Saturday, 30 June 2012
Workshop interview #8: Magical Musical Album Cover Making Machine
At 3pm on the Sunday at Indietracks you’ll be able to join Ellie & Sarah's Magical Musical Album Cover Making Machine. Here’s a quick interview with all the details!
Please tell us a bit about the workshop?
Come and make record covers with us! Along with blank and old LP sleeves, we'll be bringing along pre-printed words (designed by Ellie) for you to select at random to make your band name and album title. We'll accompany these with some super stylish pre-printed drawings (by Sarah) for you to choose, and we'll help you put them all together to design a super-arty album cover.
There'll also be accompanying suitable colouring devices, an assortment of added sticky extras, and a whole heap of drawing, cutting and sticking things to make sure everyone leaves with an awesome piece of art.
Tell us a little bit about yourselves
We are Ellie (a graphic designer) and Sarah (an illustrator). We became friends through blurry chatting about music and design and illustration and things and thought this would be a good chance to put all our experience and loves together.
Ellie works as a graphic designer (http://www.elliekilburn.co.uk/) and has done graphics for lots of different areas including: film, artists, architects, charities and publishers. She collects old printed things and posts them here: ekilburn.tumblr.com. Sarah is one half of illustration duo Crayonlegs (http://www.crayonlegs.com/), and has had her work published in the Guardian, the New York Times, The Radio Times and Time Out to name a few. Having designed record covers for a few fancy bands including indie poppers Los Campesinos! so she is particularly qualified for the workshop! She has most recently been collaborating with Emma Gaston on ceramic pieces. She is also one-third of underused shoe-gaze band Fever Dream (soundcloud.com/fever-dream).
Have you been to the festival before? Do you have any stories you'd like to divulge with us?
Ellie is fresh to Indietracks and very excited. Sarah went to the very first Indietracks (which happened to be a boiling hot weekend) where her boyfriend’s old band Esiotrot played in a roasting hot tin church with no ventilation. As she watched as she almost got stuck to one of the benches as it was that sticky from the heat...
What are you looking forward to most this Indietracks?
Paul Rains? - Can we say that?! Or should we say Tigercats...!
Do you have any festival going tips?
Err... Napping! So you can fit everything in - not got a band to watch? Have a nap. Not making record sleeves with us? Catch 40 winks. It's a marathon not a sprint (apparently...).
Friday, 29 June 2012
Workshop interview #7: Postcards from Indietracks
At 2pm on the Sunday at Indietracks you’ll be able to join Sugar Paper Zine’s postcard making workshop. Kandy and Seleena are here to tell us all about it…
Please tell us a bit about the workshop?
Having a great time at Indietracks? Thinking of your friends and family back home who aren't here having fun? Send them a postcard! Craft yourself an Indietracks postcard, from colouring one in, to stitching one, to printing one and collage!
Tell us a little bit about yourselves!
We are two ladies who love to craft and therefore made the bi-annual craft zine Sugar Paper! Kandy loves to knit, Seleena loves to sew we both love eating, dancing, collect tat and obsessing over things. Then we shove all that into our zine!
Have you been to the festival before? Do you have any stories you’d like to divulge with us?
Yes we have and we bloody loved it. It was super sunny and so Seleena's eyebrow pencil melted from the heat, so she had comedy eyebrows on her face all weekend!
What are you looking forward to most this Indietracks?
Making stuff, eating 'tent' proof snacks, riding trains and GO SAILOR!!!!!
Do you have any festival going tips?
Don't forget your pillow. Voices of experience, trust us, take a pillow!
Thursday, 28 June 2012
Indietracks interview #18: 14 Iced Bears
By Stuart Huggett
14 Iced Bears formed in Brighton in 1985, and were initially associated with the UK indiepop/fanzine scene. Their first three years together saw the release an assortment of singles and flexis for various labels, with Rob Sekula (vocals, guitar) and Kevin Canham (guitar) at the centre of a fluctuating line-up.
