We here at Howl & Echoes have a healthy long term relationship with Foals. Their 2015 album What Went Down was picked apart by some of our best, and the consensus was that it was a masterpiece of a record. We also collectively agree that Spanish Sahara is one of the best indie-rock songs ever released. What Went Down had a few amazing tracks that we’re still dancing to, and a new remix of Night Swimmers by Mura Masa will be keeping us grooving for a while yet.

Hailing from England and just 20 years old, Mura Masa has been making serious waves of late. You might recognise his name from the single Lovesick, which reached the top spot on the Spotify Viral charts in the US and UK. A shot at remixing a band as big and legendary as Foals is pretty great, and his remix does the original track justice.

Where the original was an airy, tropical indie piece, Mura Masa transforms it into a dance floor staple. The best part? None of the initial intricacies are lost – they’ve just evolved into something futuristic and dance-floor ready. Some of the best remixes are those which take a beloved track and transplant it into a totally new environment without necessarily creating something unrecognisable. It’s a great piece, and you can check it out below on Soundcloud, but it’s also on Spotify and Apple Music, so you can add it to your favourite playlists.

Read our interview with Foals

Image: Soundcloud

 

Whether you’ve heard of the London Contemporary Orchestra or not, I can almost guarantee that you’ve heard their music. Most recently featured throughout Radiohead’s ninth album A Moon Shaped Pool, they’ve also performed and recorded with Foals, Beck, Belle & Sebastian and plenty more. In a more experimental, less radio-friendly environment, they have blended light, art and music in a collaboration with Ron Arad, have worked with Boiler Room to perform with Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood and producer Actress, recorded soundtracks for films including Macbeth, The Master (composed by Greenwood) and Slow West, as well as having performed a live score of the Academy Award-winning film There Will Be Blood, again composed by Greenwood.

The blend of orchestral music, instrumentation and other elements is something we see more and more often across every style of contemporary music today, from pop, to rock, to electronic and many more. While bands like Radiohead and Foals have a fruitful history of collaborating with orchestras, it’s now a much more common occurrence in other styles too, perhaps most interestingly within the realms of electronic and even hip-hop, such as the Hilltop Hoods’ recent album and stadium tour with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, production duo Flight Facilities’ 2015 performance with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra (which is being replicated this year in Sydney), and Berlin producer Pantha Du Prince’s extensive work with The Bell Laboratory, to name a few.

The London Contemporary orchestra first formed in 2008, and I was first introduced to them when I saw them performance at London’s Roundhouse as part of Ron Arad’s Curtain Call in 2011. In that time, they have become one of the most interesting musical organisations around, stretching their hands far, far beyond what one might expect of a typical orchestra. Having worked with artists across countless areas of the musical globe, not to mention having performed in incredibly unique locations like the top of London’s Primrose Hill and a hydraulic power station, they not only bring their incredible talents to the recordings and concerts of others, but seek to challenge and change common perceptions of what an orchestra can do. For instance, during a performance with Greenwood, the crowd were encouraged to act as if they were at a regular gig – not a classical performance, including cheering, moving around and standing up. They went so far as to even encourage audience participation via an interactive mobile phone app.

I was honoured to speak to LCO co-artistic directors, Robert Ames and Hugh Brunt about the marriage of electronic and orchestral instrumentation both live and on record, some of their many thrilling experiences with and the challenges and differences involved in working with an orchestra in a remarkably cutting-edge, modern environment.

How did the LCO first become involved in electronic and rock? What attracted you to that as opposed to typical orchestral work?

Hugh Brunt: The programming of our first season, in 2008, was deliberately eclectic. We opened with Mark-Anthony Turnage’s Scorched – a series of reconceptions of jazz guitarist John Scofield’s compositions – written for jazz trio and large orchestra. That season also featured Jonny Greenwood’s Popcorn Superhet Receiver (which features heavily in his score to There Will Be Blood) programmed alongside pieces by Xenakis, Messiaen and a newly-commissioned work by Emily Hall.

