always remember but it also made me Di is also an artist in residence at Queen anniversary. realise that this instrument is built for sound For the full scrolling story including an incredible video please visit: http://bit.ly/VZharp WOOZY 16 Makari na litourgousan oi krtakoi organismoi Before the mural, I’ve already spent many kai na ginotan kati xoris na iparxei mesa I miza kai I kataxrisi xrimaton. perfectly. Similar to Picasso’s desire to work on a big white canvas, what counts to me is the The Greek Graff Scene vs Shoreditch When I began to paint in the 90s, things were size of the wall. You get a greater interaction entirely different. Living in Athens at the time with the audience and a greater freedom to was like living in the 70s in New York. Some be creative, small art works generally limit me. of us were lucky and we had international contacts and commuted to places like France and learned how this street art culture worked abroad. We returned to Greece with new knowledge about fresh talent and new ideas. I wanted to do something for the country that I loved. Because I was young, all my energy was spent organising this new wave of artistic expression in Greece. Carpe Diem developed as a platform of communication between European magazines and the network of cultural industry contacts. I became the “go It was really hard to learn and to organise orthodox society that didn’t want things to change. They saw us as aliens! The years passed and I fell more in love with street art and that’s when I started making the magazine with the support of some friends. I love futurist landscapes, mythology, geometry, and politics. My direction and changeable British weather, determined inspire new creativity. I believe that there is a seriously, and not see those artists as young perspective give an open space to one kind greater need for society to express itself. children who are just doing it for a reaction. of freedom. This is what I want to believe So I started an NGO that spun off the big and this is what I try to leave behind: a loud feeling. off the Holywell Lane wall by the In the big capitalist economies like New York event ‘Chromopolis’, as part of the culture “Power of Girl”. But the ever resilient Woozy or London where everything works with Olympiad for the 2004 Olympic games. I (real name Vaggelis Hoursoglou) stayed immense civilized order, people try to make invited my friends Os Gemeos and other big in Shoreditch and left his mark on other walls things look pretty and beautiful. This situation names to help with the promo and since then, before heading home. We’ve given him has its negatives and positives; I’m not saying I believe Greek culture started becoming more more space to speak out. the art is sterile or boring, but as an artist there isn’t anything to kick against. It’s not by chance The chaotic order in Greece is productive the big event Documenta will be taking place exists a fresh appetite and willingness without and tiring, if you aren’t used to swimming in in Athens for 2015. Meaningful art comes from sponsors, events, or other hype clouding the the deep end, you might drown. In a country a place of struggle and cannot simply arise art. Creating work for the public keeps me where there is crisis, the underground from where places are stable and set. Pictures by Marcus Peel For the full Woozy rant please visit: http://bit.ly/VZwoozy 18 KIASMOS At The Apex those trips we found this common interest for who are in similar places as you and having electronic music which, at least, I hadn’t really similar ideas - just talking to them. Me and explored before. We were just both interested Nils [Frahm] became best friends eventually - and wanted to start experimenting.” and every time we see each other we inspire each other so much and we get so many more Filled with energy of a new musical ideas we wouldn’t have without each other – relationship, early material focused on a so this is a label with very useful friendships.” shared love for minimal techno, but when it came to putting the debut album together, their music became more considered. On the phone from the Faroe Islands Janus considers the current body of work. “I didn’t know it was going to be this ambient, but I guess that was nice, it’s kind of new for me – I’ve always made dance music but in a way we’re meeting in the middle.” Also on the conference call, Ólafur agrees: “This is more clubby than I usually do but more ambient than Janus usually does.” The concept of meeting in the middle is at the core of what Kiasmos achieves. Named after a mis-spelling of Chiasmus, a literary technique whereby two clauses are related to each other by reversing them in order to make a larger idea (“Ask not what your country can do for When an island such as Iceland is shaped so plate is techno musician and vocalist Janus you, ask what you can do for your country”), Taking a project out of the secure environment Kiasmos revels in the uncertainty of turning of a studio and trying to replicate it for a something on its head and taking it out of its live show brings another dimension to the comfort zone. performance. Ólafur explains that they easy for stereotypes to take hold, especially Rasmussen, one quarter of Icelandic band when there isn’t a huge amount of people Bloodgroup who are specialists in catchy The overall sound Ólafur and Janus produce and ensconce the audience in what Kiasmos to defy them. But despite the country’s dance music earning them early comparisons is one enriched with both experience and achieves: “A live show should be a moment impeccable cultural heritage, there’s a new to The Knife. With a new date announced on uncertainty and the very idea of playing that you