Prog

Got It TAPED

- Words: Rich Wilson Images: Tomasz Pulsakowsk­i

The Riverside and Lunatic Soul man walks a different musical path on his current solo release.

Forget progressiv­e metal and folk, Riverside’s Mariusz Duda has gone back to his favourite childhood cassettes on his new solo album, Claustroph­obic Universe. Released less than six months after Lunatic Soul’s rustic Through Shaded Woods, it’s packed with minimalist electronic instrument­als that are a world away from his other projects. He tells Prog the story behind it.

For certain musicians, an enforced period of seclusion can provide the space and time needed to reach into the soul and create something magical. Mariusz Duda, Riverside frontman and the driving force behind Lunatic Soul, took that imposed opportunit­y to write and record deliberate­ly provocativ­e solo albums, which will form part of the yet-to-be-completed ‘lockdown trilogy’.

“Having the time to be more creative is one of the bright sides of the pandemic,” says Duda from his home in Poland. “It makes me sad that musicians are struggling right now and having a really hard time. For instance, if you’re a musician who is connected with other composers or if you’re a session musician, then that’s really devastatin­g. But if you’re an artist who can close himself away in the studio and create something new, it’s almost like paradise. You can do whatever you want. When Riverside stopped playing shows, I had more time. We did the new Lunatic Soul recording and after that, I needed a change. So, this became the beginning of a new adventure for me and now already there’s a second solo album.”

That freedom allowed Duda to move away from the more lush, progressiv­e leanings of Riverside to reinvestig­ate a genre that has appealed to him throughout his career – electronic­a.

For those not overly familiar with Riverside’s back catalogue, it’s a musical form that has sporadical­ly perforated their work, not least with the release of their Eye Of The Soundscape instrument­al compilatio­n in 2016. His adoration of electronic music can be traced back to his childhood, when his exposure to music was aided by a weekly market, where a solitary stall sold the staple of 80s culture: cassette tapes.

“There was nothing connected with music at my home,” laments Duda. “The gramophone was in the cellar, covered by books and old destroyed vinyl. I had radio and I had the market.

Every Tuesday, there was a guy selling cassette tapes and he only sold electronic music and death metal.

Each week, I would be buying tapes by Obituary, Tangerine Dream, Vangelis, Mike Oldfield, Kraftwerk and Carcass. It was crazy and people at school were laughing at me. They said that I was drinking beer and milk at the same time. The funny thing was that as well as listening to that kind of music, I was also creating it. I had a mono cassette recorder, lots of tapes and I created my own. I think that was because I was jealous that the guy on the market wasn’t selling my music.

So, I started to record my own albums, with the covers and stuff like that. Every month, I would create new music on my shitty keyboard and sometimes the piano. That’s why, in the lockdown times, I decided to bring back those memories and did the same again after 30 years. That also explains why I decided to release this album on cassette as the only physical format, as well as on Bandcamp.”

The project also provided Duda with an escape from the Riverside routine and the write-record-tour cycle that had begun to feel somewhat restrictiv­e. Duda certainly isn’t unapprecia­tive of the trappings of major album releases on a renowned label, but he admits to liking the immediacy of instantly revealing his compositio­ns to the world online.

“I wanted to share this kind of music immediatel­y and not have to be waiting five months, for 10 colours of vinyl production and some kind of super-deluxe edition,” he laughs dryly. “As a solo artist, I just went to the undergroun­d. I don’t know why I did this to be honest, although

I have to admit that in the last few years, I felt like I was in a trap. I love to play progressiv­e rock and bass guitar, but it’s always connected with hard work. Lunatic Soul became a much bigger project than it used to be, so I spent about two years on the last album. With this solo project, there’s a lot of improvisat­ion and things connected with the right moment. ‘I’m in the studio, I’m going to record something right now and let’s leave it.’ Later we might add some layers and overdubs but let’s keep the core. I want to share my music from lockdown right now, without the whole procedure of needing to prepare singles and stuff like that. I was tired of that pattern, which is always the same when I release something with Riverside or Lunatic Soul. This time I said no to almost everything and that was refreshing. I could say, ‘I’ve just finished the album. Here you go. It’s on my Bandcamp, check it out.’ I really felt like a rebel doing these things.”

Musically, this second album, Claustroph­obic Universe, is a change from the first release, Lockdown

Spaces. It remains instrument­al with a minimalist­ic approach, but there’s a more considered depth to the music and it’s less influenced by the soundtrack­s to 80s computer games than its predecesso­r. Additional­ly, it strikes more of an optimistic tone than the rather bleak, foreboding sounds that appeared on his solo debut.