Our first direct collaboration was with electronic duo Matmos at Village Underground, Hackney in 2009. Soon after we toured with Belle & Sebastian, and performed Frank Zappa’s The Yellow Shark at the historic Roundhouse in Camden, part of a festival overseen by the Zappa family to mark what would have been Zappa’s 75th birthday.

Then Robert and I just started exploring and seeking out interesting collaborations across any genre – it didn’t matter if it was indie rock, ambient electronica, techno that you can’t dance to, etc. Just great, engaging music – sometimes complex, sometimes simple. That’s how we’ve ended up working with artists like Foals, Richard Reed Parry (of Arcade Fire), Actress, William Basinski and Beck.

With Jonny Greenwood at Best Kept Secret Festival. Image: Supplied

With Jonny Greenwood at Best Kept Secret Festival. Image: Supplied

Do you look for anything in particular when considering a collaboration of this kind?

Robert Ames: Really it’s just the quality of the music. Jonny just writes really incredible music, so we recorded the soundtrack to The Master – that’s how the relationship started – and it just carried on with him from there. Richard Reed Parry from Arcade Fire, he’s a classically trained musician and writes beautiful music as well. The relationship with Foals, they approached us to have strings on one of their albums (Holy Fire). There’s no complex formula, it’s just a feeling, really, when the collaboration feels right.

Most of these are live performances. Apart from soundtracks, the main recorded collaborations have been with Foals and now Radiohead. What are the main challenges when recording as opposed to playing live?

RA: It’s a different challenge. When you’re doing a live performance, for me, live performance is always more tough because you do it once and it’s gone. Obviously with recording you’re in a more controlled environment, but you’re still looking to get the freshest performance of that recording. So one of the biggest challenges is to try and keep it as fresh as possible, even when you’re doing it for the third or fourth time to get it really perfect.

So is there anything special you do to keep it fresh? Or do you often use first takes?

RA: Yeah, a lot of the time it works out the first or second time *laughs* not to blow our own trumpet, but we’ve got a great group of musicians, they’re really interesting, so I think we sound quite fresh. It’s a young group, 25-30 years old, and a lot of the musicians are doing their own stuff: we’ve got improvisers, composers, people creating their own electronic music as well.

And what are the most exiting aspects of putting it to record, like adding production values and effects?  

RA: The people we’ve collaborated with are quite open to working with us, so a lot of the time musicians will give examples of something that could be slightly different or something could work better, just to mix it up. Sometimes we’ll workshop different kind of sounds and effects with those artists. So the project we did with Actress recently at the Barbican, we spent a long run up period with him working with individual musicians and workshopping different sound effects on the instruments. It’s so nice to hear that palette of colours being used in different ways.

How involved are you within the composition process of each project, or is it more strictly on the recording side?

RA: It’s really different for each one. Holy Fire, for example, pretty much all the music was already down on paper already, arranged by Hugh, who was also conducting. But he would take on ideas on how to slightly change the sound, in dialogue with the band during the sessions, so it became a more fluid process. Yannis [Philippakis, Foals frontman] would listen to a take, he’d have some fresh input and we’d keep on working, so it would adapt as we went.

HB: With Jonny Greenwood, all the material comes from him, but we’ve been fortunate to work with him closely in workshop scenarios – just a small group of seven string players and a pianist, and him on ondes Martonet and guitar. He’s fascinated by drawing new colours and timbres from these instruments, and equally sensitive to the personalities – interested in the characters, the dynamic of the ensemble, not just the instruments the players are holding. We’ve ended up performing eight, maybe nine, new works by Jonny written for the group over the past couple of years, and toured to some amazing cities including Moscow, Geneva, Budapest and festivals in the Netherlands and Poland.

When performing live with these collaborators, what are the main considerations that are different to a typical orchestral performance?

RA: A typical orchestral performance would be planned out months in advance. The Curtain Call concert that’s coming up [with Ron Arad], we already have a really clear idea of exactly what pieces we’re going to play, exactly when we’re rehearsing. With Jonny it was really fun, we treated it much more like how a band would have a set list that would change for very concert. We’d have a pool that we’d choose what to play from and we’d finalise it just before we went on stage. We’d get a vibe from the spaces we were playing in and we’d tailor the music accordingly to what we thought the audience was gonna be like, how much energy would be in the room. So we’d play at the Béla Bartók National Concert Hall in Budapest, which is a really traditional, amazing massive concert hall, and Wapping Hydraulic Power Station for example, which is a really raw space with the audience standing up, and we played The Roundhouse with the audience surrounding us, so we tailored the program to fit the situation. 

