Showing posts with label La Marche Des Rois. Show all posts
Showing posts with label La Marche Des Rois. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Off The Record Presents: A Carloman Christmas Special!


Carloman- A Carloman Christmas
Just in time for the Holidays! Class up your merriment this year with Carloman's modernized take on chants and hymns. In the spirit of Carloman (the band, not the King), spreading Christmas cheer to all who can hear, comes the gift of a new song to be added to their Christmas Classics already on Bandcamp, La Marche Des Rois. Scroll down to listen and click to download.

And bonus, we caught up with Carloman again to find out the latest news on the band's progression in the last few years. We're always impressed about their perseverance and philological style of music. Here is what the band has been up to and relive our previous interview with Carloman here.
 

UKN: Since we've last talked you released your second album in 2013. What has changed between your debut and your sophomore album "Carloman II"?

C: Hi Nichy! First of all thank you for your support, we really appreciate it! In terms of what has changed since Carloman I, mainly a lot has changed in our personal lives -- Elliot has moved to California (he misread the state name as “Carloman”) and Dominic had a son (Carloman III?). We also started up a post-production audio house called “House of Resonance” in which we do all manner of post-audio work.

UKN: You made an impressive video for "Quam Dulcis Vita Fuit." Can you tell us about the process behind it and the characters in the video? Did you collaborate with anyone in particular? 


C:
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it! Although we edited all the footage together, the artwork was entirely from the mind of Scorpion Dagger. We stumbled upon his work one day and realized that he had unintentionally pretty much already made the perfect Carloman video! The only obstacle was forcing him to let us put it together. Thankfully, after a few visits to the torture chamber, he approved of the idea and the rest is medieval history.

UKN:  Will Carloman be making more videos in the future?

C: We hope so!

UKN:  Going back, what are the origins behind the band Carloman?

C: A passion for eclectic folklore, baroque, renaissance and medieval music, and a deep appreciation for history and culture. And for making up weird stories. We were also both coming off of more traditional bands and wanted to try something different, less electric, more raw and “free”... In the course of some random discussions, we pondered the could-have-been world of Carloman, the historical character. Throw a little bit of whiskey and old Belgian ale into the mix and you end up with Carloman, the band.

UKN:  Both of you (Dominic and Elliot) live on opposite sides of the US, now.  Does it have an impact on your music?

C:
It does require more discipline and we are left with fewer spontaneous parodic outtakes at the end which is too bad, but it can be done! As for an actual impact on the music -- not too much I’d say. Regardless where we are, we each have our evolving musical lives and what makes any creative collaboration interesting is the merging of those sets of influences, which happens even 20 million miles apart (or however far NY is from LA). 

UKN:  Any chance of seeing Carloman live in the future?

C: He’s been dead for 1200 years but perhaps, just perhaps, on judgement day Carloman will live again. And who wouldn't want to spend the day of reckoning going to see a pre-baroque pop duo?

UKN: Dominic, what are your impressions of the live tribute to Gene Clark's "No Other" that saw you onstage with members of Beach House, Grizzly Bear and Fleet Foxes? 

C:
Actually, I wrote up a little blog post about it on our House of Resonance website earlier this year. Since then, we got back together once more to headline the End of The Road festival near Bristol in the UK in August. It was wonderful to get to know all these guys a little bit and see that they are just as wonderful people as they are musicians. It was a very special event, full of positive energy and good spirits. It truly was a privilege to be a part of it. Pitchfork released a full concert video of one of our shows at the Music Hall of Williamsburg if you'd like to check it out!


UKN:  I am very fond of your sublime version of "Corpus Christi Carol". Are you planning to cover other artists or traditionals in the future?

C:
Thank you! Well on that note, allow us to officially announce our new Carloman Christmas track right now! This newest track is called La Marche Des Rois and it has a wonderful history: the oldest known version is attributed to your very own Giovanni Battista Lully, court composer of Louis XIVth of France (though the melody may well pre-date as a Provencale song). Lully’s version, in a major key, was a military march, La Marche de Turenne. It seems that the Epiphany lyrics about the three kings, covered here, came about in the early 1700s. Later, in 1872, Georges Bizet reprised the musical theme for L’Arlesienne. In our version we tried to honor all of these little facets of the song’s history through our interpretation and orchestration. We like our Carloman Christmas overloaded with history.



UKN:  What's on the horizon for Carloman?

C:
The story of Carloman is open-ended. We have a few ideas for follow-up releases. We enjoy treating them as generational lineage, ie. Carloman I, Carloman II (both real people). While there is technically no Carloman III, there are all sorts of bizarre relatives (also named Carloman) with whom the tradition can live on. Maybe the eventual twist will be that WE are the direct descendents of Carloman! (which we will sing about 75 albums later, at the peak of everyone’s interest).


UKN:  Where can people listen to your album and follow you?

C:
Bandcamp and Facebook! Our music is always donation-based and our court marketing guy has also been dead for 1200 years so we truly rely on everyone’s word of mouth to spread the gospel according to Carloman! Thanks again for all your support, Nichy!

Carloman Bandcamp
Carloman Facebook
Carloman on Twitter
House of Resonance

(in italiano dopo il jump break)