by Todd E. Jones aka The New Jeru Poet |
Due to their unique sound and approach to making music, The Mountaineers are truly a band of the 21st Century. Like Momus, they use electronic music and merge them with acoustic, organic, and folk music. This fusion of natural and synthetic music is extremely original and surprisingly accessible due to the pop song structures. The Mountaineers are a trio consisting of Alex Germains, Ceri James, and Thomas Kelar. Originally from the Welsh town of Hope, they eventually moved to Liverpool and released a critically acclaimed EP on Deltasonic Records. Eventually, they got signed to Mute Records (home of Yaz, Moby, Depeche Mode, and Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds). Their first Mute release was another EP titled “Self Catering”, which the NME described as "…lush postmodern electronica complemented by delicious songwriting.” While songs like “Clap In Time” and “Self-Catering” did have a conventional pop song structure, the lyrics and sound were completely different than anything else being played on the radio or on TV. Other weird songs like “Chicken” and the hidden instrumental track pushed the boundaries even further. Finally, The Mountaineers released their debut album “Messy Century” on Mute to widespread critical acclaim. “Messy Century” is a beautiful mix of intelligent, abstract pop songs mixed in with acoustic & rock guitars and electronic music. Like New Order, the songs have odd titles like “Ripen”, “Bom Bom”, and “Sewing”. While “Messy Century” is produced by The Mountaineers, Gareth Jones (producer of Erasure, Interpol, Depeche Mode, Gus Gus, and more) handled some additional production. Some of the best tracks on “Messy Century” include “Silent Dues”, “Sewing”, “Apart From This”, “Ripen”, and “I Gotta Sing”. Together, the LP flows with a delightful grace. Still, each song stands alone and adds variety to the LP. The short, acoustic, and poignant “Silent Dues” follows the electronic, Daft Punk-like, dance-friendly, voice-box filled “Apart From This”. The very odd Beck-like track “Sewing” is unlike anything in popular music today. The Mountaineers have weird, abstract lyrics that may not make sense to first-time listeners but through more listens, the songs grow on you quickly. Soon, listeners will want to listen to the album again and again, without skipping a single track. Even though they have been compared to Daft Punk and The Flaming Lips, The Mountaineers are truly unique. On a cold evening in March 2004, I had an in-depth interview with Alex Germains about the band, labels, politics, music, and much more. Alex is not scared to express himself through words or through music. Humble yet confident, Alex is truly an interesting artist. Go on a sonic adventure. Tackle the fear of heights! Climb the electronic mountain with your acoustic guitar and enjoy the enlightenment of a unique band called The Mountaineers.
T.JONES: “What goes
on?”
ALEX GERMAINS: “Huge
amounts of stuff. New album, promoting our own night in Liverpool and London.
The album is going to be fantastic, more poppy in a Mountaineers way, more
live sounding, more electronic sounds. Imagine recording a live album,
but with lots of cool synths and f*cked up editing. I don't think when
people record electronic music, they like it to sound raw, but that's what
we want. We want it with electric guitar too.”
T.JONES: "Your new
album is called 'Messy Century'. Why?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Because
of many things. This century is a mess. That can be good and bad. Good
because the world and it's nice that people are more culturally integrated.
We can share lots of cool stuff artistically and ideologically, and there's
a big mess of great sh*t going on. Bad because we all know that the world
is going to sh*t and there doesn't seem to be a lot anyone nice can do
about it. I have a theory that nice people are too nice to kick up a fuss
about the bad stuff that other people do. Well, they kick up a bit of a
fuss but the bad guys are just too mental and too power hungry. All they
want is to be in charge. It's just not in the nature of nice guys to fight
them. Well done to those of us who try though!”
T.JONES: "Do you
have a favorite song on 'Messy Century'?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “It
varies. One of the great things about the album is that it's not 12 tracks
of the same sounding music. Some people see that as a flaw but we like
to hear diversity, again going back to the title, something a bit messy.
All over the place. All over my face. At the moment, the song ‘Sewing’
is doing it for me.”
