by Todd E. Jones aka The New Jeru Poet |
Poignant
music is rooted in emotional honesty. The heartrending songs in films
have power due to the universal truth within the emotional backbone of
the story. Many artists strive to create poignant music, but few
succeed. When an artist succeeds in capturing a precious feeling, the
music is timeless and universal. Trisomie 21, Slowdive, The Verve, The
House Of Love, and Cocteau Twins are just several groups who have
mastered this art. Electric President is a group with this talent.
Consisting of Ben Cooper and Alex Kane, Electric President injects a
subtle wit into their music. They recently released their debut album,
“S/T”. Recorded in a shed and a bedroom, “S/T” sounds as if it could be
a soundtrack for a film by John Hughes. Ben Cooper and Alex Kane were
originally in a group they called Radical Face Versus Phalex
Sledgehammer. Together, Cooper and Kane have utilized their
creative energy to create a new and exciting project.
Ben Cooper became a renaissance man after being
raised as a boy in Jacksonville, Florida. As a writer, artist, and
musician, Cooper uses various mediums to express himself.
Recently, Cooper reunited with fellow musician, Alex Kane and created
the duo named Electric President. Their goal was to use electronic
instruments without creating an overtly electronic sound. Their debut
album, “S/T” is unique collection of poignant yet enigmatic pop tunes.
If John Hughes (director of The Breakfast Club, Sixteen Candles, etc.)
were making a teen flick today, one of the songs from “S/T” would
probably be on the soundtrack. Released by Morr Music, “S/T” uses
emotional guitar melodies and light rhythms to create music that is
noticeable, but not shocking.
Ben Cooper will be one of those artists that you
will hear about in the following years. If this article is the first
time you heard about him, will you remember it?
T.JONES:
"What
goes on?"
BEN COOPER: “Not much. Just finished watching some more of ‘Lost’. Good
show.”
T.JONES: “Electric President
just released a new album, ‘S/T’, Tell us about the album.”
BEN COOPER: “Well, it’s the first record me and Alex have done under an
official name. We’ve worked together off and on since around 2000, but
finally gave the project a title. We recorded it at home, in Alex’s
bedroom and in my tool shed. It took about 8 months. It was also the
first time we’ve ever used computers so much in the process. That’s the
basic overview of the record.”
T.JONES: “What is your
favorite song on ‘S/T’?”
BEN COOPER: “I don’t have one. I’m much more into the idea of a
complete record, where no one song is necessarily more important, so I
don’t really pay much attention to any particular song once the record
is done.”
T.JONES: “Why did you choose
the name Electric President?”
BEN COOPER: “I was at a Christmas party, a couple years ago, having a
conversation with a couple friends who I hadn’t seen in a while. One of
them said something along the lines of ‘eclectic resident’, but I
thought he said electric president. We thought the name was kind of
funny. We joked that one of us should use it for a band name. So, I
did.”
T.JONES: “Which song on ‘S/T’
took the longest to complete? Why?”
BEN COOPER: “I think ‘Some Crap About The Future’ took the longest and
saw the most changes. It was a pain in the ass to record for a number
of reasons. The drums were all pitch shifted. The guitars weren’t
sitting right at first. The drones kept getting too thick and noisy and
then, proved to be the toughest to mix too. And, it originally had more
sections, but it was already getting out of hand, so it was cut back to
something more manageable.”
T.JONES: “For ‘S/T’, you wanted to integrate computers into the process
without having the LP to be an electronic record. Why? How did you
accomplish this?”
BEN COOPER: “Well, after listening to some records from The Books, I
was really pumped to try some editing. So, I suggested to Alex that we
use a bunch of computers on the record. He was into it too, so we got
started. All the songs started like normal ones. I’d lay out some
chords and get my vocals together. Then, Alex would add some bass
guitar to everything. Then we’d start using computers to mess
everything up. Splice parts out, mute and un-mute entire sections,
record sections separately and edit them together, stuff like that. The
drums were mostly random sounds we collected and made, knocking on
walls, dropping bags, zippers, tools, scraping Styrofoam, cracking our
knuckles, dropping rocks in a bucket, et cetera. I sequenced them all
in Reason.”
T.JONES: “The song, ‘Good
Morning Hypocrite’ is one of my favorites. What inspired this song?”
BEN COOPER: “It was the first song we did for the record. I can’t say
exactly what inspired it, other than that it was the start of the whole
project. It was the guinea pig, in a lot of ways, and it provided some
idea of what direction the record would go in.”
