Sarah Tembeckjian

Interview: Peter Kernel

Sarah Tembeckjian

Mixing bluntly punk vocals with experimental instrumentation, Swiss-Canadian duo Peter Kernel have come up with a refreshingly unique and energetic brand of art-pop that very nearly defies classification. Their most recent LP, Thrill Addict, certainly lives up to its name by frantically bouncing around between aggressive, playful, and contemplative atmospheres, and manages to do so without a single track feeling out of place.

We recently caught up with Aris Bassetti, one half of the group (absent Barbara Lehnhoff), via email. He filled us in on Peter Kernel's roots, their take on the creative process, and the perils of writing music with a significant other.

ThrdCoast: What are your respective musical backgrounds?

Aris Bassetti: Musically we grew up very differently. I hated music until 1991. Till then i only listened to dialect comedies on the national radio and when the music started I turned off the radio. Then I discovered the song “Gypsy Woman” by Crystal Waters, and I thought that maybe music wasn’t so bad after all. Luckily just a few days later I discovered Nirvana, and I took off and perhaps I even went a bit too far - by the age of 19 I only listened to experimental noise projects like Merzbow, KK Null, Ruins, Masonna… and considered other music null. Barbara grew up in the middle of nothing in Canada, and on the local radio station they didn’t play any electronic or dance or techno music, only rock and roll. It was natural for her to become a "punk rocker" teenager. Then throughout the years she discovered other alternative rock bands. When we met I was still listening to a lot of noise stuff and she really enjoyed it. When we started playing together we evolved our listenings and now we love a lot of different kinds of music. Lately we listen to a lot of meditation and classical music.

TC: What’s it like working together? What’s your process from start to finish?

AB: Working together with your partner is the best and the worst thing ever. By “working” I mean spending 24 hours a day, 7 days a week doing the same things together all the time. It’s great when everything goes well and we’re happy and motivated, but it gets really hard and dangerous when things start going badly because there’s no one waiting at home to reassure you - we’re sad and angry and the same time. And often we have to fight for everything we do, decide, and create - but this is our power, because after these fights we’re left with something we both love and we’re both ready to defend.

TC: Your music is quite theatrical and attention-grabbing. Is this something you strive for during the writing and recording process?

AB: I think that it’s something coming from our Italian roots mixed with our cinematic skills. We love when music narrates something, even without the voices. And at the same time it’s something unconscious. We write the music we write first off to exorcise our fears, anxiety, or anything that disturbs our existence, and probably a lot of people live the same emotional states. That’s why our music receives attention. Maybe it’s liberating.

TC: How would you describe your music to someone who’s never heard it before?

AB: I would say that it’s passionate but simple music done by two people that are working hard to live an exciting life. Taking risks and making mistakes.

TC: What are some of your major influences, together and separately?

AB: It’s impossible to separate what we are since we’re together all the time. Really, all the time. The influences are many, but mostly don’t come from music. We’re very influenced by our lives, our relationship, our friends and families, things we saw, we tried… all those things that touched us in one way or another. We’re like sponges.

TC: What do you want audiences to take away from your most recent album? What should we be listening out for?

AB: We would love to know that our music can be part of people’s important moments. Imagine how great it is to know that your music is the soundtrack to a kiss, a victory, a night out, a vacation, a workout or a dance.

Review: Foxes in Fiction - Ontario Gothic

Sarah Tembeckjian

Imagine you’re in an empty theater. You’ve just come in from the daylight and it takes a minute for your eyes to adjust; but soon after the door closes behind you, you realize that you’re in complete darkness. Blinking and feeling your way down the aisle, you search for the stage and climb up. The darkness is thick, almost palpable. It engulfs you as you become aware of your breath, feeling your chest rise and fall.

Warren Hildebrand of Foxes in Fiction has delivered another powerful album with Ontario Gothic, and like darkness in an empty theater, the sound is overwhelmingly enveloping and meditative. It allows you to focus and relinquish expectation. It invites you to be still. However, the aesthetic itself isn’t dark at all. Hildebrand paints with vivid colors on this album, starting small and using sweeping brush strokes to reveal the music in time.

Take a closer look at “Shadow’s Song,” which starts out with a soft fingered guitar melody, wobbling in the silences in between each phrase. The hesitant, minor start to this song is then ripped open with a wave of sound. Hildebrand strikes a chord on the guitar and lets it resonate across the space he has created, anchored by a thumping beat and synchronized lyrics. Each strike is like breaking through a new layer, rippling deeper into the rich colors and patterns of a kaleidoscope. The song also features Owen Pallet on violin, adding a soaring melodic layer to the otherwise low and misty aesthetic. It widens the color spectrum and leads into the title track, where the same violin and guitar melodies continue to develop.

