Posts Tagged ‘songwriter’

Sandy Dillon – Underground Mistress of the Blues

Wednesday, November 22nd, 2006

Sandy… getting in the mood for Christmas!

Sissy first heard the music of Sandy Dillon a few years ago, and couldn’t believe that this woman remains an underground artist despite her highly original talent. She plays piano and keyboards and sings her own hauntingly twisted swampy bluesesque songs; her voice somehow combines the vibes of Louis Armstrong, Tom Waits and Captain Beefheart, but channelled through the vocal chords of a diminutive girl. The musical backdrop to her voice is often minimal and evocative but also conveys that there is a kind of warped humorous undercurrent to some of the songs. Sandy has released four albums to date; Skating (1996), Electric Chair (1999), East Overshoe (2001), and Pull the Strings (2006). She continues to tour sporadically, mostly in Europe where there seems to be a greater understanding of her uncompromising material. One of Sandy’s long standing band members is Ray Majors (on dobro, banjo and guitar) who used to play in 70’s legend Mott the Hoople and recent incarnations of the Yardbirds. Previous live line-ups have included Ed Harcourt (on bass), members of labelmates Alabama 3 and Katie Tunstall’s drummer Luke Bullen. Another sorely missed long standing collaborator was Fripp-esque guitarist Steve Bywater, Sandy’s husband who tragically died in 2000.

SISSY: Where are you from and how did you get started playing music?

SANDY: Boston, USA. I played classical music as a child… I was quite a good pianist, although there are hundreds of very gifted 13 year old pianists in the States and lots of competition. I was one of those kids who got straight A’s at school, not because I was so smart but because I understood what I had to do… I came across as a responsible student but really I was just trying to get all the work out of the way. I was like that in the day, and then in the night time I was seriously delinquent and would be out clubbing. I looked older than I was and had a fake ID so I could get into gigs and things. Aerosmith were a local band I’d go and see… they’re a great blues band. I was also listening to Hendrix and things like that and I suddenly thought to myself, if I was sitting at a table with Mozart and Beethoven, they’d be going ‘Hey, what’s your latest thing?’ and they’d all be talking about their latest compositions and I’d have to say ‘Well, all I’m doing is copying you’. I didn’t know how to write music, I was just good at reading, but if you took the sheet music away I was stuck!

SISSY: Did you study music at college?

SANDY: Yes, I went to Berkeley University in Boston to study music. I was playing jazz piano and I did orchestral scoring; that’s what I really wanted to do, I wasn’t into rock or anything. The big heroes at the time were jazz players like Pat Metheny, Thelonious Monk, Chick Corea, John McGlaughlin; fusion stuff where you had to play 20 zillion notes a second. At the same time, punk was starting so in my split personality I was into jazz by day and started going to punk gigs by night! So I didn’t fit well into the school… punk music was absolutely laughed at because it was made by people who supposedly couldn’t play. They didn’t understand the whole ethos of punk music… the DIY ethic and so on. So I used to write little songs when I was at Berkley but I didn’t play them to anybody because they had a snobbish attitude and I could only write songs to a certain level.

SISSY: What did you do when you left college?

SANDY: When I moved to New York after I graduated from Berkley, the only jobs I could get were playing in piano bars. That was really tough because you had to play six 45 minute sets with no repeats! In the States, because there are so many people doing it you can’t afford to specialize… you might have to go and play jazz gigs so you have to know your standards. Then some of the bars I played in wanted singing as well as piano and if I’d hired a proper singer I would have had to split the money. So I decided to fake it! I’d choose songs that had very small vocal parts because I don’t have a big range. Then I started sneaking in my own lyrics over a basic 12 bar blues form, mainly because I couldn’t remember all the words to a song! It was like writing on the spot to fill my 45 minutes. People started asking for those songs again but I couldn’t always remember them because I never wrote them down, so I tried to remember each song by one word! It took me all that time since college to learn to write properly.

I also used to play in Japanese Enka bars; before there was Karaoke there were these bars where people could go up to the piano player and give them 50 bucks to play ‘I left my heart in San Francisco’ or something and they would sing… it’s that whole Japanese thing of humiliating yourself in front of your business colleagues to put things on an even level. I was earning lots of money because these guys got to know ‘the funny little girl piano player’. I wasn’t really suitable for the normal hotel bars because I didn’t sound like Leann Rimes or someone and I had weird short hair so I also used to play in a famous gay bar on 53rd and 2nd which was know as Boy’s Town where all the rich upper-east men went cruising for young waiters. One night I looked up and saw Tennessee Williams; he lived around the corner and he was always out cruising for rent boys. At the time I was living in the Chelsea hotel… I had a flat there. I know it sounds like a bit of a cliché! But really it was because they had a phone there I could use and I didn’t need a deposit because I moved in as a hotel guest then changed it to a lease. When you’re 20 years old and out representing yourself in New York on your own it’s scary but the Chelsea had security guards so if I came back late at night it was safe and they’d be checking out your visitors to make sure no weirdos came in. I needed that because I was a bit wild and got myself into the most ridiculous situations!

SISSY: How did your first record deal happen?

SANDY: It came about as a result of Tony Defries of MainMan (David Bowie’s old manager) seeing me play the role of Janis Joplin on Broadway at the St. James Theatre in..um…1982. The show was called ‘Rock ‘n’ Roll – the First 5000 Years’. It was great, in Act 2 I got to pretend to be Wendy O’Williams from the Plasmatics with a chainsaw and plastic tits with gaffer tape on the nipples! Funnily enough, that was the biggest money I have ever earned, per hourly rate! Anyhow, Tony liked my performance, I played him some of my songs on a piano, signed up with MainMan and got a deal with Electra in New York. I was thrilled!