The band released their self-titled debut LP in 1988, with ‘Precision’ (a compilation of their consistently sought-after singles) arriving in 1990. By the time of their second and final album, ‘Wonder’ (1991), 14 Iced Bears’ sound had become notably more psychedelic, the band drawing deeper on their 60s influences. The group split the following year.
This year’s Indietracks partners, Slumberland Records, reissued some of 14 Iced Bears’ early material on the album ‘In The Beginning’, and the band eventually reformed in 2010, touring the US twice. Rob, with occasional interjections from drummer Graham Durrant, shared his memories with us.
It seemed like a lot of people were in 14 Iced Bears over the years, but who’s in the band now?
Rob: Yes, I think we ended up having 14 band members overall. The group’s name was obviously prophetic. At the moment, apart from me, it's Graham, who was on both albums and all the singles from the Sarah stuff onwards, and Tim (White, bass), who was on the second album and our last single, ‘Hold On’. Sometimes Kev joins us when he can, but he lives out in Devon. He was in the band from the beginning up until the first split.
What inspired you to form a group originally? Which bands were you listening to?
I'd been in bands with mates since about the sixth form. Originally it was probably from watching The Monkees on telly when I was about six. When the Bears formed it was the time of C86. I was listening to the Velvets, Burt Bacharach, Jesus And Mary Chain, Nick Drake, The Byrds, Echo And The Bunnymen, The Pastels and Primal Scream. Later we were more into things like the West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band, Big Star and the 13th Floor Elevators.
What was Brighton’s music scene like when you started out?
We formed in Brighton when some of us were at Sussex Uni, and were mates with most of the other Brighton bands. There were quite a few around, including Whirl, The Milk Sisters, Ten Million Quentins, The Popguns, Bobby Scarlet and Spitfire, and some of the Bears were in Blow Up. We'd all go to the same nights – The Big Twang and The Sunshine Playroom were the seminal places. A few of us hung out in the same cafes in the North Laine too. Primal Scream and Alan McGee had moved down to Brighton, so they'd be around. You could even spot Genesis P-Orridge in a cafe. It was a good scene.
How did your first singles (‘Inside’ and ‘Balloon Song’) for the Frank label come about?
Frank was Mark Flunder from the Television Personalities’ label. He saw one of our first gigs and wanted to put a single out with us. I think he wanted ‘Jumped In A Puddle’ (he thought it was a mod classic!) but we never ended up recording it. Luckily John Peel heard ‘Inside’ and liked it and gave us a session. The rest is purgatory.
As well as John Peel, who else in the media supported 14 Iced Bears?
John Peel was the only person in the national media that was into us it seemed. He was great and very encouraging, and even tried to help get us a drummer on one of his shows. ‘Turn It Up’ on BBC Radio Sussex were kind to us. We played their Christmas party one year – it was recorded for the radio and a flexi of us doing a drunken version of ‘Balloon Song’ (re-titled ‘Salloon Bong’) was released. I remember singing “Don't call me Harry Secombe again” during ‘Cut’. Oh dear. We had nice coverage in fanzines but the major music papers didn't seem too interested at the time. Everett True came down to interview us for one of them but it didn't get printed, and Johnny Dee wrote good things about us for Record Mirror. We got some good reviews though. My personal highpoint of being in the Bears was when we supported Alex Chilton in ‘91 or ‘92 in Brighton. We came off stage and it was just him and me in the dressing room. He said, "You guys were great. Sophisticated stuff." I didn't care what anyone else thought about us after that!
How did Sarah Records get involved for the 14 Iced Bears single ‘Come Get Me’?
I can't really remember how we hooked with Sarah actually, it was a while back. It was great at the time but then we wanted to make an album and that was against the label philosophy. Also our music by then was going more psychedelic-y.
How much truth is there in the rumour that Geffen were interested in the band?
After our first album came out, it started doing really, really well on US college radio. That must have pricked Geffen’s attention. It's all a bit hazy now, but nothing came of it. They probably listened to Nirvana instead. Whatever happened to them? We would have been much bigger!
How did the band’s sound change between the first and second albums?
The only thing that changed between the two was that Tim replaced Will (Taylor) on bass. Getting someone new in can often influence the way the sound goes and that's what happened. It wasn't a conscious move. It also had a different, bigger production because we used a different studio.
How well did 14 Iced Bears do internationally?
The first time round, we toured as far as Belgium, France, Germany and Switzerland. We had to do two tours of Switzerland because the first van, owned by one of Stump, broke down while we were out there. It was left on a garage forecourt. We had to go back again, get it fixed and collect it, so we thought we'd play some more gigs too. Things got a bit mental sometimes.
What were the reasons for 14 Iced Bears splitting up?
I'm not really sure. It just seemed the natural thing to do at the time. There was no massive falling out or anything. I decided to move back to London so that changed things. I thought I'd form a new band there but ended up having too good a time in pre-Britpop Camden.
With hindsight, what would you like to have done differently?
There's no point thinking about what could have been done differently as it was a result of us as people at the time. I'm proud of a lot of the songs we did.
What made you decide to get back together?
Friends of mine on Facebook who lived on the East Coast of the US were asking if we'd like to play over there, so I thought I'd give it a go and started asking former band members. We hadn't really thought about getting back together as we all live in different places. It was nice to end up standing on the stage in front of a crowd in LA! If you'd told me two years earlier that would be happening, I would have called you an idiot and followed you round town all day laughing at you. Then I would have gone swimming. Now we’ve done two US tours, of the East and West Coasts. It was a dream come true. The gigs were great, I loved playing all of them. Tim made a video of the East Coast tour: it’s called ‘Dust Remains’ and is in two parts (part one / part two) on YouTube. I suppose the best attended gigs were in New York, San Francisco and LA. People travelled thousands of miles to see us, in some cases by plane. It was very touching, and so nice to meet people who were so excited to see us after all this time and from so far away. Due to the internet, there seems to be a well-connected army of people into indie/psych-pop or whatever it's called. Touring-wise we're on a 'see what gigs we're offered' basis at the moment. There's no strategy for world domination.
What had you been doing in the interim?
We've been doing jobs and arty stuff. Musically, I've got a new band called Easter Sun that's based in London and Kev has one called Blackthorn Crescent. Graham's a graphic designer (Graham: “I did the artwork for the ‘Hold On’ 12” and my brother Gavin took all the groovy photos for the first LP.” Rob: “Hang on, my brother Denis did the artwork for ‘Hold On’. You’ve gone mad!”) and Tim's a photographer.
Are 14 Iced Bears writing and performing new music?
There's no intention at the moment of recording any new songs. That all depends on Geffen eventually getting back to us… You never know, if it felt right and the songs started coming then we'd do it, but we’ve no plans right now. I'm concentrating on Easter Sun.
What are your thoughts on the revival of interest in indiepop?
It's great that people are still interested in this sort of stuff. We were really into the 60s during the 80s, so it's great that our era is still making people happy. I think the internet has made a big difference, and Slumberland releasing our compilation in the US helped a lot.
Apart from your namecheck in Tullycraft's 'Twee', has anyone else cited you as an influence?
I don't remember when I first heard about the Tullycraft song. It's nice to get a mention, although I'm not sure about all this twee business. When we first started out no one called it twee, I think. It was more of a reaction to all the goth darkness around. I remember getting excited by the fact that the Mary Chain, Pastels, June Brides and Primal Scream had great pop melodies more than anything. I think we deviated from the twee side because we ended up taking too many drugs! Hey, if you can remember the 80s, 90s and 00s you weren't really there, to paraphrase Mother Teresa. The only cover versions of our songs I know of are by The Aislers Set (‘Balloon Song’) and Pam Berry from Black Tambourine (‘Cut’). Not really sure who, if anyone, cites us as an influence, although ‘Lucky Man’ by The Verve sounds a bit like ‘Hold On’. Just sayin’...
How much 14 Iced Bears music is still available?
I think our stuff's hard to find physically but you can get us online at http://14icedbears.spinshop.com/ or iTunes or Spotify. I think Slumberland may have some CDs to sell at Indietracks as they've just found some old ones or something. I've got a few 'Mother Sleep' 12”s hanging around my room too, but I don't know if I'll be able to bring them up.
Finally, is there anyone on the Indietracks bill you're looking forward to seeing live, or catching up with socially?
I'm just hoping to catch loads of bands and get very social with everyone! I’ve never been before and really looking forward to it. It's our first proper festival too. Cheers!
Wednesday, 27 June 2012
Echo Lake
Echo Lake will no longer be performing at this year's Indietracks festival following the sad death of their drummer Peter Hayes. Our thoughts are with Peter's friends and family. There's further information on the Echo Lake website, and if you would like to make a donation to the British Heart Foundation in Peter's memory, please visit the following Just Giving page: http://www.justgiving.com/echolake
We can announce that The Spook School will be joining the bill for Indietracks. They will play on the outdoor stage at 1.40pm on the Sunday afternoon.
Tuesday, 26 June 2012
Indietracks 2012 Quiz!!
(Photo: matteb83)
It’s less than two weeks until Indietracks begins. Hopefully, you've sorted out all your travel, accommodation and tickets (aah - tickets!), in which case you can relax and have a go at our Indietracks 2012 quiz!
The winner will receive a fantastic vintage steam railways 2013 calendar plus any random CDs we find lying around! Please send your entries to indietracksfestival@gmail.com by 2pm on Wednesday 4 July. We'll stick up the answers and announce the winner shortly after. Okay, here goes:
1. Name three floral related artists at this year’s Indietracks?
2. Which magazine did Pam Berry help to start, later inspiring a Belle and Sebastian song?
3. Which of the following workshop activities is not available at Indietracks 2012?
a) Making a superhero costume
b) Cake decorating
c) Fanzine making
d) Postcard designing
4. Why didn’t Jimmy from The Bobby McGees attend Indietracks 2010?
a) He dropped his ukulele in the sea
b) He went to WOMAD by mistake
c) He accidentally set fire to his shoes
d) He was performing on a Mediterranean cruise ship
5. If you’re a visitor and ordering a taxi after the festival, where should it pick you up?
a) At Swanwick Junction at the top of the very narrow lane
b) At Butterley station, where there is an accessible car park and handy pick up point
c) Outside the disco marquee – just beep the horn a few times!
d) Ha, taxis are for wimps, I’m crashing under the stars all night
6. Which band has the shortest track on the Indietracks 2012 compilation?
a) Bart and Friends
b) Gold-Bears
c) Sea Lions
d) Veronica Falls
7. Anagrams! Identify the following jumbled up Indietracks 2012 bands:
a) As gremlins
b) Over-the-top cleaning
c) To camera
d) Strategic
8. Name this Indietracks 2012 band
9. Which type of train is Darren Hayman a fan of?
a) Steam trains
b) Heritage diesel trains
c) Virgin pendolinos
d) The love train, love train
10. Which of this year's Indietracks bands filmed a pop video at the festival last year?
a) The Vaselines
b) White Town
c) The Monochrome Set
d) The Just Joans
11. Which anniversary are Language of Flowers celebrating at Indietracks?
a) 20 years since their first gig
b) 8 years since their debut album
c) 5 years since they split up
d) 2 weeks since their comeback show in Belfast
12. Summer Camp's debut album was co-produced by which 90s' Britpop star?
a) John Power
b) Steve Mackey
c) Louise Wener
c) Bernard Butler
13. Doggy or Dodgy? Which band is this fact about?
In 2000, they visited the island of Taransay to entertain the participants of BBC’s Castaway.
14. Which 90s film soundtrack did Go Sailor provide a song for?
a) But I'm a Cheerleader
b) Legally Blonde
c) Clueless
d) Mean Girls
15. Girls Names are playing at this year's Indietracks. But can you name three bands at this year's festival which have girls' names in them? (excluding female solo artists, natch!)
