Posts Tagged ‘Emergència!2014’

Cuello: urgently emergent

January 16th, 2014 No Comments

Instalment two in a series of eight profiles about the artistic remit of Emergència 2014. Cuello, the band of José Guerrero, fromValencia, is emerging as one of the liveliest proposals in the festival’s line-up since it started. Clear, simple and direct is what people are saying; uncomplicated. Rampantly melodic with irrepressible energy.

They debuted with a fantastic album, Mi Brazo Que te Sobre (BCore), marked by a lyrical feel that boldly suggests the ideas that come together in the muscle of a pulsing rock concert. This is one project more of the many that make up the alternative scene today inValencia, a hotbed of creativity and new ideas. José Guerrero explains who Cuello are and what they do.

© Josu Kiro

 

Between the powerful abstraction of Betunizer and the rhythmic essence of Jupiter Lion, how did Cuello come into being, and why? It seems like a more laidback, spontaneous project than the other groups you play with…

For a while I’d been thinking about getting together a band where the melodies were more important than innovation, experimentation, things like that. Like you say, something more laidback and spontaneous, to start with at least. Perhaps even something closer to pop, but guitar-based and energetic. One day I started writing songs and formed the band with what I thought were the right people—musicians like me who in theory are not at all poppy, bringing our own approach to the songs. Rather than trying to explain something with Cuello, what I wanted was to enjoy playing this kind of songs, like I do with other bands and projects I’m involved in.

Is this raw, grandiloquent side of Cuello intended?

What we intended was to produce songs with energy, in every case positive energy. They have to have this energy to form part of our repertoire. Rather than grandiloquent, I’d say “grandipotent”.

We hear a huge range of influences: American rock like Hüsker Dü or Guided by Voices, nineties hardcore, and even some more commercial influences. Basically, alternative music that just won’t stop. How would you define these influences?

Once a music freak hits 30, it’s hard to talk about specific influences; it’s wide open. One night I can be mesmerised listening to The Disintegration Loop by William Basinski, then the next morning I put on Weezer’s debut album and get off listening to that. I’ve always enjoyed listening to melodic music, however much I like more different, extreme things at other times. You could say that Cuello’s most direct influences are guitar-driven bands with a positive spirit, with the emphasis on vocal melodies. I’m a big fan of Guided by Voices, for example. Not all their songs are great tracks, but most of them are really exciting. I just love Robert Pollard!!  And talking of melodies, there’s also the Pixies, the Beach Boys, Superchunk, Built to Spill, the Ramones, blah blah blah…

Listen to Cuello’s first disc, “Mi Brazo Que te Sobre”.

 

So melody and energy are the distinguishing features of Cuello?

Absolutely. They are two of the important things when writing a Cuello song, where the guitar riffs are important, but they’re nothing without a good vocal melody. And while I’m interested in that spontaneous, laidback sound, I try not to settle for the first thing that comes to mind just because it goes with a certain riff.

In the last ten years, Valencia has produced some of the boldest and most interesting projects in Spanish rock—Le Jonathan Reilly, Estrategia Lo Capto, Negro, Betunizer. Can we talk about a Valencia scene?

It’s true that a lot has happened in recent years. I suppose it’s because people now have more access to much more music, and here, in this country, there’s basically a lot of creativity and a lot of nerve, so you’re going to see people taking risks and wanting to try things. Everyone’s got influences, I’m not denying that, but you can see that lots of bands fromValenciahave got a personality of their own, and that’s great. I’m convinced that the music world will be talking about it. We’ve no reason to envy a lot of the music being made elsewhere.

The song titles, the words and the phrasing you use when you sing are surprising. There’s something different and exciting, a subtle intelligence in these lyrics. All the songs on the disc seem like potential hits…

That’s the idea—to make all the songs hits! But hits for the kind of music lover who never buy anyone’s Greatest Hits.

Tell us about one of your songs. What are the ideas behind a given song?

Really, I prefer not to say too much about what each song is about. I prefer it if everyone draws their own conclusions. Personally, I like things that are thought-provoking, that prompt different interpretations of the same line, flirt with the absurd and with simple things, which are the most important. What I will say about Cuello is that I generally write about very basic things, about lust for life or jumping into a swimming pool, or about internal conflicts and criticising things that seem to me a waste of time and that sometimes make us less happy when what we have to do is just that, try to be happy. But really, explanations are unnecessary. What’s important is that people listen to our music and make of it what they will. Ultimately, they can’t go too far wrong.

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 @JaimeCasasB

 Cuello are playing on the Foyer stage at year six of E!

