Letters Have No Arms: First of all, tell us about your band name. Why “School of Seven Bells”?
Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
A Chat with School of Seven Bells
Download: Iamundernodisguise
Download: For Kalaja Mari (Drum Outtake Mix)
Letters Have No Arms: First of all, tell us about your band name. Why “School of Seven Bells”?
Alejandra Deheza: I heard the name on a doc I was watching about these movie heist like shoplifting rings that plagued the east coast in the 90's. These invisible thieves allegedly were trained at the school of seven bells in the 80's in South America. Now, this was a pickpocketing academy that trained expert prodigious thieves that would then be released into the world to impoverish it one pocket at a time. True or not, it's a great story, and therefore a great name for a band. Simple as that.
LHNA: How would you describe your sound to someone who’s never listened to your music before?
A: Easy to visualize, but hard to explain in words. A good dose of psychedelics might take care of that.
LHNA: Most articles I've read concerning SOSB emphasize the fact that you have what some people have called a rather unusual song writing process: apparently you always start with the lyrics? How important do you think lyrics are in a song? Is there a particular message, idea, frame of mind, or feeling you want people to take from your songs?
A: Actually, that was just one method we used. It varies from day to day. We have no rules for it. Having them (rules) you end up writing the same song ten times. We've all heard records like that, and it works for some people. It's just not the record I wanted to make. Lyrics to me are crucial in a song.
LHNA: What are the advantages of being a band? And what’s not so great about it?
A: Putting everything you have into what you love. Putting everything you have into what you love.
LHNA: What would you have liked to do for a living if music wasn't an option?
A: Write write write.
LHNA: What’s the one book that you would force everyone to read?
Anything Borges.
LHNA: If you could ask for a superpower...
A: it would be to have unlimited superpowers.
LHNA: You really suck at...
A: Any sport that requires hand eye coordination.
LHNA: What is the one thing that makes you feel better no matter how crappy a day you’ve had?
A: Night wanderings always do the trick.
LHNA: What provides inspiration for your songs?
A: The idea of writing a new song. Really.
LHNA: There are so many new bands popping up all over the place. Do you keep up with them? Or are you more focused on your own? Any favourite bands at the moment?
A: I pretty much focus on what I'm doing, but discovering Phantogram this past tour was such a fucking treat. Beautiful songs. I wake up singing them.
LHNA: Do you read music blogs? Which ones?
LHNA: Where do you see yourself in 20 years?
A: I don't want to think about that yet. It'll ruin the surprise.
A big thank you to Alejandra Deheza for taking the time to do this!
I'm not gonna tell you to buy their album because, of course, you've already done that (duh). How 'bout a cool T-shirt instead? ;)
Posted by Eliza K. at 11/10/2009 3 comments
Labels: interview, school of seven bells
Friday, July 31, 2009
A chat with Slow Club. Well, half of Slow Club. Whatever, just don't call them twee!
We first met Slow Club 1.5 years ago, when, visiting London at Christmas, we chanced upon a rather special gig at The Social. The bill consisted of Pete and the Pirates, Emmy the Great, Slow Club and a few others (there was definitely one electronic experimental dude whose name we've forgotten). Also in attendance was Lightspeed Champion, singing along with Emmy the Great on a cover of Weezer's Butterfly. Our first SC experience can be summed up thus: We went there mostly to see Emmy and P&tP. We saw the name Slow Club on the list. We thought they would be the new band that would probably suck and during which we would go buy more drinks and use the bathroom. So they came onstage, Rebecca wearing a coat much too big and looking very cold, and started the set by explaining that they had rushed here from another gig and didn't have a chance to bring all their instruments. They would be doing an acoustic set instead. For another band, this could have not turned out too great, but for Slow Club it only made their beautiful harmonies and unpredictable melodies more noticeable. The set wasn't long, they played for something like 30 minutes, but it was enough to put the band on our radar. Now, after about 18 months of amazing yet - let's face it - randomly released songs and a few scattered EPs, Slow Club have finally got round to releasing their debut album. Awarded an 8.0 by NME, "Yeah So" is no mere compilation of their previously released material. Yes, there are plenty of the great ol' songs their fans have sung along to so many times - songs that provide a great introduction for anyone that hasn't heard of them: Me & You, Because We're Dead, When I Go. But there's also plenty of new material to please us - the devoted followers that have been looking forward to some new tunes - as well. (It Doesn't Have to be Beautiful, and Our Most Brilliant Friends currently ranking as favourites here at LHNA) All in all, the band has managed to put out a fun, catchy, sexy, danceable, sing-along album for pretty much anyone. (except that kid in the back of the gig with the Explotions in the Sky T-shirt, the one that not even Lykke Li can make dance). So unless you're that kid, do yourself the favour of buying it - your feet and hips and vocal chords will love you for it!