16. Here's four sets of lyrics and four bands - which lyric belongs to which band?
Bands: Allo Darlin, Summer Camp, Standard Fare, Darren Hayman
a) Dawn broke out the window / The glass filled up with pink
b) You crossed the dance floor to me / Stepped upon my toes
c) Can you ever understand how you ended up here? / Any friend you've ever had has disappeared
d) I don't know what train we're on / And I don't care where we're going
17. What is Stevie Jackson’s unofficial middle name?
a) Stevie ‘Overdrive’ Jackson
b) Stevie ‘Reverb’ Jackson
c) Stevie ‘Wah-wah’ Jackson
18. The June Brides are playing at Indietracks 2012, but which one of the following brides did not get married in June 2011:
a) Rachel Weisz
b) Lily Allen
c) Kate Moss
d) Abbey Clancy
19. Joanna Newsom or Joanna Gruesome? Which band is this fact about?
They’ve released an EP on the BBC Radio One-endorsed Art is Hard label.
20. Liechtenstein are playing this year’s festival, but which of these is a painting by seminal pop artist Roy Lichenstein?
a) Whaam
b) Kazam
c) Pow
21. Tender Trap or the Temper Trap? Which band is this fact about?
They formed in 2001 in London with the idea to record two-minute songs without middle 8s or excessive choruses.
22. Velodrome 2000 are playing at this year’s Indietracks, but what is the distance of the Velodrome built at the new Olympic Park?
a) 250 metres
b) 300 metres
c) 350 metres
Tiebreaker: we’d love to have some themed food and drinks at Indietracks one day. For example, Microfisch and Chips, Veronica Falafels or Summer Campari. Please come up with your own fun name or idea for an Indietracks refreshment – in the unlikely event that two or more people enter this quiz and score the same, we’ll pick the person with the best unique name as the winner!
Remember, please send your answers to indietracksfestival@gmail.com by 2pm on Wednesday 4 July.
Good luck!!
Sunday, 24 June 2012
Workshop interview #6: Come & Have A Go If You Think You're Indiepop Enough Popquiz
At 1pm on the Sunday at Indietracks you're cordially invited to take part in our annual quiz! We caught up with Gordon and Katey to find out more about their 'Come & Have A Go If You Think You're Indiepop Enough Popquiz'.
Hi, tell us a bit about the quiz:
It's an examination of
your indie knowledge - this is where being an indiepop nerd finally pays
off. Bring your competitive spirit.
How much does it cost?
Blood, tears
and a little hangover perspiration
Please tell us a bit about yourselves:
Gordon from ballboy and Katey from Music for
Girls/Spiral Scratch will be putting you through your paces.
Any Indietracks stories you’d like to divulge
with us?
Yes we have. Too many stories - Garyballboy's wedding,
Mike Mystery's midnight disco in room 204 of the Premier Inn, eating flumps
whilst watching Teenage Fanclub in the rain, Stereo Total stage invasion,
dancing to the train disko in the early days, etc, etc....
What are you looking forward to most this Indietracks?
Playing in the Church, catching as many lovely bands as we can, seeing our
pals, steam trains and getting steaming!
Do you have any festival going tips?
Yes!
Stay in a hotel. Form a band and
get to play.
Saturday, 23 June 2012
Workshop interview #5: Super Duper Super Heroes!
At midday on the Sunday, there's a chance to create your own super hero outfit! We chatted to the organisers, Bex and George, to find out a bit more...
Hi, please tell us about the workshop?
Find your inner
Super Duper Super Hero! A chance to make your very own super hero costume (a
mask and cape) and hone those special super Indietracks powers!
And tell us a little bit about yourselves...
We're Indietracks arty, crafty veterans!This will be our fourth year at the festival. We're
a bit geeky, and we love going on the trains! Oh and we're especially looking forward to seeing Ballboy's Gordan
McIntyre!
Do you have any festival going tips?
Airbeds! And a Kigu
will keep you warm in the evening...
Friday, 22 June 2012
Workshop interview #4: Indie-Pop-Lindy-Hop-Workshop
At 5pm on the Saturday at Indietracks, The Bobby McGees & Jimmy's Lindy Hoppers will be running their Indie-Pop-Lindy-Hop-Workshop!
Hi, what’s the workshop all about?
