Showing posts with label Monoganon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Monoganon. Show all posts

29 August 2012

Live Review: Monoganon, Konx-om-Pax and Remember Remember, Stereo 25/08/2012




My trips to Glasgow nearly always manage to neatly miss significant events in the city's live music calendar. There's almost always something happening just days after I leave which I'm blissfully ignorant of until it's too late. This time I'd accidentally managed to end up here during the fairly local Doune The Rabbit Hole festival which was picking off the cream of the local talent, along with a good chunk of it's natural audience. However, I'd spotted tonight's show at Stereo a little while ago – a bit of an oasis in a rather dry weekend musically. A chance to catch up with some old favourites, and to discover new ones perhaps?

Firstly, it's always good to see Monoganon again – a band who seem to grow in confidence and musical stature each time. John B McKenna's quiet and unassuming frontman role extends to a little banter at the outset of this home-town show, before the band strike up a pensive and chilling take on “Anatomy” from “Songs to Swim To”.  On record a rather fragile and brittle construction, tonight it's a churn of sound, which sometimes collapses under the weight of swirling psychedelic guitars. A new – or at least unfamiliar to me – song follows as McKenna's yelps recall David Bowie but here he meets 60s garage rock head on. "To Glass in The Blast" begins with bright acoustic guitars cutting through the swirls of sound, whilst McKenna poses the eerie question "when we're all dead again/will the animals come in?". The quiet brooding storm of "Eternal See You Soon" sets urgent, skittering, almost punk rock rhythms alongside pretty folk melodies. Finally “Devils Finger” arrives - from its subdued opening, through the heart stopping off-rhythm drum interlude to the power-chording, thunderous finale this is a complex and untamed beast of a song. Monoganon tonight once again displayed their ability to be both edgy and disturbing alongside a sort of eerie prettiness and attention to tiny details. A new album seems to be in the works, and it can't come too soon for me.




My relationship with electronic music is a confused and unstable one at the best of times – but Konx-om-Pax really seemed to split the population of Stereo tonight. Named with a nod to the received angelic visions of Aleister Crowley, and apparently translated as “light extended” which is a more than suitable tag for the sonic and visual manipulations of Tom Scholefield. He sits hunched behind a Macbook on anotherwise empty stage, the faint glow of the screen the only clue to a human presence. Meanwhile, monochrome projections begin. They are strange but compelling – buildings and indistinct landscapes crumble, and strange half-mechanical half-organic creatures shudder and writhe. These images weave and pulse along with a sonic accompaniment which at first sounds like some strange, illegitimate child born of a coupling between The Dead C and The KLF. Warbling, thundering, sometimes urgent and beat heavy and sometimes ambient and overpowering sounds echo around the venue. The audience is divided almost from the start – a significant part are spellbound and captive in the collages of sound and light, the rest are bewildered and uncomfortable – but all are quite unable to ignore what's going with it's massive sensory load. Splashes of lurid colour enter the visuals, and liquid forms reshape and ooze across the stage, which works strangely to emphasise the sweet tang of dry ice on the air. Now and then, a dark distorted voice intones portents in the vein of Godspeed You Black Emperor. Shards of sound and light echo around the dim basement, and when the undertow of bass arrives I feel my kidneys vibrating in puddles of possibly ill-advised beer. Towards the end of the set, which has been conducted without comment, pause or other human intervention, eight bit video game tunes bleep and twitter like the menacing jingles from the Protect and Survive public information films back in the 1980s. Thunderous, thrash metal drums make an appearance and the audience find this more comfortable, head-bobbing territory. Scholefield leaves the stage as inconspicuously as he arrived, some new converts signed-up, and some left equally confused it seems.



