INTERVIEW: Nobunny of NOBUNNY


A few weeks ago, garage punk outfit NOBUNNY ventured down to McAllen to absolutely tear Simon Sez apart. It truly was a night to remember for all parties involved that could still recollect the night before the following morning. As luck would have it, prior to their performance, my good friend Natalia was able to interview the band’s frontman and namesake, NOBUNNY. This will be her first contribution to The Photon God. We are excited to present to you her interview with NOBUNNY below.

I, Natalia Rocafuerte, did not know what NOBUNNY looked like. :( I walked up to who I thought NOBUNNY was, and asked him if I could “interview NOBUNNY” or if he could point me to someone I could talk to. I’m sure he picked up on me not knowing what NOBUNNY really looked like and after a few “I don’t know”s, I said “thank you” and walked away. Only to find the “I don’t know” guy coming after me and saying “I’m sorry, I’m messing with you. Okay, I’ll do the interview. I’m ‘NOBUNNY’.” After misleading me and confirming his identity, I attempted to interview him, only the interview kept getting delayed; he needed a lighter, a car alarm went off, and people kept passing by. So, we moved toward the parking lot, away from the dark alley. There, smoking a cigarrete with NOBUNNY, I began the interview.

[TAPE BEGINS]
Natalia: When is your birthday?
NOBUNNY: NOBUNNY was born, uh it was…it was Easter 2001, in the desert of—45 minutes outside of Tucson, Arizona.
Natalia: What’s your favorite Elvis song?
NOBUNNY: Oh boy…off the top of my head, “Teddy Bear”, but I reserve the right to change that answer later.
Natalia: Why “Teddy Bear”?
NOBUNNY: ‘Cause I like sweet and salty snacks. But I reserve the right to change that answer later maybe, but for now, “Teddy Bear”.
Natalia: How do you choose your album artwork?
NOBUNNY: The first one just kinda happened, I suppose. Raw Romance was found off a fireworks package, the artwork for that. Then it was altered by the guys in Burger Records then, First Blood, my friend Shannon had painted a portrait of NOBUNNY and I really liked it and decided it was going to be a poster for the second, like, tape I guess but I liked it so much I decided to save it for an album cover.
Natalia: What’s your favorite home-cooked meal and can you cook it?
NOBUNNY: Hmm, my favorite home-cooked meal. Ahh, I like grilled cheese a lot and yes I make a pretty tip-top, greasy grilled cheese if I do say so myself. (laughs)
Natalia: Any mustard or mayonnaise?
NOBUNNY: I love mustard, I’m a mustard fanatic. It’s the only thing I’ll spend money on sort of. I have a lot—well when I had a refrigerator. I don’t have a refrigerator right now—but when I had one I had a lot of different mustards in there.
Natalia: Thumper, Roger Rabbit, Bugs Bunny or female Bugs Bunny (Lola Bunny), which one would you dress up as or be?
NOBUNNY: Wahhhhh…hmm once again these are good questions. I’ll go with the lady Bugs for now just cause why not? I like…I like Bugs a lot but lady Bugs is cute. You know? So…I wanna be cute.
Natalia: Who’s your favorite Ramone or which one do you like the best?
NOBUNNY: Hmm, I use to always say Dee Dee but my official new answer is Joey. Just cause he was uh, the messiest. And he’s messy like me. I’m a mess. (laughs)
Natalia: What are your beauty secrets on tour and off tour?
NOBUNNY: Just water. Nothing but water all the time. And not too much sun. Try not to get too much sun.
Natalia: What do you pick as your pizza toppings?
NOBUNNY: I like pepperoni…kinda keep it simple you know? [I’m a] pepperoni kinda gal-guy.
Natalia: Three things everyone should know about NOBUNNY but don’t.
NOBUNNY: Hmmm…nothing, everything, and something.
Natalia: What do you do before you perform? Do you request French Onion soup, smoke a cigarette outside or get to know the place? Is there any routine you have?
NOBUNNY: Honestly no, not so much. Not reaaaally. A lot of water is good. Stay hydrated. I’m trying to think, honestly, if there’s any answer. I don’t think so. Uh, just kinda go with the flow. [I’m a] take it one day at a time kinda bunny, you know? No ritual, just keep it loose, keep it loose.
Natalia: When you perform, you’re famous for taking off your clothes. Why don’t you just take off all your clothes?
NOBUNNY: Um, I don’t know. I don’t have many clothes so I guess I just get hot up there when I’m—you know, it starts getting sweaty, rock n roll. [I’ve gotta] keep going without overheating.
Natalia: Tell us about your tattoos. How many do you have and which means the most to you?
NOBUNNY: I…I don’t know how many I have. Not that many. Probably ten. And uh, which one do I like…I don’t like any of them. I got them all when I was really young and I kinda regret all of them. But not big regrets, just little regrets. I would’ve changed it if I could, I don’t know. I do have a Nazi nurse from Mars on my leg, though, that I’m kinda fond of, I suppose. That one’s alright.
Natalia: What turns you on/off?
NOBUNNY: How long we got here? (laughs) Um…………next question.
Natalia: It could be music…It doesn’t have to be…anything really…
NOBUNNY: Right. I like sweet stuff and puppies and kittens and fuzzy…fuzzy rusty things. And turn offs…I don’t like littering.
Natalia: What advice do you live your life by?
NOBUNNY: Besides the whole Carpe Diem thing…one step ahead from the law. And umm….stay high or die tryin’.
Natalia: Truth or dare?
NOBUNNY: Truth……dare.
Natalia: Dare?
NOBUNNY: Sure
Natalia: Can I dare you to kiss someone in the audience? Or should I dare you to try something you haven’t done before?
NOBUNNY: I want the world, I know that. If you can dare me to take over the world right now I would accept that Pepsi challenge. I might fail, but I’ve failed before, you know? [I’ll] just get back up and dust myself off. So yeah, I guess that’s the truth on that dare.
Natalia: Can we be friends?
NOBUNNY: Surely, why the hell not?
[tape ends]