T.JONES: “The ‘S/T’ album was recorded in a tool shed and a bedroom?”
BEN COOPER: “Yeah. We don’t have a recording space or anything. So, we
just work wherever. Alex’s bedroom is more convenient, so it was used
for about 80% of this record. But whenever I record at home, I work in
the tool shed. It’s the only space I’ve got for playing music.”
T.JONES: “How do you feel you
have evolved as an artist?”
BEN COOPER: “I don’t know. It’s a hard thing to gauge. I mean, it
happens slowly. So, sometimes you almost don’t even notice until you
listen back to what you were making and writing a few years before. I
think I’m happier with the more recent stuff, and more confident in it,
but that could be a state of mind as much as actual improvement. But
I’ve definitely gotten a lot better at production and recording. We’re
using the same crappy gear we’ve always used. I haven’t bought any new
recording gear for a couple years, but everything sounds a lot more
together now.”
T.JONES: “How is Electric
President different from Radical Face?”
BEN
COOPER: “There’s more collaboration in Electric President. I still
write the skeletons for the songs and often have an arrangement in
mind, but we do more of the writing in the same room. If I bring
something from home, I leave everything pretty naked to see what
happens when we work together. Sometimes, Alex will do something on
bass or a synth that changes the direction of the song, which is fun.
As for the Radical Face stuff, I work alone on that project. I
sometimes have people play instruments on some songs, and occasionally
I’ll get input on a section or two, usually from my little brother.
But, it’s mostly just me holed up in the tool shed.”
T.JONES: “How did you meet Alex Cane and eventually form both groups?”
BEN COOPER: “I met Alex in 2000 in a band called Helicopter Project.
The group lost their lead singer/song writer and asked if I wanted to
step in. I hadn’t been in a band in a few years. It sounded like fun,
so I said sure. We played together for maybe a year. Then, we split up
because two members left for college. But, me and Alex stayed in touch
after that. Eventually, we started recording together again. We’ve
worked together, off and on, ever since.”
T.JONES: “What is going on with Radical Face?”
BEN COOPER: “I’m currently recording a record under that name. I’ve
been writing the songs for it for about a year and a half. I’ve been
tracking since October. I hope to be done within the next couple of
months. I’m looking forward to a break, but I’m really proud of it.
It’s turning out how I hoped it would, which doesn’t always happen. And
if all goes as planned, it should come out on Morr this August.”
T.JONES: “What other music projects are you in?”
BEN COOPER: “I have a project with my brother, who plays piano, called
‘Iron Orchestra’. It consists of instrumental songs in a modern
classical vein. We’ve been writing for the project for a while now. I
hope to have some recordings finished by the end of the year. But,
we’re still working out how to get the string sections performed and
tracked. We are trying to find a good piano to record on. I’ve also
been working with a bunch of friends in a noisy/trashy project called
‘Biowulf’. We plan on tracking a record and doing some small bursts of
touring this summer. It’s all talk at this point, but I think it’ll
happen. Other than that, I’ve been doing production for
Astronautalis for the past few years, and there’s a bunch of one-off
projects that only happen every blue moon. Headache and Pearl Harbor,
Unkle Stiltskin, et cetera.”
T.JONES: “Do you think success
and credibility are mutually exclusive?”
BEN COOPER: “It all depends on who you ask. A lot of people have a
different take on that, and their own idea of what groups should or
shouldn’t do. A lot of people get pissed when other people suddenly
know who their favorite band is. Why? I don’t know. Personally, I don’t
really care. I either like the music or I don’t whether it’s
successful, popular, obscure, cutting-edge, et cetera. It doesn’t
matter very much. I’m not very social about what I like, so that might
have something to do with it.”
T.JONES: “What do you think of the term trip-hop?”
BEN COOPER: “I’ve never known exactly what it applies to, or where it
came from. So I don’t have much of an opinion on it. I like some
musicians that get that tag, though.”
T.JONES: “Describe the overall recording process.”
BEN COOPER: “Depends on which record we’re talking about. It changes
each time. For ‘S/T’, we tracked all the basics for each song pretty
fast. One or two 10-hour-days were enough to get everything laid down
in all but a few cases. But the drum sequencing, synth modeling,
editing and rearranging sometimes went on for a month after that. It
got kind of meticulous at times, but it was fun to take what was there
and destroy it, or chop it into something new.”
