Future Music

Track by track with Chris Davids and Liam Ivory

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Liam Ivory: “For a while this wasn’t the opening track. There was going to be an intro to the album. We had this little interlude-y thing that we wanted to work with, but the A&R at (Counter Records’ main label) Ninja Tune said, ‘You need to trim it down. The album should be ten tracks. Give them all your best moments’, so we cut it.” Chris Davids: “Yeah. It was the second track so it got bumped to the first. It worked out quite well. For us, me especially, this is a road map for the rest of the album. It kind of gives you the sound, encapsulat­ed, of what’s to come next.” Liam: “It started with a guitar loop you had, from when you first started to learn to play the guitar.” Chris: “The first thing I ever wrote on a guitar was the riff that’s in Home. That song just felt very homely.”

The Clown

Chris: “This features Pedestrian. We met Jack [Sibley] on Soundcloud. It was just before we wrote Portraits. We made quite a few tracks together and a few remixes. The Clown actually came about in Jack’s studio that was in Camden at the time. Underneath the railway arches.” Liam: “It was in an old toilet! Someone had converted one into a studio. It was a mad space.” Chris: “It was a completely different song when we started it. We had all the lyrics for it and all of the vocals. It was way slower, but felt really sluggish. Then, back in [our garden studio] The Shack, we ended up writing new piano chords, and getting another instrument­al down, and then we ended up merging the two tracks.” Liam: “It was a simple case of taking the vocals from the one track, laying them over the new one and going, ‘Oh, we’ve got a new song!’ [laughs].”

Rituals

Liam: “This was basically a result of buying a new keyboard. We got this Prophet-08 and there was just this patch on there, just one of the presets. It was basically a sequence arp [hums it], which was the main arp that runs through the verses.

“It came together so quickly, because we were so excited by this synth. We were just ripping through it and finding all these patches and just building and building on the song.”

Chris: “It was also the start of us really getting into sampling drum breaks, as well. We lifted one and layered it up with the Prophet. Me and Liam started it and then we brought in Jack [Pedestrian] again and added some vocals he’d laid down from another tune.”

Liam: “That was a common practice – it still is now – just to recycle stuff.”

Steal

Chris: “Holly Walker is on this one. It was probably one of the first tracks we did for the album. This and Rituals came around the same sort of time. We wrote those two even before we knew we were writing an album. “It started from, again, a very simple loop that we made at my

“Sometimes we wanted the vocals we recorded to sound like they were sampled from another record. So we would layer them up with loads of vinyl crackle and sounds that we made. “We recorded ourselves in the shed, jingling glasses, tapping instrument­s and tinkling the piano. Then we’d layer them under the vocal and gate them. So every time the vocal hit that little noise channel would fire up and let the sound through – like it was a vocal sample that we’d maybe EQ’d stuff out of.”

parents’ house – just a loop of a piano. Then we added some bass and drums and sent that to Holly.

“We’d only worked with her once before this, on a track called Tongue. She remotely wrote the verses to it. Then we worked out the chorus together, and she fleshed out all the chorus chords.”

Liam: “It was very collaborat­ive. Compared to others, anyway, like

Midas. She came to the studio. From then on it was all three of us that totally finished it.”

Wallflower

Chris:

“This was the last track we wrote on the record. We had initially finished the album – we had our ten tracks and handed it in. Then our A&R at the label, Adrian [Kemp], came back and was like, ‘OK, guys. I know you think this is done, and it is. But just squeeze one more track out, if you can…’

“It was just for fun, essentiall­y. It was like ‘Let’s play around and make a tune,’ regardless of if it felt like it would fit on the record. There were no restrictio­ns. It came together really naturally, and it did end up fitting.”

Liam: “I think we ended up putting this together in one day, pretty much. It was another Prophet-08 patch.”

Chris: “It was something off there. Not a preset. Liam might have made a patch, and we wanted to create something that was like Blinded By

The Lights – you know, that old Streets tune? That kinda pulsing, hypnotic, feel. So we made that.”

Liam: “We’d also just received a pack of new breaks off Jack [Pedestrian]. That’s where the drums were from.”

Say More

Chris: “Jono McCleery is on this one. We were just big fans. He was on Ninja Tune as well. He had a track called Darkest Light that we really liked. We fell in love with his voice and got introduced through Ninja.”

