cbertsch: This is me, reflected in my daughter's eye. (Default)
cbertsch ([personal profile] cbertsch) wrote2003-09-25 10:47 am

Labor Fruit

My feature on the independent-label band Enon -- highly recommended, BTW -- is out today.

When I write one of these things, I listen to the record over and over. You can really tell how much you like something when you have to listen to it obsessively for work. I went in to Borders late the other night to look for something to review for Punk Planet and they were playing Hocus-Pocus. I wasn't just professionally pleased. I was excited to hear the record in a new context.

Then again, the band's driving force John Schmersal was in Brainiac, responsible for my absolute favorite song I discovered by downloading -- legally, of course, from Epitonic -- "Flash Ram".

It's funny. When you do an interview for a feature, in which you're only going to end up selecting a few quotes from a great many, you never know what's going to be most valuable until you start writing. The comment about video games seemed like the one least related to the record when I was conducting the interview. I regarded as one of those necessary icebreakers. But by the time I was done, it proved to be the key to everything.

[identity profile] cpratt.livejournal.com 2003-09-25 04:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Interesting article there Charlie. You also touched on something I've been thinking a lot about today - a modern tendency to just... how to put this... never try too hard at any one draft or take, because after all technology exists to help you splice it all together later on. Given that anything you produce can more or less easily and cheaply be replaced by a later version, why try hard at really nailing it during the recording? [This came up because, well, in the software industry, there's kind of a mantra that goes something like "well, we'll just patch it later or do a service release" - instead of really trying to get it right the first time, which seems less possible now that it ever has been... but I digress.]

Similarly, I think it's fascinating that you touch on what it's like to not have to think too much about what you're buying [or downloading], which seems also to lead to people collecting a lot of music they don't really listen to. God knows there have been plenty of times I've bought a record without really listening to it - when you're spoiled for choice, it's hard to just hunker down and pay attention to the recording you just bought. The first time I heard Kid 606's The Illness, I thought it sucked. Eventually I forced myself to listen to it on the CD player in my car a few times, and now I'm enthralled with its density. But, again, I digress.

Thanks for a good read.