On July 26th 2011 The Pitch published an interview with Carl Broemel, done by David Hudnall. The original interview can be found here.
Keywords:
My Morning Jacket returns to the Uptown, touring on its latest, Circuital. It's a fine enough record, drawing on the rock, funk, soul and country sounds that MMJ has explored on previous releases, but it doesn't — nothing could — capture the rapturous experience of its high-energy live sets. We checked in with guitarist Carl Broemel last week from his home in Nashville.
The Pitch: How's the summer going? Lots of festivals?
Broemel: We're taking a 10-day break right now, but it's been fantastic so far. We did Bonnaroo, some other festivals, a theater tour in the U.S. and Canada, shows in London.
What kind of upgrades do you get when you're as big of a touring act as you guys have become? Better food? Fancier hotels?
Yeah, like 3 inches of leg room on the flight? (Laughs.) Yeah, there's some extra little creature comforts these days. We're all adult men, so it's nice to have our own hotel room now and then, instead of having to bunk up like we used to. Our main goal on tour is to maintain a good energy level and not get burned out. So, you know, having clean clothing in our hotel room is a good way to do that.
Have you met anybody cool lately out on tour?
Erykah Badu sang with us at our record-release show in Louisville. We met her in Dallas a few years back when she came to one of our gigs. She's a kindred spirit — she really saves her energy for her performances. Plus, she's also really into funk music. And I like her spirituality. She's just a pretty awesome lady.
From your lyrics and other interviews I've read, spirituality seems like a more central theme in the band's work lately. Is that accurate?
Well, I think that a lot of artists become more aware of having a spiritual journey of some kind because they have the experience where their music or paintings or whatever come from a place that they can't quite explain. So you become open to the possibility of other energy sources that you maybe can't be fully aware of.
How are the crowds responding to the Circuital songs live?
Out of the last three records I've been a part of with the band, this one seems to be resonating quicker with the crowds. It's really satisfying to have people obviously into our fresher material, as opposed to the old classics. But we're also playing some of the older songs better or more powerfully now because we're more familiar with them. We can play them with more force.
Rolling Stone named you a Top 20 Guitar God or something a few years back. What kind of ax are you slinging these days?
I usually play Gibsons. I have a couple Les Pauls. My new favorite is a Duesenberg, which is a German guitar. It's the only thing I ever want to play other than a Gibson.
Do you remember anything from your last visit to Kansas City?
I remember we walked around and did some vintage-clothes shopping and some record shopping. I bought this big ridiculous gray jumpsuit. Like what Mr. Furley would wear in Three's Company
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Showing posts with label The Pitch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Pitch. Show all posts
The Pitch (2005)
On November 17th 2005 The Pitch published an interview with Tom Blankenship, done by Rich Sharp. The original interview can be found here.
Keywords: Recording, Z, Elizabethtown,Johnny Quaid and Danny Cash leave the band,
Sometimes it takes a jarring catastrophe to make things right.
When you're My Morning Jacket, catastrophe takes the form of a breakup.
It comes after three achingly beautiful albums and close to a decade of paying your dues, touring at increasingly large venues for growing crowds.
It comes while critics are busy drooling about the deeply soulful, reverb-drenched sound of your major-label debut, It Still Moves, and your band's singer and songwriter, Jim James, whose powerful, plaintive voice can veer effortlessly from bottle-breaking twang to a heartbreaking whisper.
The catastrophe arrives when two of your players, Johnny Quaid and Danny Cash, decide they want off the ride for good. The road has been too long, and it's no longer worth it to them or their loved ones.
So you try to soldier on. You head to the studio with a new guitarist and a new keyboardist. Along the way you pick up, for the first time, a producer who's not a band member. In fact, he's the guy who produced the Stone Roses' first album and Radiohead's The Bends and worked on — for God's sake — Dark Side of the Moon.