What’s an example of what you would tailor, say to the Wapping Hydraulic Power Station but not the Roundhouse?

RA: The Wapping Station was the first one that we did. It’s not a concert venue, it literally was a hydraulic power station and after that it was used as an art space. There were two large spaces, so we started off the concert in one space – that was just acoustic string stuff, and then we moved everybody into another space that was really cavernous, and we chose pieces of music that would specifically suit that acoustic. In Budapest, we really enjoyed playing music that could really test people’s listening, test people’s patience, so we weren’t so frightened about playing really slow music that took time to reveal itself. But when we were in Moscow we were in a mega club called Yotaspace that could take a couple of thousand people, so we were playing shorter, faster pieces with more energy. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NyHTsVGPZZQ

Is it challenging or more exciting to have a set list that changes, coming from that much more planned out orchestral background?

HB: It’s a bit of both. The way in which we respond to (and are led by) the space is key, so this means that we tend to rehearse most, if not all, the material to see what’s speaking well with the acoustics, look at the trajectory of the programme, and draw up the setlist accordingly just before the show. It can be a much freer way of working.

RA: And we come from a world where everything is practised and rehearsed and refined, almost to the point where you can take it so far that it loses some energy. But I think we’ve got to the point now where we relish that challenge, we enjoy things when they’re fresh. The Barbican show with Actress, we were still refining a lot of the elements in the dress rehearsal itself. It just worked really well, it had a special kind of energy.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KEy4dn-UM04

I’m particularly interested in the work you’ve done with electronic music – the Radiohead album, as well as these Boiler Room collaborations with Actress and Jonny Greenwood. How does it work? Where you start when you have to bring such different forms of instrumentation together?

HB: With Actress, it started with a series of workshops, out of which we spun the arrangements, scored for a chamber line-up of four strings, clarinet, prepared piano, percussion and harp. We were looking to realise as close as possible the timbres and colours of Actress’ electronics through acoustic means; something of a physicalisation of those synthesised sounds. That involved utilising various accessories: plastic bags; keys; Blu-Tack (to dampen the piano’s upper strings); milk frothers. There was also subtle manipulation of the acoustic sounds, live on stage with the electronics. For us it was a really positive example of how these kinds of collaborations can work – all about enjoying and celebrating the ambiguity of sound colour that sits between electronic and acoustic spaces.

RA: Another example is we’ve got a show coming up called DEEP∞MINIMALISM, where we’re playing a piece by Daphne Oram, who set up the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. She wrote this piece years and years and years ago, probably one of the earliest examples of a piece of music for orchestra and electronics. It’s so old in fact that it’s for orchestra and vinyl. DJ/ turntablist Shiva Feshareki will be manipulating vinyl live on stage from recordings of the piece that we’ve previously done of the orchestra. So we’re recording the piece in a dry acoustic and also in a wet acoustic. She’ll have the wet acoustic recording on one vinyl and the dry acoustic on one vinyl, and she’s going to be live manipulating that with the orchestra playing live, acoustically. So that’s just one super early example of how it could be done.

And when you put that to record, are there any particular challenges you face with marrying electronic and orchestral sounds?

RA: A lot of the time we end up working with strings and electronics, it just seems to be a really happy marriage. When we were playing with Jonny, it was guitar and strings, and a lot of the time he was playing the ondes Martenot, a really funky electronic instrument that you can do vibrato on. It sounds a lot like a human voice, you can do a vibrato on it like you would a string instrument.

You’re also working on a performance of In C with Terry Riley and you worked with him last year too. It’s one of those pieces that’s so influential, but also so interesting and transformable, depending on who’s working on it. What’s it like to have worked on this with Riley himself?

