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ALBUM OF THE YEAR 2006 |
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Chip - Die Band der Stunde !!! |
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Hot Chip began their
acclaimed 2004 debut Coming On Strong with heartfelt
advice and a warning, “Take care into the home”, before
taking you for a musical ride around their own. They
begin their astonishing sophomore record with a
different kind of warning: “FIRE IS HOT, STEEL CAN CUT
/GLASS WILL BREAK IF YOU’RE NOT … CAREFUL!”…Triumphant
and gloopy synths begin the frenetic and bewildering ‘Careful’,
giving way to rave rhythms, war drums, syrupy vocals,
computed crowd chants and a song celebrating balloons
and physical intimacy; the frenetic opening minutes of
this truly adventurous record.
‘Careful’ cuts through the listener and represents a
more confrontational sound for Hot Chip, usually found
only in their visceral live show. The confrontation is
echoed throughout the rest of the album, whose musical
inventiveness almost pokes fun at the caution in the
lyrics. Joe Goddard explains: “The completion of
‘Careful’ was a major turning point in the process of
making this album. I wanted it be a real departure from
the first album, but Alexis and I were worried that the
music we wanted to make was incompatible. Once we’d
managed to complete this track together, though, it
re-affirmed our belief that we could find common ground.”
Alexis Taylor and Joe Goddard began to work on the album
in earnest. Out of the tension of these sessions, with
the two songwriters / producers pulling against one
another, there eventually emerged some great moments of
beauty, laughter, love and slaughter. Where one man
cannot talk of his pain, another can record it. And then
fuck with it. Then you get Owen in to mash into the
guitar like nobody else. And while Felix is pushing
synthesizers through a ‘Machinedrum’, quick, record him
while he’s not looking, and Al can come over all Eno/Manzanera
- he’s got nimble fingers and vocal chords. It’ll work,
don’t worry. This became Hot Chip’s ‘creative process’.
And it really did work. But be careful, it's crazy in
there…
The Warning is an amalgamation of great songwriting and
forward-thinking pop-production. It’s an honest record –
emotionally and sonically, made by people exploring
sound in the warmth of home, not studio, and it is a
brittle pairing of voices which sing of LOVE, COLOURS,
LOSS, and WARNINGS. It is the only record you will hear
this year, which is brave enough to try and better all
of the best records of yesteryear and tomorrow. If you
want something which evokes the textures of Aphex Twin
recordings, Madlib’s sense of deranged hip-hop holiday,
the intimacy of Prince’s fantastically claustrophobic
parades, and more than merely the spirit of certain
wonderful Paul McCartney experiments in disco (watch out
EMI…), Hot Chip would recommend The Warning. It’s
cheaper than buying the Richard D James Album,
Madvillainy, Dirty Mind and McCartney II after all.
Of the title track, Joe explains: “‘The Warning’ comes
from a real love of 2-step garage rhythms and melodies…the
rhythmic devices used in programming garage appear
everywhere in Hot Chip, and I still find some garage
records to be amongst the funkiest and most soulful.
”While ‘The Warning’ insists that “Hot Chip will break
your legs, snap off your head” over a luxurious garage
beat, ‘Look After Me’ speaks plainly of the growing
distance between a couple, and acknowledges
vulnerability and the need for unequivocal support
between two people. Alexis: “Ever since seeing it on The
Box in the late 90s I had been hooked on Sparkle’s duet
with R Kelly, ‘Be Careful’. Eventually I tried to rip
off the chord structure, melody and mood to make the
beginnings of ‘Look After Me’. For the middle-eight
section’s descending chord progression I mimicked the
synth-line in Prince’s ‘If I Was Your Girlfriend’ almost
note for note. Joe heard what I thought was a take on
the modern r’n’b ballad to be more in keeping with an
old-fashioned soul classic of the Al Green ilk, and we
were soon adding plucked live violins and very soft
drumming.”