T.JONES: "What song
took you the longest to do? Why?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “The
song ‘I Gotta Sing’ by a mile. The first take sounded like Sting, which
to us, ended up being a bad thing! We did, I kid you not, 100 different
versions of the song before we were happy. Then, it got remixed 3 times
for the single edit! Holy unnecessary production Batman! It's just a nice
song anyway.”
T.JONES: "The shortest?
Why?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “I
suppose ‘Silent Dues’ because it's so simple and there's hardly any production.
It is just a simple song and it deserved to be heard that way.”
T.JONES: "How is
'Messy Century' different from the previous EPs?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Totally.
We had Tom drumming full time for the first time, which gave more unity
to the drums, and more liveliness. It's a progression of our songwriting,
production, ideas, opinions, experiences, everything. Can you tell?”
T.JONES: "Does the
picture of the 3 girls on the cover have any special meaning to 'Messy
Century'?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Yeah,
they're our secret concubines. They're really good at giving cartoon head.”
T.JONES: "How did
The Mountaineers meet and eventually form a band?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “We
met at school. We kind of discovered each other because we were the only
weird kids in a school of 1000 pupils. We played together for a couple
of years, then all left town to do other sh*t. I got stoned, fat, and lazy
living in London, learning to write songs. Ceri moved to Bangor, North
Wales, a seaside town full of hippies and druids, to study electronic music.
Tom became an artist in Leicester, England, and started a drum n' bass
night. I moved up to Leicester for a while, played with Tom a bit, then
he went home to the Czech republic to have a baby. I moved to Bangor, started
playing and recording with Ceri. Then, we got noticed. We signed to Deltasonic,
released the first EP. Tom came back and we signed to Mute. Easy!”
T.JONES: "Does the
name of the band have a special meaning?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “It's
pretty simple. Mountaineers climb things, isn't that pretentious?”
T.JONES: "When making
songs, do you go into the studio with pre-written rhymes, lyrics, and themes
or do you hear the beat first
and write then and
there? What is the creative process like?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “The
creative process is a hellish journey. I'm personally writing several songs
right at this moment. They're all whirling around my head, waiting for
the right signal to jump out onto the plastic. Sometimes, it's a lyric,
a beat, a riff or a lady...(laughs) Ha. Sometimes, they just come right
out in 5 minutes.”
T.JONES: "Lyrically,
the songs are far from typical. You use odd phrases and lyrics that are
more abstract. Was this done on purpose?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Thank
you for noticing. We put a lyric sheet in so people might get interested
in the words too. We're proud of our messy heads. Every word means
something, even if it's just ‘I'm mental’. We mostly write from the
subconscious, so whatever is on our minds comes out in a flow. We analyze
it later, or leave it to others to analyze. Do any of them mean anything
to you?”
T.JONES: "In one
phrase, how would you describe how the songs written lyrically?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “It’s
deliberately spontaneous.”
T.JONES: "How did
you get involved with Mute Records?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Our
first label manager, Svengali Alan Wills, was head of Deltasonic Records,
home of The Coral and The Zutons. He discovered us living in a tree in
Bangor, and passed the demos on to Dean Wengrow, our now A&R man at
Mute. They liked them, but not enough to sign us at the time. So, we put
out an EP on Deltasonic. It is very rare now. Find it on Ebay. Bid up!
After that, they thought we had developed to a certain level so they signed
us.”
T.JONES: "What is
Hot Trees?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Our
night. Hot Trees is English translation of Coed Poeth, Ceri's home village
in Wales and the location of our first recordings. The first two in Liverpool
and London were great successes. We had loads of good stuff, don't know
if you've heard of any of these: Jack cooper, The Bandits, Former Miss
America In Liverpool, and Adem, Aidan Smith, Ulrich Schnauss, Bloc Party,
The Zutons, DJ's Andy Weatherall and The Bees in London.”
T.JONES: "Musically,
who are you major influences?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “You
name it. I always feel like a fool saying I like everything but what else
can a musician say. I like any song by anybody that's a good song, or has
interesting production, or just something that makes you sit up and listen.
