Showing posts with label Pancake Orion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pancake Orion. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 March 2011

WARTIME SWEETHEARTS INTERVIEW



Hello one and all, and welcome to a special post on This Does Not Make Me A Journalist - an interview with Louise from the band Wartime Sweethearts. And not only that, some free MP3s! Wartime Sweethearts were responsible for one of my top 10 albums of 2010, Pancake Orion, which blew my mind a little with its giddy chaos and general brilliance. Louise was nice enough to answer a few questions for us which are located just about here...


TDMMAJ: Firstly, why and how did you get started with making music? 
LOUISE: Hmmm, I suppose I started singing when I was 5, because I was often complimented on my voice in preschool. A couple of years later I started recording onto cassette tapes in my bedroom, trying to layer my voice for a choir effect - it got really distorted but was still kind of exhilarating, and if you half depressed the pause button while playing it you got a badass chipmunk version in double time. My family (particularly dad) were really encouraging and they're all very musical. My dad, my sister and I got lessons together in various instruments. I chose keys and started writing my own songs on them when I was 10... I think they were all instrumentals in C minor on a harpsichord synth sound.


What's the significance of the name Wartime Sweethearts? 
When I was conjuring up some band name inspiration a sepia photo of my great Aunty Betty was gazing at me from my desk - it seemed like the kind of photo you would take to war with you and refer to now and then to draw strength from before battle. Not that I support war. But I really liked the idea of a bandname that carried a whiff of a romantic story. It was that or "Bird Atlas"....whew. 


A good choice I think! Who else is in the band and how did the current formation come together? 
It's still a little up in the air, but my sister Kirsten is playing drums and singing harmonies, a lovely dude by the name of Bryce Kerr plays bass and my housemate Angus Cornwell sings awesome baritone harmonies and sometimes plays cello. My bf Wyatt Moss-Wellington was playing guitar and singing with us but he's taking the year off gigging so I'm looking around for a new guitarist as we speak. He'll be super hard to replace... Resisting urge to refer to his "magic hands". 








Keep it clean! Your debut album Pancake Orion seems to cover a lot of ground musically, was it a conscious decision to make a record with a very varied sound? 
Hmmm, no! I was trying to reign my tastes into something a little more matchy matchy. Damn. Next time perhaps.


What are Wartime Sweethearts' live shows like, both for yourselves and the audience? 
For us they're usually a mixture of wootiness and stress. The stress comes from my decision to almost always include a fresh song that was written last minute... but that I like too much to exclude. My bandmates are generally good at putting up with my neuroticism over these things. Having a "omg-shit-a-brick-this-is-difficult-and-new" song in the set makes the rest of the stage time feel pretty breezy though. If the show comes together the audience generally has a hoot or two - we try to throw some comedic songs (e.g. Your Button or I've also done a cannibal love song version of At Last) or some woefully bad poems or something to entertain. I really appreciate it when we get approached by audience members afterwards with compliments about the music and our skillz of an artist - it's really something for the heart to dine out on.


Who and what would you say are your main influences? (Not necessarily musical acts if there are other things that influence you!)
Haha I trust you're referring to the "moths" on our myspace. (On the band's myspace page Moths are listed as an influence) I guess I put there because I get influenced by visual things a lot, and I was enjoying a lot of brown, mothy autumnal colours and patterns at the time. I like the idea of trying to express very visual things with sound. I'd like to play with that connection more in the future. I grew up loving Sega megadrive game music and Disney, but I was probably more heavily influenced by Jeff Buckley and Radiohead who catered to my escapist whims during my late teens. 








Which musicians/bands are you really into at the moment? Are there any new acts you think we should be looking out for? 
In the last couple of years I've been enjoying St Vincent and the Dirty Projectors - I think they're amazing. Here in Sydney my bf Wyatt Moss-Wellington plays a radically mean tune and Brian Campeau does some magnificent stuff too.