Somewhere between these unspoken ideas emerges an
incredibly personal Hot Chip song, tying the record
together at the centre and underpinning the album’s mood
of caution and warning. But it’s also a song that openly
borrows from other records in an attempt to make
something new, encapsulating the duality of the Hot Chip
sound, at once very “felt”, and very considered.
The bathos of Coming On Strong is more often than not
replaced by pathos in The Warning. ‘And I Was A Boy From
School’, a beautifully melancholy ballad of loss and
acceptance, is Hot Chip’s greatest pop moment so far –
wonderful in its simplicity; heartbreaking in its
honesty: “ We tried, but we didn’t have long, We tried
but we didn’t belong…”. But ‘Boy From School’ began life
as a Casio waltz, before looking towards the spirit of
Giorgio Moroder. Joe explains: “'I Feel Love' by Donna
Summer was in my mind. I thought if you could combine
that rhythmical power with a beautiful chorus then you
could make a dance record that would be much better than
most. In fact, the sound of the song is still very
gentle, and though I now realize that that is something
to be proud of, back then I wanted to compete with
people like the DFA.”
One of the most unusual aspects of ‘Boy From School’,
and Hot Chip in general, is the direct contrasting of
vocal styles, Alexis often taking the higher 'female'
lead, and Joe the lower, 'male' response, in a world
which recalls the classic soul or country and western
duets of the past, but is clearly somewhere stranger
altogether. And rather than rich harmonies, they create
a denser texture, singing in direct unison, leaving the
harmony to the instruments; the effect is quite unique.
The androgynous and yearning tone in Alexis’ vocal
performances, and the frailty and primitivism in certain
drum sounds, have reminded some listeners of Scritti
Politti or the Young Marble Giants, as much as the R
Kelly or Wookie tracks that inspire some of the music.
The space between conception and realisation is where
you find Hot Chip; and it's what makes them so
distinctive, so fascinating. That and the fact that they
are happy to leave imperfections in: “The idea of
including the inaccuracies that occur when people play
instruments in the song is extremely important to us. It
is the antithesis of a lot of modern record productions,
where every mistake is ironed out digitally. When I
think about the producers and songs that I really
cherish, I think that certain rash decisions or mistakes
in the playing or mixing are often the very things that
I love.”
Hot Chip have made quite a leap with The Warning, in
terms of sophistication and clarity. A deliberately
simple tune and lyric, such as ‘Colours’, transcends its
initial child-like innocence to seem gorgeous and,
somehow, profound. “I wanted to write lyrics as direct
as the ones you’d find in Kraftwerk songs. We’d just
seen them at Brixton Academy and I was struck by how
well they said something about motion or light, or
radioactivity, in so few words.” (Alexis) “For a while I
wanted this album to sound a lot like Can or Neu - I
wanted the propulsive force of the song to be powerful
but seem effortless and for the keyboard sounds to be
glistening and beautifully sculpted, in the way that
Kraftwerk make their instruments sound. We were after
simplicity and directness.” (Joe)
When Hot Chip started their album with a chorus that
confides: “The stories you told were awful /I hope that
they weren’t just artful, /I hope that you will be
careful”, you would be forgiven for thinking they could
be writing about their own music, giving you a new
warning. People have often mistaken what is at times an
opaque, and other times a transparent honesty for
something more sinister or ‘artful’ (God forbid, a sense
of humour !), and the irony of this is not lost on the
songwriters. But that is Hot Chip in a nutshell: musical
perverts who know how to tease you just right, who are
tender when you are just getting used to their brashness
and confidence.
As ‘The Warning’ says, ‘LET ME SPELL IT OUT FOR YOU’.
This time round, you may be able to tell that Hot Chip’s
tongues are deeper inside your cheeks than they are
embedded in their own.
Hot Chip also play live, they have toured with people
like LCD Soundsystem, Mylo, Stereolab & recently
Goldfrapp and played their own shows/tours too of
course. They will be doing stuff like that all year.
The Warning was recorded by Hot Chip at home.
Hot Chip are, Alexis Taylor, Joe Goddard, Al Doyle, Owen
Clarke and Felix Martin
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