SISSY: What made you move to the UK?

SANDY: After Electra declined to release either of the 2 records I made for them, MainMan moved me over to London with my then producer, Mick Ronson to try out some studios etc. We only had one release, on EMI Priority Records in 1985, a single with a double A side called ‘Flowers and Heavy Boys’. ‘Flowers’ was produced by Dieter Meyer (the guy from Yello), and ‘Heavy Boys’ was produced by Ronno. (Mick Ronson) I adored both those men. They both seemed to get what I was about, although in very different ways.

SISSY: You eventually signed to One Little Indian Records; how did that come about?

SANDY: I’d done some recordings and a guy called Tom Astor who ran Orinoco Studios (who has been my manager ever since) heard the stuff and played it to Derek Birkett who runs One Little Indian. He really loved it and said he’d like to put it out and wanted to meet me. He promised not to mess with it and to put it out just as it stood which was fantastic… I’d never had that because all my life until then, record companies would sign me because I was unique, then they’d try to push all the uniqueness out of me. Because it was the early 80’s when I was first doing stuff, women in the music industry were viewed very differently to how they are now. Basically if you wanted to play ball, you had to listen to what you were being told to do, to a certain extent, otherwise you’d have the door shut in your face. So I would compromise and try to make my sound more commercial, and then the record company would turn around and say that the very thing they had liked about me had gone. I always compare it to being a 13 year old girl when your boyfriend wants to have sex with you; you hold out and hold out, then you shag him and he never calls you again!

SISSY: So would you say it’s harder to be taken seriously in the music industry if you’re female.

SANDY: Definitely; but you have to just get on with it, although it does depend what kind of artist you are. The famous story is that Madonna never compromised, but then the sort of act she was meant that she didn’t have to because she wanted to be commercial. But if you’re trying to present something different it’s hard. For example, when I was first signed to Electra they wanted me to be more like Cindy Lauper and they put me in with a hip hop producer so there was my bluesy singing over hip hop beats… some of it sounded good but I wanted to sound like Robert Johnson or something.

SISSY: Who would you say were your main influences as a writer and also what stuff do you love?

SANDY: My main influence is the 5 senses; anything I hear forms the visual, and anything I see or visualize suggests a score to me, then with taste, touch, and even smell the music arrives, usually nearly complete. Improvisation and simultaneous composition/performance is to me the ultimate goal of an artist, so that as you experience anything, you communicate it to others. Everyone is your audience, meaning all communication is performance, and all performance is real. Nothing is really pretend. Even actors who say they are pretending are only pretending to themselves they are. This includes every emotion, and every connection we make with each other, our surroundings and our consciences. The fake is real, and vice versa, it’s all just different versions of a score that keeps changing. From music to film to literature… crap magazines and the Bible, we constantly process this stuff into creative outpourings of what is called artistic. I believe everyone is an artist and that some of us do it publicly by painting or storytelling or songwriting, perhaps individually more desperate to connect to others through the ritual of performance. I also now like to listen to nothing at all but the air of whatever place you find yourself in… if you stop and listen to it, it’s full of surprises. You have to shut up and just chill.

SISSY: Now that you’re in your 40’s do you think it’s a good thing that the type of music you make doesn’t have an age limit?

SANDY: Definitely…in fact it was harder to do when I was younger because people don’t think you have credibility; that you haven’t suffered enough to play the blues. Now I’m going to start saying I’m 56 so people think I look good for my age!

SISSY: Which countries do you have a fanbase in?

SANDY: I have a strange career because I have large cult following in Germany, Austria, especially Belgium, a bit in the Netherlands and funnily enough, Poland, which I’ve never been to but I keep getting emails from. But it’s all people who’ve discovered me themselves; it’s certainly not because of any promotion that’s been done. What’s strange is that the lack of help that I’ve received in one way has been quite cool in that I’m never under pressure to do anything. That’s one of the advantages of being 46. The hardest part is when you’re in that mid-range, in your 30’s, you’re not a young cute thing and you’re not old, but when you get older it’s like you get young boys respecting you. I’m really looking forward to being 60!

SISSY: What effect (if any) do you think the internet has had on music?

SANDY: Huge!! The internet means that artists like myself no longer have to worry about mundane things that aren’t a part of what we are trying to do. Meetings that used to HAVE to happen can now be totally avoided. I owe a lot to the internet for getting my music around the world in a way that no record label would have done for me… the control of radio/tv. Popularity is all meaningless now, because people can find the sound that’s relevant to them via internet. Also, I have now been making records with various people via the internet, some I have met, some I have never met… except through music down the wire… its a good way to represent yourself as there’s no need for any social crap so you can get straight through to raw self expression. It’s interesting, as initially I thought… ‘Oh, I ain’t one of those computer types!!’ I ‘m still fairly acoustic in my approach to everything from getting out of bed to recording live, albeit most of it with judicious amounts of DISTORTION! I recommend distortion as usually the answer to everything; your song, your life… exaggerate anything to the point of destruct-deconstruction and clarity will be revealed. I like working with other artists who aren’t afraid to push the buttons. Sometimes, forward thinking business people can be like that too, and they help realize a lot of creativity.

SISSY: Do you like to use any particular music software?

SANDY: I can only list my hardware: drills, saws, the metal and formica bits from kitchen units, oil drums, and some gaffer tape. I remain slightly old fashioned.

SISSY: Do you have a website or myspace page you’d like to plug, also when was the most recent album released?

