by Todd E. Jones aka The New Jeru Poet |
Happiness is an emotion which may posses a heartfelt
melancholy intertwined within the bliss. Powerful music possesses these
multi-interpretive and multi-dimensional emotions. The most impressive
music weaves sorrow and delight together to create a compelling work of
art. Music becomes a magically universal form of art when sincerity
lies within the rhythms, lyrics, and melodies. Hailing from France,
Sebastien Schuller is a magnificently unique and complicated artist who
has this power to create such music. Released on Minty Fresh Records,
Sebastien Schuller’s debut album, “Happiness”
is a glorious work of art drenched in both bittersweet pleasure and
beautiful grief. As an artist, Schuller shares some common attributes
with the cold wave French group known as Trisomie 21. The music of both
Schuller and Trisomie 21 require an open mind and heart for a listener
to fully appreciate the work. Underneath Schuller’s thick accent and
eccentric sound, intensity remains. This underlying power can make the
music cross barriers of language, culture, geography, sex, and perhaps
time.
As a journalist, I am sent a plethora of music from
both illustrious and diminutive record labels. Sometimes, I am very
familiar with the music and these familiarities create expectations.
When Minty Fresh’s delightful publicity department (Beth Martinez) sent me the “Happiness” LP by Sebastien
Schuller. I have never heard of him or his music before. These days, an
album must have a power to penetrate my wall of contempt made my
disappointment of hearing poor music. From the initial moment I played
the “Happiness” LP by Sebastien Schuller, I was amazed and delighted.
This music snob was introduced to a refreshing new artist. These are
the moments when I love being a music journalist.
Schuller had an enigmatic but relatable history.
Previously, he released an EP titled “Weeping Willow”. He is a
classically trained percussionist. Throughout the years, he has become
an accomplished multi-instrumentalist and composer. Working mainly from
home, he mixes acoustic and electronic instruments to create
enchantingly eclectic music. In the United Kingdom, he signed to
Catalogue Records (home to artists such as Avia, Sancho, Playground,
Alpha, and others). In the United States, he signed to Minty Fresh
Records. Momus wrote a delightful song about the Minty Fresh label for
his “Stars Forever” LP. The
company is now one of the most respected and indie labels in the U.S.
Minty Fresh is also home to All India Radio, The Living Blue, Kahimi
Karie, The Orange Peels, Liz Phair, Ivy, The Cardigans, Bettie
Serveert, and a myriad of other talented artists.
Released on Minty Fresh Records (U.S.) and Catalogue
Records (U.K.), “Happiness” by
Sebastien Schuller is a psychedelic and introspective maelstrom of
melodic emotion. The album displays various influences from Radiohead,
Bjork, David Bowie, Serge Gainsbourg, and others exceptional artists.
“Tears Coming Home” is a heartbreaking anthem about the pains of
returning to one’s hometown. “Sleeping Song” is an enchantingly
ethereal track that captures some of the mystery of sleep. The more
up-tempo track, “Ride Along The Cliff” is a psychedelic masterpiece
filled with romance and the poignancy of pleasure. Other excellent
tracks include “Weeping Willow” and “Donkey Boy”. “Happiness” by Sebastien Schuller is
one of the most mature and most fascinating debut albums to be released
in quite a long time.
Musically expressed emotion empowers and connects
listeners. Every human being feels pain, bitterness, love, hate, fear,
and passion. As long as musicians like Sebastien Schuller continue to
create emotionally honest work, artists will continue to make music
that will connect human beings of any and every kinds. “Happiness” by Sebastien Schuller
is an album that found me. If this album does not find you, hunt the
album down because even you need a little slice of happiness.
TODD E. JONES:
"What
goes on?"
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Hi, Todd. Thank you so much for this interview.”
TODD E.
JONES: “Your debut album, ‘Happiness’ was just released on Minty Fresh
Records / Catalogue Records. Tell us about the LP.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “I’ve recorded this album in France with the help
of my friend Paul Hanford, ex-brother In Sound / Sancho and a few
additional friends. A part was recorded in a studio. The other, at
home, in my tiny little Parisian flat where I’m able to watch all Paris
and a big panoramic sky from my window. My neighbors are friendly. They
let me play some piano, sing, and sometimes, jam with some friend late
at night. I can say that I've spent a good part of my life at my
window, thinking, dreaming, and listening to some music. I’ve kept a
couple of songs during 2 or 3 years before the release of the album.
The rest of the songs came the last year, before the recording.”
TODD E.
JONES: “For an album with ‘Happiness’ as a title, the music does have a
somber resonance. Why call the album ‘Happiness’?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Life with all the contradictions and a good
balance of sentiment. It is certainly a reflection of my life and some
stories of men and women who I have observed. That's all.”
