Mon, Sep 17. Mod Club, 722 College. $14.50 from Ticketmaster, Soundscapes, Play De Record, www.ticketweb.com.
If there's anyone who believes in life after death, it's James Ford
and Jas Shaw. Over the past four years, their career path has
progressed according to the the Joy Division/New Order
self-destruct/rebirth pattern – albeit, thankfully, without any
suicides involved.
Back in 2003, Ford was playing drums and Shaw was playing
keyboards for Simian, a London, UK-based psychedelic-pop quartet whose
career peak amounted to opening a North American club tour for
Ladytron. As the modest momentum for the band's second release, We Are Your Friends,
began to wane, the French affiliate for the band's Virgin label
sponsored a remix contest for the album's single “Never Be Alone.”
Emblematic of their flagging enthusiam for their own band, the members
gave each just a cursory listen.
“We were in a very dark place at the time,” Ford recounts from
his East London studio. “We weren't looking for a club hit; we just
wanted someone to fuck the song up. We got 10 tracks on a CD and
listened to them once on a little ghetto blaster, and chose the one we
thought was best – it was a noise-core version where the guy just put
the song through a distortion pedal.”
The prize for that winning selection was a B-side slot on
Simian's next single, but the fact that Ford doesn't even mention the
remixer's name is telling – since it was actually one of the losing
entries that would anticipate his and Shaw's future course.
“We didn't really pay much attention to the Justice one,”
admits Ford, referring to the French DJ duo whose rejected Simian remix
eventually caught the attention of the then-emergent French indie dance
label Ed Banger. “Pedro [Winter, of Ed Banger] got in contact with us
saying, ‘Can we put it out?' And we were like, ‘Yeah, fine, send us a
copy, do whatever you want.' And eventually that song made a little
splash, got re-released again on International Deejay Gigolo Records
and made an even bigger splash, and re-released again and seemed to
never go away. It turned into this sort of club behemoth.”
Between the years 2004 and 2006, it was impossible to enter a
club of any repute without hearing Justice's smash “Never Be Alone”
mash-up, retitled “We Are Your Friends” in honour of the song's
unmistakable chorus line. While the single immediately launched Justice
to the international electro elite, its success also coincided nicely
with Ford and Shaw increased interest in Simian Mobile Disco, a DJ team
they initially formed in 2003 to spin at Simian-gig after-parties, and
which would go on to outlast Simian proper, who disbanded in 2005.
“When we first started DJing, we were playing a lot more
eclectic stuff: a Das EFX track into the Silver Apples into Sun Ra,”
Ford explains. “It was weird stuff that would probably only work in
smaller venues, which we learned to our detriment when we played a
Black Sabbath track at [London super-club] Fabric. But once we started
to get more club gigs, the music started changing, and we gradually
tailored our stuff more towards the dancefloor.”
A string of suitably sleazy singles (“Hustler,” “Tits &
Acid”) and high-profile remixes (Air, Bjšrk) would establish the duo as
major players among an increasingly crowded field of electro/house
hybrids. However, the duo's new debut full-length, Attack Decay Sustain Release,
suggests a certain effort to distance themselves from their
filter-freaking peers, favouring lean and clean pop-structured
productions over the distorted-synth drubbing that's currently busting
subwoofers in clubs worldwide.
“Oh yeah, I'm definitely bored of that – there aren't many
distorted synths on our record for that reason,” Ford says. “When we
started thinking about the format of the record, we didn't want it to
be really long, like a bunch of 12-inches stuck together. We tried to
make it work like a rock album to a certain extent.”
And part of that strategy includes closing the album with an odd, beat-less A Clockwork Orange-style
instrumental called “Scott” – a nod to “the Raymond Scott/Delia
Derbyshire side of our music tastes,” Ford says. It's that sort of
open-eared eclecticism that's made Ford a go-to producer not just among
electronic artists, but major rock bands as well: this year, he helmed
the Arctic Monkeys' Favourite Worst Nightmare and the Klaxons' Mercury Prize-winning Myths of the Near Future.
However, even though he can lay claim to a celebrity-clientele list, a
home base in the hipster haven of East London, and an album that – as
the saucy video to “Hustler” attests – can inspire a gaggle of hot
fashionista girls to make out with another, Ford would be quite content
to spend the rest of his life sequestered in his studio.
“I haven't been out here in a really long time,” Ford says. “A
few years ago, this area got a bit toney, and all the bars started to
get pretty scary. I wouldn't go out if I had the choice. We're not in
it for the lifestyle. We're not rock stars – that's why we're
producers.”