SANDY: I do have a myspace but only just remembered the password so I can update it now. I also now have a website: www.sandydillon.com and if you go there and see the Links page, there are some great ‘unofficial’ sites that are actually official. I never did get that… one done by a Belgian guy called Jerome Smeets and another guy called Irwin in Holland. My ‘official’ site is new, and I haven’t had much time to devote to it yet. I plan to release film and other works not available on One Little Indian, my UK record label; stuff that is too weird for them. Although I have to say they were the first and only label to fund and release my work commercially without asking me to ‘clean up my room’, so to speak. Soon I am hoping to work with a guy called Chris the Sparkleboy and his friend Eric…I met them while on tour with Robert Love, aka Larry Love from Alabama 3. He also sang/wrote with me on my latest release called Pull the Strings, produced by David Coulter and Ken Thomas. It was released at the end of April 2006, and I did the Ghost Flight tour (named after Rob’s new solo album) with Rob and another labelmate Jeff Klein prior to that. This fall I’ll be promoting Pull the Strings in Europe, which is mainly where I gig these days.

SISSY: You’ve done duets with people in the past… who would you like to duet with in the future?

SANDY: I love duets. On Pull the Strings there is a song I sing with Rob called ‘Why?’ its one of my favourites on the album; it’s just voices and harmonium. The artist I would like to duet with in the future is definitely Ed Harcourt… his album The Beautiful Lie (Heavenly) and his other work with The Wild Boars is fab!! I love Ed. I think a co-write/duet with him would be a musical dream come true

SISSY: Would you like to mention any other future plans?

SANDY: I have a vague sound plan for my next recording of a group of songs concerning women who are or have been shipwrecked………..distorted rigging will feature!!! give me enough rope to…..

Check out www.sandydillon.com or myspace.com/sandydillon for more information.

Fayney – Writer, Producer and Live Sound Renaissance Man

Tuesday, October 17th, 2006
Fayney... mutate and survive!

Fayney... mutate and survive!

Fayney’s best known for instigating 80’s R&B/Rock legend Roachford and working with the Clash but he’s a versatile professional who’s equally happy producing, engineering, writing or doing live sound. His many years in the business are testament to his willingness to adapt and embrace new technologies, attitudes and methods.

SISSY: How would you describe what you do?

FAYNEY: What I do now has expanded from what I thought I’d be doing. Because the necessity in the music business now, is to do more of everything yourself. Like a lot of other people, I’ve been sort of corralled into being hands-on in a lot more areas than just the music, like the business side of things. In the past you might just work on the music and that would be the last you’d see of it until it was on TV; someone else had done the video etc. But now there’s more of a tie in between the different mediums; the audio and video elements have sort of merged along with the business aspect so now I can be called on to do all of it. I think maybe you should ask whether the music side of things is suffering because people have to do so much. The onus has definitely changed now.

I came from a background of people in rooms playing music together and if you wanted to record a track, you had to go into a studio. So it forced more social interaction. Computer technology has given convenience and ease of use but what it’s also done is to actually kill a lot of social interaction.
It’s that image of young kids sat in a room playing video games by themselves, no friends around and totally immersed in it in solitude. Humans are supposed to interact and learn from each other but unfortunately, that same scenario is happening with music.

SISSY: So making music has become much more technical, rather than being based on the vibe… the sounds have to be perfect instead of it being about keeping the take with the best vibe, which might be technically flawed.

FAYNEY: Exactly.

SISSY: How did you get involved in music?

FAYNEY: I always knew from the age of 8 or 9 that I was going to do something with music. I don’t know if it’s like that for everyone; I think sometimes people realise later in life, but from the age of 10, I was already fixing radios and had a working knowledge of electronics. I lived out in the country where there was no access to music, but my family moved to London when I was about 11, which was fortunate, otherwise I might have gone mad from the lack of stimulus.

SISSY: Did you play any instruments?

FAYNEY: Not at the time. My Dad played piano and my Mum played a bit… there was always music in the family. My dad was religious in one sense; he would drag me into the living room; we were a typical West Indian family in that no-one ever went in there except for weddings and funerals, everything was covered in plastic! My dad would take me in there and bombard me with Ray Charles and stuff. I hated it because as a really young kid, I didn’t really understand where that music was coming from. So it wasn’t until later, around 15 or 16 I kind of woke up one day and thought, ‘ah, now I get it’.

SISSY: When did you start working with music?

FAYNEY: I went to university to study electronics and when I was there I met up with a group of guys and formed a college band. I started playing bass at a couple of gigs, but then my interest started to drift. I wasn’t so interested in standing up on a stage in front of people. I actually thought my ego would love it but when I actually got up there and performed, I realised it wasn’t really my thing; it didn’t do it for me.
I wanted to get into the engineering side of things, so I started to look around for jobs in that area.

To start with, I got a job in a hi-fi shop because I couldn’t get a job in a studio; it was the nearest thing I could find. But it just goes to show you that in life, fortune has a big part to play because my sister got talking to a woman who lived on our estate who’s husband was Eddie Grant’s recording engineer. She had mentioned to this woman that I was dying to get into the music business and I couldn’t get a job; I’d sent off loads of applications and hadn’t got any replies.

One day, this woman’s husband knocked on the door. His name was Frank, and he said he could provide me with some training, although he couldn’t offer me any money. I was blown away! So I went to the Coach House studios and I basically sat behind him on studio sessions and just watched what he was doing. Then gradually, they let me take the reins on a few things, like recording the drums or something, and I learnt very gradually. My earliest recollection of recording anything is when Eddy Grant’s old band, the Equals, had come in to record some stuff and I got involved in recording some of that.

SISSY: Was it an easy road from then on?

FAYNEY: No, I ended up being out of work for about a year. When you’re out of work there’s 2 choices; you can either sit around or you can be pro-active, and I’ve always been the latter… god loves a trier! So I just kept knocking on doors and one day this guy who funnily enough was Eddy Grant’s cousin, found me. I’d been asking around for work and told me about a job going at a studio where they needed a young engineer to work for a famous band. He asked if I’d like to come down for an interview at 9am in the morning… well I wasn’t stupid, I was there bright and early!