NOBUNNY’s


Interview: Andrea Estella + Bryan Ujueta of Twin Sister

I like talking to people. There’s nothing like a great conversation. I often find that I have some of my favorite conversations in some of the most unexpected situations. Take this past Tuesday, for example. Twin Sister made their way to McAllen, Texas and played Cine El Rey. It was easily one of the best show experiences I’ve had this year. After the show, I packed away my camera and pocketed my audio recorder and walked back inside the theater excited to get an interview with the band. Now, despite all preparation and research I go through for each interview I do, to this day I never feel completely prepared. There’s always one element of surprise that makes each conversation I have unique. Having said that, this interview is going to be a bit different in style than my previous ones because it begins in the middle of an ongoing conversation I was having with vocalist Andrea Estella about things and ownership of said things. This conversation began on the first floor of Cine El Rey and continued as we made our way to the second floor balcony area where the band was hanging out before their set. For some reason, it was then that I decided to press record.

The Photon God: Well it’s already recording–
Andrea Estella: What were we talking about before…oh yeah! I have a lot of stuff. I’m not really a hoarder…I don’t know, I guess maybe I am. I just have a lot of stuff and if I don’t have it, like, around me, I get depressed.
TPG: Really?
AE: Yeah. I get really, really frustrated and depressed so I like to have a lot of options. So that’s why I have such a huge bag full of like, clothes and bullshit.
TPG: Like potential choices.
AE: Yeah, I need the choices or I kind of go crazy.
TPG: Really, have you ever had an episode because of that?
AE: Yeah, I just get really depressed and I just feel bad.
TPG: Wow.
AE: So I kind of need all the shit I pack—like, I probably packed four times the amount that I actually need.
TPG: And it’s a two-week tour you’re on right now, right?
AE: Yeah.
TPG: So you’ve packed what…(doing mental math)
AE: Like, a month’s worth of clothes! (laughs)
TPG: Haha!
AE: And just like, perfume and fucking—like, bow ties and earrings and shoes and art supplies…
TPG: All of these different things.
AE: I like to paint whenever I can, so yeah I pack like, a whole Barney bag worth of stuff.
TPG: Like a Mary Poppins kind of thing.
AE: Yeah, it’s for real.
TPG: Wow. That’s actually kinda cool. I mean, you’re always prepared–
AE: I’m crazy! But like, yeah it’s cool. (laughs)
TPG: Haha!
AE: I know it! I’m like ‘oh my god, I don’t need all this stuff’, but I know that when I don’t have it around…
TPG: It bothers you.
AE: Yeah, it bothers me.
TPG: I’m like that about some things.
AE: Yeah?
TPG: Yeah, tonight I brought a backpack with me and I have my camera, my headphones, I had this (recorder); I have a checklist.
AE: Yeah.
TPG: Every time I leave my house, I check my pockets like ‘one, two, three’ and I go through that order.
AE: Just silly things that…make you happy.
TPG: Yeah, pretty much.
AE: Yeah.
TPG: Like my iPod. If I don’t have it with me, I kind of lose it.
AE: Yeah, it’s like the worst day ever.
TPG: Yeah I become kind of socially inept. It’s like ‘don’t talk to me, leave me alone. I’m just gonna go to class, don’t—no, just nothing’.
AE: Yeah, that’s exactly what it is. And the guys kind of accepted it because they have all this—they kind of get mad when I bring too much in the van. ‘Cause it’s just van, you know?
TPG: Yeah.
AE: So, they just yell at each other if they bring stupid things like ‘god, did you really have to bring that’, but for me, they’re just like ‘bring whatever makes you happy!’ (laughs) ‘Whatever!’
TPG: Haha, like they won’t contest anything.
AE: Yeah, it’s because I don’t have any big amps or gear.
TPG: Yeah.
AE: My bag is bigger than an amp. It’s like this big, and this high (motions with hands to show a large cylindrical bag)
TPG: Wow, like a whole huge gym bag.
AE: It’s a ski bag?
TPG: Oh! So it’s meant for sports equipment and stuff like that!
AE: It’s for skiing, so it’s really, really huge.
TPG: Yeah I can understand that for touring. Did you always do that? From the very beginning?
AE: No, the very beginning I didn’t. Actually, it gets…yeah, no the first tour we did wasn’t that long. And then when we started going on longer tours, especially when it was hot out, I was like ‘I DON’T WANT TO WEAR ANY OF THIS!’ (laughs)
TPG: (wide eyed) Oh man…
AE: Yeah, so that’s my thing. And then I would go shopping.
TPG: Awesome.
AE: Yeah, so.
TPG: Like, every little town, you’ll hunt down…
AE: Yeah, and I still go shopping.
TPG: Really? Where do you shop?
AE: I love thrift stores. I’m like, a super thrifter.
TPG: Oh yeah? And you find pretty good stuff?
AE: Yeah, just always thrifting.
TPG: Cool. I actually picked this (pointing at my shirt) up at a thrift shop.
AE: It’s a good shirt.
TPG: Thank you.
AE: Yeah, everything of mine except…the shoes.
TPG: I was going to ask! I just didn’t know how to approach it because they are very unique shoes.
AE: Yeah, they’re Jeffrey Campbell’s.
TPG: Jeffrey Campbell? A designer?
AE: Yeah.
TPG: From Long Island? Or–
AE: –yeah they’re like, 200 dollars. I don’t know where he’s from actually.
TPG: Holy moly, 200 dollars?