experience, and it only happens wave of artists not content on relying on the 29th November for Superstition, we spoke to outside familiar territory. But instead of there, and it doesn’t happen again in the same drawing inspiration from the environment way. And what we want to do with the live eponymous album, made after setting aside around them, it was the band’s work with show is reinforce that- to help people get lost 2014 for collaboration in Reykjavík. Erased Tapes that continued to encourage in that moment. And forget about everything experimentation: “It’s offered me this else.” their nation’s musical output. Cue Kiasmos, two musicians seemingly decided to stick to the vibe of the album, standing on different tectonic plates. On “We met through music,” Ólafur says, “I was opportunity to grow as an artist”, says one side is Ólafur Arnalds – a BAFTA-winning working as a sound technician back in the day, Ólafur of the London-based label. “It invites multi-instrumentalist, composer and and Janus’s band, Bloodgroup, was playing collaboration - and it doesn’t have to be a producer, whose work comprises post- at a venue I worked at, and I ended up going serious musical collaboration, but just talking classical strings and piano nudged gently on tour with them as their live engineer. On about ideas. You know, having these friends Kiasmos will headline a special Superstition show in collaboration with Last.fm and Erased Tapes on 29th November 2014. For this full interview, please visit http://bit.ly/VZkiasmos 20 SUUNS “Feels like a crazy slap in the face.” D: Last time you played here was two years that had its challenges as well - a lot of songs ago and you were on our smaller stage setup were not tested live, so we were just sort of underneath the arches. This year you’ll be in working on them in the studio and we had no the main space, a move which you must see idea if they would really do well live before happening a lot for the second album run of we started recording them. I hope it’s not a tours and gigging. Do you think playing to case where each record will be the magnetic larger audiences affects the atmosphere on opposite of the previous ones - but I don’t stage? think so. J: Yes I do remember that gig - and I think in general we are just a different band, so I think it will be a different show than it was almost two years ago. D: Is there a danger as you become more popular that you lose that intimacy and response from a small audience? Do you think there’s a risk that something gets lost when you scale up? D: You’ve named your album after the Images Du Futur exhibitions in Montreal, and you’ve reason to claim it’s not as intimate - which is all lived there for at least ten years - do you totally understandable - but I guess naturally think the album in a way celebrates that it would happen if you were playing a bigger legacy of Montreal? especially good to musicians. It’s cheap to live you feel you’ve learnt from that and how did it here, everything is very close and compact - I affect your approach to Images Du Futur? Let’s set the scene: It’s four in the afternoon in London, eleven in the morning in Montreal. Dan is sat in a recycled Jubilee line tube train on top of Village Underground in Shoreditch, amid the sounds of computer keys and answering every other member of our band. Everything grinds by as car horns congregate, children we do is in some way an homage to this place goad for attention and the phone buttons are accidentally pressed, the signal drops, we were completely independent, and we - this band would not have started. It means echoes and distorts. These bursts disrupt the conversation like Suuns music: the drone The downside to that was we didn’t have we’ve been able to put a lot of work into the and hum of technology and modern living much money or that much time to do it. We band because we don’t need to put a lot of with surprising sounds taking them in new had been playing those songs for the better work into surviving. It frees us up to be really part of two years, and we kind of rushed in, devoted to do what we want to do, which is played most of them live and then did a few priceless, really. 3,243 miles away, Joe Yarmush, guitarist, bassist and founding member of Suuns, overdubs. from Montreal’s Breakglass Studios, where their second album, Images Du Futur, came into being. Throughout the interview, life is condensed across the Atlantic and returned to Shoreditch Images was really songs that were written in September with a new album for a new in a short period of time in early 2012, and stage - an eigen pun that serves to highlight sound and cohesion-wise, the songs are a lot just how much has evolved for a band better, in the respect that it sounds more like previously named after nothing. an album that came from a certain period. But For the full Suuns interview and interfering audio please go here: http://bit.ly/VZsuuns 22 TONY ALLEN The Afrobeat Goes On Erykah Badu, Fatoumata Diawara and many them because they don’t have the correct others as part of Africa Express. papers. It’s like playing the Lottery. I’m His approach to collaboration has always been every time.” open and accepting and this remains the same “I’m not like Fela who writes compositions with music direct,” says Allen “I’m composing with my drumset. I’m not going to assume that I can write for instruments that I never played with before. After the drums are there like the bass, guitars horns and keyboards.” Allen is keen to encourage the best from settled in Paris in the early 1980s. musicians that he works with on his own Nefretiti, Kuku and Damon Albarn all setting the tone for the music. Allen talks about the song he created with his The Good, The