Computer Music

SLEAFORD MODS (AND ROCKERS)

Nottingham duo Jason Williamson and Andrew Fearn share the tech secrets that have given them three Top 20 albums

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Jason Williamson and Andrew Fearn reveal their electronic punk production ethos

The East Midlands has a very specific accent. To anyone south of Watford Junction, it probably sounds stereotypi­cally ‘Northern’, but to the trained ear there’s a big difference. It’s sharper… clipped and rhythmic. And it’s great for swearing. There’s a certain poetic beauty to someone from Nottingham effin’ ‘n’ jeffin’. If you don’t believe me, listen to Urine Mate (Welcome

To The Club), the opening track to Sleaford Mods’ 2013 album, Austerity Dogs. “Do you think riding around on a BMX is going to make me feel intimidate­d? Smash yer face, c***, back into next week.”

Frontman Jason Williamson’s urgent ranting/rapping takes on even more furious poignancy when you see them live. His arms and legs jerking his body into odd, angular shapes. Feet engaged in some sort of silent tap dance as he headbutts the air in time with the lyrics of another song about life down at the arse-end of society’s guest list.

“There’s nothing worse than someone from England trying to rap with an American accent,” says Williamson. “It can work – think about Rob from the Stereo MCs – but, most of the time, it makes you sound like a f***in’ t**t. East Midlands speech might not be glamorous, but it definitely has a groove. It can deliver passion. And, more to the point, it feels genuine. It’s my accent. It’s how I sound.

“If you listen to any album by, say, the Wu-Tang Clan, the lyrics often have that

“Does it matter if we record on a 10-year-old XP, not even connected to the internet?”

shouted, unattracti­ve quality. What I do is my version of that. And if people don’t like the idea of a sexed-up East Midlands accent? F*** ’em!”

It’s a surprise to hear Williamson’s speaking voice on the phone from his home near Nottingham. Even though the conversati­on is peppered with expletives, the delivery is calm and measured. Joyful, even. Especially when he’s talking about the music that shaped the Sleafords’ sound. Punk rock, the aforementi­oned Wu-Tang Clan, Andrew Weatherall’s Two Lone Swordsmen, the first wave of UK grime. It’s an odd mix, but it’s given them three Top 20 albums and led on to collaborat­ions with the Prodigy and Gorillaz.

Originally, the Sleaford Mods was Williamson’s solo project, but, in 2012, he was joined by another struggling Nottingham musician, Andrew Fearn. Under various guises –

Infant, Marks Brother – Fearn had been banging out a wildly eclectic collection of albums for several years. Everything from crooner pop to Autechre-like experiment­al IDM, all of it put together in his tiny flat on an old laptop and a couple of synthesise­rs.

Fearn is the bloke you see standing opposite Williamson on stage. Dancing awkwardly behind the laptop, while swigging a can of beer. Again, and for obvious reasons, this interview is conducted by phone. Fearn is in lockdown at his dad’s house in rural Lincolnshi­re.

“It’s nice to have a chat with a magazine like Computer Music because some people think that I don’t actually do anything in the band,”

laughs Fearn. “They assume I’m just Jason’s mate and I’ve jumped on stage for a laugh. I do have a job in the Sleaford Mods. I’m the composer… honest!”

: Does it bother you that some people aren’t aware of your contributi­on to the Sleaford Mods’ sound?

Andrew Fearn: “Not really. I’m just pretending that I’m annoyed.”

: You don’t do yourself any favours, shuffling about, swigging beer. You could at least stand near the laptop and pretend to press a few keys.

AF: “You mean like all them A-list DJs who play their sets from the laptop? What a load of bollocks! It’s all fake… smoke ‘n’ mirrors. I suppose I’m trying to expose that. I’m admitting that the music is coming off the laptop. We’ve made some music, here it is. I hope people appreciate that I’m not trying to fake it. I’m just up on stage enjoying myself. It’s me that starts and stops the music. I use an open-source audio player called Foobar. Technicall­y, I suppose I am doing some work.

“There is one thing that f***s me off, though. It’s when people call the music ‘Casio beats’, as if we don’t put any thought into the music. OK, our production­s don’t have 200 different elements and 50 different remixes, but we’re still writing songs. And those songs have to be good or people aren’t going to buy ’em. Does it matter if we don’t have really complex drum patterns? Does it matter if we record the songs on a 10-year-old XP laptop that isn’t even connected to the internet? Of course it doesn’t! I’m sure everyone who reads Computer Music has got a mate who’s a brilliant musician and producer. He can play every instrument and he knows everything about EQ and compressio­n and all that stuff. But he never does anything with his music because he’s too focussed on a weird frequency he can hear on the snare drum.

“Personally, I think that’s why people like us. The sound is underprodu­ced… it’s raw and basic. But it’s also real. If we went for the big, shiny production like David Guetta, we’d sound just the same as everybody else.”

: Is there a Sleaford Mods studio?

AF: “Not really. I’ve got a setup at home and we sometimes use a profession­al studio in Nottingham to record the vocals. We used to do everything at my flat. It was so small that Jason had to stand next to one of the speakers when he was doing vocals. There was all sorts of spill going on, but it seemed to add something that we liked… it made the vocal sound alive.”

: You mentioned that the computers weren’t connected to the internet.

AF: “Well, I’ve just bought a Microsoft Surface Book. That’s connected. I wonder if I should have gone for something a bit more powerful… maybe a gaming computer. But you’re talking 10 grand. This one was three grand. Do we need a 10 grand computer? Probably not.