TODD E. JONES: “Favorite song on the ‘Happiness’?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “‘Weeping Willow’ or ‘Le Dernier Jour’, but I like
most of them. Maybe less, ‘Ride Along The Cliff’. That one, I like it
as a song, but I was not sure to keep it for the album. Finally, I
think it takes a place in the rhythm of the album.”
TODD E. JONES: “Which song took you the longest to finish from
conception to completion on ‘Happiness’? Why?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “‘Tears Coming Home’. I had a chorus for at least
one year and I was not able to find a verse. ‘Weeping Willow’ took time
for the final step, but was mostly composed in one night. The lyrics,
most of the time, come later.”
TODD E. JONES: “How would you describe your music?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Melancholic, happy & sad, pure & precise,
and full of contradiction.”
TODD E. JONES: “For some of the songs on the ‘Happiness’ album, your
voice is distorted by sound effects. What inspired this choice?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “The voice follows the intuition of the songs.
Sometimes, it's natural and more present. Sometimes, it's like an
additional instrument.”
TODD E. JONES: “On the ‘Happiness’ album,
it is sometimes difficult to acknowledge which instrument is being
played. Was this done on purpose?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “There are a lot of parts on the songs. I like the
fact that when you listen to a record many times, you're able to
discover some new parts, new melodies that you didn't pay attention to
before.”
TODD E. JONES: “What is your creative
process for creating music?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Live, watch some movie, watch the landscape, talk
across the music with the help of my old keyboard, an old acoustic
guitar, and a computer.”
TODD E. JONES: “You are a classically
trained percussionist. Where were you trained? How did this training
change you and your approach to music?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “I’ve started percussion when I was 10 years old,
in the suburbs. I guess it gave me some rhythmic base and a patience to
listen to the orchestra that I was playing with when I was a kid. You
can wait sometimes 14 minutes in a classical piece just to give one
beat on a triangle.”
TODD E. JONES: “What is your favorite
percussion instrument?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “The cymbalum, but I never try to play it. I would
love to have one. It's like if you were playing with some stick on the
strings of a piano. A similar instrument was used for the music of a
famous TV show with Roger Moore and Tony Curtis. It is called
“Amicalement Vôtre” composed by John Barry.”
TODD E. JONES: “When creating a song, do you have a pre-conceived
theme, lyrics, or emotion? Or, do you start with the music first?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “It's always mixed or never in the same order.”
TODD E. JONES: “One of my favorite songs
from the ‘Happiness’ LP is ‘Tears Coming Home’. The track captures the
multi-faceted emotions of returning to a person’s hometown. What town
did you grow up in? What fears and frustration did you feel? What
inspired the song?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “In the west suburb in Aubergenville. It is 40
minutes from Paris.”
TODD E. JONES: “How did you meet the members in your band?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “My bassist is an old friend from the same suburb.
My guitarist was in a shop where I was working. The other two came
across by some friends.”
TODD E. JONES: “Musically, what else have
you been working on?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “2 soundtracks for cinema. One called ‘A Summer
Day’. The other, ‘You And Me’. 2 cinemix. I've composed 30 minutes of a
soundtrack for some old movie from the start of the century and I made
some concert with them.
You can understand that I've never met the directors for those movies,
so it was a full experience. For one of them, I've tried to keep the
spirit of those old soundtracks, when the orchestra was playing in the
cinema during the movie, close to the screen.”
TODD E.
JONES: “What are some of your favorite instruments?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “I'm always attracted to learn something on a new
one, but I can say that piano and guitar helped me a lot.”
TODD E.
JONES: “Do you think that success and credibility are mutually
exclusive?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “All of that is really subjective.”
TODD E. JONES: “What song are you most proud of?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “‘Weeping Willow’, maybe. At least, I felt the
other pride for me for this song.”
TODD E. JONES: “The track, ‘Sleeping Song’ has an obvious dream-like
feel. What was the inspiration for this song?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “The lyrics came after the music, in a mood when I
was half-awake, half-asleep. It's a lullaby.”
TODD E. JONES: “What was the last dream you remember?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Ah! I remember an old one. I had a love affair
with Bjork, after a concert in Paris. A couple of days later, I decided
to visit her in Iceland. I recognized her house. It was one of the
first houses that I've seen in Reijkjavick. I slept in a room alone.
During the night, some froth was coming along the windows. Then
suddenly, some lava came across the ceiling. I was really scared and
asked her what was happening. She told me that it was normal and that
during the night, some cold lava was coming out of the volcano. She
also told me that in the morning, everything will be fine. The next
day, I was breathing the freshest air that I've ever breathed and
walking on pure green grass in the countryside.”
TODD E. JONES: “Who are some artists who you would like to collaborate
with in the future?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “I had already collaborated or had the luck to
collaborate with some of my favorites. But, Bjork and Beth Gibbons
would definitely be some singers for who I could try to compose.”
