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LIARS
Renowned for their killer live performances, LA/ Berlin trio LIARS, described
by NME as "the most frightening, evolutionary band on the planet", return
to whelans on december 4 to wreck the place... buy a ticket quick!
Liars have never been a band comfortable with staying in one place for
very long. Geographically, personally and most of all musically, each
successive album that they release comes with a new agenda, a new heritage,
a new set of reference points and a new way of thinking about music.
So, after the multimedia multi-tasking of 2006's 'Drum's Not Dead' - each
track of which came accompanied with three exclusive short films - Liars
have returned with their most stripped-back and direct album yet. Simply
titled 'Liars', their 4th full-length (recorded in Berlin and LA and mixed
in London by Erasure and Depeche Mode producer Gareth Jones) abandons
the thirty minute sound collages called things like 'This Dust That Makes
The Mud' of old in favour of a set of the band's most conventional and
powerful songs yet - although as a band with a reputation forged on thirty
minute sound collages called things like 'This Dust That Makes The Mud',
Liars' recent career swerve is a delightfully surprising as ever.
Angus, Aaron Hemphill and Julian Gross - who has played drums with the
band since the departure of original rhythm section Pat Nature and Ron
Albertson after the band's first album, 2001's 'They Threw Us All In A
Trench And Put A Monument On Top' - decided not to overanalyse the process
of making their music.
"We aimed to make songs that weren't going to require a concept. We decided
to work really quickly and not talk about what we were doing too much.
Aaron and I wanted to write songs that spoke for themselves in a more
visceral way - like when you're a teenager and things really mean a lot
for you in a song. We wanted to write songs that reminded us a little
of what it was like to be a teenager - so pretty much the only preparation
we did was going back and listening to the bands we liked when we were
kids, stuff like OMD, The Cure and Siouxsie And The Banshees."
Although Andrew and former microbiologist Aaron Hemphill met in LA (where
Andrew studied photography at art school), after a stay in New York the
band relocated to Berlin as a base for European touring. Hemphill and
Gross returned to LA soon after Drum's Not Dead but Andrew stayed on in
the German capital, where the bulk of 'Liars' was recorded at Planet Roc
(sic) studios, a former East German radio studio built in the 1950s by
Bauhaus architect Franz Ehrlich. After working on their songs separately
in Germany and the US, Liars convened at Planet Roc for a fortnight in
spanning New Year's Eve 2006/2007 to stitch together their ideas.
The band weren't balancing their interests alone, however: a friend of
Andrew's from Australia, Jeremy Glover, played bass and helped record
the album. "Jeremy understood where we were coming from and helped
to craft the songs in the studio to help us find that visceral edge we
were searching for. We wanted to make a record that would have the same
impact on people as hearing, like, the Ramones for the first time did
on us."
Their quest to connect on a more visceral level has succeeded. Unlike,
say, 2004's 'They Were Wrong, So We Drowned', which boasted a fractured
narrative based on accounts of the Salem Witch Trials,'Liars' is a set
of songs only connected by the fact that no other band around could make
music like this. This is an album that manages to balance the old, experimentally-minded
Liars with an excitingly insidious new pop edge.
The experiment has been an unqualified success. By getting back to basics
with 'Liars' the band are going back to the future.
New album Liars out now on mute
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