Finally, and to a fair amount of audience acclaim, the massed ranks of Remember Remember fill the stage. Their most recent, second record “The Quickening” – a headphone-friendly mixture ofcuriously prog-like jams and epic national anthems for the stateless – has quite a challenge in the translation to this cavernous but well filled room. They pitch this almost perfectly, partly by emphasising the electronic edge to their tunes early in the set. Like strangely modernised Gerry Anderson TV theme tunes peppered with ringing glockenspiel hits and shivers of glassy guitar, their sound expands to fill the space but loses none of its intricacies. Accompanied by brutalist architectural visuals, "Unclean Powers" shimmers into being, its weird syncopations and meandering themes at odds but finally melting into each other. A saxophone adds a low, moody note to proceedings further adding to the complexity and miraculous coherence of what's happening on stage. This is live music and its meant to be all ragged and rough-edged right? Certainly this Remember Remember are far from either. At various points on his skittish progress around the stage playing virtually every instrument – and indeed non-instrument – he can find, Graeme Ronald points a recorder into a curious box of effects or summons up Pokemon samples which are then intriguingly delivered via a mobile phone laid against a guitar pick up. At others he is crouched over effect pedals, conducting the band with a raised hand behind his back. If this all sounds very strange, it's because frankly it is. A new track “Galaxy Ripple” begins in tribal fashion, with calypso sounds crashing into woodblock percussion before a thunder of bass enters the fray. There are elements of Stereolab's coldly neurotic euro-drone buried here in the jagged bass lines and spiralling guitars too. The set ends in a distant tumult of noise, with most of the band leaving the stage while Ronald remains to manipulate the roar of feedback and Joanne Murtagh's glockenspiel still echoes serenely through the chaos and storm, leaving the audience in rapture. It had been quite a night for Remember Remember.

In some ways this was a night of contrasts, with Monoganon's sprawling pyschadelic folk a world away from Remember Remember's glacial, slow-burning epics. However all of tonight's acts share an outsider spirit of experimentalism and a sense of being on the margins of their chosen field. To get them all together on the same bill should perhaps not have worked on paper at all, but happily it certainly did tonight.


23 June 2012

We've Got It Covered #105


I don't know about you, but this last week has been pretty damn knackering. On Monday night I was out seeing King Creosote, The Pictish Trail and Randolph's Leap at the the Old Fruitmarket, then the following night I was out at the innaugural SAY Awards. Out on two school nights on the bounce has left me pretty damn exhausted, as trying to fit all of this music malarkey into real life ain't all that easy. So I feel as if I have been chasing my tail all week, thankfully though we have a pretty chilled out weekend planned so as to recuperate. If the weather brightens up a bit then we'll hopefully be heading over to The Hidden Lane Festival for a bit, then tomorrow the plan is to stick some of these awesome posters around Glasgow. Hopefully after that I'll be able to pop along to Oran Mor for the West End Festival Closing Party. If you haven't already seen the line up, it's pretty much a fantasy line up of great Scottish artists. If you don't believe me then check this out for a line up


Acoustic Stage in the Whisky Bar    
Apples of Energy 3.30- 4.00pm   
Wounded Knee 4.15- 4.45pm   
The Dirty Beggars 5.00- 5.30pm  

Venue
Doors Open 4pm   
Gav Prentice 4.20- 4.50pm   
Olympic Swimmers 5.10- 5.50pm   
John Knox Sex Club 6.10- 6.50pm   
RM Hubbert 7.10- 7.55pm   
Withered Hand 8.15- 9.00pm   
Aidan Moffat & Bill Wells 9.20- 10.20pm  

The Auditorium
Doors Open 4.30pm   
Monoganon 5- 5.30pm   
Miaoux Miaoux 5.50- 6.30pm   
Three Blind Wolves 7.00- 7.45pm   
Remember Remember 8.15- 9.00pm   
We Were Promised Jetpacks 9.30- 10.30pm

Pretty damn good eh?! If you want further information on the gig, then just head on over to their Facebook events page or you could always pick yourself up a ticket in advance here. In anticipation of the gig, here's a couple of covers from two of the acts playing, the fabulous Monaganon and the award winning, Aidan Moffat & Bill Wells.

ENJOY!



Bill Wells and Aidan Moffat - Yellow Submarine (Beatles cover)


Monoganon - Across the Universe (John Lennon cover)

12 May 2012

We've Got It Covered #100


As seems to be the case with most things this week, I am running a little behind with my blog posts, but trust me this weeks cover version post is worth the wait. To celebrate the fact that this is my 100th 'We've Got It Covered' post, I thought it might be fun to ask one of my favourite artists to record something to mark this milestone. Last years, 'Songs To Swim To' album from Monoganon was undoubtedly once of the finest things to come out in 2011, I liked it that much that I even bought a record player purely so I could listen to the album on vinyl. I have been banging on to anyone who will listen to me about just how much I like this album. If you haven't heard it, you can download it for free from the nice folk at Winning Sperm Party.
So seeing as I was such a big fan of the album, I cheekily asked Monoganons', frontman John B McKenna if he might be up for recording a cover for me and I am pretty chuffed to say that he agreed. Rather than just record the one cover though, he took up the challenge and ran with it, recording three covers in all. I am saving one back for now to share with you all later in the year, but for now I can share with you Monoganon's cover of The Stooges 'I Wanna Be Your Dog' and Daniel Johnston's 'Walking The Cow', enjoy!

