ShichiSanWake

May 082013
 

Walter Gross, the latest signing to Small But Hard, paid a recent visit to SBH HQ in Berlin. Speaking about his new release Rotorcraft, Walter gives a unique insight to his life, ambitions, and the humour that permeates his work.

 

< Tracklist >
Intro – WG Philip K Dick (kindle soundscape)
– Poem “Too Alone” by Rilke
White Mice – The White Mice
Henri Whittier – Lonesome Road Blues
WG vinyl sample improvisation
Damscray – Rural Metric Seven vs Marika Papagika – Kremetar I Kapora
WG – Rotorcraft/Vestibule mash dub
Billy Childish – Anarchy In The UK
WG Coward tape dub
Sibylle Baier – I Lost Something In The Hills

< Interview >
My name is Walter Gross. I am from Maryland; a little town outside Baltimore called Glen Burnie, a kinda stoner, white-trash sorta town. They call the kids there Glenburnouts. And now I live in Los Angeles, which is pretty much the same thing. And now I’m in Berlin, with Small But Hard.

As far as musical education, and my start: I started actually digging records and scratching, and then I…well, then I was really big into film, so this collages, sample-based music appealed to me, and uh, freedom of turntablism and sampling. There’s no rules, which I thought the music and the film went sorta hand in hand; it’s more of a conceptual thing. But then I realised that I’m not very good at scratching! It’s kind of a difficult thing. And then it got really commercialised, and sort of lost its appeal, so I went into producing using strictly the MPC. I like the limitations of it, I like the transparency of it. The limitations of it are kind of what keeps me grounded to it; it’s like my main axe. And now I’m more venturing into more ambient and field recording, and always accumulating toys, and microphones, and all that shit.

Coming from a sample-based, hip hop background, I started experimenting more with field recordings, and then I became exposed to the freaky dirty noise scene in Baltimore. It kind of split my wig. Something blossomed inside my brain, I think, seeing people so free on stage, and the music itself so free, was this tangible inspiration that just left an indelible impression on me.

Yeah, I recorded Rotorcraft out there in my tiny little studio apartment. Making films, it sorta gave me this experience of capturing my actual life and turning it into art at a new level, and so, living in LA, facing downtown, there’s just helicopters flying down over my apartment all the time, that slicer,

All the time. And I live by a highway, so it’s just this constant drone, and helicopters, while I’m making music. So I make ambient music, and I make beats, and it would just…the sounds would filter through my ear, and I think, into the hardware. So it was just like an actual audio mirror of my environment, hence the Rotorcraft, and sorta this dystopian and futuristic belief-state society, but still super-psychedelic and hilarious. And I listened to the album while there’s helicopters flying over, and it’s sounds really good. If you listen to it with helicopters, it’s nice.

Does this translate to the live context? Absolutely. The live show is a way for me to…I try not to think about it too much cause it kind of makes me anxious, but it’s a way to throw yourself out there and break yourself down before an audience, and dial in. I always know…there’s moments sometimes when I’m screaming and all the blood rushes to my head and I almost pass out when I’m playing. Y’know, it’s kinda great in a way, but I’ve feel like, I dunno, there’s something liberating about just destroying your ego and just letting yourself go in front of people, in the hope that they might experience that with you in a way, that synergy.

Who’s your friend? Oh, I dunno. Beats me! He’s my guard, I think. He’s my angel. Um…pets? No, I don’t have any pets. I have pictures of puppies. That reminds me that I don’t have any pets.

Pain in the process…yeah, I think any good art is painstaking as hell. I mean, anything that’s, like, really cathartic is…there’s many comparisons: it’s like passing a kidney stone, or doing a giant shit or something. It’s draining, but it’s, there’s a dutifulness that’s important to it. I think what’s my main inspiration, and what sorta shifted my paradigm is Tarkowsky. He always said that if within Russian art, if you’re not going for absolutely the most high, then there’s really no point. It’s just sort of rubbish. So that changed my attitude, and made me take things a little more seriously. Hence, the art therapy and the kind of catharsis of it all, and also this sort of twisted humour to it, that’s sort of my self-indulgent way of finding a joke in life. It ain’t good if it ain’t painful.