It was very odd; I walked into this place, which was a well-equipped studio. It was only 8-track but everything was brand new and pristine like nobody had ever used it. There was this short guy in there who was obviously the governor. He introduced himself as Bernie Rhodes, shook my hand and ushered me into the studio, where there was a guy playing guitar, who got up and walked out; I remember thinking later that I should have recognised him. Bernie immediately turned to me… he was a very acidic character but I don’t think he meant it in a bad way, I just think he was always trying to test your mettle because he knew that if you want to survive in this business, you’re going to have to be a bit tough. So he said ‘who are you then, who is this Fayney character?’ I explained that I’d been looking for work in a studio and that I’d had a bit of experience. He asked me how many hits I’d worked on and I had to say there hadn’t been any so far. Then he gave me a tape by a band called the Black Arabs and told me to put it on and do a mix of it for him. By this time, I was shaking, but I put the tape on and managed to get it all working while Bernie went out for a coffee. I did a mix and gave him a cassette of it, then went home, not expecting to hear anything.
Anyway, the next morning the phone rang at 8.30am and when I answered it was Bernie. He said ‘Look, I don’t know how you do things, but where we come from, we start work at 9 o’clock, so you better get your ass down here!’ So I scrambled to get myself together, and went to the studio not really knowing what was going on… I was definitely intrigued to say the least. When I arrived Bernie introduced me to these 4 guys who were there; they were called the Clash and he was their manager.

I was already into the Clash because an old school buddy of mine whose uncle was King Tubby, the legendary Jamaican producer, had he’d told me the Clash had some wicked tunes and that I should check them out. We played London Calling to death at one point. At the time I was mostly listening to reggae and rare groove or soul but when I heard the Clash, it really stood out! I remember 2 months later, I was walking down the road and at the local town hall, there was a punk band playing. I’d never seen a punk before and there were loads of them hanging around. I remember I didn’t feel threatened or anything, but the whole thing was so strange, it was like humanity had changed overnight and no one had warned me!

SISSY: Did you record the Clash?

FAYNEY: I basically ran their studios for them, and the main part I played was when they split up, we had to find replacements for their last album. I did lots of live sound for them as well, which was f****n brilliant; I was only 18 at the time.

SISSY: Would you say the Clash were responsible for expanding your musical taste to include rockier stuff?

FAYNEY: That’s not really true, but what they did get me into was politics. I wouldn’t describe the Clash as being the greatest musicians on earth but their vibe, spirit and political stance were what got to me; I’d never experienced that before. So they opened up a whole new world for me, literally overnight.

SISSY: What happened next?

FAYNEY: The Clash did a lot of stuff overseas and I didn’t go with them to the States, so while I was working at their studio I started doing other things with people involved in the scene. I did the pre-production for Malcom McLaren’s Madame Butterfly album and I worked with Bow Wow Wow, Adam Ant and the Specials.
I mostly did engineering work and contributed ideas here and there.

Things were different in those days; we’d be drinking in a bar somewhere and meet a guitarist or something, then rope them into coming to the studio to record the next day. That’s what I call punk; I don’t think of it as just the music, it’s an attitude and a way of doing things, a lifestyle.

Around that time, I also started doing some of my own music. I wasn’t really a player except for a bit of bass which isn’t much good for writing by yourself. So I persuaded Bernie to get me some equipment; drum machines and synths and stuff. I started working on some ideas and I was looking around for musicians to work with. A friend of mine recommended a guy called Andrew Roachford, so I got him in to play a keyboard part on a track I had. To be honest, he was terrible and I couldn’t wait to see the back of him! About a year later, I got invited to a concert at my friend’s college. I ended up back stage, chatting to people and not really paying attention to the bands when suddenly I heard this guy singing and it grabbed my attention; it was like a bell ringing in my head or something. I went to look and it was that same guy, Andrew Roachford! It turned out that when he’d come to my studio, he’d never played a synthesiser before, only the electric piano, which was why he’d sounded so bad. So I got him to come to the studio again, and we wrote a whole track in one day from start to finish. We didn’t really know what we were doing, it was a vibe thing… we seemed to be able to communicate without even talking and we knew we were onto something. We then started working towards the Roachford that eventually got known.

SISSY: What was your role in Roachford?

FAYNEY: Predominantly, I did arrangement and co-production, as well as suggesting ideas for videos and things.

SISSY: It always seemed that Roachford were very respected by other musicians as well as fans…

FAYNEY: Yes, I remember one time when we did a little gig somewhere and this guy came who ran Michael Jackson’s publishing empire. It turned out Michael wanted to buy our publishing because he was a big fan. Another time, Greg Phillinganes, the musical director of Michael Jackson’s Bad tour came down to some of our rehearsals, and he told us that Michael had come onto their tour bus once on the tour just to give everyone a copy of the Roachford album, and told us all to study it!

SISSY: Why do you think Roachford didn’t maintain their successful position?

FAYNEY: It was a set of circumstances that could have happened to anybody; I think the thing to remember when you’re in the music game is it’s a game of Russian Roulette. And just as you may be prepared to get all the adulation, people throwing their knickers at you and the stuff you get off on, you’ve also got to be prepared for the downfall. It’s no good if you have a fragile ego; if you have an ego you’ve got to leave it on the stage.

With Roachford, we’d been quite successful in the UK and we went to America and had a hit single and album there. But there was a timing issue because while we were messing around doing radio promos in America, we should have been back in the UK recording the next album and keeping the profile up. I remember we did a gig in Germany supporting Steve Miller and he offered us a bit of good advice… whenever you hand over an album to your record company, make sure you have the next one already prepared. It’s hard to do but it’s a must; if the first one takes off you need to back it up quickly.