You really focus, for the first time, on rhythm, putting your singer's strengths to the test in the studio, taking you far from your homemade recording space in Louisville, Kentucky, and onto the wax with the best album you've ever made. Z arrived in stores one of the best-rated albums of the year, full of haunting, memorable tunes such as "Knot Come Loose," "Lay Low" and the hopeful, hopelessly addictive "Wordless Chorus."
It's October 2005, and if you're My Morning Jacket, you've weathered the storm and you've come out somehow in a much better place.
The Pitch sat down with the group's bassist Two-Tone Tommy backstage at a sold-out show at Chicago's Vic Theater, to discuss the evolution of the band, striking a pose in Cameron Crowe's Elizabethtown and losing two bandmates on "The Death Tour."
For your first three albums, you guys recorded in some really unusual spots — grain silos, bathrooms, basements. What was that like?
Yeah, well, a lot of that was really out of necessity. Where the first three records were done was in an apartment above a three-car garage on a farm in Kentucky, basically. And it was either put the drums in the corner of one of the rooms and they'd sound kind of dry and weird or we could do it in the basement or in the garage, where we'd pull all the cars out. All that stuff — Jim doing vocals in the bathroom to get that reverb sound, recording in the grain silo, that was all about doing what we had to do because we had sort of limited options. Whatever it took — our approach was "let's try this out and see what happens."
Z sounds remarkably different from your past albums. Why do you think that is?
Well, we really made a conscious effort with this album to put on less songs. Instead of 74 minutes of music on the record, we focused on having every track be something really solid. Jim's range is also unbelievable now, the way he can stretch out and the way his voice has gotten deeper over the years. In the past, we produced the albums mainly by ourselves, and on this one we had a producer. We recorded it in a different place than we'd recorded all our past stuff, so we definitely tried some different things on Z.
You guys worked with John Leckie as a producer on this album. What was that like?
It was pretty amazing. We were definitely scared at first. We didn't know what was going to happen. Everybody always has this idea in their head of what a producer is going to be — like he's going to change your sound or tell you how to write the songs and everything. He was just really honest with us, which was great. He didn't kiss our asses. He'd just come in and say, "That take was shit" or "Why are you playing this? This doesn't go along with what the rest of the band is playing." He was also very encouraging. If we'd recorded this album like we had in the past, we'd have done a take and thought it was great like we used to, but he would push us and say, "You guys can do this better."
You guys play "Freebird" in Elizabethtown. How'd you hook that up?
We ran into Cameron about three years ago in L.A., and he was talking about how he was making this film that was going to be in Kentucky, and we figured that we'd stop by the set sometime to see what the movie business was all about. Next thing we know, he's in Louisville, and he's talkin' to us about funerals and wakes and what kind of bourbon you'd drink and what things would be like when you lived in Kentucky — just kind of everyday stuff. And then from there he decided to cast us in the movie, playing a Skynyrd tune.
Do you miss your former bandmates?
Yeah, I miss 'em, but definitely on the last run with those guys, we called it "The Death Tour" because it was just miserable. Sure, I sometimes pine for the old times, but I'm just glad that they've moved on and that they're happy now and that they aren't in that place that they were. We still see them all the time. In fact, they both got married over the two-month break that we had in Kentucky.
What is Z?
It's nothing really, which is why we chose it for the title. I've heard all kinds of rumors, like, it's Z because it's going to be our last album or Z because we're going to go backward and make a different album for every letter, but it's not that — it's basically the kind of thing you can attach meaning to yourself.
Keywords: Recording, Z, Elizabethtown,Johnny Quaid and Danny Cash leave the band,
Sometimes it takes a jarring catastrophe to make things right.
When you're My Morning Jacket, catastrophe takes the form of a breakup.
It comes after three achingly beautiful albums and close to a decade of paying your dues, touring at increasingly large venues for growing crowds.
It comes while critics are busy drooling about the deeply soulful, reverb-drenched sound of your major-label debut, It Still Moves, and your band's singer and songwriter, Jim James, whose powerful, plaintive voice can veer effortlessly from bottle-breaking twang to a heartbreaking whisper.