AE: Yeah… (laughs)
TPG: They’re very fancy shoes.
AE: Thank you. They’re five inches!
TPG: Fi—(turn down to look at her shoes in awe)…WOW!
AE: Yeah.
TPG: I’m assuming you have a history of walking in really high heels?
AE: I dunno, I guess you just have to practice and get used to them. But like, I’ll go thrifting and I’ll have a great abundance of clothes and it’ll be pretty cheap but then I’ll spend 200 on really nice shoes or something. (laughs)
TPG: Yeah.
AE: It’s nice to mix it up.
TPG: Yeah for sure.
AE: I mean, I’m fucking broke. So when I bought these shoes it was like…a THING.
TPG: Yeah yeah, like it’s a significant point in your life.
AE: Yeah, I’m not like a spoiled brat like (nasally voice) ‘oh whatever, 200 dollar shoes.’
TPG: Yeah.
AE: Yeah it’s like, it was a thing so it’s like, ‘oh my god, I’m gonna go eat at my parent’s house ‘cause I’m gonna buy these shoes’.
TPG: Like ramen for a month.
AE: Actually yeah, I eat a lot of ramen! (laughs)
TPG: What’s your favorite flavor?
AE: Uh, I don’t do the flavor! I throw the powder out and I make my own flavor.
TPG: You’re kidding, how do you make your own flavor? With spices and stuff?
AE: Yeah, what I do is I get Sriracha sesame oil, soy sauce, and then–either I do it in a broth or I don’t do it in a broth, I just take the noodles out and then I put the sauce on, and then cut whatever vegetables I want or meat and put it on top.
TPG: That’s really fancy.
AE: In Japan it’s called Poor Man’s Ramen.
TPG: Poor Man’s Ramen.
AE: Yeah. You hard-boil an egg, put it in there…it’s pretty much whatever’s in the fridge, you put together.
TPG: That’s really cool, I need to try that. I’ve always been like, ‘packet, water, et cetera’.
AE: I actually have my noodles with me.
TPG: Oh really?
AE: Yeah, I eat my noodles on the road. We have a little plug-in kettle, and I just make noodles and I have a little cutting board.
TPG: Really, in the van?
AE: Yeah, I really have that.
TPG: Wow.
AE: It’s my favorite food.
TPG: Ramen?
AE: Ramen. I love noodle shops. Actually, that’s one of my favorite things about tour. Getting to go someplace where there’s a lot of Japanese and Chinese noodles. Like, Vancouver has some amazing ramen shops! I went there and they make really serious broths. I went to this one place that had a pork broth that they made and you can have it with like, extra fat in it–
TPG: Eww.
AE: It’s delicious! But like, it’ll give you a heart attack.
TPG: Oh shit.
AE: Yeah, you couldn’t eat it every day. It’s like, pork fat. It’s delicious. It has pork that like, melts in your mouth.
TPG: Really?
AE: Yeah, like, melts in your mouth. Delicious hand-made noodles. And they do this thing where they put a hard-boiled egg in it. It’s really, really good.
TPG: Does that affect the texture?
AE: The egg? No, it’s just hard-boiled—it’s cut in half and it’s just there. You just eat it with your noodles. It’s really, really good.
TPG: Oh! I feel like I’ve just been opened to a new world of noodles…
AE: You gotta try noodles, man.
TPG: Yeah I feel like I have, but I haven’t at the same time.
AE: You need to go to like, a noodle ‘shop’.
TPG: I’ll definitely look into those.
AE: Go to like, a Chinatown or a Japantown if you’re ever near one.
TPG: Yeah.
AE: Like, San Francisco has a really amazing Japantown.
TPG: Really? Isn’t Chinatown in San Francsisco?
AE: They have a Chinatown and a Japantown. I love both though! (laughs) I love all noodles. Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese…
TPG: I had some really good noodles in Austin once. I went up for a show and during the day I walked around town and found a place called the Thai Noodle House.
AE: Yeah! I’ve eaten there!
TPG: It’s fantastic! The noodles are flat and stuff. I’d never had anything like that.
AE: Oh man, I want to live in a Chinatown in New York. There’s a couple.
TPG: Oh yeah? Do you know Chinese?
AE: I don’t but I just want to be surrounded by them and have their delicious food. It’s like, food on every corner. I love their culture.
TPG: That’s awesome. Do you ever wish that you were Chinese?
AE: I wish I was Japanese. Or Korean, I think Korean girls are like, the prettiest. They’re all pretty.
TPG: Yeah, they’re all pretty. I’ll agree with that.
AE: Yeah, but I’m Salvadoran/Puerto Rican, so.
TPG: Really?
AE: Yeah. I kinda have a round head. (laughs)
TPG: What’s your full name?
AE: It’s (spanish accent) Andrea Estela.
TPG: Andrea Estela.
AE: Yeah. But, uh, double ‘L’ only because it was spelled wrong on my birth certificate. So it’s really one ‘L’.
TPG: Yeah, otherwise it would be ‘es-te-ya’.
AE: Yeah, but it’s really Estela. And I guess in English it looks better with a double L?
TPG: Probably. And that’s what you have on your Tumblr, right?
AE: Oh yeah.
TPG: Which is pretty cool, by the way.
AE: Thank you. I posted some stuff up here.
TPG: Oh really?
AE: Yeah, I posted some paintings I made.
TPG: Oh, nice.
AE: Yeah one is a painting and another is some art that I liked.
TPG: Very cool. Do you like Tumblr?
AE: I do! Because I’m very stupid with that sort of stuff, like HTML. I tried the Blogger thing, and I don’t have the patience to learn any of that. And I want it to look cool and it never does. (laughs) So with Tumblr, it’s really easy. You just post and I get to spy on a bunch of people and all these strangers post all of this shit, it’s good.

