here we go again:

so we are in final preparations, NĂ˝kĂł Muhly is busy extrapolating sense from some new material and some old… very excited.
hope to see you there.

| Ben Frost |
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Whale Watching Tour II
here we go again:
so we are in final preparations, NĂ˝kĂł Muhly is busy extrapolating sense from some new material and some old… very excited.
Resist Network.
the new documentary by my friend Marc Silver- you might recognize the music. and then here is the last thing we did together…
An interview with Milk Factory.
In the space of just a handful of records, Australian-born musician Ben Frost has defined a very particular sound, which blends in elements of modern classical, metal and electronica into haunting cinematic soundscapes. Although his first album proper was published on Room40 in 2003, it is with his debut contribution for Valgeir Sigurðssonâs Bedroom Community, Theory Of Machines (2006) that he began to receive the attention he deserves. With his latest opus, By The Throat, Frost has developed a much more organic sound, which he developed with a number of collaborators, including Valgeir Sigurðsson, Nico Muhly, Sam Amidon, Swedish hardcore metal band Crowpath, Arcade Fire drummer Jeremy Gara and Icelandic string quartet Amiina. Ben took a few minutes out of his current tour with the Bedroom Community guys to talk to themilkfactory about his many influences, how he got acquainted with Bedroom Community, how he faced the weaknesses in his work and addressed them, and how things are not just black and white. Ben, itâs been two years since you released Theory Of Machines. What have you been up to? How did you come to music, and who influenced you in your formative years? Your first album, released as Frost, was entirely guitar-based and very ambient. How did you work on that album, and do you think you will ever return to something so bare? Youâre part of Valgeir Sigurðssonâs Bedroom Community crew, which seems to be a very close-knit family, with Nico Muhly and Sam Amidon. You all work on each otherâs records and you are also currently touring together as part of Bedroom Communityâs Whale Watching Tour. How did you get involved with these guys? Your first album for Bedroom Community, Theory Of Machines, was a pretty complex and dark affair, where guitars still appeared, but very often in treated form, and the inspiration seem to be pretty far reaching, from electronica to metal and to noise and drones. Was working on the album a very different process to what youâd done before? It was quite a difficult record, which was extremely well received. Were you surprised by the reception it got? By The Throat, your new album, is possibly even darker than Theory Of Machines, but it is also very different. How did you approach it? Did you have a clear idea of where you wanted to go with this one, and is the finish product close to your original idea of it? For this album, youâve worked once again with Valgeir Sigurðsson, Sam Amidon and Nico Muhly, who has done some orchestral arrangements, as well as Swedish hardcore metal band Crowpath, Arcade Fire drummer Jeremy Gara and Amiina, an all-female Icelandic string quartet. How do you manage to bring all these together into something coherent? Are these representative of what you usually listen to? You use howling wolves a couple of times on the album, which gives these particular tracks a very chilling twist, and wolves are also pictured on the album cover. What is the idea behind using wolves so much on this record? On your site, there is a message to those who have downloaded the album through file sharing to who you say âI woke this morning with the depressing thought that because many people are now listening to By The Throat through internet theft (congratulations).You are â as a direct result â not enjoying the visual aspect of this record, which is as important to me as the aural one.â You then go on to provide a link to download some of the pictures, taken by Bjarni GrĂms, used in the booklet, which seems a bit contradictory. Is it more important to you that people experience the whole work than they experience it legally? Some of these pictures are pretty impressive, and they reflect part of the record to a certain extend, although perhaps softening its atmospheric nature quite a bit. Did you want the visual aspect of the record to reflect its tone, and do you think they convey that particular idea? Do you listen to a lot of music while youâre away touring? Whatâs going to be on your iPod or in your CD wallet? What are the five most important records/films/books or work of art to you? November 2009
New Jersey is NOT in New York inspite of various rumours to the contrary.
Hello, I am working on a record with my friends Shahzad Ismaily and Indigo Street (AKA) PartyFace here in this beautifully bizarre but homely studio in Hoboken New Jersey, which sounds far away but is arguably closer to Manhattan than BAM where this week myself and the rest of the Chunky Move Dance company bought Mortal Engine to New York for the first time. This album is going to be good- I think Laughing Stock good. It actually reminds me so much of Talk Talk in all the right ways- and is largely constructed around double and triple tracked Silvertones and various other incarnations of LUSH. Here is our engineer (I am not touching any knobs in this particular exercise which is a strange, but nice change) Pete looking very busy. In other news, I know there are some very anxious people out there regarding the delays of the BY THE THROAT vinyl release (not the least of which being me). I assure you it will be worth the wait- it now looks and sounds very good. That is all.
Ben Frost: from Russia with love.
This last week Ben Frost played Moscow and St Petersburg… some photos.
on stage with Lawrence English. |