Liam: “We were big fans. And the Ninjas were saying we needed some slightly more high-profile guests so we asked them to reach out to Jono.

Our AR was like, ‘I know you think this is done, and it is. But just squeeze one more track out…’

“We had the backing track made and sent it over for him. He actually sent a video over, and he did that vocal in one take from start to finish and absolutely nailed it. Yeah, he’s an incredible singer.”

Chris: “Again, it was quite fluid. We wanted to work with him. Started a backing track. He liked it. He literally delivered the vocal in one and it was done. What a pro.”

Raincoats

Liam: “I remember this being one of the most arduous songs to make.”

Chris: “Yeah. It was the one that was the hardest to finish. It was one of our favourites, though, when we were making the record. It was very Burial-inspired, wasn’t it?”

Liam: “This tune, actually, was made kinda start to finish, in terms of the timeline of it. It wasn’t like we had a little section and thought, ‘Yeah, that can be the chorus’.

“We literally worked through it, chronologi­cally. That’s why I remember the ending being such a fucker. We just couldn’t get that final drop to connect.

“The strings at the end were the final thing, bolted on.”

Chris: “It started with those big reverbed drums, inspired by The

Boxer by Simon & Garfunkel. We’d watched a documentar­y and they said how they did that. Obviously they did that in a massive hall, though, and me and Liam were just doing it with plugins [laughs].”

Midas

Liam: “This came together quite naturally. It was just some piano chords. Chris did them, and then we just kinda built up the backing track and sent it over to Holly to sing on.

“She sent back three different vocals. This is before we properly knew her. Which is kinda bad, thinking back to it, because it’s a cold way to work.” Chris: “But, we just couldn’t get them to sit right. So we hired her this Neumann U87 mic and sent it to her.

“Liam and me were very naïve to how a lot of vocalists like to work. I know it’s different for everyone, but we wrote the lyrics, initially, and sent them over to her. She went, ‘I’m not gonna sing the lyrics that you guys have written. It’s my vocal’ [laughs].”

Natural Fools

Chris: “This was done pretty early on. I did most of the track, pretty much on my own at my place. Other than, like, the ending.

“I made a bit of a ghost structure of the track, with the first section with the guitar. Basically it was verse, bass, guitar, harmony and drums.”

Liam: “Chris put the whole thing together and showed it to me, and I was obviously blown away. Then we peppered in all the samples and bits and bobs, and then stuck on that ‘clubby’ outro on the end.”

Chris: “I do remember at the time that when I showed it to you, you were like, ‘Yeah, it’s cool. But it’s a bit like playing Guitar Hero’ [laughs].”

Varkala

Chris: “This was just Liam and I together with this one drone type of thing on a loop. Then we just set about improvisin­g the whole thing. Varkala is a place I visited in India while writing the album and there was a Hendrix cover band playing there.

“I captured a bit of them, with a field recorder, and that’s one of the things that’s looped during the beginning of that track. We just named the track after the place where the bit of that recording came from.”

Liam: “We weren’t too great at naming things.”

Chris: “Unless there’s a distinct reason, or vision behind the track, it’s always hard to name songs. I guess a lot of the time if you have lyrics or a vocalist, it’s simpler.”

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 ??  ?? Liam and Chris will be manning the CDJs at this year’s Soundcrash Funk & Soul Weekender. It’s looking like another sellout event, but if you’re lucky enough to have bagged a ticket, head to Brighton Beach between 17-19 May, and catch Maribou State headlining the Saturday line-up, alongside Alice Russell and Gilles Peterson, amongst other stellar guests. It’s three days of Northern soul, disco, and big brass sounds, as well as neo-soul, hip-hop, beats and the best of UK jazz. Not to be missed!
Liam and Chris will be manning the CDJs at this year’s Soundcrash Funk & Soul Weekender. It’s looking like another sellout event, but if you’re lucky enough to have bagged a ticket, head to Brighton Beach between 17-19 May, and catch Maribou State headlining the Saturday line-up, alongside Alice Russell and Gilles Peterson, amongst other stellar guests. It’s three days of Northern soul, disco, and big brass sounds, as well as neo-soul, hip-hop, beats and the best of UK jazz. Not to be missed!
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