But especially Stevie Wonder, Beefheart, Can, Public Enemy, Beatles, Beach
Boys, Sly Stone, Lee Perry, Led Zep, Pink Floyd.”
T.JONES: "Where did
you grow up? What kind of kid were you?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Tom
grew up in the Czech republic, Denmark and then Wales, which gave him some
diverse influences in his outlook. I grew up in various places around Britain.
We never stayed in one place longer than 4 years, which made me grow up
with an outsider mentality, which has always stayed with me. Ceri was born
and raised in Coed Poeth, in the hills, left to his own devices which led
to his musical difference from others.”
T.JONES: "What is
'Gruppen' mean? What is the song about?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “The
word ‘Gruppen’ is German for groups. We like to give songs abstract titles
sometimes. The song is as usual lyrically obtuse so I have some theories
about it being about friendship and ambition. Things coming together but
draw your own conclusions!”
T.JONES: “What do
you think of the Internet?”
ALEX GERMAINS: “Good
question. We have been finding a lot of Internet reviews and articles about
us to be much better written than NME, Mojo type journalism for example.
Do you agree that the mainstream publications, at least in Britain, are
more interested in some kind of egotistical sound bite friendly journalism
than actually finding anything out?”
T.JONES: "What is
your favorite part of your live show?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Hey
these questions are quite good! For me, it is probably the bit where we
play ‘Bom Bom’, then ’Belgique Limb’ and ‘Gene Cheats On You’, which is
a new song, during which I get to play electric guitar, which gives me
more chance to throw shapes!”
T.JONES: "How has
your live show evolved?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “We
can play live now whereas this time last year we couldn't! It took a long
time to get really good live, and now I think we are finally there or getting
there. It has changed our whole attitude towards music. Before we were
a studio band, we had very dance music orientated production values. For
example, we didn't think about whether we could play something live when
we recorded it. Now, we think about everything in terms of ‘how will it
sound live?’ It is also really f*cking fun playing live.”
T.JONES: "Who would
you like to collaborate with in the future?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “God,
we could fill a hard drive with the names. Everyone and at the same time
no one.”
T.JONES: "You moved
to Liverpool. Why?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “We
moved to Liverpool. That’s where we live now. Liverpool is the heart
of it in Britain as far as we're concerned. It's not always cool with the
media, but Liverpool is the rock n' roll heart of Britain.”
T.JONES: "How is
Liverpool different from Wales?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Not
as much as you might think. The people are funny, quick witted, and kind.
Obviously, there are some dickheads too but you can't have everything.”
T.JONES: "Can you
explain the song 'Belgique Limb'?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “No.”
T.JONES: "What has
been in your CD player or on your turntable recently?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Outkast
and Serge Gainsbourg on mine. Ceri likes Grandaddy. Tom is mp3 mad, so
anything he fancies.”
T.JONES: "Abortion
- pro-choice or pro-life?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Both.
I have a son but people should have a choice. F*ck them, let them
fight forever!”
T.JONES: "Death Penalty
- For or against?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Completely,
unequivocally, unbelievably against. F*ckers!”
T.JONES "Where were
you on Sept. 11th (The World Trade Center Terrorist Attack)? How did you
deal with it? How do you think it has affected music?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “In
my flat. I watched it on breaking news. I couldn't believe what I was seeing.
I literally thought it was fake or something. My immediate thought,
and please don't be offended, was that it was inevitable. We all know some
stuff they don't like us to know, and it's not pretty. But, it's true that
we, America and Britain, are f*cking the world up, especially our present
leaders. Yours, the US, is the worst though, definitely. Probably the worst
ever. Apart from Hitler. Ours is just a p*ssy. A stupid p*ssy. I don't
know how it's affected music.”
T.JONES: "Word association time. I'm going to say a name of a group and you say the first word that pops in your head. So, if I say 'The Beatles’, you may say 'Revolution' or 'Let It Be'. Okay?"
T.JONES: "Mazzy Star."
ALEX GERMAINS: “Snazzy
car.”
T.JONES: "The Afternoons."
ALEX GERMAINS: “The
Sundays.”
T.JONES: "Happy
Mondays."