TODD E. 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 times,
like the best, are always passing away….’ What works of art,
literature, or songs helped you maintain?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “The fragility and the melody.”
TODD E. JONES: “How did you get the
deal with Minty Fresh Records in the United States?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Across my publishing, Chrysalis.”
TODD E. JONES: “Your album includes some
instrumentals. Were those songs intentionally created as instrumentals
or did you decide not to include lyrics at a later time?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “It depends of the songs, but most of the time, the
tracks were done finally to be instrumentals. Sometimes, it came to me
at the end. I have spent some days trying to find a melody, but they
all had evidence that I had to keep them instrumental.”
TODD E.
JONES: “Do you believe in God? Do you believe in a certain religion?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “I believe as the American Indians believe, in the
Mother Nature. I believe you harvest what you sow.”
TODD E.
JONES: “What are the 3 best aspects about living in France?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Liberty of thinking, a taste for the art, and the
social life.”
TODD E. JONES: “What are the 3 worst aspects about living in France?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “To think that we have the best country, the
condition of the flat, and the Turkish toilets.”
TODD E. JONES: “What music have you been listening to in the last
couple of days?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Beirut, Arcade Fire, and my new demos.”
TODD E. JONES: “What is your favorite part of your live show?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “‘Weeping Willow’ and a new song, ‘Garden’.”
TODD E. JONES: “How has your live show evolved?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “We have played more new songs. At the end of the
tour, for a small tour of three gigs, we decided to improvise a song
each night. People thought that it was a written song. I was really
proud for that. Not for myself, but much more about what we were able
to build together, during this tour.”
TODD E. JONES: “Abortion. Pro-choice or pro-life?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Pro-choice.”
TODD E. JONES: “Euthanasia. For or
against?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “For.”
TODD E. JONES: “Word association. When I
say a name, you say the first word that pops into your head. So, if I
said, ‘The Beatles’, you may say ‘Revolution’ or ‘John Lennon’. Okay?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Okay.”
TODD E.
JONES: “My Bloody Valentine.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “My first indie band.”
TODD E. JONES: “Primal Scream.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Ecstasy.”
TODD E. JONES: “Happy Mondays.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Ecstasy again.”
TODD E.
JONES: “Kool Keith.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “I don't know.”
TODD E.
JONES: “Felt.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Nope.”
TODD E.
JONES: “Momus.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Nope.”
TODD E.
JONES: “Eminem.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “White hip-hop.”
TODD E.
JONES: “Radiohead.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Amnesty.”
TODD E. JONES: “MC Solaar.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Caroline.”
TODD E. JONES: “The Lovetones.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Nope.”
TODD E. JONES: “New Order.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “La Locomotive, which is a club in Paris.”
TODD E. JONES: “The Dandy Warhols.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Waksman.”
TODD E. JONES: “The Fall.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Festival in Paris.”
TODD E. JONES: “Denim.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Jeans.”
TODD E. JONES: “Trisomie 21.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “By name.”
TODD E. JONES: “Toog.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Nope.”
TODD E. JONES: “George Bush.”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Ah.”
TODD E. JONES: “Who or what are your biggest influences?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Love.”
TODD E. JONES: “What was the biggest
lesson you have learned in your career?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “When I recognize that I still have everything to
learn.”
TODD E. JONES: “What is the song,
‘Donkey Boy’ about?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “A kid who didn't like the laws and the obligation
of school.”
TODD E. JONES: “What are some of your
favorite films?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “‘Twin Peaks’, ‘Rumble Fish’, ‘Eternal Sunshine Of
The Spotless Mind’, and ‘Dead Man’. So many.”
TODD E. JONES: “What is a typical day
like for you?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Composing and taking care of plumbing.”
TODD E. JONES: “What are some major
misconceptions do you think people have of you?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “It's hard to say.”
TODD E. JONES: “Are you in a romantic
relationship these days? What is your sexual preference? How have
touring, recording, and the music lifestyle affected relationships?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Yes, like any kind of work that takes too much of
your time.”
TODD E. JONES: “Are there any
collaborations fans should look out for?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “No.”
TODD E. JONES: “What’s next?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “I'm going to sleep.”
TODD E. JONES: “Final words?”
SEBASTIEN SCHULLER: “Have some nice dreams.”
NOTICE:
This interview
is property of Todd E. Jones and cannot be duplicated or posted without
written permission.
|
The Music Journalism Of Todd E. Jones |
ARCHIVES |
Hip-Hop Interviews by Todd E. Jones |
INDIE MUSIC Reviews by Todd E. Jones |
check me out at myspace: myspace.com/toddejones |
b a t h |
|
|
Home Page |
TRISOMIE 21 (T21) Home Page |