“Whoa, is that a bunch of badass weed or what?”

Promoter Patrick Garcia walks by carrying some things and notices two unfinished blunts sitting on a nearby table.

TPG: Leftover?
AE: Ah, some blunts.
Patrick Garcia: You can’t tell me these are just badass blunts left here. That’s awesome. (laughs) I’m all about that.

He walks away. Twin Sister drummer Bryan Ujueta walks up with the bottle of tequila I purchased for the band prior to the show along with some gummy bears that were in compliance with their rider. He sits down with us and passes the bottle to Andrea who takes a sip and passes it back.

AE: (to me) You picked this up, right?
TPG: Yeah.
AE: (to Bryan) He picked this up.

Bryan passes me the bottle and I thank him and take a swig. It burns all the way into my stomach.

Bryan Ujueta: (in an accent) Tequilaa!
AE: Smooth, sweet.
TPG: That reminds me of Wayne’s World where they do the whole ad thing.
AE: Yeah yeah! (in Wayne’s voice) ‘Little, yellow, different.’
TPG: Yeah!
AE: I kind of look like Garth tonight. (laughs)
BU: ‘I’ll have the cream of some young guy!’
AE: (in Garth’s voice) ‘I’m having a really great time…I guess.’ Haha!
TPG: Haha!
AE: We actually used to watch Wayne’s World all the time.
TPG: Like, over and over again?
AE: Yeah, we used to live together years ago.
BU: Yeah, it was fun. We were young.
TPG: Yeah, how old are you?
BU: I’m 24, and she’s…like 16.
AE: I’m like, 49.
TPG: (to Brian) You’re 24. (to Andrea) And you’re…16?
AE: No…
BU: She’s 17.
TPG: 17?
AE: 17, 19…I don’t like to talk about my age…
TPG: Oh! I apologize.
BU: That’s personal! She’s an old…hag!
AE: Actually, my birthday just passed.
TPG: Well, happy belated.
AE: Thank you very much. That’s what I was looking for.
TPG: So you guys have a new record coming out soon?
AE: Yes we do.
BU: September 27th, maybe?
TPG: Oh, okay cool.
AE: No, we don’t have a date yet.
TPG: Oh, but it’s with Domino.
AE: Yes.
TPG: How long have you been signed to Domino?
AE: Since the Winter, (to Brian) right? Like late Winter?
BU: Well, we put out our stuff in England with them but it was unofficial. But now we have a contract for at least, four full-length records with them.
TPG: Cool.
AE: So we’ve been working with them for a while. They’re good people.
TPG: Awesome.
AE: Yeah. We have a great time when we go down to the UK.
BU: Yeah, they party hard.
TPG: Really? Like party hard and then in the morning they work.
BU: Yeah and they’re like, at work early.
AE: Yeah.
BU: Yeah, they’re work hard, play hard types.
TPG: Oh man, that’s good. It’s a good combo. Does the record have a name yet?
AE: We can’t say yet. It’s gonna be released in a couple of days.
TPG: Well could you tell me off the record? I promise I won’t tell.
AE: Mm, okay.

I put my hand over the microphone of the recorder and Andrea and whispers the name of the new record, In Heaven, into my ear. It’s public information now thanks to the release of their new track, “Bad Street”, a couple of days ago.

AE: But you can’t tell anyone!
TPG: Okay cool I won’t tell anybody.
BU: The record’s called Shark Sandwich.
TPG: Shark Sandwich?
AE: Geez…
BU: Yeah, the record’s called Shark Sandwich…and it’s a 15-track EP.
TPG: Okay…
BU: Yeah, out now on Fat Records.
TPG: Fat Records–P-H Phat Records!
AE: Phat Bottom!
BU: Yeah, Phat Bottom Records based in L.A.
AE: Ha!
BU: The record’s called Head P.E.
AE: Oh my god! (laughs)
TPG: Head P.E.?
AE: I want a head.com. (laughs)
BU: The record’s called System of a Down, I want a head.com, slash hummus.
TPG: (laughing) Slash hummus?
BU: Backlash hummus.
TPG: Isn’t it forward slash?

Brian just looks at me. I realize that it’s perfectly okay for him to use a back slash in his joke and before the joke is lost…