T.JONES: “How did you get involved with Morr Music?”
BEN COOPER: “Friends passing the music along. I gave some CDs to
Astronautalis, who gave a copy to Styrofoam, who told Thomas Morr about
it. Morr then check out my website and liked some of the material and
asked if I wanted to put a record out on his label. I said yes, and
then we negotiated everything for a while and came to an agreement we
could both accept. And here we are.”
T.JONES: “What song are you most proud of?”
BEN COOPER: “No particular one. I pay a lot of attention to each song
during the writing and recording, but now that everything’s done, it’s
just a record. No one song stands out anymore.”
T.JONES: “When creating a song, do you have a set theme or pre-written
lyrics? Do you write the music first? Or, does everything come together
simultaneously?”
BEN COOPER: “All of the above. Some songs start as words, some start as
music, more common. Sometimes there’s a theme to all the lyrics, like
on ‘S/T’, all the songs except one took place in some kind of made-up
future, but sometimes not. It changes each time.”
T.JONES: “Favorite sampler?”
BEN COOPER: “I’ve never owned one, so I don’t know.”
T.JONES: “Favorite keyboard?”
BEN COOPER: “I will always have a soft spot for the Casio SK-1. But I
mostly use a midi-controller and soft synths these days.”
T.JONES: “Favorite guitar?”
BEN COOPER: “If I had the money, I’d get a Gibson J-45. I really like
the sound and feel of those. I also like my little yard sale guitars
too. So it’s hard to say. Electric guitars are a whole new ballgame.”
T.JONES: “What do you think
about the cover for the album?”
BEN COOPER: “I thought the cover was great. It was not at all what I
had intended for it, but that’s exactly why I liked it. It was really
cool to see someone else’s presentation. I like Jan’s style. It’s very
charming.”
T.JONES: “What is your opinion
on downloading music from the Internet?”
BEN COOPER: “I’m not against it. There are always cases where people
take it to a ridiculous level, but that happens with anything.”
T.JONES: “What inspired the song, ‘Snow On Dead Neighbors’?”
BEN COOPER: “I take a lot of walks late at night. Usually around 3 a.m.
or so. Everything looks very different around then. There aren’t a lot
of lights, few cars, very little movement. I like the way it looks and
feels. That’s what sparked the lyrics for that one. But to be more
specific: the song takes place about a hundred years the in the future.
The main characters are a teenage boy and a girl robot. He thinks is
his sister. They’re on the run from the organization that was holding
his sister captive. On the way, they stumble upon this neighborhood
encased in snow and ice. It looks much how a lot of neighborhoods do
now, only without any people. They’re just wandering through it,
looking in all the windows. It all sounds pretty silly when written out
like that, but that’s how much of the record was written. A lot of
songs are just stories, not necessarily a personal outlook.”
T.JONES: “Favorite Films?”
BEN COOPER: “I could go on for a while here, so I’ll just mention some
of them: The Usual Suspects, Shawshank Redemption, Seven Samurai,
anything Miyazaki has done, Amelie, The Lord of the Rings movies,
Memento, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, The Iron Giant, Seven,
anything Pixar does, Return to Oz, Braveheart, Fargo, Oh Brother Where
Art Thou?, Shadow of the Vampire, Trainspotting, The Adventures of
Baron Munchausen, L.A. Confidential, American History X, Billy Elliot,
Being John Malkovich. I guess that’s good enough. I’m definitely
leaving a lot out, but that’s always the case with lists.”
T.JONES: “What is the favorite part of your live show?”
BEN COOPER: “Not sure yet. We haven’t played much of the material live
at this point. We’re still trying to figure just how to do it. Most of
the songs will likely be dismantled and played in a very different way.”
T.JONES: “Where are you from? Where are you living now? What is it
like?”
BEN COOPER: “I was born and raised in Jacksonville, Florida, and I live
here now. It’s not a very busy place, but I like it for that. You
mostly just work at your own pace. There isn’t much nightlife or
anything, but I don’t go out very often anyway. I’d rather just watch a
movie, or read, or whatever.”
T.JONES: “What are some songs that made you fall in love?”
BEN COOPER: “I don’t know. I mean, plenty of songs have had an affect
on me, but I don’t know if I’ve ever fallen in love on account of one.”
T.JONES: “Who are some artists who you would like to collaborate with
in the future?”