Swing dancing and indie-pop music are two of the greatest
things ever....we are going to take the revolutionary step of combining the
two! You'll be jiving to joy division, Tripple stepping to Tigercats, hoofing
to Heffner....but 1st of all you'll be learning to Charleston to Allo Darlin!
Please tell us a little bit about yourselves:
Jimmy & El have been "The Bobby McGees" for 10
years this year! Our first album was described by music critic Everett True as
"inventing a new genre: Twee Jazz"...we kinda ran with that, learned
trumpet, got into swing music and started lindy-hopping! Our first experiments
with Indie-pop-lindy-hop were carried out at famous Brighton club "Another
Sunny Day" and things blossomed and bloomed... now at Indietracks 2012 we
are bringing it to "the kids”! We expect some pretty amazing videos!
Have you been to the festival before?
We've been to every single one... except the third one... Jimmy
was at WOMAD by mistake!!!!
Do you have any Indietracks stories you’d like to divulge
with us?
Ehhh....we have stories, maybe we shouldn't divulge them?
Playing on the train....having my fave' band anounce
(several times!) from the main stage that he'd just seen the Bobby McGees and
loved them...Watching M J Hibbett on a huge stage....Crying when The Just Joans
played "One last kiss from Bellshill station" and having the entire
audience attempt to take my picture (what's so funny about a gruff looking
beardy Scotsman with no teeth crying to a sad song????)...Getting drunk on
Champagne at 11am at Gary Ballboy drummers wedding....Oh, and appearing on the
main stage as Jesus with The Loves.
The drunk Scottish guy who got threatened with eviction by
the campsite security for playing ukulele loudly at 4 in the morning?....as I
told them, "It must have been someone who looked like me!" (Oh...and
having a certain Ms Alice Hubley tell me we could dance "If I behaved
myself.")
What are you looking forward to most this Indietracks?
As always, seeing new bands and meeting old friends!
Do you have any festival going tips?
Take ear plugs....there may be a drunk Scottish idiot
playing ukulele at 4 in the morning!
Wednesday, 20 June 2012
Indietracks interview #17: Language of Flowers
Language of Flowers were a 5-piece indie-pop band originally from Belfast in Northern Ireland signed to San Francisco indie label Shelflife Records. As of 2006 its members are located in London, Manchester and Belfast. The band’s sound is characteristic of the British C86 movement with heavy use of jangling 12-string guitars, airy female vocals and bright pop melodies.
The band signed to Shelflife and released their debut album Songs About You in 2004. The album was well received by international fanzines with reviews noting the band’s classic indie pop influences from the aforementioned bands Field Mice and Heavenly as well as The Smiths, Comet Gain, The Go-Betweens and Lush. The band spent 2005-2006 playing across the UK with other indie pop bands Camera Obscura, Trembling Blue Stars, Malcolm Middleton and Pipas as well as touring around Northern Europe.
Language of Flowers went on hiatus in 2007 but are back for a special Indietracks performance. They’re also playing at The Menagerie in Belfast on Saturday 23 June.
Hi Colm, Indietracks is the fist show you've announced since you disbanded in 2007. Why have you decided to reform now?
Marc and I played the first gig as Language Of Flowers back in August 1992 with Heavenly in Derry so it seemed a nice thing to do 20 years on. Marc has been my best friend all that time and it's funny to be practicing again in his bedroom 20 years on.
Who will be playing in the 2012 Language of Flowers line-up? Is it all the same members from five years ago?
No. There is still me, Tara and Marc. We've taken Ben Ambridge and Louise Winfield from the ashes of Help Stamp Out Loneliness, which is good as they are possibly the nicest couple I know and are also great to play with in a band. It's always reassuring to have a drummer in a Mickey Mouse t-shirt. We've also brought Stuart Watson in on rhythm guitar, as David is concentrating on his gardening. I spend most evenings with Stuart when I go to Belfast, drinking morosely, then dancing and falling over to his DJ sets.
How long are you reforming for - is it just this summer or a longer reunion?
It'll probably just be for this unless we really enjoy it and others do too & we are asked to do more gigs.
Will you be playing new songs at Indietracks or recording any new songs this year?