Bad and The Queen collaborator. “I would never dictate anything to him, because when I’ve invited Damon, I want Damon, you know? As long as he doesn’t settled in Paris in the early 1980s. dictate to me what he wants when he’s invited Tony Allen started making music with It comes as no surprise that his new solo Fela Anikulapo-Kuti in the late 1960s and album Film of Life isn’t a perfectly preserved me. I know he will give me back something. “I think Paris is happening for music. I also I don’t need to tell him what to do. It’s like chose France because here I can walk, legally. telepathy he can read me and I read him too.” I want to be able to walk freely across the world. In England I was stuck, they wouldn’t retrospective but a future-gazing album of Certain tracks on the album also have a new material. It has the similar hypnotising political message to his African brothers and polyrhythms but doesn’t sound stuck in an era sisters, no more so than Boat Journey, which or musical style. warns against the dangers of migration. This doesn’t mean that his work is without “The song is about leaving your country continues to break the form rather than get teeth, his laconic vocal delivery often conveys because you have a bad situation but you can stuck in a loop. a strong message. The opening track Moving often face persecution elsewhere. Like me, I Nevertheless, Village Underground has On lays down the musical manifesto of what left Nigeria to come to Europe to change my tempted him across the Channel in November. at one point he calls “Afrobeat Espresso” situation because it was crazy back there. But This is the perfect chance to catch a man who and at another point he calls “Afrobeat I never lost my life. Even if the boat doesn’t refuses to stand still. Express”. This is perhaps a reference to the capsize, they can face detention and if they’re supercharged Rocket Juice & The Moon lucky and they enter the country they don’t continued to be the rhythm powerhouse of Afrika 70 during the self proclaimed “Black “The approach is Afrobeat” says Allen, “it can applied to my whole life. It’s the ups and keep moving on.” And if I did make music there there’s always back every time to catch you if you were as Art Blakey with African Highlife to create the backbone for Afrobeat. But Afrobeat give you the right papers. For me it meant collaboration with Damon Albarn, Flea, performing.” Tony Allen comes to town on 20th November. Please head to http://bit.ly/VZallen Jungle by Night, Crowd for Zoé, Sohn, Trouw Takeover, Stuart Lee Kwabs, Crowd for Claude Von Stroke, Slow Club, Years and Years, Discreet Credits: Abi Dainton, Zoe Klinck,, Dan Davies, Marcus Peel, Daddy’s Got Sweets Abi Dainton, Ross Brewer, Marcus Peel Coming Up Coming Up 2014 / 2015 2014 / 2015 6.11.14 Roni Size Reprazent - Sold out! 28.11.14 Trouw: Makam, Sandrien, Patrice Baumel And Job Jobse 10.11.14 Ben Watt Trio feat. Bernard Butler & Martin Ditcham & Special Guests 29.11.14 Erased Tapes x Superstition: Kiasmos 11.11.14 Kate Tempest + Rag ‘n’ Bone Man - Sold out! 6.12.14 White Mink 13.11.14 The Growlers + Pins 7.12.14 Los Campesinos - Sold out! 14.11.14 Wildbirds & Peacedrums + Blood Sport 14.11.14 Gaiser + Ambivalent 15.11.14 Mixmag Live Presents Marc Kinchen 17.11.14 The Bad Plus + Support 18.11.14 Bob Mould - Sold out! 20.11.14 Tony Allen + Aziz Sahmaoui & The University Of Gnawa 22.11.14 Life and Death x Superstition: Tale of Us, Mind Against, DJ Tennis 24.11.14 Melanie De Biasio 27.11.14 Ibibio Sound Machine + Afrikan Boy & Afri-Kokoa Djs 13.12.14 Running Wild: Stephan Bodzin, Marc Romboy, Aidan Doherty, James Sison B2b Edward Antonio, Jorge Martins 31.12.14 Krankbrother: New Year’s Eve With Mr. G, Gerd And Ivan Smagghe 29.01.15 Julian Cope 24.02.15 Baxter Dury + Special Guests 2.03.15 Benjamin Booker 4.03.15 Yelle 10.03.15 Rhodes 11.03.15 Vaults 9.04.15 Polar Bear KATE TEMPEST Flushed with success on a mission that is ongoing, obsessed. Words by Dan Davies You can curse and call it typical You can welcome the inevitable But we missed the boat Our ship had sailed When Tempest stormed the critical. It’s been ten years in port But far from docked, she’s more than caught Attention She’s held court, spoke forth Waving, drowning, craving, storming, sailing. As long as they’ve listened, they’ve heard her As long as they came, she’d be there Jumping genre fences at festivals Being drunk on rhyme and rum, in bars and cafes Ranting late night in kebab takeaways The beat, her heart, her own, inaudible, invisible. Go back, way back, before that Kate Tempest spat before she spoke Drummed out her words In school cloakrooms The rhythm of being in the womb Hip hop, the wet nurse Cries full of hunger and meaning Giving voice to the wounded, alone, stranded, abandoned. Writing plays for tomorrow and today Softening the life of the hard living Giving Whether whittling words or treading boards Stirring souls, portraying passion, long rounds of applause Village Underground London, EC2A Thursday 29.01.15 into awards. So let the broadsheets bang on about background and beginning Before being shredded and forgotten. Let Jon Humphries get back round to pillaring politicians Rather than hastily constructing pedestals of jauntiness (and Jim Naughtiness) Let the bookies stop taking bets on fake measures of success. Because after the fawning journos, the fakers, potshots After the Gogglebox gogglers and the blank switch off. Leave the musicians and the makers, Leave those who hear more with repeated listens Standing in the wings being lifted up with words Or pushing to the front Pinned against the band, The following, the follower, The fanzine and the fans. villageunderground.co.uk vuzine.villageunderground.co.uk