•  
  •  
  •  
  • NikeWomen.com Featured Artist: Cut Copy

    NikeWomen.com Featured Artist: Cut Copy
    CATEGORY:  diary / music /      by Brittany.JC / April 25, 2008 / 12:15 PM


    • Cut Copy is an electropop group from Australia. SXSW introduced me to the sounds of Cut Copy and I haven't looked back since. Their music is heavy on synthesizers and keyboards. They take a lot of their influence from 80's music as well as the indie scene.

      Cut Copy is made up of three people. Dan Whitford (lead vocals/keys/guitar),
      Tim Hoey (guitar/bass/backing vocals/sampler), and Mitchell Scott (drums). Their performances are definitely high energy. They performed at a rooftop party at SXSW and the show was unlike any other that day. In addition to the intense light display, they were jumping up and down and really having fun on the stage. The strong chemistry between the band members can really be seen during their performance.

      Their lastest album, In Ghost Colours was released at the end of March. My favorite track is “Lights and Music." I also really like the futuristic sound of “Far Away." To help publicize their record, Cut Copy will be touring around the US. You can check out their touring schedule on their MySpace page at http://www.myspace.com/cutcopy.

      -Brittany

      http://www.nike.com/nikegirl/us/en/v1/images/modules/audioPlayer/100p_Cut-Copy.jpg

      Cut Copy are set to return in 2008 with the shimmering timelessness of In Ghost Colours. Haunted with machines of the past and sounds of the future, In Ghost Colours inhabits the kind of space in time where trends are irrelevant and music is about feeling rather than following and 1969 is just as relevant as 2020. At once both jacking and jangly, electronic and organic, Cut Copy have crafted a record filled with glorious sounds and moods and that unashamedly pops with hooks and melodies for eons…

      In Ghost Colours traverses genres effortlessly, from already-anthem Hearts On Fire's epic sax-house to the noisy bliss of So Haunted. For Cut Copy the record was an exercise in drawing parallels between favourites old and new and trying to find a meeting point in between - from the vocoder-ed robo-pop of French house to prog's soaring harmonies to the texture of shoegaze, In Ghost Colours lands at some sort of trans-galaxial intersection between these disparate planets.

      This idea was something that appealed to Tim Goldsworthy, DFA's in-house producer,
      programming guru, synth mogul and eventually “muse" for In Ghost Colours.
      Goldsworthy was enlisted to get nerdy on the project after a series of conversations with the band, who were admitted DFA fans, and when front-man Dan Whitford found he had
      found an equal to his obsession with ELO's Time record. When it was revealed that
      Goldsworthy had dropped out of school to follow My Bloody Valentine around England in
      the 80s and could pinpoint every pedal that was used for every sound on Loveless the
      contract was signed in blood. And so the band travelled to New York in early 2007 to spend 6 weeks tracking In Ghost Colours at DFA's Plantain Studio in the West Village, geeking out on DFA's collection of vintage analogue equipment and on an endless hunt for decent coffee.

      The songs that Cut Copy had collected in the period since Bright Like Neon Love arrived
      in New York as promising bones of a more assured, song-based follow up. Upon
      encountering Goldsworthy's approach to recording, which Dan revealed involved “a lot of experimentation. A lot of the time it was a matter of listening to where a track was at, then going over and picking up a random piece of gear, or messing around with pedals and filter, and seeing what you could get from it. Whether it ended up in the finished track or not, it was all a part of the process, and it was a fun and experimental one." This approach meant some sounds you hear on the record are entirely unique and impossible to replicate. From the epic trance breakdown in Far Away, to the sawtooth synth bass on Out There On The Ice, to when an old radio receiver was plugged direct into the analogue desk for Voices In Quartz, these sharp, succinct pop arrows to the heart are benefited from an array of special sonic sparkles.

      The progression from Bright Like Neon Love to In Ghost Colours is brazenly apparent
      from opening track Feel The Love, an acoustic guitar led stomp of a space rock tune, instantly unforgettable and with recognizable Cut Copy glow. Where Bright Like Neon Love was charmingly vague and hazy, In Ghost Colours is directly to the point and efficient in it's songcraft, with vocals much more apparent and Whitford's imprint all over every track. The record is sewn together with passages of woozy dreamscapes between the straight up jams.
    •  
    •      Digg
           Facebook
           del.icio.us
           Permalink
           Email
           Print
  •  
 

© 2008, Nike, Inc. All Rights Reserved nikewomen.com  |  facebook.com/nikewomen