Monoganon - I Wanna Be Your Dog (The Stooges cover)

Monoganon - Walking the Cow (Daniel Johnston cover)

23 December 2011

40 Festive Tunes For Y'all


Normally on a Saturday I like to post a cover version or two, but seeing as it's fast approaching Christmas Eve and I am sure most of you are starting to get into the festive spirit I thought it might be a fun idea to post up a few festive tunes. A couple of songs ended up turning into many many hours of searching through my music collection to bring you a whopping forty Christmas songs from an array of Scottish artists. I guess this is as good as a time as any to wish all of the folk that frequent this site a very Merry Christmas, it genuinely means a lot to me that you choose to put up with me and my ramblings. I hope Santa's good to you all, Lloyd x

1. Monoganon - Torso In The Snow

2. Sugar Crisis - Unwrap Your Heart

3. The Second Hand Marching Band - My Gift Is Waiting

4. A Band Called Quinn - Snowblind

5. Ambulances - The True Meaning Of Christmas

6. Drunk Mule - Feels Like Christmas

7. The Stormy Seas - The Christmas Before Last

8. Neil Milton - Last Christmas

9. Snow Patrol - When I Get Home For Christmas

10. Washington Irving - Silent Night

11. De Rosa - Under The Stairs (Christmas Reverie)

12. Mitchell Museum - Stop the Cavalry

13. Camera Obscura - Little Donkey

14. Frightened Rabbit - It's Xmas So We'll Stop

15. The Last Battle - Once Upon A Boxing Day

16. Julia and the Doogans - Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas

17. Woodenbox - The Christmas Song

18. The Recovery Club - Silent Night

19. Frightened Rabbit - Cheap Gold

20. Arab Strap - Xmas Baby Please Come Home

21. Frightened Rabbit-Walking In The Air

22. Belle & Sebastian - O Come, All Ye Faithful

23. Campfires in Winter - Christmas Song

24. Dogs Die In Hot Cars - Christmas

25. How to Swim - Sleighbells (Christmas Makes Me Blue)

26. Teenage Fanclub - Christmas Eve

27. Mogwai - Christmas Song

28. The Plimptons - Christmas All Over This Town

29. El Dog - Let It Snow, Let It Snow, Let It Snow

30. Esperi - Snowman

31. Miaoux Miaoux - Snow

32. Mike Nisbet - Snow Me In

33. Withered Hand - Its A Wonderful Lie

34. The Belle Hops - A Belle Hops Christmas Song

35. The Phantom Band - Silent Howling Night

36. Abagail Grey - Winter

37. Idlewild - Mistletoe and Wine

38. Malcolm Middleton - We're All Going To Die (Live at Homegame)

39. Rachel Sermanni - Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas

40. The Scottish Enlightenment - God Rest You Merry Gentlemen

13 December 2011

Peenko's Albums of 2011

It's the moment you've really not been waiting for, yes folks, it's time for me to share with you all my favourite albums of the past twelve months. I fully appreciate that what I say doesn't really matter all that much and nor should it, but hey indulge me a little. This is now the fourth year that I have found myself compiling these lists. Back in 2008 and 2009 I came up with a Top 50 for each year which just seems insane to me these days. This year I have stuck with a top ten, mainly because I didn't want to bore you all to death. This of course means that I have missed out a lot of stuff, including King Creosote & John Hopkins, Come on Gang!, Metronomy, Indian Red Lopez and The Black Keys (which came in that bit too late). Also, I didn't really think it would be fair to include any Olive Grove releases in my choices, I wouldn't want any of them to think that they're not my favourite baby. Anyway without further a do, here's my top ten albums of 2011...