ALEX GERMAINS: “The
second greatest band ever.”
T.JONES: "Felt."
ALEX GERMAINS: “Carpet.”
T.JONES: "The Stone
Roses."
ALEX GERMAINS: “Ian
Brown good, John Squire sh*t.”
T.JONES: "The Roots."
ALEX GERMAINS: “Roots
Manuva.”
T.JONES: "The Beatles."
ALEX GERMAINS: “Smug
bastard McCartney.”
T.JONES: "The Rolling
Stones."
ALEX GERMAINS: “Sex.”
T.JONES: "Daft Punk."
ALEX GERMAINS: “Robot
sex.”
T.JONES: "The Flaming
Lips."
ALEX GERMAINS: “Not
as good as everyone thinks.”
T.JONES: "My Bloody
Valentine."
ALEX GERMAINS: “Never
heard their music. Not that bothered.”
T.JONES: "George
Bush."
ALEX GERMAINS: “Insane
Clown Posse.”
T.JONES: "What do
you think music (in general) needs these days?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Impossible
for me to say. Hopefully, it needs us. I think the industry in Britain
is in limbo. In America, you have so many people you can sell 100,000 albums
and not get in the charts. Sounds like heaven to us at the moment. Do you
know if you sell 1,000 copies of a single in a week, you get in to the
top 40?! Crazy, but the singles chart over here is a joke, perhaps rightly
so. It's an advert. Radio plays singles 4 weeks before they come out! It's
calculated on sales only, so it's a f*cking joke. A change is coming, definitely.”
T.JONES: "What is
the biggest mistake that you made in your career?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Tell
you in 2 years time!”
T.JONES: "How are
European audiences different from U.S. audiences?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “I
don’t know yet. Never played there.
T.JONES: “How are
British audiences different from other European audiences?”
ALEX GERMAINS: “European
audiences, as opposed to British audiences, are amazing. They really interested,
really listening to your stuff, even if they've never heard it before.”
T.JONES: "One of
my
favorite songs is 'Silent Dues'. Can you explain the song a bit?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Why
thank you. It's all about love. Me and my girlfriend, and those people
who told us it wouldn't work or that I was wrong for her, etc. The usual
stuff.”
T.JONES: "The Mountaineers
have been compared to both The Flaming Lips and Daft Punk. How do you feel
about these comparisons?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Like
I said, The Flaming Lips are lovely, man. I met Wayne Coyne. Respect is
due, but musically not interesting to me. I don't think we sound like them.
Daft Punk? Yes, please. Living in the past but so sexy, so cool. Well better
than us at the moment.”
T.JONES: "What are
some major misconceptions that people have of you?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “We
get tagged as ‘folktronica’. What utter bullsh*t! It is just because
we use acoustic guitars on some stuff with synths. We make pop music. Always
have, always will. Apart from that, any conceptions people want to have
are fine by me.”
T.JONES: "If you
could re-make any song, what would it be?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “I
couldn't make anyone else's songs better than they already are. Maybe one
day, we could remake all our albums just to see if we would make them the
same!”
T.JONES: "Do you
want to be cremated or buried?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Too
paranoid about death to think about it. I’m not sure it would make any
difference to me. I'm extremely anti-religious, especially at the moment,
Palestine and Ireland, Tibet, etc. I do believe in a higher being. I have
faith in God.”
T.JONES: "What do
you want on your epitaph?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “He
tried, sometimes.”
T.JONES: “What is
in the future for The Mountaineers?”
ALEX GERMAINS: “Touring
the U.K. We’re also doing The Triptych Fesitval.”
T.JONES: "What collaborations
should we look out for?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Us
and Kylie Minogue.”
T.JONES: "Any final
words for the people who are reading this?"
ALEX GERMAINS: “Please
invite us to your beautiful wooden houses and let us ravish your firm daughters.”
Thank you MOUNTAINEERS ! ! !
“Ripen”
(Windows Media)
“Ripen”
(Real Video)
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My interviews and reviews can also be seen
on the print and web publication PIXEL SURGEON
Goto: http://www.pixelsurgeon.com
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