Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Looking Back - The 1990s

And so it begins.

Our early history is probably not very well documented. And with good reason - it's not something we're especially proud of. You could view the 1990s as a learning curve for us, starting with next to no equipment or experience, and ending with just a little of each.

Despite that, we did manage to write a couple of good songs (looking back, we had maybe a 4 or 5% hit rate, which isn't too bad), and we did still enjoy ourselves immensely. But rest assured, although most of the early recordings do still exist in one form or another, there is absolutely no chance that you are ever going to hear them.

So, roughly in chronological order, these are my personal highlights of 1992-1999:
  1. Writing our first proper song in around 1992, which was called Dangerous and was largely based around The Green Cross Code.
  2. Pointing two tape recorders at one another and turning songs by the likes of Simply Red and Prince into songs of our own, by shouting over them until you couldn't hear the original any more. Unsurprisingly, in the case of Simply Red, it actually made the song better than the original.
  3. The original recording of our 1993 EP Amnesia, which was then called Brain Cell, and included the sound of us drinking tea. If we ever turn out to be influential, this will be cited as an early example of sampling.
  4. Connecting our first computer to our first tape recorder to create sequenced (i.e. in time) music. We used an insanely complex programming language called APL, and wrote all the music in code. There was a nanosecond gap in the music between each verse.
  5. Recording an album of hymns. For some reason, we never got around to releasing it.
  6. Writing our own fanzine, Pure Hype, despite not having any readers, or, most of the time, any news.
  7. Unscrewing a cassette tape, and sellotaping the two ends of a tape together to create a loop. When played back, this created a very odd sounding "sample", which we even used once for the drums (borrowed from Blue Monday) on a remix of our 1995 track What Makes It Go. Obviously, it didn't keep particularly good time, but neither did it sound much worse than when we didn't use it.
  8. The Yamaha PSS-380. Oh yes. Bought in Nottingham, in 1997, this was our first foray into the world of digital synthesis. It was a revolution. Not long afterwards, I repaired our first keyboard, the PSS-150, which still works to this day, with all of five different sounds and a drum section which we can confirm does indeed provide all the excitement of being a real drummer.
  9. Buying our first proper synthesiser, the wonderful Casio CZ-1000, in a second-hand shop in Wagga Wagga in August 1998. We made lots of digital sounds, including some great snare sounds. And some dreadful kick drum sounds.
  10. Buying our first 4-track tape recorder at Christmas 1998. Now we had a means of properly recording, and even (occasionally) of staying in time. The foundations had truly been laid for the next decade.
Next time: 1999-2002.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Coming Soon - Looking Back

A long, long time ago, I can still remember how the music used to make me something...

But I knew that if I posted more regularly on our blog, it might help me gather my thoughts a bit, which would be A Good Thing.

Where was I? Oh yes, back in July last year, I started putting together a new series of blog posts called 'Looking Back'. And then promptly forgot about them. Until now.

So... every week for the next few weeks, assuming I don't think of anything better to post inbetween, I shall blog my ten favourite moments of each "era" of our history. You may, or may not, enjoy them...

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Almost weekly update

Things that I have done this week:
  1. Lost my internet connection for a week
  2. Broke my mouse
  3. Did some tweaks to the Hypernova website
  4. Updated our MySpace page
  5. Posted the word "nearly" on Twitter
It's good when things happen, isn't it?

Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Things That Have Happened

Our last post was A Very Long Time Ago. That would be a good song title. Unless someone steals it first. I remember a very funny interview with Meat Loaf once, where he was complaining about how he had announced the title of one of the songs for his next album, and then somebody stole it. I can't actually imagine why anyone other than him would write a song with more words in the title than the song itself, but apparently it's a real problem for people like him.

Where was I? Oh yes. I think maybe I'm getting old, which would probably explain why I keep forgetting things. At the very least, it would explain what happened to my hair. And my teeth.

A lot of things have happened in the last year. One of these was that I turned 30, which was a bit of a non-event as it turns out, and we haven't written any songs about it.

We haven't written many songs at all, actually, but this is definitely something we are trying to remedy. As we've described many times before, we effectively have an album's worth of material which isn't a million miles/years away from being completed, but never quite seems to get there.

The old website mysteriously expired, so we started a new one. Why not go and have a look? It's almost finished.

I moved house. When we started working on Album Number Nine, I was based in Yorkshire, and Simon was based on the edge of Birmingham. Now it's even worse - he's in Southampton, and I'm in Los Angeles. The prospects of us ever playing live become ever more and more remote. Which is a shame, as I would very much like to do it one day.

These actually all sound like quite good excuses, but it's still frustrating that we haven't managed to finish anything for so long. Until now. We have the beginnings of a plan.

But that's all you're getting for now. I'll try and "blog" more often, and if I leave this post with an open ending, I might be more likely to write the next one. The suspense is for me, you see, not for you. That said, I could also leave this post with a half-finished sentence right at the