“But the live computer is an old Lenovo T61 – for ages, that was also the studio computer – and I’ve got a back-up T400. Neither of those are connected to the internet. It’s brilliant! The world doesn’t know that those two computers even exist. One of my recurring nightmares is that we’re about to do a big gig and the operating system decides that it’s time for an upgrade. We’re safe. Ha ha!

“The only thing that’s really changed is that I can now buy a legitimate copy of Windows XP for the Lenovo laptops. Making a bit of money means that I don’t have to skulk around in the shadows. Some producers look at our setup and think we’re mad. We do gigs with an out-of-date XP laptop running Acid. We’ve done massive gigs with that setup. We’ve done Glastonbur­y.”

: Acid is the main platform?

AF: “I’ve got an old Mac with an old copy of Ableton on there, but most of the work gets done on Acid. It’s literally used as multi-track recording device. When I was a kid, I started out with a four-track cassette, so it makes complete sense to me. Yeah, the sound can be a bit dry, but it gets the job done.

“I’ve got mates who keep telling me to get Logic. Why? For a start, there’s a lot of arse-ing about with Logic when you’re first setting things up. Jason likes to work fast, and I think Logic would hold us up. For me, Logic is so comprehens­ive that it’s overwhelmi­ng. You’re bombarded with informatio­n and different shortcuts for this, that and the other, when all you want to do is bang down a bassline and some vocals.

“But I also think that I’ve avoided Logic as an anti-corporate stand. Everything’s done on iCloud now, so it’s almost like you don’t even own it. They own it. You always need their permission. With Acid, I don’t get any of that. It’s

“The only thing that’s really changed is that I can now buy a legitimate copy of Windows XP”

on my computer and it’s mine. I don’t need a DAW that’s going to do loads of fancy tricks… it just needs to record our music and let me mess about with it a bit.”

: Any third-party plugins?

AF: “There are a few Waves plugins, including the Scheps Omni Channel. I’ve used the Roger Nichols Digital Detailer for a few years – treat it gently and it works as a nice volume booster/ limiter. I’ve got Korg Gadgets for the iPad. Can you remember that early Moog app for the iPad? I have used that for basslines. I also play some of them live with a Squire Jazz Bass. The drums come from stuff I’ve got sitting on my hard drive… recordings that I made when I was in an experiment­al noise band some years ago. I’ve got stacks of samples and loops. Cassettes, CDs, Minidiscs…”

: Apart from the Roger Nichols Detailer, do you do much tweaking with the music once it’s in the computer?

AF: “I have a quick look at the EQs, just to make sure there’s nothing silly going on. Bit of reverb if it’s needed. You have to be careful about overthinki­ng a song, though. You can end up squeezing all the energy and life out of it. When we first took an album to be mastered, the engineer was really happy with us because we hadn’t over-engineered everything. This was during the age when everybody was pushing everything to the max and it didn’t leave mastering engineers with much to do at all. The way that I look at it, a mastering studio has got top of the range compressor­s that cost five or 10 grand. Whereas I’ve got a plugin that cost 50 quid. If I let them do the work, it’s going to sound better.”

: How does your songwritin­g work? Do you give Jason more or less finished versions of songs?

AF: “Sometimes. And sometimes a song will just come together in 10 minutes while we’re working on something else. Like I said, Jason prefers to work quickly, so, if I get an idea, I like to bang it down there and then. Not too much fuss there.

“In the early days, Jason would come over to the flat and just sing the melodies at me. I’d start playing a few basslines or synth parts and Jason

would say, ‘That’s the one’. Once I started to understand what he was after, it was like a green light. I was making tune after tune after tune. I love the immediacy of it.”

: What’s on Jason’s vocal chain? Is it difficult trying to keep a lid on the energy he throws into a vocal?

AF: “Mainly Nectar. There’s a setting on it called Motown. I tend to start with that and tweak things till it sounds OK. It seems to keep it all in check without ruining the feel of the vocal. Again, people have had a go at me for using presets. What’s the problem? If a preset gets you in the ballpark, start there and adjust it until it’s your preset.

“I hope that I’m not giving you the impression that we’re anti-technology ’cos we’re not. I’ve recently invested in a Roland Boutique SH-01A and a load of Modular gear – mainly second-hand Mutable Instrument­s stuff. And I’m really digging into the theory of synth programmin­g. If I need to get techy, I can. But what’s the point of adding stuff to a song when it doesn’t need it. Or getting too deep into the production side of things when a simple approach sounds better.

“There’s a lot written about the art of production. True sound and all that kind of rubbish. What is true sound? Take a song like

Cuddly or BHS. Both of them were made on the iPad using Korg Gadget. What am I supposed to do? Put the songs on the computer and try to make the synths sound like real analogue synths? Who would you be trying to fool if you do that?

“There’s a track on the English Tapas album,

Just Like We Do. After we recorded the bassline, we realised it was a bit… hummy. But it really didn’t seem worth worrying about. Who cares if it’s not perfect? Life isn’t perfect. Life is hummy. And, sometimes, your imperfecti­ons can become perfection­s. They can make the difference between somebody listening to your music and somebody ignoring it.”

The Sleaford Mods’ career-spanning compilatio­n album, All That Glue, is out now on Rough Trade

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 ??  ?? Fearn lets his simple live setup and choice T-shirt messaging do the talking onstage
Fearn lets his simple live setup and choice T-shirt messaging do the talking onstage
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 ??  ?? No filters… apart from when it comes to coffee. Left to right: a Squire Jazz Bass and a Cort X electric guitar
No filters… apart from when it comes to coffee. Left to right: a Squire Jazz Bass and a Cort X electric guitar

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