If you could invite 5 people, living or dead, round for dinner and to hang out with, who would they be? 
1. Stephen Hawking 2. Geoffrey Rush 3. Richard Feynman 4. Jeff Buckley 5. Julie Andrews. Wouldn't it be cool to jam with the latter two? Though I'm sure Hawking could lend something saucy to the mix. 


Most definitely! What was the first song you fell in love with? And the first album? 
Either "Wind in the Willows" by Judy Collins or perhaps something from Mary Poppins. I also loooved the Monster Mash when I was 8, but my first purchase was Ace of Base - Happy Nation after hearing "All That She Wants" on the radio.






What does the future hold for you?
The immediate future holds the last year of my Graduate Diploma in Psychology then hopefully Honours - but I'm looking forward to a little gigging this year, and would really love to record another album soon when time and money permits. Pancake Orion stirred up so many other ideas that are starting to bloat my brain


One final question - When you sing "She keeps coming back like a bad boomerang" what do you mean? Surely a boomerang that comes back is a good boomerang?! Or am I missing the point...?
Bah! You're clearly off the chart there Chris. If you look at the context her "badness" was evident in the earlier lyrics, and the boomerang refers to the cyclical nature of her problematic relationships with men. They're probably some of my crueller lyrics - I don't like the idea of bad people - just bad behaviour. But that was too many syllables. Just sayin'!


Well, that's me put in my place! So I'll retreat with my tail between my legs and see you back here tomorrow with another edition of 3-4-FREE! Take care!


You can find Wartime Sweethearts at www.myspace.com/wartimesweethearts and www.wartimesweethearts.bandcamp.com, where you can listen to the whole of Pancake Orion for free.

Tuesday, 14 December 2010

Lend Them Your Ears – 14/12/2010 - The Wartime Sweethearts

I can’t tell you much fact-wise about Wartime Sweethearts – they’re from New South Wales (that’s in Australia – FACT). They are influenced by moths and consist of 4 members – Louise Nutting, Wyatt Moss-Wellington, Kirsten Nutting and Angus Cornwell. Their website doesn’t work. That’s about it.


Oh, and their debut album Pancake Orion is amazing. A random mix of ideas and instruments, it has a habit of being somewhat disjointed – breaking from sultry female vocals to bring in minimalist electro beep-booping halfway through Sea Ceiling before the sultry vocals slide back in as if nothing ever happened, for example.

A lot of the time the jazz-influenced vocals and instrumentalism balance so precariously against each other that even the slightest alteration would make the whole thing collapse into one big, heaving, twinkly mess. But that just doesn’t happen. Sure, occasional moments jar and it sometimes feels like it’s music made by someone who can’t write fast enough to get all their thoughts out but despite all of this Pancake Orion is truly marvellous, compelling and damn good.

Imagine Sufjan Stevens, Yeasayer, Jeff Buckley and Tunng coming up with an album together and getting Solange Knowles to sing on it and you get a rough idea of what’s going on here. Mad, synth-y jazz-based number Bee Bop is a particular highlight as is the slow, squelching Hungry For Heat and the twinkling, affable Warmest Chord. Lyrics are also as mad as a box of frogs a lot of the time – “Fax me to the future”, “I’ll be your violin if you’ll be my boy” and the quite infuriating “She keeps coming back like a bad boomerang” – Surely boomerangs are meant to come back, that’s the whole point! Surely this woman is a good boomerang!

Mild, pedantic irritations aside this is a fantastic album from a band who I hope to hear a lot more from in the future. Currently their gigging seems to be restricted to Australia. In fact it’s restricted to a single date in Bar ME in Sydney on January 30th at the moment. But the ambition, ability and creativity of this band can not be doubted, and that makes for fantastic listening. Fact.

Find out more at
(that is literally it - no Facebook page, no Bandcamp or Soundcloud account, no videos on Youtube and not a Tweet to be seen. You can buy the album Pancake Orion at www.cdbaby.com though)