RA: Last year we did a piece called Bell Station III, a brand new piece that he wrote with a really funky line up of instruments. He used a toy piano and children’s choir, all sorts of stuff. That was a fairly straightforward piece of music, but it was just amazing to be on a stage with him, listening to him improvise and freak out on synths. For In C, it’s him and his son playing guitar, but we haven’t started the process with him yet. I can’t tell you too much because I’m not too sure! He’s a super open guy so I imagine it’s going to be a really open rehearsal process.

Do you have a favourite moment on the Radiohead album?

RA: Yeah, recording Burn The Witch was my favourite bit. It’s a great, great tune and what Jonny does orchestrally, and with the strings, is just a really amazing sound. It’s not a sound you can put to anything else. It’s his and Radiohead’s.

HB: I love the production and engineering (by Nigel Godrich and Sam Petts-Davies) particularly, the strings in Glass Eyes is beautiful – you hear this amazing fluid, fully dimensional quality in the sound.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yI2oS2hoL0k

Feature image: With Actress at The Barbican. Image: Tom D Morgan

Amidst all the hype of Coachella, it’s understandable that some artists can get a little over excited by the occasion.

Such was the feeling (we assume) for Foals front man Yannis Philippakis and guitarist Jimmy Smith in one of the most stellar backstage interviews of this year’s festival season.

Given they had just come off stage, Jimmy and Yannis were absolutely buzzing for the chat, with Yannis revealing that the band had just gone overtime and run into a spot of bother. During a furious performance of last year’s primeval epic What Went Down, the festival opted to forcefully remove the band from the stage by switching off their power right as the band paused the song for bridge.

“Our stage manager threatened our drummer and wanted the police to come out. An apology has been made, cookies have been sent and hopefully the police won’t rock up and arrest us.”

Highlighting the awkwardness of the power cut even further is this video which was posted on the festival’s official YouTube Channel.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQwNNAS9ZAI

Yannis then told the online audience what it was really like for bands to play on the main stage of a festival, noting that the crowd was “a marshmallow field.”

Getting slightly deeper, he admitted that, “When you get into the rhythm of touring and the oblivion of it, it’s easy to not take stock of how special everything around you is….now we are half aware of it, and we have won the battle in the sense that we know that we should be appreciating it.”

“(Coachella) is kind of like the bold and beautiful of festivals I think. Everyone is really pretty and groomed..and it’s different from the European festivals because of that.”

We can only assume the excitable nature was from the adrenaline that comes after playing the main stage at Coachella, but we

Despite problems with the organisers, all accounts show that the band killed their slot on the main stage. Check out their interview below, and while you’re at it, check out our interview with them earlier this year as well.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WIc0bRrm-1c

IMAGE: NME

City Calm Down have taken to the tripe j studios for Like A Version today, in support of their recent album In A Restless House, and tour which kicks off today in Sydney.

After a brief April Fools Day gag of pulling out a recorder and starting on the intro of Dr Dre and Snoop Dogg‘s The Next Episode (to be honest I was really hoping this would break out into a full band version, because that would have been sick,) they launched into one of my personal favourite songs in the history of indie rock, Foals’ Spanish Sahara. 

And my goodness did they do it justice.

The track is rich and rumbling, with vocals soaring up on high above those dramatic chords – it would’ve made Yannis Philippakis and co. proud.

This is just the absolute perfect song for City Calm Down to cover – their ability to craft lush, sweeping atmospheres meets with one of the most beautiful, emotive melodies Foals have ever produced, like it they were born to do it.

This is a powerful, passionate cover of an incredible tune – one that we can only to see them perform live on tour this week!

https://youtu.be/86-_pY8cI28

Read our interview with City Calm Down

Read our interview with Foals where we tell them about how we cried when we saw Spanish Sahara played live. 