SISSY: That’s like something I’ve been told before; when you record your first album, you’ve had your whole life to write and perfect it, but you have to make your second one in a few months. That’s why lots of bands flop on their second album.

FAYNEY: Exactly.

SISSY: There was also a bit of an R&B/rock crossover movement going on then… I remember bands like the Brand New Heavies and Living Colour being popular at that time.

FAYNEY: We met Corey Glover, the singer of Living Colour at a backstage party somewhere. His girlfriend said she was a big Roachford fan and he seemed to have a bit of an alpha-male knee jerk reaction; he started slagging us off and saying we shouldn’t do schmaltzy love songs although ironically, their biggest hit was a ballad type watered-down version of their other stuff!

SISSY: What happened after Roachford?

FAYNEY: We kind of drifted apart and started doing our own things. For a while, I started doing some work for Elton John’s manager; live gigs for Elton and Courtney Pine. Elton John was a big fan of Andrew Roachford. I did some big gigs with him in Paris and it was crazy… every night I would be taken from the hotel in a stretch limo to the backstage door, then had to wait until the production girls had spread rose petals on the floor. I had my own room with 5 bottles of the finest chilled champagne and a Michelin chef doing the catering; no menu, he just cooked whatever you ordered!

I got a publishing deal with Trinifold, the company that manage the Who and the remaining members of Led Zeppelin. I also became a DJ at Madame Jo-Jo’s in Soho for a while, playing rare groove. Then I met my production partner, Jamie Maher and we set up our own studio, called Big Fucking Digital, originally with a guy called Martin Eden as well.

SISSY: You seem to do different jobs for people; can you tell us a bit about that?

FAYNEY: We’ve done bits of film music, including lots of post production for ‘I’ll Be There’ starring Charlotte Church. The good thing about being established is that people know what you’re about so they know they can trust you to do a job when they need something doing. The funny thing is, because the music business has taken such a strange turn, a lot of high-end producers who were doing really good business a couple of years ago, are having to sell of bits of equipment now. It’s got that bad for a lot of people. The reason Jamie and I are hanging in there is because we’re more versatile, and a small, flexible company. Lately we’ve done a few tracks for New Order’s last album and we did a wicked remix with Arthur Baker for Ash, called Submission.

Jamie and I like all kinds of music and we try and put that feel into everything we do, so it’s easy for us to switch hats and do a dance track or rock or anything. We actually ended up working on the Ukranian eurovision entry in 2004, which won! Our management company were approached by these people looking for a production and co-writing team to work on a couple of tracks. So we agreed a fee and they came into the studio to play us the ideas, and told us they wanted to put the track in the eurovision song contest. They weren’t concerned about winning, they just wanted to get some exposure for this girl Roslana’s album. We re-wrote it with them because the original was some gibberish about the local goat’s cheese and their favourite meat! Then it accidently won, which was slightly embarrassing but funny at the same time!

SISSY: What software are you into using?

FAYNEY: Jamie and I use Pro-Tools, but we’ve been waiting for Apple to bring out their own hardware in conjunction with a company called Apergy, which is set to rival Pro-Tools and will be a lot cheaper. It works through the system in Apple called Core Audio; it will make it even easier to get good results on a home system. The interface will give you much more power and creative potential. But at the end of the day, I’m an analogue engineer. The last analogue album I did was in New York; we recorded onto tape in this lovely wood room. When I got back to England, I did transfer it to digital but I used a system called Radar because it’s the only digital system that sounds like tape… it doesn’t steal your soul!

SISSY: That’s what people used to say about the first digital mixing system called SSL, which everyone used in the 80’s… it’s almost as though that was the sound of the 80’s.

FAYNEY: Totally; the first Roachford album mixes were done on SSL and I was horrified. It sounded so harsh and aggressive, like that clinical Art of Noise/Frankie Goes to Hollywood sound. I think software like Logic and Pro-Tools do the same thing to a lesser extent, but I couldn’t tell the difference between Radar and tape. I think you can have the best of both worlds, like using an old console that’s driven digitally. But you have to pay attention to what you’re using; if you want a really warm sound, you won’t get it without using valves… a plug-in just won’t do the job that a valve amp would. But there are pros and cons to the way things are going; it’s good you can get a laptop and do things through the internet, but go out to gigs as well and converse with people. Try and find musicians you can get a vibe with and then try and capture that on your recordings. You have to try and give more with the vibe now, because the machines give you less.

SISSY: What are your plans for the future?

FAYNEY: I’ve got a prediction for you for the future… because of the way that reality TV is going, picture this; one day you’ll turn on your TV and on the screen you’ll see yourself, sitting there watching the TV. And then they’ll find a way to make you pay for it! But seriously, now we’re trying to set up an internet label; people are starting to realise that there are viable ways of making money from music through the internet instead of the typical label approach. We’re working with a couple of bands at the moment called the London Beach and The Dirty Feel, with a view to releasing their stuff on the internet. Bands can put a tune on lots of different internet sites instead of being tied to one label like they were in the past. And those record deals were on really shit terms. So I would say to any young musician now, forget the major labels. If you have an album recorded and ready to go, do it yourself through the internet.

SISSY: So instead of trying to get an A&R man into you, you’re better off trying to find your own computer geek to be like an extra band member!

