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The
hiss of tape may seem nostalgic in the land of digital
recordings and MP3, but
for Montreal’s The Stills it’s more than an scratch
from the distant past. That hiss recalls the band’s
very beginnings, because without a simple, chunky-looking
four track tape recorder The Stills just wouldn’t be.
“It’s like our Rosetta stone, you can trace
everything about The Stills back to that four track,” explains
Tim Fletcher, The Stills 25 year-old singer-guitarist. “A
friend of ours who’d ran into financial troubles in
London called-up and said ‘take some of my belongings
just send me some money’, so we took that.” Splitting
the cost with close friend and Stills drummer Dave Hamelin,
a frantic exchange of ideas began hurtling between them.
“We shared the recorder so I’d listen to whatever
Tim did before me and then he’d listen to what I done,” recalls
Hamelin. “It would be, ‘I liked his song, I’m
going to try to make a better one’. We created our
own little universe.” From early experiments this private
world began to take shape, fleshed-out with a delicate melancholy
born from a shared restlessness. “The only moments
when we felt we could truly let go were when we were recording,” explains
Fletcher who with Hamelin writes The Stills’ material. “When
you’re playing you’re not thinking of anything
else, not even what you’re playing, you’re just
doing. So we created everything for those moments. Ultimately
we wanted to feel like that all the time.”
It was clear then their recorded experiments required a
wider audience, so recruiting lead guitarist Greg Paquet
and bassist Oliver Crowe (both, along with Hamelin, 23) from
various aborted local bands the four had served in, and in
search of wider exposure they temporarily swapped French-speaking
Montreal to spend the summer of 2002 gigging in New York.
They immediately garnered attention.
Interpol became firm friends, they supported The Yeah Yeah
Yeahs among others
and Vice Magazine’s record label signed the band. More
touring followed, and after their debut release the Rememberese
EP in April 2003, last summer they again settled in New York
to record album Logic Will Break Your Heart with ex-pat Canadian
producer Gus Van Go.
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