No. We live in Belfast, Manchester and London, so it's pretty hard to even rehearse the old songs. There's a couple of old unfinished ones knocking around though.
Have you started rehearsing yet? What will/does it feel like playing the old songs again?
We have had two days in Belfast, not with all six of us at once yet. It was surprising how quickly it all came back and nice now to have keyboards and female backing vocals. Marc even smiled for a second.
Lots of people will recognise some of you from Help Stamp Out Loneliness. How would you describe Language of Flowers to a HSOL fan?
It's pretty different, though 'Record Shop' and 'Sola & C' were both originally for Language Of Flowers. We recorded two versions of Sola, but it was never right. On Last FM it says we sound like The Cranberries. That's pretty damning. It's definitely more Indie Pop.
You originally formed in 1992, played a single gig and then split up for 10 years. What happened?
We used to sit listening to Sonic Flower Groove and Sarah stuff in Marc's house and so formed a band to try and reproduce that, as all the bands in Belfast were punk bands at the time. Unfortunately we weren't very good at it. We played the one gig with Heavenly and were so bad that we never did anything else for 12 years. Amelia said that we sounded like Huggy Bear, which was great. Unfortunately we were trying to sound like The Field Mice. I moved to Leicester after that and Marc descended further into the Goth world after that.
How has the world of indiepop changed since 1992? Do you think it's easier for new bands nowadays what with the internet and all that?
It's incredibly easier. We used to have to write letters to people and through that move onto ringing them and arranging. We were pretty cut off, which is why we arranged Heavenly to come over for the Irish tour. You can find everything on the internet now and find out about stuff or listen to manic ramblings of people on Anorak and stuff. By the time of trying to find a label for our album, we were able to use these kind of forums to find out about lots of different labels. Before that, it was just by writing to the bands, or tracking down fanzines. I remember being pleasantly surprised by the turnouts for the Heavenly gigs, as we had no real idea if anyone would be interested.
Any favourite memories from your trips to Indietracks over the years?
All my best memories involve Dan from Pocketbooks. I'm sure everyone remembers being shown his saucy playing cards several times last year, but I still enjoy the night I wouldn't let him leave my hotel room until he'd drank all the remaining vodka with me. It was also nice to play the main stage in the sunshine last year as the hot air balloon came down over the stage. Then the sound system blew up.
Let’s hope the hot air balloons come back again this year! See you in a couple of weeks.
Tuesday, 19 June 2012
Appear in the new White Town video at Indietracks
Jyoti from White Town is asking for your help in making a new video at this year’s Indietracks. Here’s Jyoti explaining the idea and how to take part:
“Please you help me make another pop vid at this year's Indietracks? I've got one happy song left on the album and I think the Indietracks vibe will fit in beautifully with it.
“I'd like people to make signs (probs no smaller than 18 inches x 12 inches to be legible) with their names and how long they've been together written on. Plus any other adornment they feel like adding. Then I'll just take a quick four or five seconds while they pose/ smile / kiss etc. The whole song is soppy and about love so I think it'd be cool.
“If people are interested in taking part, what do they need to do? Well, I'm pretty easy to spot so I'd say to collar me at any time. If they want to get in touch now about it, the easiest way is via the White Town facebook page.”
Last year Jyoti filmed a beautiful video for his song ‘She’s a lot like you’, which we’d highly recommend:
“Please you help me make another pop vid at this year's Indietracks? I've got one happy song left on the album and I think the Indietracks vibe will fit in beautifully with it.
“I'd like people to make signs (probs no smaller than 18 inches x 12 inches to be legible) with their names and how long they've been together written on. Plus any other adornment they feel like adding. Then I'll just take a quick four or five seconds while they pose/ smile / kiss etc. The whole song is soppy and about love so I think it'd be cool.
“If people are interested in taking part, what do they need to do? Well, I'm pretty easy to spot so I'd say to collar me at any time. If they want to get in touch now about it, the easiest way is via the White Town facebook page.”
Last year Jyoti filmed a beautiful video for his song ‘She’s a lot like you’, which we’d highly recommend:
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