FAYNEY: Yes, you need to find people who can help build you a website. Try finding someone who’s at Art College or something, who wants some real world experience. What we’re trying to do is different from the traditional record company approach; we want to create a level playing field and facilitate the need for growth; encourage enterprise. If there’s too much financial pressure on a band when they record, they’ll blow it and not get another chance, which is what happens on major labels. We want to put out music on a song-by-song basis where the band isn’t signing their life away. If you don’t put some mud down, the plants won’t grow; the record companies aren’t allowing things to develop any more, they just want singles. The whole record company thing is dead… they just don’t know it yet! For the first time, people can now control their digital identity. In the same way that you don’t need to go to the bank, you also no longer need a record company because you can do it all online. The record companies could save themselves but they’re not willing to give up their greed! Ultimately, music will probably be free but that will generate income from other parts of your identity; merchandising, tickets for gigs, access to tour diaries on line etc.

SISSY: You have your own album under the name ‘the Rainmaker’. Can you tell us about that?

FAYNEY: I’ve basically spent 5 years making this album, not because it’s immaculately played or recorded; in fact I’ve tried to make it as lo-fi as possible… I recorded everything at 16-bit. I took a long time making it because it’s a heartfelt album; it’s not instantaneous, it’s a grower! I’m about to release the album online; it’ll be available on 35 different music websites, details of which will be at myspace.com/therainmakeruk.

……………

Since doing this interview with Fayney, he and his partner Jamie Maher have been producing an album with young Icelandic singer Vedis Hervor Amadottir. They’re flying out to Iceland in a couple of weeks to finish recording.

Paul The Girl – Talented Singer/Songwriter

Thursday, August 3rd, 2006

Paul The Girl

Paul the Girl is a unique and talented singer songwriter who invites the inevitably easy comparisons with PJ Harvey and Tori Amos simply because there’s precious few other female artists to compare her to. In reality, she’s much more diverse and complex, embracing a multitude of influences from jazz, blues, pop, rock and folk and she plays guitar like she’s been possessed by the ghost of Jimi Hendrix! As you might expect from someone who defies categorisation to the extent that Paul does, she’s rejected the traditional record company route and embraced the DIY ethic, releasing her new album ‘Little Miss Weird’ on her own Inconvenient Records label.

SISSY: How did you first start playing music?

PAUL: When I was at school I started on classical guitar; there was a teacher who came and played folk and classical guitar so it was quite early on, maybe around ten. But I didn’t take it very seriously at the time.

SISSY: Did you come from a musical background?

PAUL: My dad was into classical music, always playing records and my brother played the clarinet.

SISSY: When did you make the transition from classical to electric and rock guitar?

PAUL: Around 15 or 16. I suppose it was prompted by mates at school being into top of the pops and stuff, and then discovering bands, what was out there.

SISSY: Where are you from?

PAUL: I was born in North London but I went to school in Macclesfield.

SISSY: How did you develop your style?

PAUL: I spent quite a long time in cabaret bands before I started to properly write my own songs. I was playing a lot of different styles, from James Brown to chart music. We played gigs at British army bases in Germany and RAF bases all over the place. I started doing that because I’d gone to college after failing A level music, to retake it. I wanted to play electric guitar but I didn’t have any real experience, I was still only trained to play classical. There were too many guitarists on the course so they said I could do it if I played bass. There were a lot of cabaret bands looking for bass players, and my dad said ‘if you want to do music, you have to think about earning your living’ so I answered an ad in the paper and went to an audition at Pontins in Wales, then joined a band.

I was briefly in an original band in Manchester but it didn’t work out, so then I started to write my own songs on an old computer. It was on drum machines and all on midi because you couldn’t record audio on computers then; I just used sounds from here and there and sequences.

SISSY: Did you move to London from Macclesfield?

PAUL: No, initially I moved to Runcorn, then to Chester, then eventually to London. When I recorded my first album I was in Chester and I was looking for a place to move out to. The studio I’d recorded in had a sort of big guesthouse with 10 bedrooms and the studio was in a separate building. The guy who was running it was renting the rooms out and I’d got to know some of the people living there so I moved in. It was a bit like a little community.

SISSY: Did your first album get released?

PAUL: Yes, through Arista. I was sending demos out to people, then the A&R guy from Arista was living in Nottingham and he came to one of my gigs in Runcorn.

SISSY: What was that album called and is it still available?

PAUL: It was just called Paul… by Paul. I have a few copies left but I’m thinking of getting it re-pressed. It was a very studio-based album; it has much more of a sequenced sound than the later stuff. The album didn’t get put out until quite a long time after it was recorded and it didn’t get promoted very well. Then I moved down to London and that was the beginning of the end of the deal with Arista.

I’d never been to London before so it was all new to me; I started going to lots of gigs, looking for musicians to put a band together, meeting lots of new people and then I did a few gigs. I recorded another album which didn’t get released; it had much more of a band sound as I was using musicians I’d met in London.

SISSY: What did you do after the deal with Arista fell through?

PAUL: I started working with different musicians, writing songs and recording new material. I normally write the songs on my own and then get the band in to play the parts. Then in 2003 I released an album called Electromagnetic Blues.

SISSY: How did you go about making your own album?

PAUL: There’s a guy I know who’d got into Logic Audio and I learned how to work with that. Then I booked a day in a rehearsal studio and started off recording a day’s live drums and bass for 2 or 3 songs. We also recorded some drums and bass in my flat which eventually upset the neighbours… on my new album there’s only 2 tracks with live drums on and one of them is kind of Keith Moon style, so I was saying to the drummer, ‘think Keith Moon’… the neighbours definitely didn’t like that!

SISSY: Did you use the same musicians on your new album as on Electromagnetic Blues?

PAUL: No, it’s all changed as they’ve become successful with their own bands. (Mercury-nominated jazz band Polar Bear and jazz/indie band Acoustic Ladyland) I seem to end up playing with jazz musicians because they know what they’re doing… I write the parts out and they sight-read them.

SISSY: What music do you like to listen to?