10. The Shivers - More

When it comes to releases from the Fence stable, it's usually a straight bet that you're going to be getting something fairly folky. However, with this release from New York duo, The Shivers, we got something quite different from the norm. What with the majority of Fence's back catalogue being made up of folk based music, The Shivers sixth album, but first for Fence, is a no holds barred rock n roll record. One minute you feel that you're listening to The Strokes, then The Velvet Underground and then Tom Waits. Every time I listen to this album it grows on me more and more. Full of vitality and raw emotion, I can see why Fence were so keen to add them to their ranks.

The Shivers - Love Is In The Air


9. John Knox Sex Club - Raise Ravens

Being a man who loves his catchy tunes, The John Knox Sex Club wouldn't usually be the kind of band that I would find myself listening to much, but listen I did. Raise Ravens is a dark unsettling album full of raw Scottish emotion, at no point does it ever let you settle into any kind of comfort zone. It's a record that will continue to challenge your emotions and I fucking love it.

John Knox Sex Club - Above Us The Waves


8. King Post Kitsch - The Party's Over

So how do you critique the work of someone you now consider to be a friend, well in King Post Kitsch's case I don't feel I have to as I loved his music well before we ever met. Much of his debut album, 'The Party's Over', is made up of older songs that featured in his earlier EPs, which I guess makes me love them even more as they're songs that I have treasured as my own (I am still taking unjustified credit rights for being the one to 'discover' his music). With the possibility of live shows in the new year, plus some other potential projects on the go, keep your eye on King Post Kitsch as he's got plenty more tricks up his sleeve.

King Post Kitsch - Fante's Last Stand

7. Martin John Henry - The Other Half Of Everything

Out of all of the albums that came out this year, this was the one that I had been most looking forward to, and it didn't disappoint. The demise of Martin's old band De Rosa was a real kick in the teeth, their two albums Mend and Prevention rank in my eyes as being some of the finest records to have ever come out of Scotland. So with the release of The Other Half Of Everything, Martin had some pretty massive expectations to live up. Thankfully though he delivers the goods and then some. Scotland may well have lost one their greatest bands, but in turn we have gained one hell of a songwriter.

Martin John Henry - Span


6. Sparrow & The Workshop - Spitting Daggers



I remember reading a review in Uncut of Spitting Daggers shortly after it came out, in which the reviewer pretty much slated the whole album. Having just bought the album that day I knew what a load of old pish they were talking, as this is one hell of an amazing album. Their debut album Crystal Falls was impressive, but this really feels like a massive step up in them progressing as a band. Snakes In The Grass, the lead single from the album is by far and away the greatest song I have heard in 2011. If you don't believe me then check out this video then come back and apologise. Also, for the record I cancelled my Uncut subscription very shortly after that review.

Sparrow & The Workshop - Our Lady Of The Potatoes

5. The Antlers - Burst Apart

I bet you were starting to think that this list would completely taken over by Scottish bands, which kind of makes sense as I so rarely find the time to listen to anything that doesn't have a touch of 'Scot' about it. For The Antlers though I am always willing to make an exception to this rule. Having first gotten into the band through their last album, Hospice, which I liked a lot, I was genuinely surprised by just how good Burst Apart really is. Having heard them being played countless times on Marc Riley's 6Music show, I now have the album etched into my brain and I feel a lot better for it.

The Antlers - Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out

4. Emily Scott - I Write Letters I Never Send

One of the things that really stood out for me as I looked back over my previous albums of the years lists, was the lack of female singers. With Sparrow & The Workshop and Emily Scott featuring highly this year, hopefully this years choices will go some way to rectifying this oversight on my part. I think I have been pretty vocal about the albums that I felt disappointed by this year, Bon Iver being the main one, the other being St. Vincent's album. Thankfully though I had Emily Scott's 'I Write Letters I Never Send' which more than made up for it. It's an album that I happily find myself getting lost in, it's surprising just how enjoyable one woman and a ukulele can really be.

Emily Scott - I'd Hardly Know


3. Beerjacket - The White Feather Trail

I must admit that in comparison to my fellow Scottish bloggers I was a bit behind the game in getting into Beerjacket. In fact until we got him to record a Peenko session back in March, I'd never actually seen him live. Having witnessed the live experience in such intimate surroundings just added to the experience, which I guess in turn made me love The White Feather Trail all the more. Out of everything he's recorded to date,I think this stands way above it all.

