
UKN: We've featured your band on our UP! show a couple of years ago, but can you talk about how you took your first steps and how you developed your original ideas, mixing visual art and music for the readers of our blog?
AR: Uniform Motion started off as a solo project when my previous
project, Angle, got put on hold. Then I met Renaud, a talented
illustrator with fine taste in music. I can't remember exactly where the
idea came from, but Renaud had always dreamed of being in a Rock band,
so we both agreed that the concept of him drawing illustrations during
the songs would be a good idea. His definition of a rock band wasn't too
limiting at the time! I was recording the
songs for what would become Uniform Motion's first album at that time
and somehow, we managed to get quite a few people involved. A young film
maker, a recording studio, several musicians. We thought it
would be a nice idea to release the album like a TV series, with an
episode every 2 weeks including the studio version of the song, a live
video and a comic strip containing the lyrics. Renaud came up
with the idea for the interactive comic strip where people could listen
to the song and flip though the comic book. It was a lot of
fun! Then the project turned into a band and we released the content
from our series as a CD/DVD/ comicbook in 2009. In
2010, we released a second album, which came with an illustration for
each song and a interactive virtual concert we developed for our
website. During our live shows, Renaud uses Photoshop, a video
projector and video screen. He draws an illustration for each song.
People love it! So the visuals follow us everywhere we go. It's an integral part of the project.
AR: At the end of 2010, we found a really cool drummer called
Olivier, who can play the drums and the keyboards and sing at the same
time!! I wasn't necessarily looking for a drummer at the
time, but I came across an ad he put up and thought, this guy looks
cool. So I called him up and we did a few rehearsals.
It went
really well so we started working on a bunch of new songs I had
written. A couple of sound engineering students approached us and asked
us if we would be interested in doing a 3 day recording session for
their end of year project. We said yes, entered the studio on day one,
and left on day three with 11 songs. The
songwriting process was totally different this time round. The previous
albums were written and recorded using a copy/paste method. I'd record
an idea, play around with it, work on a song structure, remove things,
add things, and so on until I got the song to a place I liked. Playing
them live was a nightmare because I had to learn all the songs from
scratch! With One Frame Per Second, I actually
wrote the songs before I recorded them. I knew how to play them and had
a song structure for them before we entered the studio. I
also adapted my guitar playing style to the drumming style that Olivier
was throwing at me. It was quirkier and faster than anything I would
have come up with on my own.
It's been a great experience. Now
we're releasing the album. We were lucky enough to receive some
financial support from our fans to help us release the album on CD,
Vinyl and on a Playbutton.
Renaud created a video game and video clip for the release of the album!
AR: The 4-string guitar was a bit of an accident. I found the guitar
like that, and then just tried to tune it in and play it. I actually
used a six string guitar for One Frame Per Second by the way (which
means I need two guitars for our live performances now!). I
suppose having less strings pushed me to places that I wouldn't have
discovered otherwise. It allowed me to find a playing style that sounded
a little different an focus on the texture of the songs, building them
in thin layers instead of one big one. I still use the 4-string!
AR: It was definitely a tribute to Mark Hollis and late Talk Talk! I liked the idea of taking one of their earlier synth pop songs and playing it a more restrained style. There's definitely something magical about Mark's voice.
And there's the myth as well. He just
disappeared! I'm not sure whether it was the industry that made him stop
releasing music or whether he just stopped making music all together
but I can definitely relate to the feeling of pointlessness you can get
sometimes when you look at your own achievements or lack thereof. I do
hope he still plays music though and that there are some sheep in the
middle of nowhere who are blessed with melodies floating over the fields
from time to time as Mark jams on the Piano in his country retreat! As
for new covers, we actually made a cover of an Erasure song for
Christmas last year. It wasn't really a personal choice. We were given a
list of songs to cover by a sync agency and decided to cover Erasure
because it was a great song that I thought would still sound great
without all the 80's bells and whistles.
We do a pretty
energetic cover of Catpower's 'Nude as the News' towards the end our our
set when we play live. :) Aside from that, we don't have any plans for
any other covers right now but we're open to suggestions!For more information about the band go here