PAUL: I guess I would have to say Jimi Hendrix as a guitarist but I listen to all sorts of stuff. I like Roy Harper, Johnny Dowd, John Martyn, Tim and Jeff Buckley, the last Strokes album because I like their songs and vocals, and there’s an American guitarist I like called Paul Curreri… I’ve got one of his cd’s.

SISSY: What’s the new album called?

PAUL: It’s called Little Miss Weird. It’s much more of a solo album. This one was recorded in my flat and I did it all on Logic version 4.8. I stick to that older version because I know how to use it well.

SISSY: How does this album differ from the previous one?

PAUL: It’s better sound quality because I’ve got a 24-bit sound card now, and it’s better produced. This album has a lot more space on it and more acoustic songs although there are some rock-out tracks as well. I think the songs are better and the singing and guitar playing are better as well.

SISSY: Did you try to get a label to release this album or did you intend to release it yourself from the start?

PAUL: I decided I’d do it myself and it’s being distributed by Cargo… they also distributed the last album.

SISSY: Can you tell us how a distribution deal works?

PAUL: I sent a cd of four songs I’d recorded to Cargo and I thought they weren’t interested because I didn’t hear anything back. Then I sent them an album when it was finished 6 months later, and they said ‘yes, we really like it, we’ll distribute it for you’. I don’t think there’s a standard type of deal, it’s more about building a relationship with them. Last time, I paid for the pressing of 1000 albums and they took a percentage to distribute them. This time, they paid up front for the costs of pressing and duplicating cd’s and artwork, which has to be paid back out of sales. They take a % fee of cost price (as opposed to retail price) for distribution. The only thing is they don’t do any promotion at all so I have to do all that myself. I don’t have a press agent or a plugger; I just concentrate on building up relationships with people I’ve met. I sent 200 cd’s out in advance of this release to press and radio, you have to do that about 2 months before you release something, then start chasing them up and annoying them. Being able to send emails has made that process easier because you can think about what you want to say instead of getting flustered on the phone.

SISSY: Have you got a booking agent to help you get gigs?

PAUL: No, not yet.

SISSY: You seem to be getting a lot of critical acclaim… is it translating into record sales and big audiences?

PAUL: A lot more people seem to have heard of my last album than the amount sold would indicate; we’ll have to wait and see.

SISSY: What’s your verdict on the effect the internet is having on music?

PAUL: I think it’s mostly a good thing. If you think about how things were 20 years ago, musicians didn’t have anything like it so in some ways it’s made it a lot easier to reach other people, to get in touch with them. But you still need DJ’s, journalists and tastemakers as filters, I think. Now you can hire pluggers and press agents to get publicity for you instead of signing a huge percentage away to a label. Doing it the way I have, by sending lots of advance cd’s out, the difficulty is in maintaining a campaign; you have your album launch which you can make into a bit of an event but you need to have something planned to do next, to follow that up. If you have someone else working on it they can make suggestions on what gigs to do and plan what interviews to do to keep up the momentum.

SISSY: Do you think it’s harder for female musicians?

PAUL: Yes, female musicians can tend not to get taken so seriously as their male equivalents. You have to prove yourself more, but on the other hand you can stand out more because there’s not so many of you.

SISSY: Any message for the masses?

PAUL: Buy my albums and come to my gigs!

……………….

A few days after this interview, Sissy went to Paul the Girls’s album launch gig at the 100 Club in Oxford Street. The support act was Duke Garwood (who also plays sax with the Archie Bronson Outfit) performing stripped-down jazz-blues on acoustic guitar in a Tom Waits-esque manner. He was joined by a drummer who provided dynamic expression on pots-and-pans style drums. Duke’s material is authentic and moody, but Sissy couldn’t help thinking it would be more suited to a more intimate environment.

Paul the Girl was joined on stage by a double-bass player, drummer, mandolin player and Michael J. Sheehy on guest backing vocals and guitar. She effortlessly breezed her way through a set of songs from the new album and a couple of old favourites from Electromagnetic Blues, seemingly thriving on the occasional moments of chaos caused by the lack of intensive rehearsal. The lyrics on the new album are particularly sharp and satirical and the music ranged from full-on rocking out to subtle jazz-influenced whimsical pieces. As ever, Paul’s usual self-deprecating demeanour was transformed and beautified by her music to the point where you couldn’t take your eyes off her. One song in particular, ‘Down the Lane’ stood out as having huge commercial potential, which we hope will translate into reality. It’s rare to find a talent as unique as Paul’s that hasn’t already been oversold; in her case it’s definitely been undersold.

You can buy Paul the Girl’s records and hear her music at:
paulthegirl.com and myspace.com/paulthegirl

Emiliana Torrini – Icelandic/Italian Singer Songwriter

Friday, March 24th, 2006
Emiliana picture by Alexandra Bone

Emiliana picture by Alexandra Bone

Emiliana Torrini first got famous in Iceland almost by accident when she was a teenager. She recorded some songs for fun which generated lots of interest and resulted in some offers to record professionally. She was then ‘discovered’ by Derek Birkett and Arni Ben from One Little Indian records and asked to come to the UK in 1998 to record the album ‘Love In The Time Of Science’ produced by Roland Orzabal of Tears For Fears fame. This album was trip-hop in feel and received worldwide critical acclaim and some commercial success.

Since then, whilst writing material for her current album, Emiliana has collaborated with a number of other artists including the Thievery Corporation and has written songs with the Sneaker Pimps.

The emotional poignancy and evocative quality of Emiliana’s voice makes it particularly suitable for use on soundtracks and she was invited to sing on the soundtrack of the Two Towers from the Lord of the Rings trilogy. She’s also had songs featured on UK TV series Footballers Wives and Sugar Rush (set in Brighton where Emiliana currently lives) and a car commercial, to name but a few.