TPG: (laughing) Backslash hummus!
BU: Yeah, backslash hummus! (laughs)
AE: Ahh, I don’t want this to ever end! This interview.
BU: It’s a good one!
AE: I’m finding myself.
TPG: Haha!
BU: Let’s find ourselves. (to me) You’re a philosophy major, no?
TPG: No, I’m actually a film major.
AE: Oooh…
BU: What are your favorite movies?
AE: (in a nasally voice) Oh my god…I’ve…always wanted to be in a movie’.
TPG: I love Akira Kurosawa’s movies.
BU: Do you like Ran?
TPG: Dude, Ran is fantastic.
BU: Ran is epic.
TPG: I love his work.
AE: Who is this Ran?
BU: RAN!
TPG: Ran is a film.
BU: It’s epic!
AE: Oh…I knew that…
TPG: Yeah, it’s by this director named Akira Kurosawa. He’s one of my favorites.
AE: Ohh okay.
BU: His last movie was Ran and all the weather in it was natural. So, he would have a thousand people sitting on a lawn in Japan in the countryside waiting for a tsunami. And then a tsunami would come and he’d be like, ‘ACT!’
TPG: Yeah.
BU: Yeah so like, all the weather was natural.
AE: Noo, that’s so scary. What if you die?
TPG: That’s the risk of the time.
BU: Yeah, he’s a very special man.
AE: Yeah, that’s special. I’ve only seen, what’s the ‘dream’ one?
BU: Oh yeah, the ‘Dreams of Akira Kurosawa’. That’s where the foxes are in the woods and they do a dance…
TPG: I’ve never seen it.
BU: It’s cool, there’s a Van Gogh scene, a lot of inspiration stuff. It’s like a collage of stories.
AE: It’s a lot of mythical stories.
TPG: Like, his interpretation of stories?
BU: Yeah there’s like, a Van Gogh scene that’s like, swirling Van Gogh…
AE: It’s awesome. I like the peach blossom part with the dolls.
BU: Yeah…
TPG: That’s very cool.
AE: Yeah, it’s really cool. They all kinda go out like dolls, dance in a field, and like, pause. It’s kinda creepy.
TPG: Nice. Okay let’s talk about inspiration for the new record.
AE: Okay. (to Brian) Inspiration…go! Pinwheels! (laughs)
BU: I was really inspired by Kraftwerk and really simple music. Music that’s really easy to listen to, and there’s only a couple little components, and it all comes together very fluidly, simply. It seems natural, you know? Not a lot of playing. Just sort of like clicks and pulses.
TPG: Yeah, like almost leaning into kraut-rock kind of?
BU: Well, I feel like it’s more like kraut-pop. It’s like, really simple structures, obvious pop songs, but they just kind of like, they chug…and there’s not much difference, it’s just sort of like…
TPG: Just vibing…
AE: Viiiibing.
BU: Yeah it’s easy to listen to. But we also veered away from a ton of like, effects, delays and loops.
AE: My voice is pretty dry.
BU: Yeah, it sounds pretty dry. It’s very contained and almost tiny and simple and dry. The parts are there; you can hear what everyone’s doing.
TPG: Very cool. So how long has Twin Sister been a band?
AE: We’ve been an actual band for about two years, but we’ve been playing since high school. Eric and I used to play, he was about 14, and I was 16.

Pause.

AE: Don’t do the math because then you’ll find out how old I am. (laughs)
TPG: I was going to, thanks for telling me.
AE: Yeah, so we used to play in high school and stuff. Sometimes we’d play with Brian, the three of us, then it would have been Brian and I, and Dev was in another band, (to Brian) and you’d play with Gabe in another band…we’ve just been playing since high school. We all wanted to play together and there’s even a couple of friends that are left out of this, but we wanted to call it the Dream Cream Supreme Band…
TPG: (laughing)
BU: It was like, all the local musicians that were our ultimate—
AE: All our favorites.
BU: Yeah and the tracks they sent us, the shows they played were really awesome. So in our minds there was this huge band that had to happen.
AE: It never happened, though.
BU: Well, it did but it didn’t. I feel like we missed a couple people but the five of us were the only ones that were like…
TPG: Dedicated…
BU: Yeah we all looked at each other like ‘you’re awesome, you bring something else to the table, you have a different point of view’ so.
AE: Thank God we didn’t name it that…cause it’d be really douchey…like ‘oh hey we’re the Dream Cream Supreme’…
TPG: I can see that on an LP.
BU: In like, bubbly font. Shiny.
TPG: Haha, I’m sure people would still buy the record.
AE: Haha, maybe.
TPG: I understand that though. I’m in a band that recently stopped playing shows, and it took a really long time—‘cause we’re just a two-piece, I play guitar and my friend Zeb plays drums, and it took forever to find that guy. I just didn’t feel comfortable playing with anyone. And you all have that connection, right?
BU: Yeah, it’s easy to take for granted. But I think it’s getting better. I think for a while it was harder to collaborate, communicate and get together cause everyone had separate ideas. But I think we see the sound more now and we see where everyone can open up and express themselves. Like, everyone knows their territory. And we had to make a record to figure it out but now I’m excited about new material.
AE: Everyone’s gonna graffiti all over it.
BU: Yeah I think the future’s gonna be more of everyone getting a little wilder.
TPG: That’s cool though.
BU: Yeah I think so. Cause the new record is very contained. It’s very, like, thoughtful and tight. And I think in the future we’re all gonna get to play a bit more and everyone’s personality’s gonna come out.
TPG: Cool. That’s exciting.
BU: Yeah.
AE: Excited.
TPG: Excited.
BU: (in a Garth voice) Spew in this.
AE: (in a Garth voice) If you need to spew, spew into this.
TPG: Haha!
BU: (in a Garth voice) You need some coffee and coolers, STAT! (laughs)
AE: Wayne’s World. It’s good.
TPG: Wayne’s World. That’s all this interview’s about.
BU + AE: Ex-cel-lent, party time, woo woo woo woo woooooo!
AE: Yeah. Everyone needs to watch that movie again.
BU: Claudia Schiffer, schwing!
AE: Schwing!
TPG: Did you see them on SNL recently?
AE: What?!
BU: Oh yeah they did Wayne’s World again, right?
TPG: Yeah, they introduced the show.
AE: And they’re there…
TPG: Yeah, in costume and everything.
AE: I need to see that.
TPG: It’s on Youtube. Okay! Final thoughts!

The rest of the interview trailed off into drunken ramblings on all sides, but the show was fantastic and I enjoyed speaking with Andrea and Bryan very much!

Keep a look out for In Heaven, out September 27th on Domino.


Interview (kinda): Keith Morris of OFF!

