It's
been a few years since we last spoke to Stephen from The Telescopes
and with all the recent activity surrounding their first single in
12 years and various compilations and reissues hitting the shops in
the last year, now seemed a good time to speak to him again.
Unbelievably
it's over three years since we last spoke and you'd just made your
live return at the time, how does it feel to be here a few years down
the line and The Telescopes seem as popular as ever?
- I feel this
is the most creative line up we've ever had and that we are making
our most exciting and interesting music. I never thought I'd be
able to make Telescopes music again, so we've totally exceeded any
expectations I never had. There's a good spirit within the group
which would still be there if everyone hated us. We would still
enjoy making the music for ourselves.
You've had various
compilations released in the last year or so and the re-issue of your
Creation album on Rev-Ola. How much involvement did you have with
that and what was it like working with Joe Foster again after all
these years?
- Our involvment
was to send extra mixes and photographs for the sleeve and to approve
the new artwork. It's an honour to work with Joe. We're huge fans
of his Creation single 'I'll follow you down'. We play it every
time we dj. Jo got him to sign her copy last year when we played
his club in Brighton.
How did the other
releases come about?
- I always wanted
'Altered Perception' to come out. I asked Steve from Spaceage if
they would be interested in releasing it and they were happy to.
Midsummer madness held a poll asking for peoples favourite Telescopes
material of old and approached us with the results. Anton from Brianjonestown
Massacre wanted to release his favourite titles on his Committee
To Keep Music Evil label. Greg Shaw put it together for him. We
sent pictures and mixes.
You
also recently released the Winter EP on Hungry Audio, your first single
in 12 years. How did that come about?
- Both tracks
grew from the Third Wave tour. People send me bootlegs they make
of our live appearances. hearing back a recording taken in Chiasso,
we were inspired to expand on the versions in a studio environment.
- I've known
Adrian from Hungry Audio for a while. When he asked for a single
for his new label, we sent him the recordings half expecting a thanks
but no thanks. I wasn't sure anyone was going to understand what
we were doing. I was pleasantly surprised when he did. Adrian thought
it best to release the EP in Winter. Which meant holding it back
for the best part of a year, but it was the right thing to do. We've
had letters and emails from people who say Winter#7 is the soundtrack
to their winter time.
I'm told the single
has virtually sold out now, do you have any idea how well the albums
have been selling?
- I get updates
from some labels. Considering they haven't had big PR /advertising
campaigns behind them most of them are doing well as underground
records go. Obviously we're not selling as much as we used to 15
years ago, no one is. We would probably be number one in the mainstream
charts if we had our old sales now. I think it's harder for the
guys at Midsummer Madness because they are introducing a whole new
genre of music in a foreign tongue to their country.
The most surprising
thing to me was that NME reviewed everything.... all the reviews were
extremely positive, did it feel strange seeing yourself in there again
after all these years, it certainly made a nice change from reading
about Razorlight and all those bands.
- Indeed, the
possibility never crossed my mind when we started making Telescopes
music again. I naturally assumed we were travelling very different
pathways. It's interesting to see.
You recently dj'ed
at the Sonic Cathedral 'Shoegazing' night in London, how was that?
- Great, nice
crowd. We played the kind of things we play at Jo's Electric Earbone
nights, things like Throbbing Gristle, Suicide, Slaughter Joe, Sunroof,
Vibracathedral Orchestra, Magnetophone, Faust, and Can. The people
there were really open minded and responsive. they seemed to really
enjoy it.
There
seems to be a fair few similar nights starting and whole host of a
new generation of bands influenced by the likes of The Telescopes,
Slowdive and obviously MBV. Have you been to see any of the new bands?
- Some of them
play with us from time to time. Some i like, some are too derrivative.
Same with any genre. I'm interested in any music bringing something
new to the table.
As a live band
you've changed quite dramatically since your last incarnation. You
certainly split audience opinions when I recently saw you, with half
the audience walking out and the other half shaking from the sheer
volume of the set. Are you trying to make Kevin Shields jealous?
- I'm sure Kevin
is safe in the knowledge of what he is capable of. Our music is
fired by ESP, the choice of loops we have to improvise around and
the instruments we bring are all we prepare. everything else comes
from tapping into something we can't describe, but is there in the
environment. Any effect that has on us and the audience is interesting
to us. Some bands you can sit through in a kind of apathy, neither
loving them enough to cheer or hating them enough to leave. I'm
happy for The Telescopes music to cause extreme division. Nothing
is for everyone.
Do you think you'll
ever play any of the early material again?
- Defnitely.
The version of The Perfect Needle on the Winter EP came together
live. I'm sure we'll introduce more from time to time. We're working
on an Acoustic Night Owls session for Double Agent at the moment,
which is mostly old material. we'll record it live one evening soon
, maybe tonight, whenever feels right.
When
can we expect some new material from The Telescopes?
- There's a
new 4th album almost complete. We recorded so much we 're considering
the possibilty of a second part being released at a later date.
We have other ideas we would like to try first.
Can you describe
what direction the new material is going in?
- Very dense
sounding, lots of layered textures, like with Winter, seriously
dark, very trippy, intense and warm, much more guitar based than
Third Wave and a lot less beat driven. the material ranges from
pagan folk chants to extreme white noise.
What other projects
apart from The Telescopes are you involved in at the moment?
- Jo has joined
Los Planetos del Agua playing guitar and singing. They're busy eating
cake, drinking tea and mixing a new album. Jo also promotes the
Electric Earbone nights once a month, Vibracathedral Orchestra and
Ashtray N avigations are playing the next one. My job is to record
all the shows for the end of year compilation. I'm also compiling
a compilation for Antenna of new experimental music from around
the world. It's taking a while to assemble, but it's well worth
it, there will be lots great mind expanding music on there.
Interview held
January 2005. Many thanks to Stephen Lawrie for his time....
Click
here to read our interview with The Telescopes upon their return >>>>>
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