In 2004 Emiliana and her producer Dan Carey co-wrote ‘Slow’ with Kylie Minogue, proving that Emiliana is a truly diverse songstress who can express herself in many genres and styles.

Sissy catches up with Emiliana Torrini as she takes a break from touring and promoting her album ‘The Fisherman’s Woman’ released on Rough Trade early last year. ‘The Fisherman’s Woman’ is a collection of beautiful, subtle songs played on acoustic guitars, lap steel, harmonium and glockenspiel. It cleverly blends elements of folk, soul, country and pop. Since January 2005 she’s been performing songs from the album with her band in Europe, the USA and Iceland and so far the gigs have been well received. In a couple of weeks she’s off to Australia and Japan to promote the album there.

SISSY: So what’s your opinion on the ‘internet revolution’ currently changing the shape of the music industry?

EMILIANA: I think that the internet is such a brilliant new way for music. Because when I was growing up and had MTV at home, I’d stay up all night to record a video or record the music on tape just to be the first to be able to play the new band next day; everything has to be your own discovery and the internet is the way for the younger kids to do that now. They want to discover something new for themselves that nobody’s heard, bring it to school and play it to their friends. That’s what it is to be young, always the first with something. The internet is almost the new punk because people are sick of everything that’s going on in the world; people feel that governments are failing them, the media is failing them, there’s war and horrible stuff going on and people are sick of it all. They’re sticking their fingers up to all of it and saying ‘No! We’re going to find our own way and take what we want.’ People have had enough of being fed what the media wants them to hear. I think it’s brilliant that there are websites where you can get some exposure for your music and end up doing your own tour without a record deal or press or anything, and still fill a 3000 capacity venue just on your reputation through the internet. It’s like a treasure chest; I think your instinct when you’re growing up is to say ‘what’s behind that mountain?’ and always to search somewhere further. The internet opens up a lot of treasure hunts that you can explore for yourself.

SISSY: What was the first gig you went to see?

EMILIANA: My first gig ever was Rage Against the Machine when they played near Reykjavik. I wasn’t allowed to go so I had to sneak out; we had to hitch a ride to the concert but there were hardly any cars on the road. Eventually these guys stopped and we were pleading with them to take us. They said ok, but only if we travelled in the boot! So they put us in the boot all squashed with a big tyre, then they drove somewhere onto a street that had loads of speed bumps and they drove up and down over the speed bumps for about half an hour before they took us to the gig!

SISSY: I guess that gives a new meaning to the term ‘headbanging’!

EMILIANA: Definitely! When I got back I tried to lie to my mother that I hadn’t gone but I was wearing a t shirt I’d drawn on; a picture of a bug or something, and the ink had run because the gig was so hot and sweaty. So by the time I got home my face was all covered in black smudges from where the colours had melted!

SISSY: Growing up in Iceland must have been very different to growing up almost anywhere else in Europe.

EMILIANA: I think it was. We didn’t have so many distractions so we would do more things like make up stories, go exploring and have adventures.

SISSY: What’s your favourite story?

EMILIANA: I remember once when it was a festival day or some kind of celebration and everyone was walking on the beach in Reykjavik, holding balloons in a big procession and a whale had come ashore and got stuck on the beach so he had died. All the people walked around the whale and my friend Siggi who is a big show-off climbed up onto the whale and was shouting down ‘Look at me! I climbed the whale!’ Everyone pretended to ignore him and carried on walking along the beach but suddenly there was a scream and Siggi had disappeared! All that could be heard was some muffled noises. Nobody could find Siggi for ages so eventually a man climbed up on the whale to get a better view; then he saw an arm sticking out of the whale and heard Siggi squeaking that he had fallen into the whale’s vagina! Lots of people had to get up and pull him out. He’s never got over that experience; now everyone calls him Siggi the whale vagina miner!

SISSY: Wow! That’s an amazing story! Your experiences must have given you lots of material to write about.

EMILIANA: I started writing music relatively late in my career; I always considered myself to be just a singer of songs… I don’t care who writes them but if I like the song I want to sing it. And then I wanted to write but I thought I couldn’t write at all because I wasn’t that type of person. Then suddenly I was a songwriter but it was a fight to become one!

SISSY: I heard a rumour that you originally wrote your single ‘Sunnyroad’ for Johnny Cash but that he died before he could record it.

EMILIANA: No, that’s not true at all! After the song was finished I thought it would have been amazing to offer it to him… I think it would have really suited his voice, he was such a great character and brilliant artist.

SISSY: Judging by your recordings to date, you seem to like lots of different styles of music and it’s hard to categorize you.

EMILIANA: I feel like it’s a real comfort when people don’t know where to place me, because when people seem confused and have no idea where to put me then I can be whatever I want to be. It makes me feel I must be doing something right; it’s not that I’m breaking any new ground as far as the listener is concerned, but I’m constantly breaking new ground for myself and discovering new things when I’m writing.

SISSY: So is there any unifying factor to all the diverse projects you’ve been involved with?

EMILIANA: I just take part in the things that I like, but usually it comes down to a good song, regardless of style. In the same way that you don’t want all your friends to be the same as each other or have the same opinions, I’m interested in lots of different types of music and in letting different things happen each time rather than choosing in advance.

…………………

Emiliana Torrini may be reluctant to categorise herself but we think that’s easy; she’s carved her own niche and it should be called Icelandic Soul… soul in the true sense of the word as in music that comes from the heart and expresses raw and sincere emotion. With the help of sympathetic management and an understanding record company she’s been able to forge a career path that seems both credible and enduring. Hopefully she’ll be around for a long time to come; she’s due to start writing for a new album soon, tour schedule permitting so we can look forward to hearing some more of those delicate Icelandic Soul classics in the future!

For more information on Emiliana check out her website at www.emilianatorrini.com