Beerjacket - Eggshells

2. Monoganon - Songs To Swim To

The best things in life are free - try telling that to a ten year old kid who's asked for a new XBox for his Christmas. However, in the case of Monoganon's Songs To Swim To, the best things really are free. The album which is out on super sexy vinyl, is also free to download from Winning Sperm Party's website. I fucking love this record, so much so that I went and bought the bloody thing on vinyl and I still don't own a record player (I'm working on that though).

Monoganon- Eternal See You Soon

1. Adam Stafford - Build a Harbour Immediately

There can be only one, or so the bloke in Highlander said. In 2011 there really is no real debate as to what my favourite of this year would be, Adam Stafford's Build A Harbour Immediately won this race back in January. Since then nobody else has really had any sort of a look in. Putting on Adam's album launch alongside my partner in crime Jim 'Ayetunes' at our last AvP gig, was one of the highlights for me of this year, as I was honoured to be in anyway connected with something so good. It's an album that lures you in with promises of indie pop magic, before descending into full on fucking loop pedal craziness and somehow it all fits together perfectly. If you do one thing with your Christmas money this year, invest yer pennies in a copy. I promise you, it won't disappoint.

Adam Stafford - A Temple of The Holy Ghost

12 November 2011

We've Got It Covered #76

It's amazing how a morning of CBeebies (kids TV) can turn your brain to mush, once again I find myself with various kids theme tunes stuck in my head. It used to be that I'd find myself spending my days with the latest hipster tunes stuck in my head, nowadays my earworms tend to be more along the lines of the Zingzillas or Chuggington theme tunes (if you don't know what I am talking abut, don't ask). I guess what I am trying to say is that nowadays it's a bit more tricky for me to have the chance to listen to as much music as I once used to. Then again I used to listen to a helluva lot of music, it's just that the real life restricts these kind of things.
Fuck, I'm rambling again, sorry, sleep deprivation does that to me...
This week has been a bit of a crazy one, on Sunday night I got my first chance to visit the BBC Scotland building as part of The Moth & The Mirror's entourage* for their Radio One Session. Then on Monday I put on a gig at Mono with The Shivers, Randolph's Leap and Where We Lay Our Heads, which was a hell of a lot of fun. Thanks to everyone that came out on a cold Monday evening, I am pretty sure you'll agree it was worth it. For those of you who didn't make it along, you can read a review of the gig here.
This week coming also looks like it could be a good un, on Tuesday night myself and a few of my fellow bloggers are going along to a seminar being put on by Universal. Then hopefully if I can persuade one of them to come with me, we'll get ourselves down to Stereo to catch St Vincent, followed by Monoganon, at the Old Hairdressers. Which in a roundabout way brings me to this weeks cover version which comes from Monoganon and their cover of The Baptist Generals 'Ay Distress'. If you like what you hear get yourself along to the Old Hairdressers (across from Stereo) on Tuesday for their free gig. Right I think that's enough rambling for one day, hope you like the tune...

Monoganon - Ay Distress (Baptist Generals cover)

* by entourage, I meant just me

11 March 2011

Friday Freebies


As so many folk complained a couple of weeks back when I had to miss a week of Freebies, I am typing this up on a Wednesday which is a bit unorthodox for me as it means I'll probably miss a tonne of good stuff out. Fear not though as that wee annoying bunny eared fecker will duly point them out. I do have good reason to have an excuse as we put on the latest Peenko session last night, which we will hopefully be bringing to you shortly. Anyway, lets get this show on the road and get on with this week freebies.

Monoganon
This could quite possibly be the greatest freebie I have ever posted, I shit you not. Yes, in the past I've posted links to some pretty amazing free EPs and singles, but this is a while album and it's fucking amazing. The album is called 'Song's To Swim To' and it is already one my favourite albums of 2011, I still can't quite fathom that they're giving it away for free.

FOUND
Alas all good things must come to an end, by my calculations this weeks FOUND freebie will be our last a their amazing new album 'factorycraft' is due on Monday. They'll also be celebrating the release with a gig at the Captains Rest on the same day. Personally I can't wait, hopefully I'll see a few of your beautiful faces there too. As for the freebie, you'll find it here, just mind and buy the album you won't regret it.

Robin Pecknold
Robin Pecknold of Fleet Foxes fame recorded three acoustic songs a couple weeks ago in LA with his friend Noah and he was kind enough to share them with us all. One is a duet with Ed Droste from Grizzly Bear, one is just a new solo jam, and the last one is a cover.

Ghost Pants
I don't really hide my liking of Ghost Pants, for those of you who haven't been paying attention the band originally started as the solo project of Dananananaykroyd drummer Paul Carlin. They're now a four piece and I was even lucky enough to have them as my first guinea pigs when we had our first ever live Peenko sessions back last year. You can watch the videos and download the recordings at the top left hand-side of the screen there. Having given away numerous EPs and singles, they're now offering their new release 'Error b/w Hit' as a pay what you want scenario. So if you're conscience can take it you can download it for free here.

Song of Return

Having risen from the ashes of Union of Knives, Craig Grant and his boys have regrouped and are making something of triumphant return under the guise of Song of Return. They apparently played a storming set at Tuts last Friday, a welcome return indeed, plus if you sign up to their mailing list they'll send you a couple of free MP3s.

Admiral Fallow
Their amazing debut album, 'Boots Met My Face', is set for a re-release at the end of this month in a plush new sleeve, if you haven't already got a copy then get that sorted. The updated version of the album includes new song 'The Sad Clown Cast', to make up for all of those folk that have already bought the album they've made the song free to download.

Trapped In Kansas
Ayr's finest, Trapped In Kansas have posted up three acoustic version of their songs for free download on their Soundcloud page. Sounding good boys, sounding very very good.

Battle for 2nd Place
The Glasgow four piece recently recorded an acoustic version of their song 'Damage that you've Done' for Balcony TV in Dublin. To mark the performance the band have made this song and current single 'Say it ain't So' available for free download from their website. While you're at it, if you sign up to their mailing list they'll send you a download link for their song 'Sense of Self.

Wild Beasts
If you go and click 'like' on Facebook, Wild Beasts will give you a free download of their new song 'Albatross,' the first single from their forthcoming album 'Smother'.

Okkervil River
Stereogum have a wee exclusive free download of new Okkervil River song 'Wake and Be Fine', just follow the link.

Datavus
Originally from Ontario, Canada, Datavus frontman Danen Francis Sloan relocated to Edinburgh and formed this exciting new indie-folk outfit. Their single 'All Stands Still' is free to download on their Bandcamp, if this song is an indication of what's to come then they're certainly going to be ones to watch out for.

The Strangers Almanac
I must admit that since The View broke through to the mainstream, that I have been naive enough to tar all bands from Dundee with same brush. Only now do I feel realise the error of my ways, recently we have had an abundance of talent to emerge from the City of Discovery, including Olive Grove's very own Esperi, the rock-tastic Pensioner and now we have another wee gem in the form of The Strangers Almanac. Their single 'Whale Watching For Beginners' is a joyous little number, that harks back to the 60s & 70s with it's chilled out vibe, lovely stuff.

Art Brut
You can download new Art Brut song, Unprofessional Wrestling, here in exchange for an email address, a Facebook 'like' or your soul.

Young and Lost Club
There are an array of free downloads up for grabs on Young and Lost Club's website, including tracks from ExLovers, Young The Giant Noah & The Whale and Gold Fields.

Three Trapped Tigers
The band are giving away a track taken from their forthcoming album 'Route One Or Die'. Get 'Cramm' here in exchange for your email address.

02 March 2011

Scots Way-Hay #49 Monoganon


In a recent conversation with Johnny Lynch aka the Pictish Trail, he described the new Monoganon album as "Mind-blowing!". I really couldn't argue with that summation, as 'Songs To Swim To', their forthcoming long player is one of the most stunning releases I have heard all year. Fronted by John B McKenna, who at the tender age of 22, has already established himself as a bit of a stalwart in the Scottish music scene. Having recently released their new album on vinyl, the band are now set to give the album away as a free download. Yes, they're giving it away for nothing. Fuck all. Zero pennies. They're clearly insane, as they've crafted a classic album that has completely caught me off guard. Quite simply, wow...



Would you care to introduce yourself?

Hello, my name is John, I'm 22 years old, I enjoy photography and music. I work in a bar (Stereo) and in my spare time I play guitar, go out trips with a photography club (called SNAP) to different locations in Scotland (We've been going a year and we only experienced bad weather once, we went to Mecca Bingo to get out the rain and entered a game for £1.50, an old woman beside us won £500 and gave us £20, so we bought another booklet with pound signs in our eyes and ideas of funding albums and studying a masters which slowly dwindled to the realisation of 'we've been in Mecca Bingo for 3 hours now, lets gtf out of here.'


