Rarely has a band polarised audiences and critical opinion in such a way as Sydney rockers Wolfmother.
But whether you believe Wolfmother are a great band doing their thing,
or just another revivalist act cashing in on a genre, there are a
couple of indisputable things about them. The first is that they know
how to write great tracks. The second is they know how to rock the fuck
out. Cynics beware, Wolfmother are on a mission and judging by their
packed out shows, they are well on the way to accomplishing it.
Lifelounge's Dimitri caught up with singer and guitarist Andrew
Stockdale for a chat about how Wolfmother came into being.
Firstly I've got to say I've
been looking forward to your album since you released the EP, and it
doesn't disappoint, how does the band feel about the end result?
Very happy, we're really blown away by the result, we can't believe it's us.
How did you guys meet, did you play in any bands prior to forming Wolfmother?
I
played in a lot of bands from about the age of 18 onwards that lasted
for one show, and then everyone got jack of each other and never called
each other again. It's very difficult to meet people who are willing to
get into music. You meet people and you're like, ‘Hey do you want to
start a band' and they're like ‘you know, I'm starting my degree next
year and I've gotta do this and that', or ‘I'm more interested in being
a chef or whatever'. I guess the majority of people like the idea of
being in a band but don't really want to follow through with it.
I
heard you guys used to be photographers and designers, so are you the
internationally renowned fashion photographer who came up when I typed
your name into Google?
Nah that's not me, that's some other guy! No, I used to be a photographer.
So
were you playing music in that whole period when you were a
photographer? What made you make the switch to becoming a full-time
muso?
We'd been jamming full time for about six
years, and occasionally I'd do a photo shoot for a magazine or
something, and I'd finish the shoot and then I'd go and jam for days
when I should have been out looking for work. I always felt like it was
a distraction, I wished I could have committed myself fully to
photography but I'm kind of too interested in music and I never felt
like I could let music go.
Have you taken many shots of the band?
Yeah I did most of the first press shots.
You must have some really candid stuff.
Yeah
candid is the word for it (laughs), it took the guys awhile to get used
to being in front of the camera, I think we're still working on it.
The shots on the website look great, were they shot out in LA?
Yeah
the one that is a silhouette of us, we shot on top of a mountain that
is about half an hour out called Mt Wilson, we went up there with our
girlfriends and hung out taking shots with a digital camera. The
lighting looks great.
So where did the name Wolfmother come from?
Chris
just texted it through to me before we got our first show and I was
thinking, ‘What the hell is that, it sounds like a death metal band,
are you serious?' But nobody came up with anything else. He got it out
of a book called Skinny Legs and All , a Tom Robbins
psychedelic book. So we told the people who offered us the show we were
Wolfmother and from there everyone was like, ‘so have you heard of
those Wolfmother guys?' And it kind of stuck, it's grown on me now and
I think it suits us in a way.
There
has been a lot of hype about how the process from Wolfmother forming to
getting to where you are today seems to have been fairly rapid, what do
you think of those sort of comments?
There have
been years of jamming that people haven't seen, and with us it's like
we can walk into a room and start playing something and everyone just
falls into place. We've always had that, and I've been in bands where
you can play for a month and walk up to your guitar and be like, put
your finger on the fret board here and then put the other finger there.
So I think how fast things happen aren't really a reflection on the
quality of the music, although I think maybe it is a reflection of how
good the band is. I think we were pretty good from the start because we
were all decent at playing and we had a natural synergy within the
group, an understanding of what everyone else was doing.
Who are some contemporary bands that you respect or are influenced by?
I
like Devendra Banhart and Joanna Newsom. I went and saw her (Newsom)
play a couple of weeks ago and was really blown away by her
musicianship. I'm struggling enough with six strings let alone how many
strings she's got on that thing! I really like the style of the Kings
of Leon, he's got a great voice and they have a really good guitar
sound, and I also like the White Stripes and Dead Meadow. Have you
heard of Dead Meadow?
Nope.
They've
got some nice stuff, it's got big buzz bass lines, (Andrew imitates a
buzz bass line down the phone) and the whole band sort of follows a big
groove. Dead Meadow is a band that I feel are like kindred spirits in
some ways, it's like they're from the same family as what we're doing.
What was it like recording in the same studio as legendary bands such as Fleetwood Mac and Nirvana?
It's
funny because it could be anywhere, in some ways it's exciting, but
then you also kind of think, well this could be anyplace. It's fair
enough a lot of great things have happened here, but it's the people
that made it exciting, not the places. I got to the point where we were
in a really historical studio called the Sound Factory, and it stank
like shit, it was mouldy and I just said to the producer, lets go back
to the new one, I don't care if the bloody Doors recorded here or
somewhere else. It still had a vibe and the room sounded good, but I
think in some studios they think they can be really lazy because people
will continue to come from all over the world because of the artists
who have recorded there. I feel like its good to try to make history in
new places, to create new history.
So you're saying the environment you're in doesn't make that much difference?
I
think it's the people. I found Dave the producer was a pretty unique
person, and I just liked hanging out with him, talking about music and
ordering Frapaccinos! In music it's about the people in the room. If
you're in a room with five people and you feel good and you feel
comfortable and creative, good things will happen. Or you could be in a
room that has great historical significance but you might be stuck with
people that you aren't feeding off creatively.
I have a personal fascination with the desert just outside of LA, was the album actually recorded in a studio in the desert?
No
we'd actually recorded in about six studios by the end of the album.
The first one we rehearsed in was called Cherokee Studios. Bowie had
done some stuff there, Motley Crue had played on the piano and Evan
Dando and some Lemonheads stuff had been done there. The next one we
did was Sound City , that I think was in the porno district, and that
was just urban sprawl. The room was enormous, with really high
ceilings, and the Chilli Peppers and Nirvana had played there, and they
showed us the spot where Charles Manson had recorded an album there.
Apparently a guy tried to go in there and steal the tapes and there was
a shootout with police and Dave (the producer) showed me where there
were bullet holes in the lockers. He also showed me the spot where
Stevie Nicks used to snort cocaine in a little attic above the studio.
But in some of these places there is no vibe, like the place that we
stayed in. It's called the Oakwood apartments and it's pretty much
equivalent to a council estate. Nirvana stayed there, all the bands get
put there and all these great things have happened creatively, but you
go there, and it's devoid of any form of inspiration. It's like you may
as well go down to Coles and write an album!
That's
interesting because there's a real sense of mysticism in your album, is
that an intentional thing, or do you think it's something that comes
from the environment you're in or from within you guys?
I
think it is something that is within me and the other guys. It's a
place you can kind of go to creatively, I think that's what artists do
whether you're painters or writers, you can react to your surroundings
but it comes down to experiences in life and things that have happened,
because you can get a whole bunch of people and put them in a certain
place and they'll all have a whole different interpretation of it.
Wolfmother
are currently touring throughout Australia and New Zealand and will
then jump on the festival circuit, playing at the Homebake, Rocket,
Meredith and Falls Festivals. If you can't wait till then, indulge
yourself with some prog-rock goodness on their self-titled album, which
is out now through Modular.