JOHN FOXX & MOTOR
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MOTOR: ‘On 'Metamatic' you famously used the CR-78
drum machine. Do you think the album benefited from the exclusive use of one
drum machine?’
JOHN FOXX: ‘Oh yes –you got a real sonic identity
right away – just plug the drummer in and off you go.
There was a lot of bunk mythology about drums in those
days – bands routinely spent days getting a drum sound in studios. Used to
drive me nuts.
The CR78 was so brilliant, you could get down to the
serious business of sound mashing right away – plus you could put it through
lots of those little effects boxes that conventional engineers sneered at. They
read technical specs and had forgotten how to listen. But all the high spec
boxes were crap. Far too polite. It was
the wee cheap ones with the nasty sounds that were truly revolutionary.
At the time, the CR78 also seemed such a little box
that no one took it seriously. It was intended for cabaret work - so you didn’t have to pay a drummer and
carry a kit around. Not meant for anything significant.
Drums, on the other hand, were very serious - complex
and heavy, with a big skilled guy to hit them hard, loads of mystique -
specialist microphones all at different angles and mounted on specific stands– it
had all become a daft set of studio conventions. Like getting married is now - you
get coerced into spending twenty grand and giving all your friends and family a
two-week holiday. Totally unnecessary.
I remember thinking my way clear of it all by using something
I learnt in art school – the concept of relative scale. If you allow a thing
enough space, it can be as big as you like. So I gave the CR78 all the drum
space on the record. That gave it room to expand into a proper presence, rather
than being a wee add-on, and it also made Metamatic sound very different from
anything else around at the time.
Another quirky thing about that machine - it was a
very unhip, non-dancing but capable Japanese programmer’s idea of western
rhythms, from a cabaret/ lounge point of view - with fundamentally inaccurate
waltz, samba, bossa nova, disco and rock thrown in. Pretty wild. You couldn’t
fail to get something challenging out of that.’
MOTOR: ‘Do you think it’s an advantage or disadvantage
for electronic musicians today have an overwhelming amount of soft and hardware
instruments available to them?’
JOHN FOXX: ‘Another valuable thing I learnt in art
school is that limitations can be a positive advantage. If you can do absolutely
anything, then your work will most likely be a mess.
Operating from self imposed strictures breeds a
certain elegance that people seem to instinctively
recognize. I guess it’s a relief from
the real world, which is a jumble of incoming incoherence.
Compare walking into a minimalist room to a teenage
bedroom. Or try putting all your favorite food onto one plate - it doesn’t make
a good meal.’
MOTOR: ‘Many of electronic producers today are less
musically trained, but much more computer savvy than say the 80's. Everything today
fits neatly into genres. These genres become big and then die in the space of a
few years. Do you think the lack of human soul and musicality on much of the
new electronic/dance music contributes to its short lifespan?’
JOHN FOXX: ‘Things haven’t changed much. I clearly
remember a period in the 1960’s when there was a new dance every week –the
Watusi, the Frug, the Twist, the Hitchhiker etc – and a new single to go with
it - we don’t remember most of em at
all.
I think there is room for both long and short-term
stuff - Like the difference between newspapers, magazines and novels – all
reading matter, but each aiming at different kinds of longevity or immediacy.
Musicality is vital - but not conventional musicality
which is built on observing conventions that can efficiently disable you from engaging
with anything truly new.
As for Soul – I think that might mean an ability to
make what you have available transmit what you want to communicate.’
MOTOR: ‘How do you feel about soft synths - do you
think they capture the original synths they aim to emulate? I was always a
big fan of the Pro One and the Arp 2600 for example, but I rarely incorporate
them in my songs because of the pain of controlling them and recalling
sounds/presets. Sampling these synths creates loop based music, but loses the
fluidity of the original synths.’
JOHN FOXX: ‘Yes it’s interesting. You can’t shift a sample
too much, and softies are useful up to a point but they are too nice to get really
rough. If you want something truly mucky and disobedient, then get an old
analogue machine. It’s back to that careful engineering and technical spec
stuff - the bad behaviour gets ironed out – but that’s what you really want. That’s
the whole point. The sound always has to feel bigger than its medium, otherwise
it will seem too feeble and passive.
Pushing the envelope is utterly vital to any useful
kind of music. Otherwise it just lies down contentedly on the sofa and gets fat
on Cowell.’
MOTOR: ‘If you were to record 'Metamatic' today, would
you still use the same instruments?’
JOHN FOXX: ‘Well, I guess I wouldn’t record Metamatic
today – Then I was trying hard to write about what I was living through, while
everyone else seemed to be trying to make the ultimate punk or prog or pop
record.
I found it wasn’t easy writing about the present,
because of course its always unrecognized at the time. But give it ten years or
so and everyone begins to go “oh yea – now I get it”.
It’s the driving forward using the rear view mirror
syndrome - that’s what humans do. We’re going forward in time but can’t see
ahead at all. All its possible to see is the past. So we don’t recognize the
future until it’s gone. Then we know what it was. By then, of course, we’re
into another unrecognized present. Hilarious, makes you wonder how we ever got
out of the swamp.
I guess Metamatic is getting recognized now, because
we have that particular past finally in view for the first time. Took about
thirty years and I don’t have enough lifespan to do it all again. It’ll have to
be the Watusi next.’