(This feature first appeared in issue 62 of Shindig! magazine. For the full unpublished interview with Emm Smith click over the jump at the bottom of this post. Photo by Mat Manser.)
Canadian
sonic adventurers go back to the future and top up their studio tans
with Duncan Fletcher.
“Ultimately
I want to trip out like when you're dreaming, which can be the most
amazing journey. Jumping from one adventure to another, seeing things
appear in multiple places or configurations. Using the recording
studio as an instrument. A Jerry Garcia quote says it best - 'mixing
it for the hallucinations'” So says Stereo Moon mainman Emm Smith
talking about modular recording, the technique pioneered by Brian
Wilson on 'Good Vibrations' and SMiLE,
and also utilised on Stereo Moon's latest outing, The
Shape Of Psych To Come EP. Over its four
tracks the band pick up the psych baton that was dropped by
mainstream musicians in the late '60s. “I think
in a Brian Wilson interview from that time he mentions the future of
music being psychedelic and it doesn't happen. That future is a lie
to some.”
Aside
from the tightly arranged psych-pop of lead track 'Requiem For The
Non-Believers', the band get to stretch out with free-form jamming
and studio experimentation on the EP's instrumental tracks. They've
also been obsessively re-working a debut LP, Smoking Shake By The
Riverside, which should be ready for mixing next
year. “There's a lyric in one of the songs that says, 'I've been
driving myself insane but I wouldn't have it any other fucking way'.
There's everything from pedal steel to horns, strings, double bass,
organ, piano, banjo. I was laid-off from work in 2015 so production
has slowed down. It costs money to rent a vibraphone for example, the
next thing to get excited about! All the exotic instrumentation can
be hard to find, or even people who can play them!”
Live
shows are a less disciplined affair. Says Emm, “Live I’m going
for more of a noisy Velvet Underground sound with psychedelic organ.
For me the VU and The Beach Boys are the two ends of the spectrum I
want to explore.”
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Click here for Stereo Moon on Twitter.