Apr 262013
 

We are proud to announce ‘WALTER GROSS/ROTORCRAFT’
NEW 12′ VINYL (limited edition 300 copies)
AVAILABLE NOW ON OUR BANDCAMP and digital download.

http://smallbuthard.bandcamp.com/album/rotorcraft-12-digital

Written/Produced/Mixed/Arranged—Walter Gross
—Mastered—James Plotkin/Plotkinworks/

©2013 SmallButHard Recordings/sbh.small-but-hard.com/
www.small-but-hard.com/

Art Direction— Bryce Davesne /electiic Simon Fowler/Cataract Press
Graphic Design—Bryce Davesne
Label Illustrations—Simon Fowler
Back & Front photograph—Unkwow/nasa
Back Photograph—courtesy/Robert Windel

 


-Special Guest-
Jan St. Werner (Mouse On Mars)

-Live-
Devilman
Walter Gross
DeadFader

-Dj’s-
ANBU
DJ Die Soon
TIME$UP

-Links-

Jan St. Werner
http://www.mouseonmars.com/
http://thrilljockey.com/thrill/Jan-St-Werner/

Devilman
http://www.small-but-hard.com/?page_id=260
http://soundcloud.com/devil_man

Walter Gross
http://www.small-but-hard.com/?page_id=497
http://www.waltergross.com/

DeadFader
http://www.small-but-hard.com/?page_id=594
http://soundcloud.com/deadfader

ANBU
http://soundcloud.com/anbu-music

DJ Die Soon
http://djdysu.net/

Facebook event Page here

 

Tracklist
1. Allan MacDonald – Hiotorotro
2. Dillinja – Angel Fell
3. Allan MacDonald – Lament for Red Hector
4. King Midas Sound – Surround Me
5. Richard & Linda Thompson – Night Comes
6. Tyler, The Creator – Yonkers
7. Alasdair Roberts & Friends – The Daemon Lover
8. Amy Winehouse – Me And Mr. Jones

Guitarist, folklorist, and occultist, drone doom pioneer Dylan Carlson has spent the last 25 years propagating sublime minimalist drone rock with his band Earth. From the early days of epic distorted walls of sound, Carlson’s legacy more or less spawned a whole genre, his name connecting the dots between much of the modern stoner rock drone doom scene. Still eminently active, Earth’s second wave incorporates elements of American blues and country traditions within Carlson’s favoured epic format. Those old connections remain, the band’s releases abounding through Greg Anderson’s Southern Lord records, home of all things heavy.

A fascination with the cunning-folk traditions of the British Isles has provided inspiration for his latest solo project DRCarlsonAlbion. Modern interpretations of the UK traditional folk music are presented with a book describing Carlson’s exploratory visit to various fairy-faith sites in England, Scotland, and Wales. This eclectic podcast reflects this journey, and the breadth of musics that make up Carlson’s unique sound.

“The stuff I picked is what I’ve been listening to a lot lately. The last Earth record (Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light: Parts I &II), and my solo projects have been heavily inspired by English folk music and English folklore. Under the DRCarlsonAlbion header, I sort of brought that all together.

I’ve always hated that idea of folklore as…well, it’s obviously preserving the past, but that idea that folk has to be kept like a museum piece, like it can’t grow. There’s that weird kind of collector, antiquarian mentality about it where it’s like you’re trying to preserve something.

The same thing happened with the blues, where the original bluesmen were recording, and were trying to have hits, but then white people got involved, and it was all about authenticity. They’d go out and grab some guy out in the woods, and say ‘This is the originator’, because he was sitting on his back porch playing a song. It would turn out that he would be playing songs that he heard playing off the radio. They’d wrongfully attribute it to him because he was the old guy out in the woods, as opposed to the guy who went to the city and tried to make money with it. It isn’t some static thing that doesn’t move or grow or expand.

