Total Guitar

Architects

- Words Amit Sharma / Photograph­y James Sharrock

When TG last caught up with Brighton metallers Architects on a sunny afternoon in April 2016, founding brothers Tom and Dan Searle explained how it was a mutual love for music that spurred each other on and eventually became the foundation for the band they started over a decade prior. It very much felt like the twins were a walking definition of musical telepathy, while also lightheart­edly playing up to sibling rivalries in the accompanyi­ng photoshoot that celebrated seventh full-length, Allourgods­have abandonedu­s.

Only months later, it was announced guitarist Tom had passed away at the age of 28 following a threeyear fight with cancer. It was a devastatin­g loss that shook the metal community to its core.

“I don’t know what will become of Architects” Dan admitted in the band’s announceme­nt, adding: “Me and Tom started playing in a band together when we were 13 and Architects is just an evolution of the band that we started over half my life ago.” Two years on and having fulfilled touring commitment­s with the band, Sylosis leader and Tom’s friend Josh Middleton is now with Architects on a full-term basis and worked closely with Dan for new effort, Holyhell. It’s a huge achievemen­t for a number of reasons and, as Josh and fellow guitarist Adam Christians­on explain, an album born of love, loss and respect.

Architects guitarists Josh Middleton and Adam Christians­on pay tribute to founding member Tom Searle and reveal the story behind landmark new album Holyhell…

What were the biggest challenges in deciding to carry on as a band?

Adam: “We wanted to stay true to the original sound, but also be a bit free with it and try new things, not feeling limited to working in a certain way. Obviously, there was alot of pressure because of the situation, but there was also not a lot of pressure in the sense that we had no deadlines. There was no expectatio­n, no one really knew what we were up to, we just thought we’d work on this music and see what happens. We could go at our own pace. There were a couple of tracks Tom had finished or partially finished that were like a springboar­d to work from and get a flavour of the album with.”

Josh: “A lot of all that perseveran­ce was down to Dan. For us, it was more about getting our heads down and getting to work. Admittedly, we got started quite quickly with writing, but like Adam said, without telling anyone. We didn’t even tell the label when we were going to the studio, it was only much later when we needed to book it, we knew it was time to say, ‘There’s an album ready.’”

Josh, considerin­g you’d known the band for a long time – having even filled in on guitar for tours – did that make the process of joining full-time any easier?

Josh: “I filled in intermitte­ntly over the years and actually so did Adam before he fully joined. I did a summer of festivals in 2012, then Adam played with them, then I did the following year’s festivals and then Adam joined. I’ve known the band since 2004 when they had a two-track EP and they stayed at my parent’s house when they recorded [second album] Ruin. We go way back. It wasn’t like we had to get to know each other; we’ve all stayed close, which made it an easier transition. I got on straight away with Adam – being guitarists, we always find a way to talk shop… it didn’t take long at all.”

Adam: “It felt pretty easy for us to lock in quickly. We have similar interests outside of the band, like [vegan] food. We don’t drink, so we’ll hang out on the bus with some muesli talking about weird conspiracy stuff. We’re the chilled out guys for sure.”

What gear did you use on Holyhell?

Josh: “I used an LTD for a lot of it with Fishman Fluence Modern pickups, which have no coils – they’re digital. There are some Kemper tracks, but most of it is a block letter 5150 through an old Mesa-boogie cab when the speakers were being made in the UK, which sounds very different to the Chinese ones. I think Celestion try and deny it, but they sound super different. The sticker they put on is at a different angle! There was a Victory Kraken in there too as the KSR we originally tried wasn’t doing it. And in front of the amps, we always had a stock Maxon Tubescream­er or a TS9. There were four tracks for rhythms, so two tracks with the 5150 left and right and same again with the Kraken. Everything was going through the same cab and overdrive pedal. Our strings are low [btuned] and heavy gauge.”

And Tom’s parts from demoes were also included on the album too?

Josh: “There are a lot of his tracks in there as well. Two of the songs he had completely finished – though we’ll probably avoid going into full detail of who wrote what. Then there are a few songs where me and Dan elaborated stuff Tom had been working on. We had his computer with all these demoes, some of those tracks ended up as the final guitar tracks on the album. There’s a lot of ambience you’ll hear that’s Tom actually playing. He’s not on every track, but he’s there throughout the album in ambient tracks, clean parts and more. Wherever possible, we would try to take the exact file from his demo in the final album.”

Adam: “They sounded cool and were difficult to recreate too, they worked as they are. It’s hard to say where they are most prominent, it’s just all sprinkled everywhere…”

When Tom last spoke to TG, he declared his love for Strymon pedals, which must have played a part in those ambient noises...

Adam: “Yeah, he loved the Big Sky and Timeline for those pad-like guitar sounds. You can get a lot of mileage out of the ambiences, they can imply chord changes or add more mood to aggressive chugging. They can add movement and depth to your ideas.”

Josh: “Weirdly enough, we played Graspop Festival last year and the keyboard player from Deep Purple wanted to meet the band. He came into our dressing room asking what keyboards we had on the last album. And we told him, ‘None!’ He assumed all the ethereal ambient sounds were synth pads, when it was really Tom playing super wet on a Strymon. I’ve always tried to experiment with ambience myself, layering up completely wet guitars in the background of songs so that they almost sound like keys.”

There’s a very rhythmic approach to guitar too, what exercises can readers learn to help?

Josh: “Practising to a click is essential. You have to do that, at the very least because playing with people is harder! Some have a tendency to speed up; other musicians have a tendency to play behind the beat. If you can’t do a click, you are going to really struggle with humans. I see comments online on

“wewanted tostay true... but alsobea bit free”

guitar videos where people write, ‘I tried playing with a click and didn’t like it’ or ‘couldn’t get on with it!’ and I always think, ‘But you have to!’ It’s boring but there are no shortcuts when it comes to that stuff. These days, everything is 4/4 with us, we don’t do much odd-meter stuff. My school for rhythm guitar was ...Andjustice for all by Metallica. Learning Battery played a big part too, getting those gallop rhythms as tight as possible was huge. It’s probably the best rhythm exercise out there! Start slow for endurance and avoid going too fast too early, you’ll stress yourself and cramp out. I used to teach and people would always want to improve too quickly. You need to get it in your muscle memory, clean and tight at speeds you can maintain. Once you’ve gotten used to it, your muscles kick in and that’s when you bring in the metronome. People that want to play fast quickly – you’ll get there quicker, cleaner and better if you start slower.”

And then, of course, there’s the actual tone of what you play…

Adam: “Exactly. People also forget about that side. Get the sound good first, before you think about speed. You need the right attack and percussion. I started out on music that wasn’t anywhere near as heavy, I used to be a pop-punk kid, which was all downpickin­g… it really isn’t that different to thrash! There are some great guitarists on the punk scene – Nofx are super crisp and tight every time you see them. Propagandh­i too. On a similar note, I think people will find more improvemen­t if they stop overdoing the gain. You want to underplay the gain, so everything is clear – you’re not trying to mask what you are doing, you want the ultimate attack. Less is more. You want the gain to come from your hands, rather than how much gain you have dialled in on the amp. You want the upstrokes to sound like the downstroke­s. You don’t want two different sounds; it has to be in unison tonally. That’s why recording is one of the best ways of practising… there’s no way of hiding those mistakes. That is what you sound like. You might realise you are not as good as you thought, so you can put things under the microscope and get working on them.”

How do you hold the pick in order to execute those ultra-precise rhythms?

Josh: “I pick from the wrist… all the other styles like circular picking with your thumb and index finger don’t translate to metal riffing, at least in my experience. A solid wrist movement with thick picks works better. You want to be very assertive and percussive. You want to dig in, basically. Circular picking styles might be better for lead playing and economy stuff, but with metal rhythms, you want to be consistent and sound aggressive. It’s all about that one motion. Like Adam said, a lot of pop-punk bands are great at it… that dude from Pennywise down-picks like crazy! They might not be as tight live, but it’s a huge part of the sound. Back in the day, all the bands were going onto tape. Those classic Metallica records sound super-tight because there was no getting around it back then. There was no punching in. They had to learn how to play the entire song perfectly without any unwanted fret noises. The only way James Hetfield could record albums that tight was by practising how to play like that. Don’t rely on cutting stuff up on Pro-tools. Play songs the whole way through and listen back with a critical ear.”

There are also some pretty nifty pre-bends incorporat­ed into a few of the riffs heard on Holyhell...

Josh: “There’s definitely a few… I’m glad someone finally noticed! I’ve seen a few people playing Hereafter wrong on their Youtube cover videos. No one seems to have picked up on the pre-bend in the riff. Another really noticeable thing Tom used to do was on the song Amatchmade­in heaven, which had a behind-the-nut bend that released back into open. It was just all the little things like that he did that were really cool. I love weird guitar effects like the Gojira scrape… I always call it the cat scrapper!”

Adam: “That’s one skill not enough guitarists work on: just bending in tune. Guthrie Govan is incredible for that, he can play a scale off one fret almost. That’s an important thing, having muscle memory and the ear to adjust as you go. Those guitar tricks are often harder than they look to execute noteperfec­t...

Adam: “Being able to replicate sound

effects every night is an unusual skill but it’s important. Players shouldn’t use noise gates as a crutch. Sure, they are there to make your playing better, but you should be able to play quietly without that stuff. Work on it with your hands first and then get rid of the feedback or noise that’s impossible to avoid. Doing it yourself the best you can first and then use the gear after that. A lot of players have their gain on full, their gate on full and that doesn’t sound as good.”

Josh: “If your noise gate is set high, those pick scrapes might not come all through in the same way. You have to practice them just like everything else, which is crazy.”

Adam, what are the main difference­s with Josh on the other side of the stage?

Adam: “Lots...”

Josh: “I’m trying not to change things, sorry to answer for Adam here!”

Adam: “Yeah, but you’re also your own guy. I would say you’re a more regimented player and very precise, in a good way, not a bad way. Josh is bringing years of experience and practice into this new thing.”

Josh: “Thank you, I’ll take that in a good way regardless ha ha! To be honest, I’ve been more into the idea of adapting into the band than bringing anything into the band. That would have been a different mentality I think. I’ve always focussed on rhythm a lot. That’s always been my main thing and Architects is pretty much all rhythm. Tom did some leads, obviously, but mostly rhythm.”

Finally, two years on… what do you most miss about Tom?

Josh: “His sense of humour. He was so funny… and extremely intelligen­t as well. I would always be excited to hang out with him. It sounds corny but I genuinely felt like I would take something back from any conversati­on with him, as in learn something new. I’m not really into small talk and I always felt he was one of those people where you could jump into something really in-depth within a minute of seeing him after having not for a few months.”

Adam: “He was one of the most unique people I’ve ever met and extremely insightful in so many different ways. We all miss him greatly.”

Holy Hell is out now on Epitaph; Architects tour the UK in January

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? steppingup­As an occassiona­l touring member and friend of Architects, Josh’s transition into the band was seamless
steppingup­As an occassiona­l touring member and friend of Architects, Josh’s transition into the band was seamless
 ??  ?? architects­ofsound The late Tom Searle (left) with twin brother Dan posing for TG in 2016. The duo were the original driving force behind the writing
architects­ofsound The late Tom Searle (left) with twin brother Dan posing for TG in 2016. The duo were the original driving force behind the writing
 ??  ?? punk ’n’ proud Adam: “There are some great guitarists on the punk scene – NOFX are super-crisp and tight... Propagandh­i too”
punk ’n’ proud Adam: “There are some great guitarists on the punk scene – NOFX are super-crisp and tight... Propagandh­i too”
 ??  ?? solid foundation­s Architects are looking to the future with a Wembley Arena show on 19 January
solid foundation­s Architects are looking to the future with a Wembley Arena show on 19 January

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia