Interview

INTERVIEW: BENEDEK

By: Tony Price

Benedek is a DJ, producer and recording artist based in Los Angeles. Over the last decade he has released records on labels like L.I.E.S. Records, People’s Potential Unlimited, and Leaving Records, all of which could be classified as modern classics. A skillful producer and programmer possessing a virtuosic sense of musical vision and a keen ear for arrangement, Benedek’s sound masterfully combines the familiar and immediate with the heady and avant-garde. Throughout his discography you can find traces of technological funk, computer-age jazz fusion, the iridescent sheen of early ambient New Age music, and the metropolitan clank of early Chicago house. In this discussion, we talk about the concept of sound presets, the happy accidents built into music-making machines, the notion of “retro” in music and much more.

TP: I’ve seen you play guitar a lot. Is that your main instrument, your primary instrument?

B: Yeah, it is actually. I’ve been playing guitar since I was like 9 years old, and it’s definitely my primary instrument, though it doesn’t always make it onto my tracks, I’m definitely most comfortable on guitar. 

TP: Very interesting, I’m the same. I’ve been playing guitar since I was pretty young, too, so I was just curious about that. A lot of your music is obviously very synth and drum machine focused. When you say it doesn’t show up on the records, does it play a role in writing songs or coming up with songs?

B: It does, depending on the track. I think more recently I’ve been getting into it, back to trying to write by starting out more on guitar and looping things. The tracks that have guitar on them, where it plays a bigger role, I’d say those – I often am coming up with the chord progressions and the riffs on guitar. But I don’t usually write on guitar and then figure it out on keys; usually if it’s gonna be a guitar based track, I figure it out on guitar. If I have something I’m working out on keys, I’ll layer over it with guitar. It depends on the track. I recently got this Midi guitar plug-in that you just play and it turns it right into Midi.

TP: Do you still have that studio space you had a few years ago?

B: Yeah, I’ve had this studio space in Koreatown – it’s been eight years now, I think, since 2014. I’ve had a few people I’ve shared it with over the years; it’s mainly me and my buddy Alex Talan, who helps me make a lot of my stuff. He’s a really sick engineer and producer as well. 

TP: Do you tend to make music more during the day or at night? 

B: I find myself making more dance-y stuff at night, it definitely influences the music. Dependson the time of day, it definitely impacts the vibe. 

TP: I agree, I agree. Are you the type of person that has to adhere to some kind of a schedule? Do you wake up every day and make your way into the studio or do you just kind of see what happens? 

B: I like to have somewhat of a schedule. Usually we split up the time depending on who’s in here. I try to come in every day. I like to work early in the morning but I like to stay up late. I think my inclination to stay up late overpowers that pretty often. I definitely like to keep somewhat of a schedule. If I can get in the studio every day at the same time in a week, I like having that momentum, for sure.

TP: Do you prefer working alone or do you like working – not so much in collaboration, but maybe in the presence of others in the room, having people there? Is that something that you enjoy or do you usually like being completely alone when you’re starting to make a track?

B: You know, I like working with other people around but at certain stages I prefer to be alone.  If I’m already far enough along with something,  I need to be alone to just focus, mixing or fine tuning things or whatever.  But of course, there are definitely different vibes to be caught with different people in the room.  

TP: You like to use a lot of old gear, so I’m just curious about how you navigate between the worlds of digital and analog. Do you find that when you use archaic gear or old synths, drum machines, synthesizers and stuff, that it creates a situation that is conducive to happy accidents? How much of a role does chance or improv play when you’re working with machines like that? 

B: It definitely plays a role. With drum machines, if I’m not sequencing something in Ableton, if I’m using the built-in sequencer in some old drum machine, sometimes I can play random things and see how it gets quantized. I think that’s part of the zeitgeist of electronic and dance music, house, techno etc., the random sequence, say, a drum machine triggering a Pro-One or an SH-101, playing random notes in. That’s a part of the practice of it. Even looping, playing something in, you could do this with a Midi controller into a computer, too, but just playing something random, having that get looped and then quickly layering something over that, you keep layering, that’s definitely, for me, where I find a lot of energy and fun, it’s a fun process. 

Benedek - “Doodat” from the Mr. Goods LP

TP: I agree with you fully. The past decade, you’ve seen the price of gear rise by ten times what it was in 2008. So the entry point for anyone interested in this stuff, you get like one piece at a time. I think that’s something I learned when I started getting into drum machines and synthesizers, just how much of that music that inspires you to buy an SH-101 or 808 or something, is made largely by chance. A lot of acid house is very much a random, spontaneous process where you press play, turn knobs  and see what happens and then all of a sudden, it’s printed out on tape, and it’s done - that’s it. It can change someone’s life, just – that accident, that chance. What about presets? Do you find yourself happy with presets or do you end up tweaking things and dialing in your own sound?

B:  I love certain old presets. There’s just something about them. They sound good, they hit a certain spot. I don’t know if it's nostalgia, some of the sounds that I like, they just sound good and they work in a certain way. The DX7, just the stock sounds that come on a DX7, those sounds are so done to death, but sometimes they work, it’s what you want. I definitely love to program my own sounds as well. Before I could even play keys I was really into sound design. In high school I got a cracked copy of Reason. I started out on that, just messing around with those plugins, trying to make sequences. I didn’t play keys, I was a guitarist, I just loved electronic sounds and production. And then I got a Juno HS60, a Juno 106 with built-in speakers; on that thing I learned synthesis. I think a lot of people started out on the Juno. It’s very barebones, sounds amazing, super friendly to learn. Initially I didn’t want to use presets, I wanted to make my own sounds. Over time, I learned the presets are pretty cool. The music I like, some of it is just all presets. My heroes weren’t always trying to make that DX7 bass sound from scratch every time. 

TP: There’s a clip of Jimmy Jam testing out the Roland Boutique D-50, have you seen that clip? He just says, and I’ve read this in other interviews, too - that he is 100% presets. He hates having to change sounds, he’s like, “I want to plug it in, press a button and have a song basically written from that sound.” It’s interesting how these charges get pressed when it comes to synthesizer-based music. If I plug a Stratocaster into a Twin Reverb, it’s a sound that’s just considered normal, even though it’s very much an “old sound”. One thing that artists who use vintage equipment often get told is that their music “sounds retro”. How do you feel about this kind of thing? Do you feel like you make “retro” sounding music? Is it something you aim for or try to avoid? I mean it’s kind of impossible to not want to sound like Jimmy Jam. 