This was definitely the most fun interview I had at Fun Fun Fun Fest. I’m a huge fan of Keith Morris and most of the music he has helped create. I’ve even run into him a few times at SXSW but never had the chance to actually speak with him. Well, I get my chance, and it wasn’t exactly what I expected it to be. I hadn’t really prepared any questions for the guy; I just wanted to talk to him. So I did. Therefore, this isn’t really an interview so much as me talking to Keith Morris for six minutes. But they are a funny six minutes. Enjoy.

Note: I’m embedding the video now because I won’t be online later tonight to post it. I will be at a show in Mcallen. At this very moment, the video is processing. It should be done within the hour. So, check back around then for the video. I’ll make sure to post it on Facebook and stuff when I get back.

OFF! – Panic Attack


Interview: Chaz Bundick of Toro y Moi

After my experiences at Fun Fun Fun Fest, I’ve realized that I really like talking with people. That is to possibly say that I’m a conversationalist. That being said, today’s interview is with Chaz Bundick of Toro y Moi. I had a chance to talk with him after his awesome set at the festival (the first time I had ever seen him with a rhythm section). Be forewarned, my audio is a bit lower than Chaz’s, so you might need to listen to this at a higher volume than usual. Maybe. We talked about everything from funk to movies to dancing like Michael Jackson. It was loads of fun. Check it out below.


While their set was really great, I was a little bummed that they didn’t play “Leave Everywhere”.
Toro y Moi – Leave Everywhere
:'(

Video shot by Trae Valdez of Sin Caras Fotografia.

Causers of This is out now on Carpark Records.


Interview: Deakin

One of the more underrated performances of Fun Fun Fun Fest was Deakin‘s. His set, which he played with the help of Gang Gang Dance‘s Tim Dewitt, was quite the aural experience and I’m glad I was able to catch it twice (once at the festival and once the night before at the Mohawk before the police shut the show down).
(Photo: Andy Pareti)
I sat down to talk with Josh Dibb (aka Deakin) early Sunday afternoon and had a pretty good conversation. I’m a fan of Animal Collective so I was pretty excited to be able to speak with him. Tim hung out on a nearby chair during the interview; texting away, I assume. I wish I had known who he was at the time because I really dig Gang Gang Dance. I’m pretty sure I would have tried to interview him as well about their new album. Oh, well. Maybe next time. Check out my interview with Josh below.