The last project I did, the DR Carlson & the Hackney Lass was really an attempt to do some sort of modern folk. We took stuff from old folk and tried to update it to modern times. That’s generally what the playlist reflects to me: there’s some really old traditional stuff, like the Scottish stuff on there, and then some modern interpretations, but also some new electronic music. To me, folk music is popular music, and popular music is folk music; it’s not high culture, it’s all music created by people to be listened to.

The Scottish music I chose is interesting. There’s the ‘low’ Scottish music, which is the stuff people dance to, and then there was the high music, which were all funeral musics and songs, usually about some hero who had died. It’s a lot slower, and a lot more repetitive than the dance music or the party music. I found that very interesting for that reason. I’ve always wondered where that came from. For some reason I’ve always gravitated to slower, more repetitive music. That’swhy I’ve always loved the dub thing too. A lot of the times they’re using the same rhythm tracks over and over, but changing stuff on top of it.

For a long time I was sort of anti-technology curmudgeon, but recently I’ve decided that technology exists, it’s more about what’s done with it that determines the outcome. The technology itself is not necessarily bad or evil, it’s how it’s employed, so I’ve been becoming more conversant with digital technology and electronic recording. I mean, I miss analogue, I like analogue better. Sound is a smooth waveform. With digital, not matter how fine a sampling rate you get, you’re eventually missing spots. You’ve got a curve that’s the soundwave, and you’re sampling it here, here, here, but not matter how high the sample rate, and they always argue, ‘Oh well the human ear can’t tell the difference between…but whatever, I think the human ear can, and does.

There’s some older electronic music that I put on the mix. When it first came out I was interested in some of the jungle and the drum ‘n’ bass stuff. I would listen to that, but I’d never really integrated it into anything I did. When I did the Last Touch release for DR Carson Albion I did some remixes for digital download, where we put some electronic stuff on the tracks. Now I’m starting to think about doing a project maybe involving electronics, and also how to integrate it into what I’m already doing.

When I get into music, I try to wait, rather than rush into it. I’ve always felt like you can be influenced by music, but it doesn’t mean you need to sound like those influences. There are other ways that it influences you. I take on influences and then I try to let them integrate and affect what I do, rather than trying to replicate my influences. I think if you get really hyped on some kind of music, and then learn that kind of music, then want to just play that kind of music, you end up sounding like the genres that you’re into, whereas if you give it some time to absorb, and integrate it with your own playing, the influence will still come out, but it will come out more with your own angle, or vibe. Obviously I have been very influenced by American music, country music and blues and so on, but I don’t do country records, or blues records.”

Carlson approached his latest project, “Falling with a Thousand Stars and Other Wonders from the House of Albion” in a fascinating way, inviting fans to sponsor the project through Kickstarter. As well as an album of songs, it includes a filmed documentary of Carlson’s trip to the UK to visit sites of various megalithic and human/fairy encounters, an exploration of ritual and folkloric magical practices, elaborately packaged and designed by Small But Hard founder Simon Fowler in collaboration with specialist advice from Shepherd’s Bookbinders’ Matthew Phillips and Joe Dixon. The release will contain a book to accompany the music, with the aim of illustrating the lyrical content of the songs, as well as an historical essay about the subject and some more informational content about the trip itself.

“I’ve always been a big book person. That’s how it started. Being exposed to all the materials you can use to make really nice books, the kind that you don’t see any more. That was the genesis of that side of it, wanting to do a ‘proper’ old- style book as part of it. I think that’s the only way nowadays to really do this, because so many people download, so many people just do digital format that you have to make something special, you have to make something people are going to want to keep. That’s what’s become really tricky about doing music is making it…it’s not just about making good music now, you also have to be thinking about what object you can make that people are going to want and going to want to pay for rather than just rip it off.