B: I agree, I think about it in this way: when you see in 2021, a thrash band, like a band of 20-somethings in 2021 who have been listening to classic metal or punk, these genres which keep going – you don’t hear thrash and necessarily think “oh, that’s 80s, or early 90s.” So to me, all this stuff has that connotation because it didn’t just keep going. I guess house and dance music did keep going, and of course there’s different eras, but as far as the funk side of what I love, what we’re into, and the R’n’B, it’s funny, it gets pegged as being of a certain time, but to me it’s just so classic, it’s just as classic as classic rock. Like you’re saying, the DX is just as classic as a Twin Reverb at this point, a Strat and Twin Reverb.

TP: I agree, and that’s a part of what I love about L.I.E.S, there’s nothing “retro” about that label or that world that Ron(Morelli) has cultivated. It’s very much that he and everyone that’s involved with that label understand that the core values and ethos of this type of music existed long before the DX7 was invented and will last long after we are all gone. How did you end up hooking up with Ron to do the Mr. Goods record? 

B: I met Ron in like 2011 or 2012, but we didn’t really know each other. I would just go into A1 when I lived in New York at the same time as Brandon, Delroy Edwards, who is a good friend of mine from L.A., so we all ended up hanging. I would go into A1 and hang with Brandon, and kind of met Ron then in passing. A couple years later I saw Ron a few times; he played in L.A. and I would say what up to him, but we first really got to hang in Europe when I was out there and we started talking.  Ron’s the best.  An absolute legend and a real head who just knows so much shit. 

TP: Do you make an effort to ensure your music is released in some kind of physical format? Or is that by the nature of who you’ve connected with that it has come out that way?

B: I’d say that I do love for it to come out physically, if it’s at all possible.  Most of the labels I’ve worked with do physical releases. It’s all been pretty organic. The releases I’ve put out, the people involved in the labels – we were friends already or we became friends through the process of putting the record out. I definitely prefer it to be that way. There’s a lot of great labels where that’s not the case, but I definitely prefer that, where I feel like we’re working on something together. It’s collaborative. 

TP: What role do you think vinyl plays in either dance or underground music culture at this point? Do you think people are still buying records to listen to or to DJ with, or are they buying them in the same way they buy t-shirts?

B:  I think there’s a lot of people that just love to have the physical, tangible object but don’t necessarily treat it in the same way someone who is digging for this stuff day in day out would.  Playing records is definitely not a must as a DJ in this day and age but depending on the style of music you’re into it can bring a lot of depth to what you’re doing.  Most of the music I play out is older and was never released digitally at all. I like the idea that maybe you’re one of the few hundred people in the world who knows this one track and the other heads listening to it are on the other side of the planet. 

TP: Do you use Spotify, or any music streaming services? Is that something you enjoy using as a music fan?

B: I dunno that I enjoy using it, but I do use it. I think it’s very convenient but I think the playlist aspect/format as a way to push music from a corporate agenda – I think that’s really wack, but for artists or labels to make playlists for people to access, I think that’s cool, to have that be a communal thing, that aspect is cool. I feel like they haven’t worked out how to get people paid properly. I still like having actual files of all my music, I’m weird like that, like I’m stuck in, like ten years ago. 

TP: That’s interesting, because that’s something I’ve been asking everyone. That’s something that I still do too, not even for DJing. There’s so much stuff you can’t find, especially dance music, on Spotify. They’re hiding in the basement channels of the internet!

B: One hundred percent. For me, my favorite platform has been YouTube since it came out, and though it’s gotten worse over the years, to me that’s the best place to dig for music other than going into an actual store. 

TP: I agree, you get the same kind of happy accidents you do with analog gear. Something will show up, you’ll click on a user with 50 subscribers, and then you’ll find some insane track. I think that, speaking as a music fan, Spotify is convenient – I use it a lot when I’m walking around or driving. But like you’re saying, these tech companies have gentrified taste, like they’ve gentrified the act of curating or discovering stuff. The playlists that Spotify and Apple make, they’re fucking horrible. They obviously serve a purpose, a purpose that does little for us. Something that makes me happy is that NTS exists. NTS has changed my life. I used to live right across the street from the booth in London, and that’s how I heard about it. Discovering that, couldn't believe that it existed. The amount of amazing, life-changing music that I’ve been introduced to through NTS is insane. But I’m curious, other than YouTube, how do you usually find new music, music you don’t know about?

B: I love just digging through records and CDs wherever I can, but also through friends. I love just hanging out with like-minded friends that are into similar musical worlds and sharing music. To just hang out with a couple friends, smoke some weed, drink beers and listen to music. It sounds funny, but that’s maybe my favorite. As far as personally, on a digging kind of level, I guess record stores, YouTube.   A couple years ago, I’d say Blogspot was really popping. 

TP: I miss Blogspot. Those were the days.

B: Yeah, like ten years ago to maybe, like 2015 – but there’s still some out there!

TP: That short window of time, until those RapidShare-type sites were all taken down, that was such an insane time to discover stuff. 

B: It was cool. I think that was the Golden Age of something. I was just telling my friend, it’s always the Golden Age of Something. What is this the Golden Age of that we’re in right now? But that time might have been the Golden Age for fuckin’ Blogspot. The RapidShares, ZippyShare - 

TP: MegaUpload, whatever…

B: Yeah (laughs).

TP: How do you find your work as a DJ and your work as a producer are linked, if they are at all?

B: They’re linked for sure, but I also get into a different mindset. As a DJ, I know some producers who when they DJ will mainly play their own tracks, or their own unreleased stuff in a way that’s more integrated. I like playing my own stuff, but I also really like playing things that inspire me and things that I’m excited about that I’ve never heard before. I just love to play something that I just found, something that I’ve never played before. To hear it on a good system is just a good feeling, ya know. And have people interact with it.

TP: Do you see DJing as an extension of your music production, or is it a different thing?

B: I’d say it is related. Of course I play music that informs what I do as a producer. My goal when I’m DJing is to play things that have inspired me, to pay homage to the music that I get inspired by. I would say when I play live, that’s the real live performance extension of my production, and DJing is something slightly separated but it’s all integrated for sure. I’ve definitely done sets where I play live keys over it. I wanna do more of that. It’s kind of a fun way to bring them both together in a way that’s – I heard this Boyd Jarvis and Timmy Regisford radio broadcast, like a WBLS, one of those New York radio stations, and Boyd is like going over the track. I couldn’t figure out what was going on. It sounds crazy. I realized he was playing live over it, and I was like, I need to do that more often. A few people do it but it’s kind of rare. I’ve seen Byron the Aquarius do it and he’s sick. 

TP: Yeah, on Instagram, I’ve seen him rip over tracks. 

B: Yeah, he does it a lot. I wanna do that more.

Benedek - “Afterglo” from the Bene’s World LP

TP: How do you feel about the increased efforts that are expected of an artist in promoting their own music on social media? Is it something that you enjoy or dislike? How do you feel about it? 

B: I don’t like it. Straight up, I definitely don’t like it (laughs). We have to do it nowadays in the most tasteful way that we can, but I really don’t like the “talking to the camera” type style, some people can pull it off and that’s their vibe, they own it, but for a guy like me – I don’t have any desire to do that. A lot of the music that I like is almost anonymous, faceless. You don’t see Larry Heard doing that type of thing, or even producers like Jam and Lewis, you didn’t see them doing that either. Back in the day, maybe there would be an interview in like, Keyboard Magazine, but they’re not front and center and I have no desire to – I’m down to have images of me out there or whatever. I don’t even really like doing interviews. I like doing this, with you, because you’re my friend, but some random journalist, I haven’t had the best experiences doing that. So it’s kind of the same thing with the social media shit. People are expected to do so much now. People, like, writing a question, and people are supposed to comment? I guess this is where we’re at now, but there’s gotta be some alternative because it’s not for everyone. 

TP: I’m in the same boat as you. I’d say it’s more than discomfort. I have a crippling fear of putting myself on the internet. That’s why I’ve kind of forced myself to find a way with Maximum Exposure, whatever it may be, to exist on the internet, but in a faceless way, which is largely inspired by the music we’re talking about here. To your point, asking questions, doing that type of stuff, being part of the game or whatever – maybe this is just wishful thinking - but I think being faceless or maintaining some type of mystique, although it doesn’t provide immediate results, I think in the long run does help. I think that’s why we’re still intrigued by Gherkin Records, why we’re still intrigued by Jam and Lewis. So I think there is another way for people like us. I’m hoping at least. And that’s what I’m trying to get at with these interviews, another way to talk about things that isn’t self-promotion.

B: Hundred percent. I love that. I have so much respect for what you do with Maximum Exposure. As soon as I discovered your page I was like, “this guy knows his stuff, this is cool.” Really compiling inspiring really sick and curated vibes, visually and musically. It’s dope. Not many people are doing what you’re doing. 

TP: Thank you, thank you. I’m still trying to figure out what it is and I’m still trying to make it be the best that it can be, but I definitely feel exactly how you feel. It’s awkward to be an artist today, everyone’s expected to act like a celebrity or an influencer.

B: Totally. There’s just this micro-celebrity culture. I blame reality TV. I think reality TV is the catalyst for all this shit. And then you have like a generation, our generation, that grew up watching this shit and whether they liked it or not, people absorbed that and they think that’s just like, how you have to be. Maybe it works for some people, it’s definitely funny, but it’s not inspiring, it’s not artistic, it’s not musical…

TP: It’s not natural!

B: (Laughs) I could go on for hours about this shit.

Trackstars- “Bonanza” from the Trackstars EP

TP: I just wanted to ask one more question, about the Track Stars record. You’ve been friends with Brandon, Delroy, for a long time? 

B: Yeah, for like ten years, I’d say. 

TP: And you guys had done something together for PPU before, right? A seven inch?

B: Yeah, we did an RX 45, it was this really bugged-out, strung out – I think one of them was called “Strung Out”, it was like music for a snuff film or a porn, like really low budget fucked up sounding. 

TP: So what was the deal with Track Stars? Was it tracks that you’d been working on for a while or had sitting around? Did you intentionally come together to do this for L.I.E.S.?

B: It was definitely intentional. We came together and we wanted to make some house tracks and put ‘em out, and we did it. I forget if we were making it for L.I.E.S. from the jump but we started making these tracks, six of them or something and we ended up with those four that we put out. 

TP: Did you write the first record together? 

B: Yeah, we made it in person in his studio. 

TP: Do you have more of that stuff coming out? Did I read that somewhere,that there’s another volume? 

B: Man, we have other stuff that’s unreleased but we are definitely planning to do something. We’re overdue to link up again.

TP: Other than a new Record on Apron records, do you have other stuff due out in the foreseeable future?

B: Yeah, there’s this record with my friend Anthony that I’ve been working on for like two years now, I guess since right before Covid started, and it’s kind of like ambient-fusion-y, some ECM vibes.

TP: Did you do a live set with him recently?

B: Yeah, yeah!

TP: Yeah that was amazing!

B: Thanks man. We did a live show in September. Hopefully once we put the record out I’m sure we’ll do more. It’s been fun to play more guitar and do something different. This is the first fully collaborative album I’ve done with someone, and it is such a different process, especially this type of music, which has made it cool. He comes from more of a jazz background, he’s a trained musician, jazz guy. Plays trumpet and keys, amazing singer. He’s a vocal coach, teaches piano. He’s really much more of a traditional musician than me. He’s played on a few of my records in the past. He’s played in live stuff in L.A. We’ve been doing stuff together for a long time but this is the first thing we’ve actually released. The project doesn’t have a name yet, but I’m working on it. 






INTERVIEW: DAMAR DAVIS

By: Tony Price

Damar Davis is a DJ, producer and recording artist based in Los Angeles. Through his label Salon Recordings, he has cultivated a scene and sound that are filling a void in dance music on America’s west coast. A virtuosic drummer and manipulator of machines, within his productions you can hear the influence of J Dilla’s fractured funk, the cybernetic swing of Theo Parrish and the glossy sheen of prime time G-Funk. The Salon sound is at once corporeal and machine-like, familiar and hyper-futuristic. I spoke to him in December 2021 about the relationship between drumming and programming drum machines, the state of dance music in Los Angeles, his relationship to physical media and much more.

TP: What’s going on? You’ve just released a new EP a few weeks ago.

DD: Yeah, I released “Duende” a couple weeks ago. Before that I was just playing shows like every weekend, I was running the gauntlet. It was kind of intense. So I’m kind of happy things have slowed down. I’m hyped that things are slow now, or slower. 

TP: I don’t think I asked you this when we hung out in L.A., but would you consider your ‘main instrument’ to be drums? I’ve seen you play some nasty drums. 

DD: (Laughs) Yeah, I grew up playing drums in church, you know, typically Gospel chops musician. Not typical, but like, that’s my background. Everyone in my family plays some sort of instrument. 

TP: Do you still play often?

DD: The drums? Nah, man. I wish. I was actually talking to my girl about it the other day and I miss touring, man, I miss being in a band and like, I dunno, putting my energy in and seeing a sea full of people and just playing, you know, going for it. 

TP: A completely different life. 

DD: Yeah, yeah. 

TP: Do you feel the rush you get from playing drums on stage is different from playing a record to a room full of people as a DJ? 

DD: Yeah, especially as a drummer, there’s like this automatic adrenaline that you get, even if you’re playing a slow song, you know. If you watch someone that has a backing track and a guitar singing right after watching a full band, even if the songs they’re playing are super high-energy, it’s just not going to match. 

TP: When you’re making electronic music, do you approach programming drums in the same way, being a drummer, that you play drums with a band or is it more of an experimental approach? On the record you put out earlier this summer, there are some 808 high-hat patterns which are just wild. Listening to it, I was curious as to how you approached that.

DD: I approach it exactly like if I’m playing the drums. I write the part to it, like if it’s a verse or if it’s a chorus, then those are the parts for the song. Most of the time I don’t really click drums in; a lot of people click some drums into their DAW. I normally play all my drums out, either like on some sort of pad or on the keyboard, like I’m playing all those drums. 

TP: Last time I spoke to you, you had  recently moved out of a rehearsal space or studio space and set up at home. Are you still in that mode, where you’re working in your home studio, or have you moved into a different space? 

DD: I’m still at home. I have a studio room, if you want to call it a studio room, where I work out of. But it’s getting to the point where it’s just like, alright, I need to be back in a space where I can track real drums, and have friends come and play on the record. I’m just kind of like, ugh. 

TP: I feel the same way. I went back to Toronto for most of this year, but I came back to New York, a cool spot in Chinatown, but my room is really tiny, and I realize that I really need to get a space that I can work out of, for the same reasons that you’re explaining. Being able to do stuff with other people is important.

DD: 100%.

TP: So what’s your home studio situation like? Are you the kind of guy that sets a schedule for yourself or do you wait for inspiration to hit and then just walk in to the studio and see what happens? 

DD: So, normally I’d say before, in the beginning of the year, I would wake up, work out, take my dog for a run, and then after I take a shower, like, immediately into songwriting. But, now, I feel like, I dunno, I’ve reached this point where everything kind of sounds the same, and everything looks the same, from a consumer standpoint. I pick up my phone and everything on Instagram looks exactly the same. And then I listen to what other DJs are playing and everything kind of sounds the same, too. So as of right now, I don’t have a routine ‘cause everything sounds so shitty to me. Myself included. I’m so tired of hearing the same shit.

TP: I know exactly what you’re saying. It’s hard. I find myself buying synths when I hit that wall, trying to spark some sort of inspiration. But it often doesn’t help, you just end up sitting there trying to figure out how to program the thing, thinking to yourself that this isn’t really helping my problem, is it? (Laughs)

DD: Buying new gear is never the answer.

Damar Davis - “Gym” from the Haus LP

TP: No, it isn’t! It’s always the problem, actually. What’s your relationship like with gear? Do you like using hardware gear or do you find like it kind of gets in the way? 

DD: I mean I feel like with the majority of the hard gear that I do own, I use it and write with all the time, but with everything being accessible on the internet, it’s kind of hard to spend a lot of money on a Juno when you can just buy a plug-in. 

TP: The plug-ins at this point are sounding amazing. 

DD: Right. 

TP: What’s up with Salon? When did you start Salon? 

DD: I started it at the end of 2019, but it started out as just a party, and then it formed its way into a record label, by necessity, because my experience with other record labels. So, the story behind it is pretty much just to put out music that I like from my friends, first and foremost, and then to pretty much – I feel like there was this empty space in L.A., as far as music was concerned, and like the style of music. No disrespect to any of these people, but I feel like a lot of the artists in L.A. that were playing house or electronic music sounded a lot like, Ben U.F.O., or like Shlomo, you know. I kind of was like, there’s no one really representing the stuff that I like. My immediate group of friends, we are all into more soulful, J. Dilla, house-y, Theo Parrish-type stuff. So since no one else was doing it, I was like, well, I might as well start that. 

TP: Do you think that the fact that Salon started off as a party first has helped to cultivate an offline, real-world community in a way that starting a label online wouldn’t be able to? Has a community come together though that? 

DD: For sure. I mean, there’s so many people that just keep coming, there’s no other sound like this in L.A., no one else is doing this, you get that whole gauntlet of emotions. I mean, like I said, I feel like, even with house music in New York, or house music in Oakland or wherever, no one is really doing a West Coast soulful sound of house music, other than us. It’s kind of like what Dre did with the Death Row sound. 

TP: I can definitely see that kind of parallel for sure. 

DD: It’s not like we’re trying to emulate that or wear this hat, it’s kind of what we keep getting as far as a response to what we’re doing. It was kind of like an idea that grew legs and started running on its own. I’ve been trying to grab it by the harness and try to steer it as much as possible, but it’s kind of been running on its own, going crazy.

Damar Davis - “LA” from the Duende EP, out now through Salon Recordings

TP: What would you say is the most frustrating thing about running a record label in 2021? Is it the promotion side that is the most agonizing? What about streaming? Do you like streaming, from a consumer standpoint? What about from an artist and label standpoint?

DD: Alright, so, it’s so crazy because, as you know since you have your own label, there’s so many different hats you have to wear as a label. And then dealing with different graphic designers, and then dealing with the consumer that’s like, I’m only gonna buy records, you’re not a real record label unless you put out records, and then there’s also the basic consumer that will just come to our parties that’s just gonna stream our music on Spotify or on iTunes because it’s easily accessible. So, I don’t knock streaming; I wish we could get more money from the streaming side of things, but at the same time, I feel like it is what it is and music is going its own way as much as possible. In that regard, I just try to push Bandcamp as much as I can. Then on the other side, as a label, even small diners have their own clothing, so you might as well have t-shirts, hoodies, hats, stickers, whatever you can. 

TP: What about from a consumer standpoint, do you like it? 

DD: I do, man. I use Spotify – I don’t wanna sound like a jock, but I use Spotify mainly for when I’m working out. But if I’m looking for music, I’m listening to mixes.

TP: When it comes to music and finding new mixes, for me, personally, NTS has always been the beacon of hope. Do you listen to NTS radio? 

DD: 100%. My first experience with playing on online radio was on NTS. The longer my stint goes, the more I realize there’s so many NTS, they’re just the one that has the crown right now. Everybody has an online radio show on a different platform.

TP: What role do you think vinyl plays in the world of dance music at this time? Is it the same as any other kind of consumer area in music, where people treat vinyl like they treat t-shirts and posters as just something to buy and own rather than something that has a specific use value to it? 

DD: I’m just going to be real, I know people that buy records not to listen to them, they buy them just to have a record collection, and they’re music snobs, you know. But as far as buying records, I don’t feel like a lot of people buy records like they used to. I feel like mainly DJs buy records, but other than that, you’re not getting a bunch of people going crazy over records, unless it’s people who are in the scene, buying that record because they plan on playing that record, or because they’ve been supporting that artist since day one, or if you’re in, like, Europe. That’s really it. And then if you’re a hip-hop beat producer that’s kind of O.G., you’re buying records too, but other than that, they’re not buying records. 

TP: Do you buy records? 

DD: Yeah, for sure. Not all the time, but not as much as I should.

TP: Do you ever DJ with vinyl? 

DD: Every once in a while, on my radio show, but not live. I did that Vinyl Factory thing and that’s the last thing that I did with actual records.

TP: Do you collect any other physical media? Do you collect magazines or books or anything like that? 

DD: No, man, it’s super weird. As a kid, my whole family was kind of athletic, so it was like, “you have to play sports.” That was the thing. Either you play basketball, or you play football. So, I was outside a lot of the time, so I never really got a chance to do collecting, other than shoes. Like, shoes and some types of clothing, I would, but not as much any more. Hardly ever. 

TP: How do you store and maintain your digital files? Do you really make an effort to back up sessions, for instance, when you’re making music? do you use Cloud storage? How do you navigate that? 

DD: Funny that you ask that. So, yesterday, since I told you I haven’t really been making music, I was like, alright, I’m gonna go back to the old way that I used to do things, and I literally go through all my sounds that I have, whether it’s like, loops, chords, basslines, one-shots, and I make folders for everything, and then after I make folders for them, I put them on a hard drive, that way everything is backed up, and then I go from there. I’m kind of a nerd about that.

TP: So when you can’t really find inspiration to create a song, you get down to work and organize things. 

DD: For sure, because you’ll come across a sound, or you’ll come across a vocal loop and you’re like, oh, this is cool, I’m gonna use it. It sparks ideas. It’s just like being clean. If you cleaned your room as a kid, you’d be like, oh, there’s that shirt! Or, there’s that toy!

TP: (Laughs) Yeah, for sure, I’m that way to this day. I can’t even sit down at a computer and do work unless everything is cleaned up and lined up visually, so I definitely know what you mean. Did you work in a studio for one of the records that you put out this year? Do I remember seeing that online? 

DD: Yeah yeah yeah, so Future Sound and Frogtown. 

TP: Nice. Did you produce in there, or just mix? How did you incorporate going into the studio into your work flow? 

DD: It was mainly just mixing. My friend Jon Jon has a studio in Frogtown and I just went over there to mix the record down, and he has really good gear, analog and digital, and I needed to be in a space where it would sound like it was, really in the club. So it was really helpful to just take it there, ‘cause I can’t really like bump bump music like that in my spot.

Damar Davis - “GF” from the Bronze EP, available now through Maximum Exposure Inc.

TP: There is a ‘Salon sound’, I really do think that, in the same way that there is this ‘Apron Records sound’, and it is quite futuristic. Do you have any interest in making things sound old or analog, or is that not something that passes through your mind while mixing? Your stuff doesn’t sound retro or throwback at all. I feel like a lot of people, and I’m guilty of this, really fetishize old sounds. Do you ever do that? 

DD: Nah man, I like things that sound super fresh. I don’t even want to say it’s a competitive thing, but I feel like the number one thing that would make a Salon sound is that I am really aware that our direct competition is, like, mainstream media, so even if we do make dance music, there’s like, a Kaytranada that’s making dance music that’s gonna get played on the radio, and they’re not using older sounding stuff, they’re using brand new gear and all new sounds that makes everything sound super fresh. So as far as a consumer is concerned, they don’t wanna hear older stuff. That’s for people that are buying records. And no disrespect to anybody, that’s just the way my brain thinks. 

TP: For sure, and I think that sometimes it just takes someone with a vision, like you, to create this world that becomes something like Salon. So what do you have going on in the next year? Do you have any specific plans for what you want to do with music in Salon or are you just going to try and go with the flow and see what happens? 

DD: There’s definitely a roadmap. You’re gonna see Salon in other states, We’re gonna do other things in other places, not just L.A. You’re gonna get more merch and stuff like that from us, just because we are super aware of fashion and the times. What else? Obviously, just music, great mixes, equal opportunity for female DJs as well. It’s a big thing that we’re really big on, so all that stuff, man.

TP: Do you run everything with Salon on your own or do you do it with someone else?

DD: It’s really all just me.


”Duende” is out now through Salon Recordings

Follow Damar Davis on Instagram

Follow Salon Recordings on Instagram

INTERVIEW: TOM CARRUTHERS

By: Tony Price

Tom Carruthers is a producer from Cheshire, England. His latest LP on L.I.E.S. Records is an instant classic. Drawing inspiration from the early 90’s bleep techno, the grimiest of NYC house and Motor City machine funk, “Non Stop Rhythms” is an elemental masterpiece that is a masterclass in otherworldly, minimalist production. I recently spoke with him about his new album, his recording process, the birth of his label Non Stop Rhythm, and using social media to promote music.

TP: Congratulations on that L.I.E.S. record. I listened to it at the gym yesterday. It’s incredible. I love it so much. 

TC: Nice one, I appreciate it. Been in the pipeline for a while so I’m glad it’s finally out now. I think my copies arrive tomorrow. 

TP: The artwork looks great, too. 

TC: Yeah, it’s cool, innit. 

TP: So is that a compilation of a bunch of stuff that you had either put out or worked on before?

TC: I think it’s a few tracks I already released on the label, and my label’s quite small so he (Ron Morelli) wasn’t too fussed about it, about the fact that they’re already released, but a lot of it is unreleased material, I’d say half of it is unreleased. 

Tom Carruthers - “Cyclone” from the Non Stop Rhythms LP out now on L.I.E.S. Records

TP: So, you have Non Stop Rhythm, that’s your main label, right? 

TC: Yep. I did have a label in 2018 called L&T Recordings, but that’s pretty much died off now. Non Stop Rhythm is my main focus. House music. 

TP: I feel like I’ve seen you post a bunch of stuff with different graphics, maybe different label names. Did you have another one as well, or was it always just L&T and that turned into Non Stop Rhythm?

TC: I was doing L&T but I was more into European techno, like R&S Records, that was a big inspiration for that label. Over the past couple years, I’ve gotten a lot more into New York house music, Chicago house. I thought I’d start a new label, Non Stop Rhythm, to take you from the more house-y kind of sounds but with tempo stuff.

TP: When did you start that label? 

TC: It was around February 2020, just prior to Covid and all the rubbish. 

TP: You’ve put out a lot of music since then, haven’t you? 

TC: Yeah, super prolific, especially through 2020. I wasn’t really working at the time, I was just focusing on my music and living off the income of my record labels. 

TP: So during the pandemic you’d just be making tracks all day and then just put them out as soon as possible? Was that your goal?

TC: Yeah, just to get them out there. I wanted to be super busy. I think in one year we put out 50 releases, not all my own on the label, but from guys all over Europe, all over the world to be fair, but a pretty prolific 50 in a year. 

TP: That’s wild, very cool. Did you do one 12” as well, physical? Or did you do more than that? 

TC: Trying to think, I did put one out, I made up a little label called Crash Records for it for a massive house single. Pressed up a few of them and then I put out two 12” on Non Stop Rhythm. One was a reissue by Freddy Bastone, not sure if you’ve heard of him, from New York, “Corporation of One”.

TP: Yeah, that track is crazy. I was surprised when I saw that you reissued it. I was just looking at Discogs…how many vinyl records did you press for these two releases? 

TC: Both of them, just 300. Kept it small, just to test the waters.

TP: Do you have vinyl distribution? Do you press them and sell them out of your house? 

TC: What I’ve done is I have a digital distribution contract, with a company called Label Way. I signed that in late 2019 for L&T Recordings, and Non Stop Rhythm falls under that contract as well. I got a physical distribution contract with a company called Above Board Distribution. 

TP: They’re London based, right? I feel like I’ve heard of them before. 

TC: Yeah they’re based down in London. Doing loads of old school stuff so they’re on the same wavelength. 

TP: That’s great. So do they do pressing and distribution? Do you get it pressed on your own and then ship it to them? 

TC: No, just distribution. I’m funding all the records myself. Probably best to do that, though. 

TP: Do you have plans to do more vinyl? 

TC: Yeah, I’ve actually got a reissue coming out. I’ve paid the guy the advance and everything, I just need to put the order in. It’s called Exocet, “Lethal Weapon”. It’s a three-track single from 1989. Bleep techno. 

TP: So it’s a U.K. thing? 

TC: Yeah, it’s off a label called Catt Records, originally based down in London. 

TP: Amazing. When you reach out to these older artists and talk about reissuing their stuff, what’s the response usually like? Do you find that a lot of these producers are still involved in music, or have they moved on from that? Are they happy to hear from you? 

TC: To be fair, I’m into the more obscure stuff, so a lot of the guys are surprised that anyone is still interested in the music, to be honest. A lot of them are surprised and they’re fully on board. I don’t come across like a businessman. I’m just passionate about music so I think it comes off.

TP: How did you end up getting in touch with Ron from L.I.E.S.?

TC: Ron originally reached out to me, saying congrats on the label, and that he likes what I’m doing with Non Stop Rhythm. Eventually we got talking about the music and he said he’d like to put some stuff out. I was a little bit hesitant at first because that’s why I started my own label, I want to own my own stuff, but he seems legit and we got a good deal together, so I thought why not. Seems a cool guy. 

TP: Definitely. I feel that more than pretty much anyone, Ron has been the most important figure in maintaining, preserving and promoting the raw aesthetics and sonic roots of dance music and electronic music in the last decade. Do you ever DJ live or are you a strictly producer and label guy? 

TC: I did one mix for my mate Mario Liberti’s label Deep In Dis, I think it was 2020 I did that. Mostly strictly producing, it’s more my thing. 

TP: So when you’re producing, do you usually think more so about how your music is going to hit on a dance floor or are you more concerned with how it sounds through headphones? Do you put one above the other when you’re producing and mixing? 

TC: To be fair, I just go for what I personally like, and it seems to be catching on now, it’s selling, so people are obviously on the same wavelength as me. I mainly base it towards the dancefloor though. 

Tom Cruv - “Work The Box 21 (Original Mix)” out now on Trax Records

TP: What about listening? I personally like to buy vinyl, I’ve always bought vinyl, but I definitely listen to music mostly on my headphones. I stream a lot of music. It is what it is. When it comes to you as a music fan, not so much as a producer, do you find that you listen to vinyl, or do you prefer the convenience of streaming music? 

TC: Yeah, I listen to a lot of vinyl. I collect a lot of vinyl. Nu Groove Records, I collect them religiously. 

TP: What’s record buying like where you live, and in Liverpool? Are there good record stores? 

TC: There’s a few stores, but mostly I buy off Discogs. I’m not against buying records online. I’ll get what I want. I don’t want to settle for something I’m not really interested in. My collection, I’m 100% interested in. 

TP: What drives your interest in reissuing music? Is it mostly to get it out there, feeling like it needs a second life? What is your thought process like when you find a record that you want to reissue? 

TC: Partially that, partially to give it a new lease on life, but also, to be on my label. It’s cool to say I put out good music. If I reckon it’s good, they’ll wanna put it out. 

TP: Did you do a track with Trax Records?

TC: Yeah, I put out a single on Trax under the name Tom Cruv back in April of this year. 

TP: How did that come about? 

TC: They've got Marcus Mixx, I don’t think he works with them anymore, for A&R, but I just sent him a few demos and he said he reckons they’d fit really well on Trax Records. Not even demos per se, just a couple new tracks that I’d made, check ‘em out, see what you think. He was like yeah, they’re really cool. I made them on one of those old 4 track tape recorders so they’ve got a lot of tape hiss. 

TP: I noticed that, I love that aspect of your music. I wanna ask you some more questions about production stuff. What was your setup like during the pandemic? Obviously, everyone was locked at home. Did you have a bedroom setup? That’s the way I imagine Larry Heard making his early stuff. 

Tom Carruthers - “North West” out now on Non Stop Rhythm

TC: Pretty much set up in my bedroom, yeah. I’ve got an old analog mixing desk, a couple of drum machines, a lot of it’s sample-based, so I’ll just load samples, I’ve got a massive sample library, old school, obscure sounds. I’ll just load them into the keyboard and play my riffs with them like that. I’ll chop a lot of sounds from old records, say there’s a nice bassline, I’ll chop the sound, load it into my keyboard and then play my own riffs with it. 

TP: What kind of keyboard are you talking about when you say sampling keyboard? 

TC: Casio, stuff like that. Nothing major. But they do the job. They’re effective.

TP: Sounds incredible. That’s the thing, these days, people are so obsessed with gear, but if you look at Derrick May, you look at Larry Heard, any of these guys in the early days of house music or techno, they’re just doing what they can with what they have. The sound of tape hiss, when you’re using samplers from the 80s that have a really low bitrate, there’s a real nasty hiss on top. 

TC: Adds character!

TP: It’s amazing, that’s what’s missing. It feels like you are engaging with a living thing when you hear those artifacts. Do you still predominantly work at your home studio or do you have a place that you like to go to do work? 

TC: I’m still running the same setup, stick with what you know.

TP: How many channels is your mixer? 

TC: It’s an old 32 channel. I got it passed down to me off one of my dad’s mates when I was first starting to get into it. I think it’s an old Allen and Heath mixer. 

TP: Did you grow up playing music or did you start making electronic music as your first foray into music? 

TC: I’m not classically trained or anything. What it was, I was probably around 15 when I started getting into house music. It was all over the radio and it kind of blew up over here on the charts. But then I started to veer more into the underground stuff, did a little bit of digging, and that’s where I found the early Chicago stuff, New York stuff, and then I just fell in love with that. 

TP: Do you prefer to make music during the day or at nighttime?

TC: Probably nighttime, early hours in the morning. That’s when a lot of the magic seems to happen. 

TP: When you sit down to make a track, is it different every time? I personally like to start with drum programming, whether it’s Ableton or if it’s with a drum machine. Do you start off with drums or is it different every time for you? 

TC: I’d say the majority of the time, it would just be a bassline and then I’ll go program the drums and then go from there. A lot of my tracks are just a bassline and drum machine, some effects added. That’s what I’m into, the percussion side of things. Drum programming, complex drum programming. Not just one bar looped like a lot of the modern stuff. Snares. 

TP: A lot of your production does remind me of the Mayday stuff. I think Derrick May’s drum programming is very kinetic. His hi-hats are always so alive, they jump around and I can definitely hear that in your music. It sounds like you do have an element of hardware magic in your process, where you like to have a hands-on approach. Would that be true? Do you like to be able to touch knobs while you’re making music, or is it not so important to you? 

TC: It’s more of a hands-on kind of thing, I like to have a hands-on approach to it, yeah. 

TP: What do you think of modern house music? I’m talking more about the contemporary underground scene rather than the stuff that’s huge. 

TC: There is a lot of cool stuff out there. A lot of young people, like myself, I’m only 22. But a lot of people are starting to get into the bleep-y, obscure kind of stuff. I reckon it’s definitely making a resurgence. 

TP: That’s a good thing. What is it about the older stuff on labels like like Transmat or Nu Groove that is still so potent to you? 

TC: I’ve never been able to put my finger on it, and I don’t think many people can, it’s just got the edgy, obscure, proper underground kind of vibe. Just a dark kind of vibe. 

TP: I think it comes down to what you were saying, people making music and releasing it as it comes. They get to the desk, behind the drum machines and then two hours later they have something, they’re editing it down, and then it’s being pressed on vinyl. 

TC: That’s the same with me. I make most of my tracks in one sitting. I don’t like coming back to it a track, because by the time I’ve come back to it I have a completely new idea. So I’m one of them, I’ve got to get it done there and then, so I’ll stay up for hours and just try to do it in one sitting. 

Tom Carruthers - “Technology Grooves (Original Mix)” out now on L&T Recordings

TP: When you have all of your stuff going, do you improvise and then edit at the end to make an arrangement? Or do you go into it with arrangement in your head as you’re making it? 

TC: Mostly I’ve got the layout in my head, how I’d want to map it out. I’d say I spend the majority of the time actually creating the sounds, morphing the sounds. The mix down is like a five-minute process for me. 

TP: Considering how fast you make and release music, do you find yourself ever looking back at your catalogue and thinking, “oh my god, I forgot I made that track!” Does it still feel fresh to you like you’re hearing some of it for the first time?  

TC: Yeah, some tracks, I’ve completely forgotten about. I don’t really enjoy listening to my own music because I know what’s coming.

TP: I feel the same way. Looking to the future, do you have any plans to perform live? If you were to do something live, would it be more of a DJ-based set? 

TC: I’d be more into DJing, because realistically, that’s where the majority of the money is in the dance music industry. So if I ever wanted to make a proper living from it, I would probably veer into DJing at some point. 

TP: So what’s coming up for you? Are you just going to keep releasing tracks as you make them or are you going to do EPs or albums? What’s your plan with the label and with your own music after this L.I.E.S. record? 

TC: The plan is probably going to start working towards albums, say in around a year’s time, maybe a best of. Like, “the best of so far” on Non Stop Rhythm. I’m doing another release more L.I.E.S., more techno-oriented. Got a nice reissue from a guy called Ron Wells under the pseudonym Jack Smooth coming out on Non Stop Rhythm too. 

TP: Did you send that to me? You sent me some reissue you were working on.

TC: I think I might have, yeah, Jack Smooth, “Break The Sound Barrier”, and the track two is “Buzz Off Music”. Really cool stuff from 1991. 

TP: Is that going to be a digital release or is it a 12”?

TC: Just a digital release, because unfortunately, he lost the master tapes a long time ago.

TP: When you’re promoting stuff, your own music and your label, do you focus mainly on Instagram? What are your tactics?

TC: Mostly IG, Instagram, yeah. Send some stuff out emails to friends, I do it organic. I don’t pay for promotion. 

TP: Do you get frustrated with Instagram or do you feel like it does what you need it to do? 

TC: I like the Instagram format, to be honest. I reckon it’s cool, posting snippets. I noticed it’s slowly starting to grow but it’s organic, so it’s not going to be overnight. 

TP: Exactly. I think Instagram’s pretty good for a label like yours. You have a strong, consistent aesthetic. Your 12” artwork is like a classic house label. Every time you see it with a little snippet, you know what to expect. You’re gonna hear a track, it’s gonna be raw, it’s gonna be good, so I think it works. 

Anyway, that’s pretty much it! I just want to say I love everything that I’ve heard from you and it’s very exciting to discover a new artist, especially someone that’s just doing it for the right reasons. So, nice to meet you and thank you for doing this.

TC: Best of luck to you!


”Non Stop Rhythm” 2xLP is out now on L.I.E.S. Records

Follow Tom Carruthers on Instagram

Follow Non Stop Rhythm on Bandcamp

INTERVIEW: CALVIN LECOMPTE

By: Tony Price

I recently spoke with Calvin LeCompte about his new album “Laughed At An Attachment”. We talked about his recording process, the sonic semiotics of tape hiss, the hilarity of psychedelic aesthetics and more.

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TP: I really love your show on NTS Radio. I think we share an infatuation with music that feels like it has fallen through the cracks of time, sounding sort of “half produced” or “demo-like”. What is it about that set of sonic qualities that appeals to you?

CL: Absolutely, yeah. I would assume that an entry point to talk about something like this would be intimacy. Perhaps it’s appealing because it feels intimate? I’m not saying that a demo is always better, but it has an energy to it that is often times a little more exciting. Even tape hiss itself adds a level of excitement, It’s more intimate, it’s looser, it feels more exciting. 

TP: That excited energy bleeds through the crackle of your new album Laughed At An Attachment. How did you make this album? Do you have  a home recording setup or do you have a work space that you go to?

CL: Me and my girlfriend live in a two bedroom in Chinatown. One room is a bedroom and the other is a studio. As far as for how it was recorded, I have, for lack of a better way to put it, fetishized that type of tape sound and the home recording tradition, so to speak, and I just gravitate towards it. An artist like Tonetta, although he doesn’t record to tape, has always resonated with me. I started recording into a computer with Garageband, so this has been a sort of backwards learning curve. I think most of the time, or at least with those a generation before me, people start with tape because that’s what’s available. For instance, learning a four track like a Tascam is not entirely intuitive. Figuring out bouncing left and right, activating certain tracks, etc. But I finally found a tape machine that I can comfortably work with. My understanding of it is that it’s the last four track cassette recorder ever put into production, maybe 2006, 2008? It’s called the Korg CR-4. It’s a wonderful machine. The nature of it is that it has built in speakers, which is cool, but it also has built in effects and amp simulators. You have to look into this machine. It’s fun. The inputs are direct, and this sounds trivial, but they are in the back of the machine, so you’re not reaching over the back, blindly hoping you’ll find the right input. Little things like that add up while you’re recording. It’s just a pain in the ass, you know what I mean? You just go in right through the front, you don’t have to pan it to the left or right, it’s just direct. Being a musician you usually end up, on some level, becoming some kind of a gear-head or something, and I don’t have a ton of gear, but you’re always looking for new things to make your process easier. I’ve kind of called it quits and decided that I’m only using this machine, hypothetically, for the rest of my life. I actually have two that I use at the same time. Otherwise, I’m done. I’m done looking for sounds! This machine has been good to me. I like it a lot. That’s how I made the album.

TP: I can imagine that between those two machines, bouncing ideas down, running them back through each other, all of that movement back and forth between two machines adds more life and character…you can almost hear those machines breathing on your record.

CL: Yes! The thing is, with a computer, everything is so intentional. I’m not saying that this is bad, but with my process, the accidents are actually real, and this works better for me on some level. For instance: I write pop songs. I’m not that really that “experimental”. I mean, there are some experimental elements on the record for sure, but typically, I am shooting to write a verse-chorus type of thing, and it can become a bit, I won’t saying “boring”, but predictable, which is fine. I like predictable. But to have real mistakes that I can’t really touch up helps me find the sound that I am looking for in the first place.

TP: With regards to computers, what role, if any, do they play in the music making process for you?

CL: They are exclusively used for the final step. I don’t use them for anything other than to digitize the tracks and share them with people. It just complicates things for me. I try to finish a track in four hours. The point of that is, and I’m sure this happens to everybody, but I can go as far as dedicating three weeks to a month to a song, and it is no better than the a song that took 25 minutes. I try to create something in four hours and the caveat is that it’s allowed to ‘suck’. It might turn out great and it might be something that I never want to hear again, but at least it’s done, you know?

TP: Very interesting. Do you find yourself making music more frequently in the day time or the night time? Does it really matter at all?

CL: I’m usually quite a night owl, although recently I’ve somehow managed to get on more of an early riser type of schedule which is a bit unusual, but yea, when I’m staying up until eight in the morning that usually means things are going pretty good! 

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TP: You are located in Chinatown in Manhattan. Space is obviously usually quite limited. What is your relationship to physical media like? Are you a record or book collector?

CL: That’s a good question. Very much not so, actually. I get by with the internet. The things I have, I tend to use. I do read often, and I have what I have, but I’m not, you know, seeking out first editions… I don’t even have a record player. It would be really special to own some of the records I play on the Uline show, but I’m okay not really collecting. 

TP: What about with your digital files? Files and folders that you accumulate for your NTS show, or your own music…do you organize and archive this stuff and save it on harddrives?

CL: Well it’s all archived on my laptop, and I have put it on thumb drives before, but the show is archived on NTS, thank god. When I do the Uline I tend to really make a point of not bleeding the songs together because the songs are possibly so rare that they’ll never show up again, and if anyone needs them again, they won’t have any bleed from previous songs and they can be extracted from those archived shows.

TP: Incredible. When it comes to uncovering this stuff, is it a really time intensive process for you? You are unearthing and presenting music that in many cases is so obscure.

CL: I dedicate the last four to five days before my deadline to be like, “I’m not doing anything else”. I order food and spend 12-13 hours going through all of my bookmarks. I’m not ever familiar with any of the songs before they go up there, so I enjoy the program as a fan of it just like anyone else does, it’s basically all that I listen to (laughs). And knock on wood, I don’t know how the fuck I keep finding stuff!

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TP: This reminds me of your album cover, the image that presents you as some sort of doorway. It’s as if these songs that never got their chance the first time around are out there, swimming in the ether towards you specifically, passing through your brain to find their way to us. 

CL: I hear you man! Sometimes if I’m on a psychedelic or something I can get on that wavelength, I know what you mean. 

TP: How would you describe or sum up the Uline catalogue show?

CL: Hmm. Not to be so clinical, but it’s just primarily an expression of my taste in music. What I exclude from the Uline is important. I don’t really fuck with music made beyond 1983, I don’t fuck with proto-punk too much, if that’s even relevant. I just like to stay in my zone, and I definitely don’t mean to sound xenophobic here, but I do tend to stick to English speaking music. For instance, there is a lot of very beautiful Japanese folk out there, extraordinary stuff, but I don’t know Japanese. I don’t know the history of Japanese music. I just feel that I can kind of understand the UK and the USA stuff, so I feel like I know where it sits in relation to everything, but if you are a Japanese artist you might be commenting on another major artist that I am unfamiliar with, so I think that’s a show for someone else.

TP: In both your music and your show I can recognize a particular sense of humor, a ridiculousness and absurdity that bleeds out of the lyrics, music, and aesthetics of 1960’s psychedelia; it’s something that has kept me drawn to and in love with this stuff for decades. Is this something that you also pick up on and intentionally showcase?

CL: Some of that music is certainly funny as hell. But first and foremost it has to resonate.

TP: Of course.

CL: Yeah, funny is good. If I find something funny I’m happy to put it on there.

TP: My last question is about a song you played a few months ago by Linda Finkle, called “Welcome To The Race”, the Hillary Clinton song. (Laughs)

CL: You see, that’s funny. But it’s also important because it’s a moment in time. With all of this stuff, its really a chain of people who bring this stuff to life, uploading, archiving it online. 

TP: I could talk about this stuff for hours, but I’ll let you go. I look forward to putting this record out together.

CL: It’s been great working with you. It’s been a perfect fit and really, really positive!

Laughed At An Attachment is out now on Maximum Exposure, streaming everywhere. Limited edition cassettes are also out now through Adhesive Sounds.