One of our favourite new bands is the Office For Personal Development. Their single 'You Are In Control' has been getting some deserved attention recently. We interviewed vocalist Trevor Deeble to find out more about the band and what the future holds for them.
There's
a very strong visual/conceptual side to The Office of Personal
Development. It's corporate, cynical almost, but with a knowing sense of
humour. Can you tell us about what drew you to this aesthetic?
I've
never worked in an office, so maybe I'm craving the structure and
career path my life has never had. It's a response to the ubiquity of
the pseudo psychology that thrusts itself upon us on a daily basis, and a
bit of a comment on the reality of being in a band nowadays. Music has
become a very corporate endeavour, even at a low level. Brand new
unsigned bands, who have barely done a gig, now spend more time creating
online marketing content and chasing the all important streaming
figures, than writing, playing, or even just hanging out and getting
drunk like the good old days. Maybe it's everyone else, especially the
highly motivated super-ambitious 'slacker rock' bands with overactive
Instagram accounts, or the, what I like to call, 'pose-punk' bands, who
are cynically hiding behind an aesthetic?
I'm loving the latest release, 'You Are In Control'. What inspired the track and how did you write it?
Thank
you very much. I wrote most of this song in my head on the walk to and
from my son's nursery. I think it's a bit of a pep-talk to myself. I've
always longed for a life less ordinary, and as you get older and routine
bites it's easy to lose yourself, to find yourself just carrying on,
allowing doors to close to protect yourself from feeling like a failure,
and gradually lowering your expectations. I think you also become less
idealistic and allow things that once would have angered you into trying
to change the world to pass. It's a self-preservation response I think,
or maybe just fatigue, or realism. I suppose this song is about trying
to let yourself loose, to snap out of it, to feel some of that fire
again and open yourself back up to new ideas and possibilities.
Prior
to starting this project you were one half of Trevor Moss &
Hannah-Lou, making mainly acoustic music. What prompted you to veer away
from folk-based music towards this more electronic sound?
After
our second child was born we decided to do solo projects, both out of
logistical necessity and the fact we felt we'd done everything musically
that we wanted to do as a husband-and-wife-harmony-singing duo. We'd
really lived it, toured endlessly, lived on the road out of a campervan,
and pursued it with such full commitment, we knew that at this stage in
our lives it would be impossible to improve on. I was recording a solo
acoustic album and suddenly realised I was boring myself with my own
music. I'd done a few solo shows and just felt like I was going through
the motions. The shared mission was gone. The rooms clapped politely,
some people even cried in all the right places, but it just felt like a
dead scene to me. It felt very safe creatively, and with very little to
lose or gain. I was almost always the youngest in the room by a good 10
years, and while there's nothing wrong with that, I just felt like I
wanted a bigger night out. I also think you can say serious things in a
non-serious way, often it's more effective. I started to find earnest
music really annoying and folk-acoustic nights were like listening to
endless teenage poetry, and I was acutely aware that I'd contributed
more than my fair share of it.
I
really don't know what triggered the electronic experimentation
initially. I remember wanting to scrap every musical and production
principal I'd ever snobbishly adopted and do the polar opposite. Clearly
all my principals hadn't worked, I hadn't had a hit record yet. I love
learning and the feeling of progress, so the more out of my comfort zone
a new process was, or the harder a new piece of gear was to understand,
the more obsessed I became. I've always loved 80's pop music, and
Eurovision, a hangover from growing up in Germany, so I think the stars
aligned and the rest is hopefully history.
Your childhood was quite peripatetic compared to most. What effect did that have on the music you got to absorb?
My
Dad is in the MOD, working alongside the army, so we moved roughly
every 3 or 4 years. I went to 7 different schools. I did two stints in
Germany, the second at a very formative time, from when I was 8 until I
was 13, on a military camp. It was brilliant. It was like a small,
completely secure town, so we, even as kids, had the run of the place.
We could go to the cinema with our friends and walk home at midnight.
Sleep out in the woods. I loved it. I would consider that my hometown as
it was where I lived the longest whilst growing up, and was happiest.
My family left Birkenhead where I was born when I was a baby. The
military camp has now been shut down. It was abandoned and has slowly
returned to nature, so I can never go back, or show my kids where I grew
up. I really have no roots anywhere.
I
didn't have a particularly musical upbringing, my Dad was massively
into Queen, but also R.E.M, who I still love now. I was more into
sport growing up. Living a weird colonial life, floating somewhere in
between the cultures of 'the motherland' and your adopted country, meant
music didn't seem to have any cultural resonance. We had BFBS (British
Forces) Radio which played a very mainstream overview of UK music, then
I'd hear europop down the nearest German skate park if we went off-camp.
I'd get caught up in Eurovision fever every year, which I loved, as it
combined music and competitiveness.
All
the moving around meant that I was always the new kid. In Germany we
were all in the same boat, so that was great, but back 'home' I was, and
still always feel like, an outsider. I think that's why I've always
felt like an observer, in every aspect of my life. That's maybe why I
ended up getting into art. I did a Fine Art degree at Goldsmiths and
really discovered music as an outlet while I was there. I've never felt
like I fit into a scene, be it the folk, or americana world. With no
sense of belonging comes no sense of obligation, which I think is
crucial for an artist. I don't even feel like I'm a musician despite
doing it now for nearly 20 years.
Do
you think being based in Bexhill-on-Sea, away from the established
music industry cities, has helped shape the way you make and release
music?
We
only recently moved to Bexhill, mainly as we could afford to live here
and have a studio, so that's a big influence. Without my own studio
there's no way The OPD could have happened. It's taken thousands of
hours of production so would have been unachievable any other way. We
were in Hastings (just down the road) for nearly 10 years which is a
real music town. With the music world becoming more and more virtual, I
think it's still really important to be appreciated in your town before
taking on the world, to try it out in real life, which is great if your
town has opportunities to play, which we have in abundance down here.
When you're in London with so much going on, making even a tiny dent can
seem like a chaotic and insurmountable task. I think it's easier to
concentrate on what you are doing down here, to build something, then
take it up to town when you think it's ready, although it seems like
most of the music business has moved down here now anyway.
Joining
you in The OPD are Bellza Moore and Del Querns. How did you meet and
what qualities and strengths do they bring to the (boardroom) table?
I've
known Del for many years. He runs Music's Not Dead, one of the finest
record shops in the land, in Bexhill. I never knew he could play keys
though. I had someone else in the band, who unfortunately had no choice
but to let us down the night before the video shoot for 'You Are In
Control' and Del, who was due to be an extra in the audience, was
upgraded to being in the band at very short notice. Then life imitated
art and he is now our Head Of IT. I think it was Michael Stipe who said
every band needs a musical encyclopaedia, they had Mike Mills, we have
Del Querns.
When
another friend of mine, who was also in the OPD for a bit but never
made the first show - I'm a great Boss honest, but HR have worked
overtime - handed in her notice, she recruited her own position, filling
it in true corporate nepotistic style with her
daughter, Bellza. Bellza is less than half mine and Del's age, so is the
Office Junior. We quip that that means Bellza works twice as hard for
half the pay. We pay everyone the same. The rest is true.
What does the future hold for The OPD? Any imminent new releases or plans to tour?
We
will have another single coming out, probably in April. That might be
the last release before we think about releasing the album. It's all
finished, we're just waiting for the right business opportunity to make
it happen in the fashion we see fit, to achieve our projected market
share. We're playing our debut London show at The Social on 22nd March
and we have some exciting festival announcements coming up as well.