The catastrophe arrives when two of your players, Johnny Quaid and Danny Cash, decide they want off the ride for good. The road has been too long, and it's no longer worth it to them or their loved ones.
So you try to soldier on. You head to the studio with a new guitarist and a new keyboardist. Along the way you pick up, for the first time, a producer who's not a band member. In fact, he's the guy who produced the Stone Roses' first album and Radiohead's The Bends and worked on — for God's sake — Dark Side of the Moon.
You really focus, for the first time, on rhythm, putting your singer's strengths to the test in the studio, taking you far from your homemade recording space in Louisville, Kentucky, and onto the wax with the best album you've ever made. Z arrived in stores one of the best-rated albums of the year, full of haunting, memorable tunes such as "Knot Come Loose," "Lay Low" and the hopeful, hopelessly addictive "Wordless Chorus."
It's October 2005, and if you're My Morning Jacket, you've weathered the storm and you've come out somehow in a much better place.
The Pitch sat down with the group's bassist Two-Tone Tommy backstage at a sold-out show at Chicago's Vic Theater, to discuss the evolution of the band, striking a pose in Cameron Crowe's Elizabethtown and losing two bandmates on "The Death Tour."
For your first three albums, you guys recorded in some really unusual spots — grain silos, bathrooms, basements. What was that like?
Yeah, well, a lot of that was really out of necessity. Where the first three records were done was in an apartment above a three-car garage on a farm in Kentucky, basically. And it was either put the drums in the corner of one of the rooms and they'd sound kind of dry and weird or we could do it in the basement or in the garage, where we'd pull all the cars out. All that stuff — Jim doing vocals in the bathroom to get that reverb sound, recording in the grain silo, that was all about doing what we had to do because we had sort of limited options. Whatever it took — our approach was "let's try this out and see what happens."
Z sounds remarkably different from your past albums. Why do you think that is?
Well, we really made a conscious effort with this album to put on less songs. Instead of 74 minutes of music on the record, we focused on having every track be something really solid. Jim's range is also unbelievable now, the way he can stretch out and the way his voice has gotten deeper over the years. In the past, we produced the albums mainly by ourselves, and on this one we had a producer. We recorded it in a different place than we'd recorded all our past stuff, so we definitely tried some different things on Z.
You guys worked with John Leckie as a producer on this album. What was that like?
It was pretty amazing. We were definitely scared at first. We didn't know what was going to happen. Everybody always has this idea in their head of what a producer is going to be — like he's going to change your sound or tell you how to write the songs and everything. He was just really honest with us, which was great. He didn't kiss our asses. He'd just come in and say, "That take was shit" or "Why are you playing this? This doesn't go along with what the rest of the band is playing." He was also very encouraging. If we'd recorded this album like we had in the past, we'd have done a take and thought it was great like we used to, but he would push us and say, "You guys can do this better."
You guys play "Freebird" in Elizabethtown. How'd you hook that up?
We ran into Cameron about three years ago in L.A., and he was talking about how he was making this film that was going to be in Kentucky, and we figured that we'd stop by the set sometime to see what the movie business was all about. Next thing we know, he's in Louisville, and he's talkin' to us about funerals and wakes and what kind of bourbon you'd drink and what things would be like when you lived in Kentucky — just kind of everyday stuff. And then from there he decided to cast us in the movie, playing a Skynyrd tune.
Do you miss your former bandmates?
Yeah, I miss 'em, but definitely on the last run with those guys, we called it "The Death Tour" because it was just miserable. Sure, I sometimes pine for the old times, but I'm just glad that they've moved on and that they're happy now and that they aren't in that place that they were. We still see them all the time. In fact, they both got married over the two-month break that we had in Kentucky.
What is Z?
It's nothing really, which is why we chose it for the title. I've heard all kinds of rumors, like, it's Z because it's going to be our last album or Z because we're going to go backward and make a different album for every letter, but it's not that — it's basically the kind of thing you can attach meaning to yourself.
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