BEN COOPER: “Lots of them. But it would depend on the kind of music,
and when you ask me. Some names at the moment: Joanna Newsom, The
Books, Sigur Ros, Max Richter, Tom Waits, Johann Johansson, some groups
on Morr.”
T.JONES: “What are some songs
that you would like to remix? How would you do it?”
BEN COOPER: “I’m not sure. I’ve never remixed anything before.”
T.JONES: “Where were you during September 11th terrorist attack? How
did you deal with it?”
BEN COOPER: “I was at home. At first, I didn’t deal with it. It took a
while for it to sink in.”
T.JONES: “Death penalty – for or against?”
BEN COOPER: “I don’t think I could give an adequate answer in the form
of an interview. In part, it is because I usually keep my politics
separate from my music or art. I don’t want to use them as a platform;
I can’t help but have some views seep into the writing, but I’m not
very outspoken in that way, but also because I feel politics and views
should be discussed. Just putting out opinions in a place that you
can’t debate them or have a conversation mostly just starts fights,
which isn’t conducive for making a point. I definitely have a view
about these things, but you’ll have to corner me in person for a
response.”
T.JONES: “Abortion –
pro-choice or pro-life?”
BEN COOPER: “Same as above.”
T.JONES: “What was your childhood like? What kind of kid were you?”
BEN COOPER: “I grew up in a very big family. I have nine siblings, but
I’ve always been about the same in that I’ve always liked to make
things. I got into drawing and painting when I was in the second grade.
In middle school I started playing music and making short films with
friends after school. Toward the end of high school, I got into reading
and writing. But I was into a lot of physical things too. I skated
until I was 19 and would probably still be skating everyday had I not
hurt my back. I fell on my tailbone a few too many times, so now my
back goes out. Even lifting something wrong is enough to leave me
bedridden for a while, so skating is out of the question. But I miss
it.”
T.JONES: “What has been in
your CD player or in your tape deck recently?”
BEN COOPER: “Joanna Newsom, Max Richter, a mix CD of choral
compositions and Chopin piano pieces, and this old Erectus Monotone
album I got from a friend.”
T.JONES: “Word association.
When I say a name, you tell me the first
word that pops in your head. So, if I say ‘The Beatles’, you may say
‘Revolution’ or ‘Lennon’. Ok?”
T.JONES: “Massive Attack.”
BEN COOPER: “Dark.”
T.JONES: “Trisomie 21.”
BEN COOPER: “Math.”
T.JONES: “The Stone Roses.”
BEN COOPER: “England.”
T.JONES: “Morrissey.”
BEN COOPER: “Smiths.”
T.JONES: “Slowdive.”
BEN COOPER: “Nice.”
T.JONES: “The Fall.”
BEN COOPER: “Leaves. I know you meant the band, but I’m trying to stick
to the ‘first word that pops into my head’ guideline.”
T.JONES: “The Strokes.”
BEN COOPER: “Guitars.”
T.JONES: “My Bloody Valentine.”
BEN COOPER: “Drones. “
T.JONES: “The House Of Love.”
BEN COOPER: “80s.”
T.JONES: “Momus.”
BEN COOPER: “Unfamiliar.”
T.JONES: “Felt.”
BEN COOPER: “Hands.”
T.JONES: “The Wolfgang Press.”
BEN COOPER: “Mozart.”
T.JONES: “Cocteau Twins.”
BEN COOPER: “Pretty.”
T.JONES: “The Dandy Warhols.”
BEN COOPER: “Campbell’s.”
T.JONES: “Psychic T.V.”
BEN COOPER: “Cleo.”
T.JONES: “Coldcut.”
BEN COOPER: “Turntable.”
T.JONES: “New Order.”
BEN COOPER: “Ceremony.”
T.JONES: “Brian Eno.”
BEN COOPER: “Apollo.”
T.JONES: “George Bush.”
BEN COOPER: “Ears.”
T.JONES: “What do you think of the
U.S. involvement in the Middle East?”
BEN COOPER: “Again, this isn’t the place I can adequately discuss it.
For a general statement, I’m not real happy with it, but it’s not a
black and white topic.”
T.JONES: “Who was the biggest
influence in your life?”
BEN COOPER: “My family, hands down. They’ve forever and always helped
me stay centered. They’re my favorite people.”
T.JONES: “How has technology hurt
music?”
