Obviously there aren't meaningful lines between
dance, pop, and indie-rock anymore, since more and more
instrument-focused acts born as rock bands are leaning on the techniques
of electronic music production to modernize their sound. But sometimes
that transition works the other way around too, when a traditional
DJ-culture act starts to focus more on the songwriting process typical
of rock bands. Take Digitalism, the German electro/house team: their
2011 single "2 Hearts," a careering, guitar-driven,
post-neo-disco-punk-indie/whatever track may be the most exuberantly
danceable "song" (as opposed to a "track," mind you) of the year.
That little number is not an aberration of this summer's widely diverse, one-stop-genre-shopping record, I Love You, Dude
(Kitsune Music), which also lays down screaming club bangers like
"Reeperbahn," atmospheric Air-like daydreams like "Just Gazin'," the
glitchy, chopped up beats of "Antibiotics," and the pulsing house
throw-downs of "Blitz," alongside the straight-up guitar-focused dance
rock of "Circles" and "Forrest Gump."
While they flirted with vocal song-oriented material on their 2007 debut Idealism,
Jens Moelle, one half the duo (with Ismail Tüfekci), explains on the
phone from Switzerland that some of those songs — the New Order-like (or
Cut Copy doing New Order, rather) pulse of "Pogo," or the Rapture-like
dirty basement dance punk of "I Want I Want" — were examples of them
already moving outside their comfort zone. Songwriting, as such, he
says, is something they wanted to improve upon this time around, while
producing it and recording it in a more polished electronic style.
"I
think the new album is song-based," Moelle explains. "We started as
DJs, did instrumental tracks, and ended up writing 'Pogo' and 'I Want I
Want,' full songs with a chorus and verse and everything, but I think
there's more of that on the new album. After the first album, we just
got into songwriting, and definitely wanted to do more of that stuff.
It's less garage band, a bit more electronic, a bit more what you'd call
indie, more proper songs. . . . In a way it is electronic sonically,
but also more indie as well, more dance stuff. For us, it was a natural
step. We've always had feet in both worlds, in a way."
They also set out to create a shift in dynamics and rhythm. On Idealism,
everything revolved around the standard, clubby 130 BPMs. Not so
anymore — tracks range from fast, to hard, to creepy and slow, to
thrashing. "We have more disparity now, in a way. We have the spectrum,
like all the songs are further apart from each other. Like when the Big
Bang happened everything was really close; now there's lot of space
between everything."
The duo, who've
been back and forth to the States numerous times in recent years for
festivals like Hard, Coachella, and Lollapalooza, have noticed a
shifting tide in music here since their first visit around 2005. "People
are loosening up. I think in America, when we started coming over, it
was mostly electronic acts from Europe coming over and playing. Now the
US and Canada have their own artists and are really proud of that. There
are loads of very good, big domestic acts, and everyone is really
celebrating that, which is really nice to see. People are going
completely mental nowadays."
On their last visit for Hard Fest, he says, he
noticed a change in Americans' style choices as well. "It looks better
everywhere. It was funny to watch everyone be dressed up for proper rave
stuff when we came over last time. We had that already over in Europe."
Now we have it here too. I love that, dude.
DIGITALISM + DATA ROMANCE + AMERICAN ROYALTY | Paradise Rock Club, 969 Comm Ave, Boston | December 1 @ 8 pm | 18+ | $15 | 617.562.8800
DIGITALISM + DATA ROMANCE + AMERICAN ROYALTY | Paradise Rock Club, 969 Comm Ave, Boston | December 1 @ 8 pm | 18+ | $15 | 617.562.8800
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