City Calm Down Tour Dates

Friday 1 April: Oxford Arts Factory, Sydney
Saturday 2 April: Woolly Mammoth, Brisbane
Friday 8 April: Fat Controller, Adelaide
Saturday 9 April: Corner Hotel, Melbourne

Record Store Day is right around the corner, and with the news of exclusives, re-releases, special editions and more, comes a slew of new, or previously unheard music. UK five-piece Foals have jumped on the RSD bandwagon, announcing a 7″ special release. Yannis Philippakis and co are set to drop a cover of Daffodils by Mark Ronson and Tame Impala aka Kevin Parker, which they first performed live for Triple J’s Like A Version last year. The 7″ will also feature a studio version of previously unreleased track Rain, which was recorded during the studio sessions for their 2015 album What Went Down. A demo version surfaced last year, and you can hear the final version below.

Opening on a choppy string loop, Philippakis’ echoed vocals bring in a beautiful, booming melody, backed by a distant yet demanding beat. This track is just stunning. Raw and evocative, it’s interesting to learn that it was recorded during the WWD sessions as it has a much more stripped back feel and a less-produced wildness to it. In fact, if it had made it to the album, it would have easily been one of my favourite tracks on the release.

I love it, I love it, I love it.

Here’s the official artwork:

foals art

Read more: We hung out with Foals backstage in Sydney

Check out our photos of Foals live at The Hordern Pavilion

Image: Dani Hansen/Howl & Echoes

Currently in the middle of a world tour in support of incredible fourth album, What Went DownFoals dropped into SiriusXMU (a Canadian radio station) for a live session that included a performance of their hit single Mountain At My Gates and a cover of Mark Ronson‘s funk jam, Daffodils.

Originally featuring the vocals of Tame Impala‘s Kevin Parker, Foals’ Yannis Philippakis is more than a worthy contender in this cover. Taking the psych-funk and replacing it with some good old fashioned Foals-esque power, his voice heaves with a sudden weight that wasn’t in the song before. “Dropping another daffodil” has never sounded more urgent, but it’s a different side that we can definitely get down on. Noticeably missing one member for the live cut, the remaining four don’t seem fazed at all and turn the track into a spacey, rocked out version that sounds just so damn good.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CtSDu7Km3AE

Foals were in the country just a few weeks ago for Falls Festival and two sideshows (see photos for their Sydney show here), and their time was memorable to say the least. The band killed every single performance they did, and landed themselves in all three of our reviewers’ highlights for Falls. You can read that here and check out our track-by-track review of What Went Down here.

Image via HungerTV

If you’ve been reading Howl & Echoes throughout the past year, you’ll know our collective adoration for UK five-piece Foals. Fresh off the bat of their glorious new album What Went Downthe group were in town across New Years 2015-2016 to headline Falls Festival, and a few sideshows across the country. We hung out with guitarist Jimmy Smith, and keyboardist Edwin Congreave, in Sydney before they took to the stage at the Hordern Pavilion. Speaking on everything from loving Radiohead and the Flaming Lips, to hurtful comments on the internet, to listening to fan criticism, and what makes an album the best album in the world, it was as hilarious as it was insightful.

How was Falls Festival?

J: It was good, yeah it was fun. Byron was the best one. It would’ve been good if there were more of them. We did Laneway a while ago, and there was loads of them! Anyway, Tasmania was really good, we were a bit jet lagged over New Years, we saw in New Years on stage in Melbourne which was great, but I was really jet lagged, and knackered, and the party afterwards was crap! But New Years is always crap. Byron was really really cool.

Did you get to see any other acts playing?

J: I got to see Mac DeMarco, who I fucking love and have been waiting so long to see and he was amazing. And then we saw Young Fathers, who were fucking awesome.

Oh nice! They’re playing here tonight.

J: Are they?

Yep. And I can’t go because I’ll be here seeing you guys.

J: If I were you *Edwin laughing* I would go watch them. They’re really good.

E: Yeah, we’re on terrible form at the moment.

J: They’re a bit better than us live. A bit different I guess. But I’m biased.
E: I saw Django Django play three times because they played before us, I’ve never seen them before but I’ve become a massive fan. It’s so intoxicating, it’s like a whole world. Everything they do, all the sounds. I just love the whole show.

So, I run my website with another girl and she’s cried the last two times she’s seen you play.

J: In pain?

Yeah. She was like, this is the worst.

E: Did Yannis land on her?

