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The Secret Machines - Alone Audio
Secret Machines Video
Alone, Jealous, and Stoned
28th February
Imagine the worst thing you've ever said to a loved one. Now recall the instant you realize you can't take it back. Your stomach drops; your mouth tastes metallic. What is done can't be undone. A short time later you're defiant-feeling that you don't need anyone and will die alone. That naïve, insolent, singular moment is thoroughly explored and set to crystalline music on Ten Silver Drops, the new album from the propulsive trio Secret Machines.
It's no surprise that the theme of isolation dominates the New York City-based Secret Machines' second album. By the time they began working on the songs in January 2005, the band members-bassist/keyboardist/vocalist Brandon Curtis, his brother guitarist/vocalist Ben Curtis, and drummer Josh Garza-had been touring for more than 18 months straight in support of their 2004 debut album Now Here Is Nowhere with only a couple days off at a time. "We experienced a deconstruction of our personal lives," says Brandon. "Coming home to a familiar setting and being alien to it created a sense of isolation from the people we're close to.
There were all these invisible barriers that were tough to reach through. So we ended up with songs like 'Alone, Jealous, and Stoned' and 'Lighting Blue Eyes,' about how our emotions propel us toward these conflicts and away from the people we love." The band crafted multiple layers of icy synths, alpine guitar, and Garza's trademark hypnotic, crashing drums, giving the epic soundscapes a three-dimensionality that the band feels was missing on Now Here Is Nowhere. This musical confluence evokes that moment when you realize that things have changed and can never be the same, and is revisited several times on Ten Silver Drops.
"Last time we were interested in creating edges in places people don't normally create edges, like in the low-end frequencies. It ended up making the songs kind of two-dimensional and flat," he says. "This time we tried to preserve some of the depth and let other things, like melodies, float to the surface." Where Now Here Is Nowhere was tight, spiky, and well-defined, Ten Silver Drops is more spacious-its wide frequency spectrum giving it both frozen peaks and murky depths. "To stir up the feelings we were trying to express," Brandon says, "we let things lurk in the shadows without trying to make everything so sharp." To retain control over the vision, Secret Machines produced the new album themselves, as they did Now Here Is Nowhere. The band booked itself into Allaire, a secluded recording studio on a mountaintop in scenic Shokan, New York, and worked, ate, and slept there for three weeks in May and two weeks in July. But they had a rocky start. "The first week it was like all the toxins we had gathered from the travel had leeched out and filled up the place with negative energy," Brandon says. "It was the first time we had been that still for 18 months, in a quiet isolated place, and everything we had internalized came to the surface. We really struggled to wrangle all the energy and emotion ricocheting around the place."
Over the second two weeks, the band ended up redoing everything they recorded the first week, but they learned some valuable lessons. "Producing ourselves, we came away with the essential nature of preserving the sanctity of the vibe of a recording studio," Brandon says. "A producer can dictate the terms, set the schedule, and create a sensory feeling in the room by lighting it or making it smell a certain way. When you're doing it yourself, you have to be responsible for dictating the feeling you want." The songs that emerged from the Allaire sessions feature more chords and melodic movement this time around. Longtime fans will embrace the familiar effects-laden, heavily processed guitars and primal, stomping drums on up-tempo tracks like "Lightning Blue Eyes," "All At Once (It's Not Important)," and "I Hate Pretending." As with Nowhere, the music owes a certain debt to the band's beloved German experimentalist pop groups Kraftwerk, Neu, and La Dusseldorf.
"There was no effort to abandon any aesthetic or embrace a new one this time around," Brandon says. "But the songs are more 'song-y,' perhaps because they were honed out on the road. There's something about the immediacy of performing in front of an audience, as opposed to a performance in your own head...what you do can be shaped by the reaction you get from the crowd."
Click Here for all you need to know about: The Secret Machines
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view all comments (2) - add your comments
Sounds alot better after a couple of listens. I was originally a little
disappointed as i was a big fan of their debut album and ep. Now I cant wait
to hear to full album. i just hope their is a sufficient edge to it and not
just so called 'atmospheric drifting'. it got old in the seventies why drag it
up again
This gem struck me from the first time I heard it, thought it was a -for me-
undiscovered singersongwriter classic out of the 80s-90s... really haunting, as
I was a fan of their debut album, this is for me their best song to date really
amazing cant wait to hear the full album, J