On “Ontario Gothic,” Hildebrand reuses the guitar pattern from “Shadow’s Song” as an ostinato, a small melodic motif that repeats on a loop. However, it takes on new life with different instrumentation, articulation, and tempo, all of which give it a stronger direction and energy. Despite the song’s more upbeat and optimistic tone, the lyrics relate to a dark and tumultuous period in the artist’s life. Hildebrand writes, “lyrically, ‘Ontario Gothic’ is written about a close friend named Cait who died in 2010 and to whom the album is dedicated … getting to know, open up to and spend time with Cait during those first years helped open me up to kinds of happiness and a love for life that I didn’t think was within the realm of possibility at that point in my life.” This context provides a fascinatingly intimate insight into Hildebrand’s emotionality and inspiration. His technique and aesthetic definitely lend themselves well to the subject matter – after such a trauma, wouldn’t your mind be cloudy, too?

The trademark fuzziness of Foxes in Fiction comes from Hildebrand’s various tools and processors, including an old reel-to-reel tape machine. He’s previously stated that pure, unaltered sound is too clean, too digital for his taste. Instead, he’s attracted to the warmth, haziness, and imperfection that results from multiple processors, a practice that stems from pioneers in experimental pop and ambient music, like Brian Eno and Atlas Sound. 

With Ontario Gothic, Hildebrand has added another phenomenal work of art to the Foxes in Fiction oeuvre, and the strong melodic quality of most of the tracks is definitely a welcome departure from some of his earlier, more purely experimental ambient projects. Despite being at least partially inspired by tragedy, I think this record represents a joyful new direction for the project.

Review: SALES - SALES EP

Sarah Tembeckjian

Pick a word. Any word. “Simple” keeps rolling around up there as I ruminate on SALES’ self-titled debut. But that doesn’t quite cut it. Yes, this music has a certain simplicity to it, but I’m not trying to use the term condescendingly. I can just see the scrunched up face of a dismissive critic saying “it’s… simple,” waving their hand, and leaving it at that. Instead, I want to take a more detailed look at how that might just be the EP’s biggest asset.

SALES kicks things off with “renee,” which opens on a short guitar motif that repeats throughout, keeping the pulse uniform and driving. It’s uncomplicated. It’s boxy. And subsequent instrumental and vocal variations fit within the rhythmic constraints of the original pattern, putting heavy emphasis on the downbeats. This metronomic approach to layering can be dangerous, often leaving behind a jagged, square, and ultimately predictable aesthetic. However, SALES has managed to avoid this by keeping it clean, with only two to three lines to concentrate on at a time. Even though these lines exist within the same rhythmic space, they are individual musical ideas that stand alone and can be followed simultaneously. By paring it down to these essentials, SALES has eliminated excess weight and opened the track to a lighter, airier feel.

The tentative, hesitant start we got in “renee” quickly disappears as the EP progresses. With every new track, SALES gets stronger and more confident in their music and performance. Not only can we hear it in Lauren Morgan’s vocals, but also in the musical direction the band takes over the course of the EP. The wonderful quality to this oeuvre is that it features the band spherically. We get to hear SALES take on bubble gum uke pop with “chinese new year,” mellow rock ‘n’ roll with “vow,” and patient melodic patterns with “getting it on” that gently ripple into a warm and inviting aesthetic, lending itself extremely well to slow, circular head bobbing (the best kind of head bobbing).

“getting it on” is a new addition to the SALES repertoire. (We’ve heard the first three songs on this EP over the past year and a half, but with the debut of this EP, the Orlando natives have added two new tracks and a remix.) “getting it on” adheres to a similar framework as “renee,” with multiple lines simultaneously operating within the same rhythmic space. However, on this go around there are more musical trajectories to keep track of, leaving behind a warm, full bed of smooth instrumentals. This song immediately puts you in a trance, holding your attention with simple guitar repetitions and harmonic colors that seamlessly weave in and out of each other. Interestingly, if you break it down, there are just two sections to this song that alternate back and forth. One is more straightforward with an evenly divided rhythm. The other has some playful rhythmic variation that is quite subtle, but really packs a punch when put in contrast with the opening pattern. It’s simple, but absolutely brilliant. This tactic keeps the song driving forward without sacrificing any of its character.

SALES has mastered the art of simplicity with this EP. Each track has its own, distinctive character, yet the band has been able to achieve that while maintaining cohesion throughout. There’s definitely a quality of pop accessibility, but just enough roughness around the edges to keep things interesting. All in all, while it’s mostly just a repackaging of their singles, the band’s debut has certainly impressed both aesthetically and technically.