*laughs all around*

Tears of emotion.

J: Shit. That’s cool.

Yeah, at Falls this year, and Splendour in the Grass last year. On that note, one thing I read about What Went Down was that you’ve said there’s a few heavier songs on the album because those really went off when you played live. Was that more about the audience going off, or you guys having so much fun on stage?

J: A combination, really. The main thing is it’s really fun for us to play this heavy songs and big riffs. it’s what you wanna do when you play guitar, it’s what school bands do. It’s the first thing a band does, like covering Led Zeppelin. It’s really fun I don’t know how far we’re gonna take it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iuQQIawCqBA

Oh so we won’t be seeing a Foals metal album next?

J: *laughs* we don’t wanna be a totally heavy band, I find that really uninteresting. But it’s certainly a lot of fun, and it contrasts really well with the quieter, cleaner, “poppier” songs. But it’s so nice, you hit a fuzz pedal, there’s a bit of feedback, everyone’s like ‘woah!’
E: You need the dynamic.

And it’s great to have those peaks and troughs on the album as well as on stage.

J: It’s gotta be balanced. Otherwise it’ll be shit.
E: It’s a defining feature of the band, which isn’t going anywhere. Putting out a record that has all of those ups and downs. I can’t imagine the next record just being one thing.

J: I guarantee that’s what people think we’re gonna do.

Go heavier?

J: Yeah. So we’re gonna go acoustic.
E: Yeah or we’ll do five solo albums, and we’ll see whose does the best.

This question’s for you Edwin. A few years ago you did an interview after Holy Fire had come out-

E: Oh, shit. I never said that. *laughs* what was the question?

It was just about audience reactions! You were talking about how when Spanish Sahara came out, you said it was confusing to fans at that point in your career because people maybe didn’t understand just yet what Foals was all about. Did you feel like the band was going to respond and change your sound accordingly?

E: I think when everyone heard it on the radio, it premiered on Zane Lowe’s show, his Hottest Record or something. We’d never really had that before, we’d put out one record, we never had something that big. All the previous singles, it was a slow build-up, we gradually formed our audience. But with Total Life Forever, that was such a shock to everyone listening. There was no context whatsoever, the only thing most people had heard was Antidotes. So I seem to recall comments like, ‘what the fuck?’

J: They’re still doing that. I read some horrible comment last night, I can’t remember how I found it. It was some girl being like, what the hell are you doing, why are you doing all these fucking disgusting, shit, slow songs, all this heavy fucking shit, it was really scathing, like, ‘get back to your math rock!’ Oh my god, it was horrible. Bye bye, that was one fan I’m happy to lose.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eYoINidnLRQ

So do you take fan response into account when you’re writing, or is it more that you create what you want, and if they like it then they like it?

J: Well if there was mass hating then we’d be like, well we’ve probably done something wrong. But I don’t think you can really listen. Well, no, you listen, and you can take it on board if a lot of people didn’t like it, but you can’t change what you do because of what people think. Otherwise you’ll make the worst album. It’ll be a deeply confused album because every single note you write, you’ll be thinking about what someone thinks of it. And I think almost all of the best albums in the world were made in total seclusion from that.

And perhaps the worst were written when they took on too much from others.

J: Yeah, or when they took too much advice from outsiders. It’s a really fragile ecosystem, writing a record, you can’t let too much in or it’ll get polluted.
E: But back with Total Life, it was a precarious moment because it was so new, so we would have been affected by it. Fortunately the majority of people were saying that they loved the song.
J: And now people change their mind. *Puts on a weird falsetto voice* “Oh I love Spanish Sahara!”

Once it gets popular!

J: Exactly!

But now, fans are more used to the variety, and you’re less likely to get people criticising a big change like that. Well, except for that one girl.

J: Except for this girl. Who I WILL find, by the way. I will kill you.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l_EIE5f2t6M

When you’re recording, do you want the audience to have a particular reaction – or do you just want listeners to react in some way?