1. "Look at us, we formed a band!" How?
Rebecca: We were at school, i was angsty and Charles was great at playing Jeff Buckley songs. I was drumming in a different band, Charles came and sang with that, and then we started writing songs together and made this band...
2.Describe your sound in five words:
Sexy, Smooth, Bootie, Shaking, Beats.
3. The band you've been compared to most times is...
The White Flipping Stripes. Just read a comment on our single on itunes begging people who listen to the White Stripes to stop making music, we never even listened to them much! All itunes comments are pretty mean!
4. Your favourite song from what you’ve written so far is…
Erm, good one, I think at the moment the new one, because its the new one and that's always exciting for us.
5. The craziest thing a fan’s ever done for you is…
bought our album, that was pretty bonkers.
6. You like …EASTENDERS
7. You don’t like... missing it
8. Your favourite bands at the moment are...The Heebie Jeebies, Dirty Projectors and Casio Kids.
9. Your favourite book/writer is... My Take - Gary Barlow.
10. (You might be a talented musician and we might hate you for it but it will make us feel better to know that) you suck at... A HELL OF A LOT OF THINGS - doing anything important that needs doing, keeping my emotions in control, texting back, not holding a grudge, jogging.
11. What helps you write songs? (Booze? Crappy teen movies? Heartbreaks? Popcorn? Anything goes.) Everything that goes in my eyes and ears, whether that's a conversation I overhear, or a picture I see, or a friend or a goodbye. Oh, and BOOZE.
12. Do you read music blogs? Which ones? Erm, my friend does nothingbutgreenlights which I would always recommend, but since music blogs were given a whole album to be mean about I don't read anything, my mum sends the nice ones over...
13. Are you worried about the future of the music industry? Do you think it’s true that unless you’re Coldplay you can’t make money just by playing in a band anymore? Do you guys have day jobs?
I am worried I am going to have to get a real job yes. A delightful person posted something about me saying that I'll be burger kings newest employee in a years time, and wow, that hurt because it is very possible, but I'm not proud, I'll get a job if I need one. But we will carry on writing, recording and touring and hoping to keep our heads above water for now and see what the future brings. But i would try to get a job at Mcdonalds first because I like their chips more.
14. You're in a band because… I want to make music, I want to be free, and I wanna screw a load of hot chicks.
15. You wish everyone would... stop calling us twee.
A big thank you to Rebecca for doing this and another huge thank you to Debbie, who forwarded this to R. and made this wonderful post possible! Now stop staring at the screen and click here.
Posted by Unknown at 7/31/2009 2 comments
Friday, July 3, 2009
LHNA talks to The Woodlands!
Hannah and Samuel, a.k.a The Woodlands released their first, self-titled album recently. As soon as we listened to it we dug out our English dictionaries and started flipping desperately through them, looking for the right words to describe it. They had to be beautiful words, big words, words that hadn't been used before! We kept looking and looking and meanwhile "Summerland" was spreading all over the blogosphere and we thought maybe it was time to stop trying to come up with adjectives and descriptions and just post the songs for everyone to hear. That's approximately when the band e-mailed us promoting their album. Light bulbs appeared above our heads and the idea was born: what better way to find the right words than to ask the band to give them to us themselves? We decided they would be the first band we'd ever ask for an interview. Lucky for us, they said yes.
1. "Look at us, we formed a band!" How?
The Woodlands came to be in somewhat of a roundabout and unintentional way at first. When Samuel and I first met, I had begun playing guitar a couple of years earlier and started writing some songs. Samuel was always musically minded, but didn't actually pick up the guitar until the first year after we got married (about seven years ago). He just decided to teach himself guitar and poured himself into it.