The Photon God: So how has your tour been?
Deakin: This tour’s been new, playing with Tim [Tim Dewitt of Gang Gang Dance]. We had to work stuff out that we both felt good about, you know? And we actually weren’t able to work out all of it, so sort of all we have is six songs.
TPG: You played by yourself originally, right?
Deakin: Yeah, mostly I would play by myself and the tour I did before this–in September–I toured with Prince Rama, and two of the people in Prince Rama, Taraka [Taraka Larson] and Nimai [Nimai Larson] both played with me. And they’re on tour right now in Europe, so.
TPG: That’s right. You helped them record the record, right?
Deakin: Yeah, I helped them finish recording it. They had already tracked a lot of it with a friend of theirs…this guy Kelzo in Philly. They just hadn’t been able to finish it or mix it so we just kinda did a little bit of retracking and added some stuff and mixed it. The mixing was mostly done with the help of my friend Rusty [Rusty Santos]. I’ve done other mixing this year, but that one we kind of let Rusty do cause I hadn’t–up until this year, I had never really mixed a record by myself…like, as kind of the main person doing it until, really, Dave’s [Dave Portner aka Avey Tare] record, Down There, so that was kind of my first foray into that and I think it was sort of because working with Prince Rama was sort of a warmer upper and I sort of realized I knew more than I thought I did. So that’s kinda why I even ended up doing it. ‘Cause Dave and I helped Prince Rama and it seemed like it went better than even we thought it would. So I think both of us felt a little bit more confidence about doing that than I think I would have without that experience. But doing it with Rusty was really helpful for that reason, too. Just seeing him…he’s been doing it for a long time.
TPG: Did he help with a lot of the Animal Collective stuff?
Deakin: Uh, he mixed Sung Tongs and he’s helped with a few other things over the years. He did live sound for us for a tour or two.
TPG: I know he helped on Person Pitch, Noah’s [Noah Lennox aka Panda Bear] record.
Deakin: Yeah, totally. He’s done a bunch of different stuff over the years but I think the only AC record that he really worked on was Sung Tongs.
TPG: Alright, how old are you?
Deakin: I am 32 years old.
TPG: 32? Wow, man. I thought you were, like, 28 or something.
Deakin: Really?
TPG: Yeah.
Deakin: Nope. 1978.
TPG: 78. Do you remember your first experience with music?
Deakin: Um, I mean, my first–I mean, they go way, way, way back. My family–yeah, both my parents were definitely really into listening to music. My dad had a really awesome record collection and he played really, really good classical piano and he was like, good enough that I think that he–at a moment in his life, that could have been the way he could have gone. He never did, but in his prime, he could really play some amazing stuff. And we had a baby grand [piano] in the house, so, kind of as long as I can remember there was always a lot of music going on and I definitely have really early memories of just, like, hanging out at the piano and starting to, like, just play. I mean, I was never super classically-trained–I mean, I did do a bunch of classical training when I was younger but I feel like I remember more times when I would kinda just sorta jam out things. So it goes pretty far back I guess.
TPG: So you resembled Schroeder? From Peanuts?
Deakin: (grins) Yeah, maybe a little bit. Maybe that’s it.
TPG: That’s cool, man. So how was the trip to Mali? It was a ways back.
Deakin: Yeah, that was in January. I left on January 2nd of this year and I was there for like, eight or nine days. It was great. It was really amazing. It was definitely a really intense experience for me–both, just because that’s the first time I’d really extensively traveled in a developing country and Mali is an incredibly–I think it’s, like, literally the fourth or fifth poorest nation in the world.
TPG: Oh.
Deakin: Yeah. So, just on that level I think traveling there and being as immersed as I could have been was just a really intense travel experience in a really great way. And the music, of course, was really incredible at the festival; I saw a lot of really amazing stuff there which was really great. But it was also just, I think more than even any of that, for me it was all just a personal thing. It was kind of, uh…getting the opportunity to go to that festival was sort of the thing that really pushed me over the edge to even, like, work up the nerve to try to play shows by myself. Previous to that I’d really be avoiding that sort of thing for a long time, so when that opportunity came up to do it, I sort of just felt like it was an opportunity I couldn’t really pass up, I guess, to do that. So, it sort of motivated me, in the month of December, to really get together a set of music and a lot of those songs are sort of still what I’m working on now. They’ve changed to me a fair amount since then, but, um, that was kind of the impetus. That was kind of like–essentially–I actually played one show on January 1st, but that was added a week before I left. That was just me being, like, “I should maybe do this once before I go there” but really, the Mali show was meant to be, and in a way it was, kinda like my first show ever, so.
TPG: Cool, that first one was in Baltimore?
Deakin: Yeah.
TPG: I think I saw a video of that. Not bad.
Deakin: Thanks.
TPG: You said you were avoiding playing live at first. Why?
Deakin: Um. I think I’ve just…um, I guess just like for most of my post-high school years, so much of my music energy has gone into what we do together, the four of us–or, the three or whatever. I think that even though I’ve always made music on my own, I’ve always kind of had sort of an issue about finishing things, you know? And I think that once we really started, you know–and yeah even through high school, when we work on stuff, the melodic sensibility of Noah and Dave was so strong, I didn’t feel like I needed to work on that, so–(Josh’s cell phone starts ringing)–um, yeah, so I just think that for me, it was a matter of, uh…I just didn’t feel like I needed to. It was something like, I worked on stuff on my own, but, not like the idea that I would like, want to or need to do that or something. (cell still ringing) Well, what I wanted to has always been there if, like, I needed to, I guess, so–(Josh picks up his phone and sets it to vibrate)
TPG: Yeah. I mean you have before, right? (phone vibrates)
Deakin: I mean, I’ve worked on music, like, by myself for years…(picks up phone)
TPG: I can wait if you–
Deakin: No, it’s okay. (puts phone away) Um, I’ve worked on music by myself for years and years and years, it’s just recording it or putting it out or something. It’s a scary thing, I guess, for me. To do it by yourself, you know? I think it’s a lot…a lot more fun and, in a way, easier to do it with the guys ’cause it just sort of feels like we’re all invested in it and I think if I do it by myself I feel like I’m more vulnerable so it’s just something I’ve just shied away from.
TPG: Yeah, I can relate to that. I write my own music and I’m hesitant on working on it anymore without a full band.
Deakin: Yeah.
TPG: ‘Cause that way writing is more…organic, I guess?
Deakin: Yeah, yeah.
TPG: Did you see any local artists over there that you still listen to?
Deakin: Yeah! Um…(checks phone)…huh. (still looking at phone) Sorry…
TPG: It’s cool.
Deakin: Um…(puts phone down)…um, yeah. I had already known knew a few bands that were over there like Tinariwen I already knew pretty well.
TPG: Who is it?
Deakin: Tinariwen?
TPG: Tinariwen.
Deakin: They’re like a North Malian, Saharan–they call it kind of like this–over here we’d call it Desert Blues, that’s sorta the name for what it is. They’re kind of, like, in the same lineage as, like, Ali Farka Touré in a way, but a little bit more…I don’t know how to describe it. But it’s really good. Just kinda really good grooves, basically. I’d already known them for a while. Um, but yeah I think the bands I was most excited about–there’s this woman singer named Khaira Arby and she has this really, really amazing young band and I got to see them two or three times while I was at the festival in a couple different bunch of environments and it was sort of like a main stage show, which was kind of just like seeing them here, basically. Even though it’s in the middle of, like, Timbuktu.