J: Well a positive reaction would be nice! Or maybe even a negative one? Yeah, some sort of reaction would be great.
E: Imagine if there was no reaction at all.
J: Well we did a show that had no reaction. It was K-Rock Christmas Party (in LA), some horrible radio show thing where you’ve got to play or they won’t play you on the radio. It’s “dance, monkey, dance!” territory. We played to a lobotomised crowd, teenage fans who like, what are they called? Twenty One Pilots. It was an emotionless crowd. So yeah, anything to avoid that.

But when we’re writing our music we think, “What’s gonna happen when we play that live, what’s it gonna do to people?” And you have a fair idea – what it does to you, it’s probably gonna do that to other people.

Okay so you sort of internalise it – how it affects you?

J: Yeah, when you’re playing, writing, in a room and you’re like, “Oh fuck that’s so sad,” or you feel really angry. And you know, we’ve got thick skins because that’s what we do for a living, so obviously it will affect other people more than it affects us.

E: I do remember being quite shocked and confused when we first started making music. We were just signed and getting released. And all of the ways I felt about the music, I thought it was the best music that there could possibly be, and finding it so emotional and powerful, and then finding out that some people just didn’t have that reaction to it. I was just like, “But, this doesn’t make any sense! How can you listen to this music and not feel exactly the same way?” I was quite young.

J: It’s like the Radiohead syndrome. When people ask what’s your favourite band and you say Radiohead, and they go, “yeah, just doesn’t really do it for me!” Like, I get it, but I still can’t fathom it. It’s like… how?

But even with people who do like Radiohead, every album is so different that two people could say they’re their favourite band, but still have a totally different experience.

J: For me, it’s OK Computer, then Kid A, tied with Amnesiac, then Hail To The Thief.
E: Not that he’s thought about it. *Jimmy laughs*

Yeah, I go between OK and Kid A as my favourite.

J: I have to do OK because it was the one that got me into them, and it is kind of still a rock album. But Kid A is fucking amazing, probably better than OK Computer. Anyway, don’t get me started. It’s funny when bands shit on Radiohead. If they were to release any of their albums, probably even Pablo Honey, they would be heralded as the greatest band ever. But when you’ve got a collection that’s that good, you know, it’s difficult. I feel sorry for them.

E: But who shits on Radiohead?

J: Oh, some people. I can’t think of any now. They’re like, ‘oh it’s so depressing!’

 E: It happens to me quite often, I’ll share a new song with the band, I’ll say, “Check out this amazing track, oh my God!” And they just don’t get it.

J: We are winding you up a lot of the time!

What was the last song where that happened?

E: It was Hello by Adele. *Jimmy laughs* No, seriously! The day it was released. I’d never really liked Adele that much, but I heard the song and thought it was absolutely incredible. I found it so powerful, I was like, “Guys, guys, you’ve gotta listen to this!”
J: I felt bad though after. I was like, “Oh, she’s just singing loud, who cares?” But I went and watched a live session on TV, and it was really cool, she’s fucking cool, so I take it all back. I just think her music is terribly dull. But again, it ticks his boxes, but not mine.
E: It keeps happening, and it becomes more of a mystery to me, the older I get. I feel like I’m losing track of how to relate to other people’s music tastes.

L: Is it important to do that?

E: Well I’d like to have some idea of how other people interpret and appreciate music, and I seem to have less of an idea now than I did in the past. I think it’s because I’m thinking about it more. When I was younger I didn’t really care. But now, it’s such a mystery that I can listen to a song that to me, is like a perfect song, but someone else who I really respect doesn’t like it at all.

J: It also happens more when you really get into something. Like Mac DeMarco. It’s not on Edwin’s radar, but I was SO into Salad Days. I bought into it, I got the fucking tshirt. So I loved it. And there’s this girl called Julia Holter who released an album last year which I just love, but I’m holding it back from the band because I know it’s gonna get fucking slated. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-n4U2KZZVs

E: It would be helpful if you could take a person, and do a sort of backwards family tree of their musical discovery. Like the moments they first heard records, what their parents played, because it gets to who they are at the moment. So when I’m talking to Jimmy we’ll be talking about something we have in common, but there’s all these roots that are different, and that explains why you like one thing and I like another. I don’t know how you’d trace that though. So, we both LOVE The Flaming Lips, probably in equal measure. They have an amazing ability to reinvent themselves.