The trip to do the environmental recording for the kickstarter project was in May of last year (2012). Most of the sites were in a book on sites of fairy encounters, except for the one in Scotland. That site was from the trial records. It was where this cunning woman, Bessie Dunlop, had met her familiar. In the tradition, a dead human is somehow translated into the fairy realm. When they meet another human, they then take them to meet the fairies. He [her familiar] was a Scotsman who had been killed at the Battle of Pinkie in 1547. She was accused of witchcraft and then later executed. I had read about her encounter in a book, and then read the trial records.

I’m going to take the environmental recordings and go through them and then use them as a background for the music, for the atmosphere they protract. The first solo thing I did was a cassette. I had done some recordings around Waterloo station, because Lambeth used to be, in the Tudor era, where all the wizards, and alchemists, and fortunetellers and so on lived. Waterloo station was the site of one of my own experiences, so I went and did some recording around that area. I isolated some kinda weird stuff on that recording and then used it with the music on the cassette.”

Carlson clearly approaches everything is with a similar intensity and rigour, combined with a clarity and patience in digestion. He lives and breathes this deep and dense presence, his whole being a mirror for the work he produces. Even talking to him, his tone is precise and slow, the conversation punctuated by long pauses and drawn-out laughter. We return to Earth.

“The last two albums was definitely more a band thing, because a lot of it was improvised in the studio; we worked them out playing them live and then in the studio we’d use that as a basis and then play and see what happened.

Right now Earth’s been stripped back. It’s just me and Adrienne. The new stuff I think is more…song oriented in a strange way. It’s a little more concise. The last album was sort of lay-back-and-let-it-flow-over-you sort of album, whereas the newer stuff is a little more dramatic, grabs your attention. It’s more of a hard rock record in a way.

This one has involved a lot more of me writing stuff beforehand. I’ve always written the same way I guess…I’ll find something while I’m practising, a pattern I like, and begin to work on it, add variations, and then repeat it, and sort of add variations. I’ve been writing a lot of stuff lately, and it’s been coming out quite rapidly, whereas usually stuff comes out a lot slower and I have time to think about it. I feel like I’ve always kind of written the same way, but it’s hard to say with this album, I guess because it’s so so new, I haven’t really had a chance to examine what is going on with it all yet.”

Find out more about Earth here:
http://www.thronesanddominions.com

Find out more about DR Carlson Albion here:
http://drcarlsonalbion.wordpress.com/

Further reading about Bessie Dunlop and her friends here:
http://www.mysteriousbritain.co.uk/scotland/ayrshire/occult/bessie-dunlop-the-witch-of-dalry.html

For more information on the House of Albion project, watch the video here:
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/160700771/dylancarlson-wonders-from-the-house-of-albion-lp-c

Further information on Simon Fowler here:
http://www.cataract-operation.com/information/

Further information on Shepherds Bookbinders here:
http://store.falkiners.com/store/go/about-us/

 

5.4.2013 Devilman w/ Walter Gross, DeadFader @ Cafe Oto, London, UK
9.4.2013 Devilman w/ Walter Gross @ Hare&Hounds, Birmingham, UK
10.4.2013 Devilman w/ Walter Gross @ The Portland Arms, Cambridge, UK
11.4.2013 Devilman w/ Walter Gross @ The Bay Horse, Manchester, UK
12.4.2013 Devilman w/ Walter Gross @ Buffalo Bar, Cardiff, UK
14.4.2013 Devilman w/ Walter Gross @ Mad Ferret, Preston, UK
25.4.2013 Devilman w/ Walter Gross @ Djäzz, Duisburg, Germany
26.4.2013 Devilman w/ Walter Gross @ Landbouwbelang, Maastricht, Netherlands
1.5.2013 Devilman w/ Walter Gross @ Café Central, Brussels, Belgium
3.5.2013 Devilman w/ Walter Gross @ Fluc, Vienna, Austria
4.5.2013 Devilman w/ Walter Gross @ Waggons am Nordbahnhof, Stuttgart, Germany
8.5.2013 Devilman w/ Walter Gross @ Cave12, Geneva, Switzerland
9.5.2013 Devilman w/ Walter Gross @ Berghain Kantine, Berlin, Germany
10.5.2013 Devilman @ Worm, Rotterdam, Netherlands
11.5.2013 Devilman @ SOTU Festival OCCII, Amsterdam, Netherlands
30.5.2013 Devilman @ Spring Festival, Graz, Austria