TPG: Yeah.
Deakin: I saw a rooftop show they did and a smaller town show. They were just a really, really amazing band. Just this past late summer/fall, they got taken over to the US and were playing a bunch of shows. Kind of all over, I mean, it wasn’t a consistent–like, a heavy tour. They did a lot of shows, like, especially in New York and kind of Eastern Canada. But they’re really, really amazing. I’ve been really psyched to see that they’re starting to break out a little bit. Everyone that I know that’s gotten a chance to see them has been as blown away by them as I have…
TPG: Are you gonna get them something on Paw Tracks?
Deakin: (grins) Uh, I don’t know! I mean, we’ve talked about putting out stuff that’s more in that kind of vein of music and I go back and forth whether I feel if it would really be helpful or not, you know? I think it’s really easy for people that have labels to get really excited and like “oh, I can put that out, I can put that out” but also, I feel like you kinda need to have the resources to back up the kind of releases that you’re doing.
TPG: Of course.
Deakin: Yeah, so a label like Sublime Frequencies, that’s their aim; to do that. And that’s where their connections are, whereas the stuff that we do, there’s some crossover but there’s also a different sort of a–just things that you’d pay attention to. But I go back and forth though. We’ve talked about a number of releases that we’re like “yeah”, but I dunno.
TPG: That’s cool. How long has Paw Tracks been around?
Deakin: Uh, I guess we started it in 200…2?
TPG: That’s about 8 years…
Deakin: 8 years, yeah. And it grew out of a label that we ran before that.
TPG: Catsup Plate?
Deakin: No, no. Catsup Plate is a friend of ours. He still runs that label. He put out the Danse Manatee release and Campfire Songs. We ran a label called Animal. That’s kind of how Animal Collective sort of started.
TPG: Like members of that label…
Deakin: Yeah we basically started a label where we had the idea that anything we did would come out on that label and people would always know it by that, you know?
TPG: Yeah and now it’s evolved into this whole…thing.
Deakin: Yeah, but so we couldn’t really keep that label going. It just was too hard for us to do and then right about the time that we were getting ready to do Here Comes The Indian, this dude Todd that runs Carpark Records asked us if we wanted to put anything out and we told him about Animal and our idea about that and he suggested that we start a new label that was basically that idea but also expanded to other bands and stuff so that’s kind of how that started.
TPG: That’s cool. It’s done a lot of great stuff. I mean, Ariel Pink’s kinda bigger now and he was one of the first artists on there.
Deakin: Yeah, he was one of the first non-AC artists on there. I feel like there might have been something before him but my sense of, uh…my time lines are kind of a little screwed sometimes.
TPG: I’m sure a lot’s happened in your life.
Deakin: Yeah.
TPG: So, you were talking about original material earlier. How many songs do you have?
Deakin: Well, it’s kind of hard to say ’cause some of the songs are kind of fragments of songs. I’ve kind of moved things from one song to the other so “what is a song” is still pretty unclear. I think I have nine solid jams going right now.
TPG: Okay. Would you agree that beats are a big part of your music?
Deakin: Uh, yeah. I mean, for me, that’s probably in some ways one of the more challenging sides of it, I think. I like having beats and it’s definitely something that doesn’t necessarily come naturally for me to do so I’d say going to work trying to get stuff–that’s one of the reasons why I like playing more with Tim, ’cause that’s way more what he does. When I was working on the songs I felt like I sort of made backing tracks that would sort of inspire me to write the songs around them. That’s kinda where the core beats came from. But, uh, to me it feels very limited and yeah, it’s been cool to be able to play with like, Nimai and with Tim cause they’re able to kind of expand on the beats a lot more so I don’t have to like, focus on it, but yeah.
TPG: I was really excited to see you play last night. Mostly because…I’ve seen Noah play before, I haven’t seen Dave play…
Deakin: He doesn’t really do solo shows.
TPG: Dave? No?
Deakin: No.
TPG: Is he gonna tour at all for the new record?
Deakin: I don’t think so, no.
TPG: Oh, okay.
Deakin: Yeah, I think he felt it was more of a recording project than it was a live thing.
TPG: Well, if you ask me, I think you and Tim work really well together.
Deakin: Thanks, man.
TPG: You were really in sync and stuff; it was really cool.
Deakin: Thanks.
TPG: Okay, this is a question you’re probably going to get a lot. Is Animal Collective doing anything else?
Deakin: Uh, yeah! We’re talking about getting together to start writing new stuff next year and starting a tour…
TPG: Cool, man.
Deakin: Yeah, we kind of all wanted to take this year off. I mean, those guys, after finishing the Merriweather tour, they wanted to take a break and we were all just kinda wanting to have a year that was sort of like, active, but in terms of other projects; helping people record and doing individual solo records and stuff but I think next year, everyone’s feeling pretty psyched about getting going again.
TPG: Cool, I’m looking forward to those shows.
Deakin: Yeah, thanks.
TPG: Are you going to put out a solo record at all?
Deakin: Yeah, I’d like to. I’m going to try and record hopefully this Winter and try to have something out in the Spring. We’ll see.
TPG: And is it gonna come out Paw Tracks or somewhere else?
Deakin: Yeah, most likely Paw Tracks, yeah.
TPG: Alright. I’m sure you probably get this a lot, but you know how people put that cult status on Animal Collective?
Deakin: Yeah.
TPG: Okay, well I’m sure there’s a lot of speculation as to your record given that Noah’s put out a couple and Dave just put out his…a week ago?
Deakin: Yeah, yeah it came out at the end of October.
TPG: Yeah, so I think a lot of people are really excited for like, any news regarding your record.
Deakin: Yeah.
TPG: What do you think of that position that you guys have been put in?
Deakin: Um, I mean, I have really–uh, I mean it’s…mostly it just is what it is. Meaning like…I dunno it’s a mixed thing, I guess, for me. I mean, of course, it’s an amazing thing. I mean, for years long before even this point, you know. Noah and I, especially, were just like, “can you imagine if we went back and told, like, a 15-year-old us that was like, making 4-track recordings in like, our bedroom that this is what we’d be doing”, so for sure, it’s amazing. It’s pretty mind-blowing to realize that you’ll get to that point. For sure. But I mean yeah, for me personally doing this, like you said, the comparison, anticipation and stuff. It’s cool. Like, it’s great that I get to come play shows that I wouldn’t get to play if I didn’t have that connection but there’s also a side to it where it’s like, I have to try really hard, like, not to think about that expectation, because to me it actually feels a lot more like how I felt when I was 18 or 19 in terms of making music. Like, to me, I feel very, uh, like I have a lot to figure out when I’m just doing it by myself. So I mean, to kinda be in that position and know that there’s people that have, like, the imprint of Feels or Merriweather versus like, “oh, and what’s this dude gonna do?” to me is like, I have to try and not think about that because it’s kind of a little bit…
TPG: ‘Cause it affects your process, your writing.
Deakin: Yeah, but I mean, it’s…you know, how it is.
TPG: Yeah. Thanks for the interview.
Deakin: Yeah, totally.

Keep an eye out for Deakin’s solo debut sometime in 2011 as well as for some possible Animal Collective activity.