J: Steven Drozd is the genius behind that band, really, in that he writes all the music.

E: We love them equally, but our love of them is based in very different roots, and bands like them, who I listen to, and yet Jimmy doesn’t. It’s really interesting.

It IS interesting!

J: That makes people think it’s interesting. Even if it’s not.

E: Oh that reminds me! I was having Christmas dinner with his girlfriend, there were some family members I hadn’t met. Her uncle is really interesting, really smart, but he’s definitely… Well, he likes to talk. He’s got lots of opinions. He was just talking about the financial situation in Australia at the moment, he was monologuing. It was actually really interesting, but he went on for about fifteen minutes. And at the end he sort of paused, and said, “that was a really interesting analysis.” He was just applauding himself. And he just stopped. I was desperately trying to see if anyone else was flinching! I would love to have that kind of self-confidence, to just talk, and then think, wow, that was so fascinating *claps*.  Think that’s my main aim in life, to develop that.

J: I don’t think you’ll ever get there. And you certainly won’t be in the band if you do.

E: Aww. You see what I have to put up with? This bullying.

J: It’s not bullying, it’s just a threat *laughs*

Check out our photo gallery of Foals with Django Django, live at the Hordern Pavilion

Django Django

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Foals had a mammoth 2015, with the release of their stellar fourth album What Went Down and an international headline tour, which has just seen them headline our own Falls Festival, as well as a run of solo headline shows across the east coast.

What Went Down delivered a heavier, more intensified sound than what we’ve heard on their previous albums (read our full review here), and their already-insane live performances have grown more ferocious than ever before.

The band have now taken to the international airwaves, delivering an energetic rendition of Mountain At My Gates on the latest episode of The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. Once again proving that they are a serious force to be reckoned with, they’re the kind of band you will never, ever tire of catching live.

Watch the performance here:

Foals are continuing on their Australian tour this week, including a headline slot at Perth’s Southbound Festival this weekend. They continue their tour next through Europe and the USA, where they’ll be performing at a number of esteemed festivals, including the recently-announced Coachella 2016.

Read More: Foals Frontman Yannis Philippakis Tells The Story Of ‘What Went Down’

 

Foals have become the latest band to be featured on the endlessly cute Kids Interview Bands YouTube channel, which, as the name suggests, is a wonderful, long-running video series of young children interviewing artists.

The clip opens with the interviewee, 5th grader Piper, sitting on a couch in between Foals frontman and concert safety campaigner Yanis Philipakkis, and bass player Walter Gervers.

Piper proceeds to ask the band a series of left-field questions, like, “What music did you like as a kid that you don’t like now?”

Walter noted that “I used to like a lot of kind of power ballads that I don’t listen to now- stuff like Bon Jovi”, while Yannis revealed that he had “listened to a lot of heavy metal, but… I’ve fallen out of love with it.”

Both members went on to reveal some interesting personal details, with both members calmly sitting back and picking off the name of each of the Spice Girls. Watch the full video below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGJY18-LkdA

Kids Interview Bands has become renowned for both the mismatch of children interviewing artists, as well as the intimate details revealed by artists as a result of the questions posed. Past highlights have included Kevin Parker, The Pixies, The Smashing Pumpkins, and even and Nameless Ghoul from Swedish pop-metal act Ghost.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=md4JYaxhjtg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPy5jMJk7a8

Foals will be visiting Australia this month as part of the Falls festival as well as playing some of their own shows. Catch them at the dates below and check out the official website for ticket info.

FALLS FESTIVAL

Lorne, VIC: Dec 28, 2015 0 Jan 01, 2016 in Lorne, VIC
Marion Bay, TAS: Dec 29, 2015 – Jan 01, 2016 (All ages)
Byron Bay, NSW: Dec 31, 2015 – Jan 03, 2016

FOALS SIDESHOWS

Tues January 5: Hordern Pavilion, Sydney
Tickets
Thurs January 7: Festival Hall, Melbourne
Tickets