Band camp

 

Desert’s logical modernism kicks off Emergència! 2014

January 9th, 2014 No Comments

Every year, Emergència! focuses on the immediate future. It looks ahead and offers an insight into what’s happening at the grassroots of musical creativity, casting light on a scene that just keeps on growing. There’s no crisis in creation; imagination follows its course, and there’s no stopping it. As a showcase for this reality, Emergència! is the event for new bands at the CCCB. It is a curtain raiser to the Centre’s music programme, coordinated with an open approach by Ingrid Guardiola along with guest curators and, in the case of Emergència!, by cultural producer Sergio Silva.

We start this round of profiles and interviews to present the projects making up the festival line-up with the Barcelonaduo, Desert. With just a couple of EPs released, Desert, who will also be playing at Sónar 2014, has become one of the most interesting, imaginative projects on the Barcelonascene. Desert is Cristina Checa, formerly one of the voices of Granit and backing vocals on Pop negro by El Guincho, and Eloi Caballé, producer of groups such as Los Selenitas and La Rabia del Milenio. Desert is a melodic treatise of dreamy, evocative pop, of soaring, iconoclastic music.

© Jordi Castells, 2013

So far they’ve released two 7”s, both in Catalan: Camins (“for us, the path towards the light in song form”, they wrote in the Disco Naïvité blog) and Desert. These two expressive, emotional songs interweaving melody and image are all it took to shoot them to the attention of the music press, festivals—such as LEM—and local fans. Desert’s songs “are not about anything specific—they’re sensations that we somehow rationalize, and we prefer to let everyone interpret them in their own way”, says Cristina Checa. The host of references and ideas coming together in their music explains the duo’s intentions: the 4AD label, the deep, ethereal grooves of the Cocteau Twins, contemporary electronics –Andy Stott, post-dubstep—and commitment to experimentation. “When we write a song, what we’re quite sure about is what we DON’T want to do”, explains Cristina. “From there on, absolute freedom. I think we waste more time analysing the things we don’t like—about others and ourselves—than those we do. We’re absolutely manic, we get on really well. Bearing in mind that this is 2014 and we’re not trying to create an exercise in style, contemplative electronics and classic 4AD are our real passion”.

The group started out with rather different, less poetic intentions. “The idea when we started out with this project was to purge ourselves. Some people do the maple syrup diet. It could be worse.”

© Dani Canto, 2013

With one EP under your belt, you’ve achieved recognition and a contract with a US label (Minty Fresh, the label of Veruca Salt and The Aluminium Group, among others). What are your plans for the immediate future? Are you recording more work?

We’ll soon be releasing an EP with four songs and yes, we’re starting to think about an album. Now, it doesn’t seem as crazy as it did a while back; we’re spending more hours in the studio, learning from our mistakes, and we’re forming a clearer idea of where we can go. There aren’t enough hours in the day, but we’re really excited.

How do you strike the balance between the contemplative and the melodic momentum that is so characteristic of your music?

The rhythmic base, the voice, and the sensation the two create are the most important things for us when writing a song. I guess that’s where the balance comes in.

How do you go about writing a song?

Each song starts differently. It might start with a melody, a beat, a few chords, a sampler and let’s see what happens. We don’t have strictly defined roles, we switch and change.

Voice is a key element in understanding Desert. Do you have a model for your melodic changes? Kate Bush, maybe?

I’m a big fan of Kate Bush. Not just because she’s a virtuoso singer, but because she’s pure imagination and talent—she’s a huge composer and producer, she plays loads of instruments, she dances, she does karate, she controls her artistic career down to the finest detail. What more could you want? The Dreaming is one of my favourite albums of all time. But I wouldn’t really call her a model. I mean, I’m delighted that you think that Kate Bush could be a model for my melodic changes but quite frankly my head is constantly being bombarded, and I can’t control what I do. I learned to sing in the shower, like 99% of the population.

The remix EP, also produced by Glitter End Records, Enrique Ramos’s label, contributes exponentially to your music. How did you choose the remixers? Do they reflect the original essence of the songs?

Obviously, we chose people we like: we’ve known Lasers for some time, and we’re fans of both the underrated Erik Hurtado aka Afrika Pseudobruitismus and Aster. Marc Piñol and Hivern’s new stuff. We thought it’d be interesting to give a new twist to these two songs, and the truth is we’re delighted with the result.

Jaime Casas (@JaimeCasasB)

TheBarcelonaduo will be performing on the Foyer stage at the sixth E! festival on 15 February.

Bandcamp DESERT

(Català) Al febrer, torna el festival Emergència! Cartell #Emergència14

December 11th, 2013 No Comments

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