
Liars have never been a band comfortable with staying
in one place for very long. Geographically, personally
and most of all musically, each successive album that
they release comes with a new agenda, a
new heritage, a new set of reference points and a new
way of thinking about music.
So, after the multimedia multi-tasking of 2006's 'Drum's
Not Dead' – each track of which came accompanied
with three exclusive short films - Liars have returned
with their most stripped-back and direct album
yet. Simply titled 'Liars', their 4th full-length (recorded
in Berlin and LA and mixed in London by Erasure
and Depeche Mode producer Gareth Jones) abandons the
thirty minute sound collages called things like
'This Dust That Makes The Mud' of old in favour of
a set of the band's most conventional and powerful
songs yet – although as a band with a reputation
forged on thirty minute sound collages called things
like 'This Dust That Makes The Mud', Liars' recent
career swerve is a delightfully surprising as ever.
6" 6' Australian singer Angus Andrew explains
the methodology behind this new approach: "It
was a bit
of a reaction to what we'd gone through in the creative
process – I think that in the past we always
felt
like we needed to give our albums a concept. But this
time we felt like we'd earned the right not to
explain everything all the time or give the songs an
overarching theme."
"I think that we also wanted to make sure that
we weren't diverting the listener's interest away from
the
music with hi-falutin' titles," continues Andrew. "People
end up finding more to talk and think about in
those words than they do in the actual music itself.
This time we wanted to avoid that and not have any
external influences on people's perception in terms
of titles or weird artwork. Everything is very straightforward
this time. The speed of production was doubled compared
to our previous albums, so in a way it offered us less
time to talk about things."
Angus, Aaron Hemphill and Julian Gross - who has
played drums with the band since the departure of
original rhythm section Pat Nature and Ron Albertson
after the band's first album, 2001's 'They Threw
Us All In A Trench And Put A Monument On Top' - decided
not to overanalyse the process of making
their music.
"We aimed to make songs that weren't going to
require a concept. We decided to work really quickly
and not talk about what we were doing too much. Aaron
and I wanted to write songs that spoke for
themselves in a more visceral way – like when
you're a teenager and things really mean a lot for
you in
a song. We wanted to write songs that reminded us a
little of what it was like to be a teenager – so
pretty
much the only preparation we did was going back and
listening to the bands we liked when we were
kids, stuff like OMD, The Cure and Siouxsie And The
Banshees."
Although Andrew and former microbiologist Aaron Hemphill
met in LA (where Andrew studied photography
at art school), after a stay in New York the band relocated
to Berlin as a base for European touring.
Hemphill and Gross returned to LA soon after Drum's
Not Dead but Andrew stayed on in the German
capital, where the bulk of 'Liars' was recorded at
Planet Roc (sic) studios, a former East German radio
studio built in the 1950s by Bauhaus architect Franz
Ehrlich. After working on their songs separately in
Germany and the US, Liars convened at Planet Roc for
a fortnight in spanning New Year's Eve
2006/2007 to stitch together their ideas.
"Planet Roc was built as a broadcast facility
for radio and is in the old East Berlin so it has this
strange
communist vibe about it – but it feels liberating
to use it for the kind of means we're using it for.
But the
best thing about it is that it has loads of different
sized rooms and corners to record in – we ended
up
recording a drum pattern in a stairwell."
"Sometimes we had two rooms – I'd be working
on one room and Aaron would be next door in the next
room working on his stuff. It can be quite frightening,
but Aaron and I have worked together for ten years
and we trust each other, even though sometimes we work
in total opposition to each other. Like for this
record our interests were different sonically: we were
both writing songs about freedom and teenage
melodrama, but I was interested in the bass and Aaron
was more into the high-end trebly stuff."
The band weren't balancing their interests alone, however:
a friend of Andrew's from Australia, Jeremy
Glover, played bass and helped record the album. "Jeremy
understood where we were coming from and
helped to craft the songs in the studio to help us
find that visceral edge we were searching for. We wanted
to make a record that would have the same impact on
people as hearing, like, the Ramones for the
first time did on us."
Their quest to connect on a more visceral level has
succeeded. Unlike, say, 2004's 'They Were Wrong,
So We Drowned', which boasted a fractured narrative
based on accounts of the Salem Witch Trials,
'Liars' is a set of songs only connected by the fact
that no other band around could make music like this.
From the demonic football chant of 'Clear Island',
to 'Freak Out''s industrial Beach Boys loveliness,
the
metal-flavoured birth rite of 'Cycle Time' or 'Houseclouds''s
no-fi electro shuffle, this is an album that
manages to balance the old, experimentally-minded Liars
with an excitingly insidious new pop edge.
"Every record you learn a lot about what you can
do" says Angus, who moved back to LA after completing
the album. "With this one we've gone another step
towards making music. When we started the
band was more like a means of expression. Now it feels
like we're gaining control of a medium a bit
more. I feel I know at least in some sense about how
to connect with people now. Before it was a bit
more like an experiment, a stab in the dark."
The experiment has been an unqualified success. By
getting back to basics with 'Liars'' the band are
going back to the future. |