Since we got married we have both worked an assortment of jobs (some 9-5ers, some part-timers) to work hard, but to also keep a flexible schedule for traveling and visiting friends and family. We started playing some of my really old songs together a couple of years after we got married--I would sing and play guitar and Samuel mostly messed around on the harmonica. On a few of my newer songs he just started writing some guitar parts to them and we felt a musical intertwining happening. Meanwhile he was beginning to write lots of his own songs (Of The Isles www.myspace.com/oftheisles), and then we started writing together.
A few years ago we sold, stored or gave away most of our things and we moved down to central america for several goals that we had (to live outside of the US for awhile, so I could learn Spanish--I had always wanted to, and Samuel already spoke it, to volunteer at some orphanages, for an adventure, for a challenge, to write music, to see if we would live abroad permanently, etc.).
We came back to the US after seven months, and realized that we wanted to pursue our music more seriously as The Woodlands. We were absolutely broke coming back, but worked jobs and started writing more songs together and playing some small shows. We set a goal of recording our first album. After moving to Portland a little under two years ago, we began the process of recording at home in the corner of our bedroom with some equipment and a lot of blankets, pillows, sleeping mats and foam pieces built around us. We spent that year recording and writing and developing our songs as we went, and ended up with our album that we self-released a couple of months ago. Now we are working hard and trying to get it out there as much as we can on our own (although we just won a contest from Tinderbox Music that chose us as the winners of their 2009 national college radio campaign contest that will be very helpful), and hoping that we can keep living simply and have some income from our music and the hard work that we have put into it. We have started to get FM radio play in the US, UK, Australia, Spain and also gotten reviews and exposure in those countries as well as Germany, France, Wales, Portugal, Sweden, Canada, Peru, etc.
Since we got married we have both worked an assortment of jobs (some 9-5ers, some part-timers) to work hard, but to also keep a flexible schedule for traveling and visiting friends and family. We started playing some of my really old songs together a couple of years after we got married--I would sing and play guitar and Samuel mostly messed around on the harmonica. On a few of my newer songs he just started writing some guitar parts to them and we felt a musical intertwining happening. Meanwhile he was beginning to write lots of his own songs (Of The Isles www.myspace.com/oftheisles), and then we started writing together.
A few years ago we sold, stored or gave away most of our things and we moved down to central america for several goals that we had (to live outside of the US for awhile, so I could learn Spanish--I had always wanted to, and Samuel already spoke it, to volunteer at some orphanages, for an adventure, for a challenge, to write music, to see if we would live abroad permanently, etc.).
We came back to the US after seven months, and realized that we wanted to pursue our music more seriously as The Woodlands. We were absolutely broke coming back, but worked jobs and started writing more songs together and playing some small shows. We set a goal of recording our first album. After moving to Portland a little under two years ago, we began the process of recording at home in the corner of our bedroom with some equipment and a lot of blankets, pillows, sleeping mats and foam pieces built around us. We spent that year recording and writing and developing our songs as we went, and ended up with our album that we self-released a couple of months ago. Now we are working hard and trying to get it out there as much as we can on our own (although we just won a contest from Tinderbox Music that chose us as the winners of their 2009 national college radio campaign contest that will be very helpful), and hoping that we can keep living simply and have some income from our music and the hard work that we have put into it. We have started to get FM radio play in the US, UK, Australia, Spain and also gotten reviews and exposure in those countries as well as Germany, France, Wales, Portugal, Sweden, Canada, Peru, etc.
2. Describe your sound in five words:
3. The band you’ve been compared to the most times is…
Feist. Jaymay. Gregory And The Hawk.
4. Your favourite song from what you’ve written so far is…
Hannah: Summerland is my favorite, because after writing it, I had the realization that I really believed in what we were doing. I felt that something inside of me was made to write songs.
Samuel: King And Queen because I like the lyrics that I wrote and Hannah's haunting voice. We were living in Guatemala at the time and we were hanging out in a dim bedroom while the weather stormed outside and it felt like we were castaway lovers in castaway times.