BEN COOPER: “I don’t think it has. I think its changed music, but it
hasn’t hurt it. It could only hurt it if you wanted music to stay the
same, which I don’t. I’m always excited to see what else will happen
with music. But I do think that people haven’t learned how to adjust to
all the technology just yet, both in terms of how to use it to make
records, and how to market and sell them as well. Everyone’s kind of
flailing, convinced that downloading music and consumer-level recording
gear will be the death of music. Music isn’t going anywhere. In the
80’s, people were saying the same thing about Midi and synthesizers,
that they’re killing music, and that everything worth writing has
already been written, etc. Music didn’t die, it just changed. I really
don’t think it’s that big a deal now either. People just have to figure
out what to do with all the options they have now, and adjust.”
T.JONES: “In The Consolation of Philosophy,
Boethius writes, ‘It's my belief that history is a wheel…. Rise up on
my spokes if you like but don't complain when you're cast back down
into the depths. Good time pass away, but then so do the bad.
Mutability is our tragedy, but it's also our hope. The worst of time,
like the best, are always passing away.’ What other works of art,
literature, songs, or whatever helped you maintain?"
BEN COOPER: “Books in general are a life-saver for me. Whenever I’m
down, I can read and it takes my mind off of things. There’s not enough
space in my head to feel shitty and concentrate on a story.”
T.JONES: “What was your last dream
you remember?”
BEN COOPER: “Most of my dreams are very tense and unnerving. I’m sure
there’s some psychological reason behind this, but I don’t know it. My
last dream was no different. I dreamed that I was trying to help
someone I know, but couldn’t.”
T.JONES: “What is music lacking these
days?”
BEN COOPER: “In a personal way, I wish there were more composers
working now. I realize there isn’t much of an avenue for it outside of
film soundtracks and such, but I would like to see more instrumental
pieces being written and sold like other records. But overall, I think
music is doing fine. I’m finding at least 4 or 5 new artists a year
that I really like, which isn’t bad at all. I’ve changed the way I
listen to music though. I try my best not to listen to music as what I
would like it to be, and just listen to what it is and decide whether I
enjoy it. It’s really easy to get caught up in a bunch of social crap
and listen to music as some sort of identity-defining thing, but I’ve
found that there’s very little attention paid to the music in those
cases. It becomes the equivalent of deciding what you’re going to wear,
and I like music too much to let it become that. I’ve never been very
social about what I like, but I’ve become even less so lately, and I’ve
found that I’m just enjoying more art in general. It’s nice.”
T.JONES: “You also are involved in
writing and art. Tell us about your other non-music creativity.”
BEN COOPER: “Well, music is kind of the last thing I got into. I’ve
always drawn and painted, since elementary school. For the past few
years, paintings have been my only source of income. When I was just
out of high school, I was determined to become a writer. For a little
over a year, I did nothing but write in my spare time. But my computer,
which held all of my writing, completely crashed one day and all the
work I hadn’t backed up was lost, which was pretty disheartening. So
while I was working a bunch and saving up for a new computer, I needed
something to do. So Alex and I started recording together again, and
that’s when all this started. I’d been playing bands since middle
school, and writing songs throughout the years since, but it wasn’t
until borrowing a 4-track and recording on my days off that music
really clicked. Playing live and being in bands has never been my
favorite thing. I enjoyed it, but it wasn’t enough to make me stick
with it. But when the recording thing got rolling, I was suddenly
writing all the time, practicing more than I ever had, and trying to
understand how to make a record. Writing and recording are by far my
favorite parts of music.”
T.JONES: “What are some major
misconceptions that people have of you?”
BEN COOPER: “I don’t know. Locally, I mostly hang around the same
people I always have. I’ve known a lot of my friends since elementary
school, and the rest I met in high school.”
T.JONES: “What is next for you?"
BEN COOPER: “Once I finish this current record and get it mastered, I’m
gonna change gears and work on a book for a while. I’ve been mapping
out this story for a long time, and would like to sit down and write
it. I also hope to get some of the Iron Orchestra pieces recorded this
year, and have been working on some short film scripts with a friend,
that we plan on shooting soon. Then there’s the Biowulf project for
summer and some touring for Electric President during fall. So it’s
going to be a busy year, and I’m pretty sure I won’t finish all of
that, but I’m gonna try.”
T.JONES: “Any final words?”
BEN COOPER: “Thanks for this opportunity, Todd. And thanks for asking
some different questions. This is definitely the most thorough
interview yet.”
NOTICE:
This interview
is property of Todd E. Jones and cannot be duplicated or posted without
written permission.
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