“When I was creating Lockdown Spaces, I had only two weeks to do it,” he reveals. “It was written during the Lunatic Soul sessions. I was a little bit tired of the recording session and so I wrote it in between. That was inspired by the lockdown that we had one year ago. It was full of uncertaint­y, there was a lot of fear and that’s why the music was so dark. I mean, the compositio­n Waiting is not even pleasant to listen to. But now it’s a year later, we have started to feel comfortabl­e in this new reality, so the music has changed as well. It has altered into something more optimistic. Of course, this is still ‘the lockdown trilogy’, so on each album, I wanted to keep this feeling of still being in an enclosed area. It’s an album that’s inspired more by the journey into your own mind. It’s just like a wardrobe when you can find a door to Narnia.

“What was really great for me was that this time, I was able to spend three months in the studio just focusing on it,” he continues. “I had more time and you can probably hear that there are more layers and everything is better prepared. Of course, I didn’t want to repeat myself, so I decided that this time I would focus more on a different background. I also tried to get away from some other things, like the melodies. That’s not to say that in

Claustroph­obic Universe there aren’t any. There are, but they’re hidden, whereas on Riverside and Lunatic Soul they’re the main fundamenta­l of the song structure. I’m still a huge fan of melodies but with this, I just wanted to put those melodies in a different place.”

Aside from the more obvious connotatio­ns for a trilogy recorded in this era of uncertaint­y, there are more subtle references which permeate the three albums. Granted, without lyrics it’s trickier to discern those influences which drive the compositio­ns, but there’s a deliberate sense of escapist nostalgia, as Duda explains.

“Each album is associated with different attributes connected to my childhood,” he reveals. “On one layer, of course it is connected with the lockdown but on the second layer, it’s also connected with my moods. When you take a look at the titles on Claustroph­obic Universe, there’s

Waves From A Flat Earth, which is dedicated to people who don’t believe in things. On the third and most important level, these albums are linked to my childhood. So, for instance, when you take a look at

Lockdown Spaces, it’s connected with retro videogames, which were my main inspiratio­ns and were a time killer for me when I was a child.

“With this solo project, there’s a lot of improvisat­ion and things connected with the right moment. ‘I’m in the studio, I’m going to record something right now.’”

Claustroph­obic Universe is connected with cassette tapes and I believe the third album will be connected with comic books and books.”

The process has also been one of therapy for the bassist, finding solace in his escape to the studio to write and record music. That freedom has led to the creation of three albums in a relatively short space of time, with this spell of inventiven­ess also set to lead to a new Riverside album next year.

“When I’m struggling with my demons, I just write lots of music,” he confesses carefully. “With every album, I try to skip some medication stuff and just focus only on music, so for me, it’s always a therapy. On this album, there’s a compositio­n called Lemon Flavoured Stars and the sound that you can hear at the very beginning are pills. But it is mostly pills connected with vitamin C and nothing that might be connected with bipolar disorder. I have given myself a small break but I’ve already begun working on the third recording. At the same time, I need to go back to Riverside because we’ve got plans for the summer. Maybe we should start to finally celebrate our 20th anniversar­y? After that, I will definitely be finishing my trilogy before the new Riverside chapter begins. I don’t want to record another solo album and to release this under the name of Riverside. I did this with the last two albums, which were mostly composed only by me. I just want to go back to a rehearsal room and to those times when we did more things together. We are slowly going back to our rehearsal room and

I believe that [very soon] we will start to prepare something new.”

Somewhat endearingl­y, Duda isn’t an artist overly anxious with the reaction of his fans. His music has always been composed to provide self-satisfacti­on and these minimalist, electronic releases may prove challengin­g to some Riverside aficionado­s. That potential for negativity is something that Duda is undoubtedl­y aware of but blatantly unconcerne­d by.

“I really should release a pop album with songs because I know that people like that,” he reasons provocativ­ely. “When we did the electronic Riverside song, Rapid Eye Movement [which appeared on the special edition of the album of the same name], there was a mixed response. There were people who said, ‘Wow, this is really progressiv­e. You have tried to make something in different genres, this is really great.’ But then there were those people who were just giving it one star out of five because it wasn’t progressiv­e metal. I mean, it wouldn’t be fair if I started to build something under my own name that sounded exactly like Riverside. I don’t have to prove anything to anyone. I don’t care. I don’t want to repeat myself because it would be boring for me. I just decided to create a totally different musical world and I don’t give a damn about what people think about it…”

Claustroph­obic Universe is out now via Bandcamp. See www.mariuszdud­a.md for more informatio­n.

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 ??  ?? CLAUSTROPH­OBIC
UNIVERSE IS OUT NOW.
CLAUSTROPH­OBIC UNIVERSE IS OUT NOW.
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 ??  ?? DUDA IS HAVING A BALL, RELIVING HIS CHILDHOOD.
DUDA IS HAVING A BALL, RELIVING HIS CHILDHOOD.

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