Mar 192013
 

Small But Hard Recordings and The Quietus Present:

DEVILMAN
WALTER GROSS
with Special Guests DEADFADER

To kick off the UK/EU tour for Devilman (Scotch Egg, Dokkebi Q, Bo Ningen) and Walter Gross (incredible noise hip hop alchemist) we decided to come back to Cafe Oto, also to celebrate the new Walter Gross LP Rotorcraft coming out soon on SBH. There are some yet to be announced guests to be added to the line up shortly. More soon…

£6 advance and £8 on the door. Buy advance ticket here.

www.cafeoto.co.uk
www.small-but-hard.com
www.thequietus.com
www.waltergross.com

 

23/2/13 @Underwerket Copenhagen, Denmark
28/2/13 @Rocket Milan, Italy
1/3/13 @Codalunga Vittorio Veneto, Italy
2/3/13 @Clan Destino Faenza, Italy
3/3/13 @DalVerme Roma, Italy

Feb 072013
 

Our new podcast series is here!  We’ve been talking to artists that have inspired us in our Small but Hard journey, inviting them to do a special Small but Hard mix that you can download for free!  We will be posting a new edition each month, along with an interview with each artist about the mix they have made and the things that inspire them.  We hope you enjoy it!

In this first edition of the Small But Hard podcast series we spoke to the legendary Skiz Fernando, perhaps best known as producer Spectre of the renowned Wordsound label.  Skiz is a prolific artist: he has released nine studio albums as Spectre, and leant his talents to innumerable other projects as part of the Wordsound imprint.  Wordsound defined the Brooklyn hiphop scene throughout the 90s, and remains relevant today as a source of inspiration and reference for all of us here at Small but Hard.

Skiz headed up the label from the outset, providing a voice for the scene he was involved in, and defining an era in underground hip hop.  His vision resulted in a devastating roster, that not only provides a rundown of the critical artists working in New York during that period, but was also home to many artists that are still shaping the scene today:  Scorn, The Bug, Antipop Consortium to name but a few.  This vision, this ability to really see the value and uniqueness in what is happening around him is demonstrated time and again by Skiz.  He works not only as a musician, but also as a writer, journalist, film maker, and documentarian, weaving his magic through careful study of the things he encounters.

His mix is, in his words, a small, but hard, exclusive offering of unreleased Spectre material from the last 3 months of his beat-making.  For him, making beats is his form of relaxation, it’s the way he makes sense of the world and digests what has happened around him:

“My process of making music is very organic, I would say.  I have no preconceived notions…when I turn the power on in the studio, whatever is happening, whatever I’ve been through in that day, or wherever I’ve been, whatever I’ve seen, whatever I’ve eaten, it all somehow makes it into the stew.  Music is just a form of expression, just like writing, just like film making, just like cooking, so to me, all of those things are the same.  If anything, my modes of expression have increased over the years.  I just used to write and do music, and now, I do a whole lot of other stuff. I see that in most other creative people too; they’re not only creative in one subject, but they have many modes of expression.”

“I don’t follow any trends, I don’t follow any hype stuff, I just make music that’s not being made by anyone else.  That’s why I make music to begin with, cause I make stuff that I wanna hear! I love bass music, and for me, dub is the original.  The dub that originated in Jamaica, that’s the original bass music, and it’s very mellow music.  It’s not like, it doesn’t have to be hard or loud or anything like that, it’s just more of a vibe, y’know.  That’s basically what I’m on.

That’s the stuff that I listen to when I’m just chilling out.  It’s all old music. Jamaican dub, older jazz, and different types of music from around the world. Right now I’m listening to a lot of Ethiopian music because I’m doing a film on Ethiopian music, I’ve been going there a lot.

Before that I was living in Brazil, and that had a lot of influence on me. Nothing about the music specifically, but the polyrhythms of Brazil had a huge impact on my work of the last 5 years.  I lived out there for like, a year, and I just soaked up that atmosphere, y’know, so, actually, that’s my inspiration, travelling.  Not just listening to other music, but travelling, and experiencing other people, other cultures.  It all comes through my filter and then comes out on tape…”

So where does Wordsound feature in all of this?  The latest Spectre release, The True and Living, is Wordsound LP #57.  I wondered if he was still drawing inspiration from the Wordsound crew, from the other musicians around him.

“Wordsound was never really a label, it was just a group of people who happened to be in the same place at the same time.  All of us were making music, and we inspired each other.  It was a certain time and a place.  It was Brooklyn in the early 90s, and a specific neighbourhood.  I knew all these people; all the artists were my friends.  That can only last for a finite amount of time, because people move out, people leave; it’s just the normal flow of things.  Especially in a city like New York, money is a huge factor as far as living, if you are an artist.  I’m thankful because back then, in the early 90s, I could make next to nothing, but I could still live, in Brooklyn, and do my art and do my music.  I didn’t have to worry about paying a lot of rent and all that stuff.  So, Wordsound existed in a certain time and place, and obviously now we’re many years removed from that.

Wordsound as a label is still releasing records though. I’m putting out another album in March called Firn/Energys, which is from my nephew, John Fernando.  He was kind of like a protégé of mine.  He was an amazing beat maker, and he died last year.  So I’m putting out some of his beats on vinyl, as a tribute to him.  The label is still going around, but obviously it is not the same as it was, as far as the whole collective nature of it is concerned.  As far as I know, all the other people are still doing their thing, I mean, Sensational is definitely doing his thing!  Everyone’s scattered around the world now, and that’s kind of cool cause when I travel to different parts of the world I can stay with different friends who used to be part of this movement that we had and it’s like no time has passed at all.”

It is clear that Skiz’s sphere influence is not in danger of diminishing any time soon.  New Spectre material, the publication of several books, a new Wordsound documentary are just the latest outputs from his camp.

“I feel like I have not really reached the point that I want to be at, creatively speaking.  I feel like every record I do is much better than the last one.  Now I just released album number 9, and I look back at my first album and I think ‘Oh my God!  I can’t believe I put that out!’

In my eyes, the normal flow of this is that an artist comes out, he gets big, he gets popular, he gets famous, and the quality of his work goes DOWN.  You can map almost anyone up to that point of a paradigm.  There’s a lot of people like myself who get better with age, like a fine wine!

My first influences were people like Adrian Sherwood and On-U Sound, Bill Laswell, and these people are still making music!  They’re in the generation above me and they’re still doing their thing, y’know!  That always makes me feel good.  I always like to give credit where credit is due.  We are just one part of this evolution, but I’m proud to say that Wordsound did add on to it, and there are certain labels that you can point to in this progression that, maybe they didn’t get a lot of credit, but they were doing their thing at their time, and what’s going on today might not have existed if it weren’t for what was going on then.”

You can read more about Spectre online here:
http://skizfernando.tumblr.com/

You can find out more about Wordsound here:
http://www.wordsound.com/

Watch the Wordsound documentary, The Greatest Thing You Never Heard, here:
http://vimeo.com/49172467

Spectre’s latest album The True & Living is available to buy now at:
http://www.wordsound.com/

Devilman Live In London

 News  Comments Off
Jan 102013
 

Small But Hard & the Quietus present Devilman, Gum Takes Tooth and Kohhei Matsuda at Cafe Oto

Sunday 27th of January at Cafe OTO | 18 – 22 Ashwin St | Dalston | London | E8 3DL.
Tickets £5 advance from WeGotTickets

Read more on The Quietus website

UK/EU DEVILMAN TOUR!!

 News  Comments Off
Dec 292012
 

We are now organising Devilman UK/EU tour for early 2013!
For UK/EU bookings contact:  sbh(at)small-but-hard.com

Note: Replace (at) with @ when emailing.

© 2012 Small But Hard Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha