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Sleep
and Release
February 18, 2003
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Aereogramme release their second full length lp in spring
2003. 'Sleep and Release' will surprise those new to the band
and will delight and confound those who are familiar with
the bands previous work.
We needed to create intense music," states Campbell,
"Whether it was intensely wild or intensely fragile.
We have no interest in slack-jawed, faux working-class posturing
or conceited, culturally aware post-irony. Its
got to be about hearts on sleeves not tongues in cheeks (arse
or otherwise)."
Glasgow, late nineties
Craig B., fresh from the
ashes of Ganger, called upon long time friend Campbell McNeil
to work on some ideas. In need of a drummer they found
satisfaction in one-time jazz percussionist Martin Scott.
Not chin strokers mind, but all proud to be beard wearers.
Recording came quickly and their first fruit was borne in
the shape of the Translations single on their own Babi-Yaga
label, selling out within weeks. A second single (Hatred)
followed thereafter, and that too was a success.
Noticed by Chemikal Underground as they slowly started to
grace stages around Glasgow in 2000, a relationship was quickly
developed and Aereogramme released the magnificent Glam Cripple
EP - the first outing of the labels new boutique imprint,
Fukd i.d.
Chemikal Underground simply had to work with Aereogramme on
a more permanent and loving basis. A deal was finally
concluded and the band retired to the studio to record their
magnum opus, A Story In White.
Aereogrammes debut album is a record that marries punishing
metal with sublime moments of beauty. It weaved aggression
and raw emotion into a new form, transforming calm into mayhem
and back again without any surface glitches. It gently
unfolds and envelops one completely by stealth. 'A Story In
White' was an unqualified triumph - LP of the month in Rock
Sound and featured in Kerrangs LPs of 2001 - and Matador
Records released the record in the Fall of 2001.
Following the release of 'A Story in White', Aereogramme embarked
on a number of adventures - two American tours, a string of
headlining dates across Europe & the UK as well as shows
with Idlewild and Anathema, and a bizarre firework incident
involving Wayne Coyne of the Flaming Lips.
Work on the follow-up to A Story In White was constrained
by touring and made awkward by living through it. Its
fair to say that six months of solid touring, upheavals in
our personal lives, ever increasing disillusionment with the
bullshit of this industry, had taken their toll
on the band. Couple this with the addition of a fourth member
which created a shift in the personal dynamic within the band
- causing us at least as many problems as it solved,
said Campbell.
The fourth man Iain Cook, a shadowy figure operating within
the confines of the film and TV soundtrack world, had always
been there but this was unknown to all but a few. Craig
holds otherwise, Other commitments had prevented Iain
from being in the band full-time, but it was becoming more
important for us to match the ferocity of our recordings on
stage.
Its fair to say that things were tense at the beginning
of recording 'sleep and release' and those problems started
on the road. Campbell explains further...It
gave rise to that most classic of rock ironies, feeling lonely
when your never alone. Everyone deals with this thing in their
own way - booze, drugs, exercise etc. The one uniform release
for us all was film and computer games. The recent (for us)
arrival of on the road dvds and computer games
offered us an unreal reality where we could safely communicate
with each other.
Aereogramme walked straight off a plane into CaVa studios
to work on this record. The imprint of dark films and
the clinical beauty of shoot-em ups loomed large.
The resultant effect, on record, is that there is natural
flow: a deeply cinematic structure - tracks move forward like
scenes in a film.
Craig maintains that, this record is just more intense
all round. On the first LP we put the most crazy song after
the quietest, which is quite hard for a lot of people to take
in. This time we have grouped songs together, and to us it
makes complete sense.
'Sleep and Release' is also a highly charged and political
record - the band are serious in their intent. Each
great civilisation in the history of humanity has been judged
by its artistic output as well as its progress scientifically
and politically great art defines progress. Put
simply a society that advocates the perpetual regurgitation
of culture is a society in its death throes. This terrifies
me when connected with current world events and there has
got to be something more to creating great music than how
well you can ape your dads record collection. Campbell.
In one particularly unsettling moment on Sleep and Release
a disjointed voice emanates from the speakers between A
Simple Process of Elimination and Older.
Craig: This is a total fluke but someone rang Martins
house during the last week of recording and left the message.
A wake up call to just how low people can get. I guess
its apt for this record - misery and joy share the same
confusing space sometimes.
Aereogramme should be celebrated for their breadth of vision.
They have made a truly great record - one that covers the
whole emotional spectrum.
Campbell's final thought
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We release our records on two of the coolest labels
(Chemikal Underground and Matador) on the planet. Europe think
we fucking rock. Stephen Malkmus thinks we fucking rock. John
Peel thinks we fucking rock. Ergo, we fucking rock!
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