Samuel: King And Queen because I like the lyrics that I wrote and Hannah's haunting voice. We were living in Guatemala at the time and we were hanging out in a dim bedroom while the weather stormed outside and it felt like we were castaway lovers in castaway times.
5. The craziest thing a fan’s ever done for you is…
Our fans have been relatively sane up until this point. We were recently playing a show in Idaho and someone said they saw our video on YouTube. This was a surprise to us because we had never made a video. We found out that a kind filmmaker and artist gentleman in Scotland had searched through heaps of songs and chose "Summerland" to make his next project. That was one of the most enjoyable surprises by a fan.
6. You like …
H: kombucha tea, the forest, morning coffee, walking where I go, red wine, Amsterdam, dark chocolate, tiny cafes, tapas, strings of white lights, indoor basil plants, porches
S: cloudy days, strong cheese, cream and tan and grey colors together, letterpress letters, Scotland, dark chocolate, foreign films, autumn, textile patterns, night showers, old machinery, writing poems, olives
S: cloudy days, strong cheese, cream and tan and grey colors together, letterpress letters, Scotland, dark chocolate, foreign films, autumn, textile patterns, night showers, old machinery, writing poems, olives
7. You don’t like…
H: wearing socks, really cold weather, worrisome thoughts, perfume, wasting food, staying up really late
S: social injustice, raisins, chalk on my hands, heat, clutter
S: social injustice, raisins, chalk on my hands, heat, clutter
8. Your favourite bands at the moment are...
H: Seabear, Shout Out Louds, Blind Pilot, Noah & The Whale, Youth Group
S: Seabear, Folded Light, Arcade Fire, Beirut, Band Of Horses
S: Seabear, Folded Light, Arcade Fire, Beirut, Band Of Horses
9. Your favourite book/writer is...
H: Thomas Merton
S: C.S. Lewis
10. (You might be a talented musician and we might hate you for it but it will make us feel better to know that) you suck at...
H: being on time, technology, doing dishes
S: I have a terrible tendency to leave long and rambling phone messages, fixing car problems
S: C.S. Lewis
10. (You might be a talented musician and we might hate you for it but it will make us feel better to know that) you suck at...
S: I have a terrible tendency to leave long and rambling phone messages, fixing car problems
11. What helps you write songs? (Booze? Crappy teen movies? Heartbreaks? Popcorn? Anything goes.)
The need for an outlet to process sorrow. The stimuli and adventure of travel. A desire to see things change. A glass of wine. Insecurity. Confidence. Being immersed in nature. LOVE. Inner silence. Time for contemplation. Awe at the genius of other music and writers.
12. Do you read music blogs? Which ones?
Honestly, no. The main music blogs we have read are when we are searching for music blogs to feature us or when we are reading something that someone has written about our music. Selfish, but that is just what it is at the moment with our schedule and time. We will say that often times the most arresting blogs are those that also have a great artistic visual aesthetic as well. Yours is one of them (and that is sincere, no lip service).
13. You're in a band because…
It just happened. We both love creating and writing and the expression of song. We also love hanging out together, so making music together became a very natural extension of just living our lives together in such close proximity on so many levels.
14. You wish everyone would…
Buy local goods. Buy fair trade goods. Buy our album. Be more nerdy. Laugh at themselves. Choose time, people and experiences over money. Learn to enjoy stillness and solitude.
15. Are you worried about the future of the music industry? Do you think it’s true that unless you’re Coldplay you can’t make money just by playing in a band anymore? Do you guys have day jobs?
Not worried, but trying to figure out how it works and how it is going to work as time progresses. Bands have to be more innovative, self-motivated and creative in their approach to music as a career. We are trying to find out how as well. At this point, we still have to work day jobs waiting tables (Samuel) and as a nanny (Hannah). Our goal, however, is to be able to make a simple living from our music.

Download: Can We Stay
Download: Summerland
Download: Summerland
Buy the album here!
A big big thank you to Hannah and Samuel for agreeing to answer our questions.
Edit: The Woodlands are still unsigned. Seriously, record labels, what are you waiting for??
A big big thank you to Hannah and Samuel for agreeing to answer our questions.
Edit: The Woodlands are still unsigned. Seriously, record labels, what are you waiting for??
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