How would you describe the music you make?

It's a question I often ask myself, not because I believe it's indescribable, but because I don't have the correct vocabulary and I don't care enough to research the correct definition or genre. I usually say "it's pop music"... wait a couple of seconds, gauge their reaction, then say, "but it's not really just pop," and blabber a wee bit until the other person starts speaking again. I guess it's experimental while maintaining pop structures, and it's not folky but has that elemental feel maybe, and it's not rock music but it has some stones, even if they are small, and only appear every-so-often.


How did you come together as a band?

I met Andrew through mutual acquaintances and remember him playing guitar at a party and thinking that he was pretty good, later realised he was a lefty playing a right-handed guitar, I think I asked him then and there if he'd be up for playing and then maybe 2 years later he came to my bit to jam and write a part for a song I was having nae luck with writing. (song is called "flesh" and it's on winningspermparty.com inside the release "Monoganon - Elephant Pregnancy"). Andrew plays with the band Lyons who are amazing if anyone needs something fresh to check out.

Colin started work in stereo with me ages ago and he offered his drum skills to me upon hearing some songs, and down the line I think he gradually started to have an appreciation for the music we were making beyond what he initially heard. He offered us his musical know-how and his knowledge, anything you know is common knowledge, everything he knows is Colin Knowledge.

Rory offered his guitar skills after I played a gig with The Ballad of Mable Wong. I was coy at first as I fucking love the wong and was all swooning to those skills being offered. I came to the realisation that the music I was writing was not music for one person to play, so I enlisted these Monoga-brethren to help realise the realisation into reality. So we played some gigs during 2009 (our first was with David Grubbs and people seemed to enjoy it so we continued) we recorded (Elephant Pregnancy) with winningspermparty.com's Duncan Young in his basement. We released that for free on wsp as part of a Christmas mp3 hamper with Blood of the Bull, Orzelda, and Ballad of Mable Wong!

We were awarded Scottish Arts Council funding in 2010 and we started practising and recording "Songs To Swim To". We played the Winning Sperm 10 band studio party at the Practise Pad in April, which was good for realising some aspects of the songs we were about to record.

We also recorded songs without having played them together at all, Colin and I just played guitar and drums together on song 6 "Lullabies for the sedated" Andrew was forced to improvise in real-time as he recorded the nylon guitar in Duncan's close. I wish I had kept him saying "what should I do here" in the song. In the last song we had our pal Tim (Davidson) play lap steel in one take over it, these additions and alot of the improvised material remained intact in the album and it wouldn't have been the same without them.

We recorded piano in Carluke at my mate Christopher's family home in May, while he was out painting the fence (he wants some recognition for this but it wouldnt fit on the thank yous of the album - as in he wants recognition for painting the fence). While in Carluke we went to a resevoir I used to hang about at, and recorded 4 takes of song 4 "needle green" - each with a theme of fire, wind, earth or water. After recording I went away interrailing and went to primavera. I recorded many samples and used the most significant ones on the album for instance: An ambulance siren in Amsterdam that went double-time as the doppler effect happened as it passed by me, a single ribbet of a frog in the Czech Republic, the insane echo of a man's whistle in the nazi-built olympic stadium in berlin, and the reversed sound of a seagull that sounds like a seagull backwards and forwards. We mixed the album carefully during a very rainy July, although everyone thinks it was sunny because June was a scorcher while I was away and they were all still doped up on the vitamins, I was on a downer to be back in Scotland to be honest. The album got mixed with samples added on the very last day in some fucking palava to do with sending to Colin's phone, him sending to a computer, sending it to the mainframe. Only the most important samples made it through in this process.

Most recently we have been practising with Susan Bear (Vendor Defender) on bass and it has been going great with her, we always shared the bass frequency in the past, its great to have a dedicated pilgrim of bass guitar!


How did you start out making music?

I bought an 8 track with the intention of making songs when I was 16, I had mucked about with plugging my guitar straight into audacity for long enough to know that I needed a bigger run. 8 track provided this. I have many many recordings of some really teenage stuff packed in a box somewhere, never to resurface hopefully. As I entered Paisley University studying Music Technology I decided that being honest about teenage life was adding insult to injury and wrote and recorded some songs that were meant to be about something else. Side A of the album is these songs. I planned to bury them after playing them for a year or so, but was playing so much that I just went through them all in a cycle seeing which ones were best. After recording Elephant Pregnancy using only one of these cusp-teenage songs I decided to re-record some other songs in a recording quality and style that I wasn't ashamed of. Side B of the album is songs I wrote most recently of the album.


What process goes into the way you write songs?

I'm playing guitar a lot for my own enjoyment, I don't have any technique as to what sticks or not, most of the time I go out to write a song that serves a purpose. Track 7 - To Glass In The Blast, was a song to relax/send people to sleep... that's why it's at the end of the album. However I have heard of someone who listens to music while they sleep, and says that only that song wakes them up. I like the idea of songs having a use. I like putting on certain types of music in the morning, or in a bath, or cooking, so this thought-process is involved when writing. As for lyrical content, I always write down funny ways of saying things, or phrases that hold a genuine emotion, or phrases that will age well, or phrases that will age badly in a good way - Melt all that stuff down when I find a common cause for them.


Who are your big musical influences?

I can only speak personally here, and I feel I was subjected to a certain group of music before I knew what was going on. Bruce Springsteen, Fleetwood Mac, The Beatles and all others on that popular vein were very apparent all through my life. Discovered my peer's musical companions at around 12 which were Nirvana, Radiohead and Blur. After this I tagged along on the discovery of friends being the Pixies, Fugazi and later Rilo Kiley. In between here something interesting happened, where my friend and I went to see Fugazi at the Barrowlands to see them play supported by Eska, Colin's band at the time. This coincidence was patched up over time between Colin and I. Anytime after this the musical cycle entered fields such as Tom Waits, all the fields of my childhood taste, TV on the Radio, Deerhunter, Grizzly Bear (supported them in 2007), local acts such as Frightened Rabbit, Twilight Sad, Errors, We Were Promised Jetpacks, Over The Wall, Lyons (Andrew's main band), Fur Hood, Ballad of Mable Wong (Rory's band), Uncle John and Whitelock, Plaaydoh (winningspermparty.com old favourite) and more.

What kind of influence do you feel that where you come from has had on the music you create?

Carluke seems strange to me now, I can't convey it in any special way at all. My experience was living right on the edge of town with countryside one way (great childhood spent in the fields making treeswings, fires and walking) and a heavy town-vibe the other way. I still think in small town terms, it fucks with my mind when I see huge spans of houses (5 persons to a house average) plastering the countryside of Europe, I can't even picture it to be honest, I just have a sense of it being big and fucking terrifying but lets not think about it eh? Lets just go down to the crown for a pint.

What can people expect to see/hear from your live shows?

I've been filming a lot of stuff recently to show at the live show. Macro-fruits, fungus, shadows, weaves and patterns found in the macroworld, mixed with footage of porridge cooking and breakfasts, landscapes, pixels and colours. Stuff to tag the mind along while people watch a performance of the music from the album. I have plenty of bad chat to offer at live shows too. Live shows in the past have seen Colin interrupting my verbal diarrhoea by counting-in to the next song, I like this, I'm glad someone had my back.


Has there been a particular gig that has stood out for you so far (good or bad)?

I played with Twilight Sad and Frightened Rabbit in 2008 and I think I realised then that I couldn't keep playing as a singer/songwriter for what I was playing. I played solo with Sun Kil Moon around that time and realised there is a place for solo performers. I played with Jeffrey Lewis around that time and realised that solo performances that are received well can leave you feeling great. Personally a favourite gig was with the band in November with Mr Peppermint, Ballad of Mable Wong, Make Love and Lyons in November 2009. A great gig we organised ourselves and great bands played, and the audience was attentive and we all had a laugh.


What are your plans for the rest of the year and beyond? Do you have any new releases planned for any time soon?

We have plans for more albums. We will release songs to swim to for free on winningspermparty.com at the album launch in Mono on the 7th of March! We play the Fence Homegame this year in May, and plenty more. "Monoganon's got legs" as Rory said about the stupid name I came up with in ma bed splicing words together.



Monoganon - Eternal See You Soon

Monoganon launch their new LP 'Songs To Swim To' with a free gig at Mono on Monday, 7 March, 8pm. The album will be available to download for free from Winning Sperm Party shortly after this date.

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