music art film review - REDEFINE magazine
Liars Band Interview (2014) Brooding in Ecstasy With Mess’s Playful Catharsis
Liars' 2012 full-length, WIXIW, dwelled in doubt and anxiety, pressed against a curtain of murky fragility. Even if one only looks at the cover art for the band's latest follow-up, Mess -- a robust mass of multihued string that looks like the Love Forever Changes hydra head grew dreadlocks -- it's evident that in 2014, the band is in a more positive, confident, and even silly headspace. Mess's stock in trade is industrial dance music -- and although Liars' beats are as primal as they've always been, their music is now a little too emotionally in-check to properly identify as synth-punk.


This kind disease could run its course This time will be a whole brand new route This comforts all that ached before I might just start to believe in trust - "Perpetual Village"
I brood in ecstasy, a thought to wrap my head around. - "Pro Anti Anti"Singer and guitarist Angus Andrew's focus on Mess is putting problematic issues to beneficial use, on-trend with current popular strains of psychology devoted to mindfulness and cognitive behavioral therapy. In mindfulness meditation, one learns to accept a thought without judgment, to live in the present and simply notice what can't be noticed when one's head is mired in past events or nerves over future events. Cognitive behavioral therapy holds that our patterns of thinking -- the way we catastrophize situations and make grand leaps in logic toward negative outcomes -- can be changed by naming them, taking away their control over our lives. The question, then, is whether these trends have merit.

We don't outgrow hard feelings - "Left Speaker Blown""It depends on what is needed for the individual," Hemphill continues. "I suppose a broad rule to follow might be that negativity should be followed if and when it truly resonates with where a person is at in their life. If one feels obligated to turn negativity into something positive based on another's wishes, I believe this will only prolong the negativity, and lead an individual further away from finding the true answer to their question."
I always wondered how To rid myself of doubt Haven't really been forced in awhile - "Vox Tuned D.E.D."The use of the word "forced" in "Vox Tuned D.E.D." is interesting; it suggests that Andrew has had a lack of agency in these matters, and there's a twinge of resentment, or "hard feelings" accompanying the desire to make personal progress. Perhaps conventional therapy hasn't fully explored the punk rock approach of following the resentment down the rabbit hole to see whether it kills us or charges our creative batteries.
Connection, Dislocation & Influence
In a REDEFINE interview from 2010, Andrew mentioned that the band felt dislocated from what was going on -- unconnected to music, culture, and Los Angeles, in general. Such factors were at the root of the band's record, Sisterworld -- and though circumstances have changed, Hemphill thinks the sense of disconnection is still there, although not necessarily in a negative way.
"We try to treat everything like it's our last." - Aaron Hemphill, Liars
Bands that succeed in America are generally eager to relate, to seem lovable and make a real connection. Liars project a more European aloofness -- something that the band's time in Berlin may have cemented even further. Their refusal to hold onto anything as basic as a "musical direction" for more than a single album would come off as a dare to the fanbase if Liars weren't operating in and creating such a self-contained universe, an ecosystem that can thrive even without exterior influence.
Liars don't take success for granted; the band sees changes in the music climate as a "creative challenge" and approaches every album or tour like it's their last. That connection, such as it is, comes by giving fans "what you yourself would want to have put out there."
Making music full-time is the band's dream, says Hemphill, and even if outside circumstances prevent that in the future, he would hate for it to be because of a lack of effort. The band still plays shows as if no one had ever heard of them, and still refuses to phone it in ("You don't know how far someone drove").
"We try to treat everything like it's our last," Hemphill emphasizes once again. "That's why we still feel really nervous when we play. It adds a lot of nervous energy to our performances, and hopefully it has created a consistency throughout the years of our live shows."
Liars on Art Direction & Album Cover Artwork





Easily Attainable Objects, Secret Knowledge, and Spontaneity: The Creative Process Behind Mess
We count to 4 then face the tide - "Boyzone"Where WIXIW's creative process was slowed by a learning curve with unfamiliar technology, the writing was easier and more "spontaneous" on Mess, says Hemphill. Nonetheless, the recording setups and use of software synthesizers for the two albums were largely the same; Liars made both records using Pro Tools and Reaktor -- Native Instruments' graphical modular sound studio -- as well as a variety of plug-ins. This time, though, the band was more self-assured and less glued to the instruction manual. "We felt that we were gaining some sort of knowledge with [the technology], and that it'd be a shame to abandon it at that point," Hemphill explains, "because we felt a different side of the creative connection with soft synths, and it seemed to be a bit more fluid and very exciting, so we just kept with it." Reaktor has a customizable online user library where people create different instruments, and according to Hemphill, the band downloaded 50 a day in search of sounds they wanted to incorporate into Mess. He is a fan of Reaktor's home-built ensembles, including a "sequencer that this guy built that's really raw-sounding" that Liars have used a couple times. In general, though, Hemphill notes that he's reluctant to publicize the band's favorite software instruments and effects, because, "They're kind of obvious, and they're kind of secret", and he doesn't want to give too much away. Analog synthesizers are present on Mess as well: a monophonic standalone synth called Dark Energy, and a Korg MS2000 that a friend gave the band. These incorporations reflect Liars' creative mentality; they're fans of "easily attainable and universal objects," and aren't afraid of things one might find on the sale rack at Guitar Center.

"We don't tend to write anything off as being too corny until we've heard what it can produce." - Aaron Hemphill, Liars
One example is the vocoder Angus Andrew employed on "Dress Walker" -- a minimalist electro-funk workout with some Nine Inch Nails squelch. Hemphill says that during Mess's writing process, he noticed Andrew at the MS2000, playing with the vocoder. "And I was dreading, like ‘Oh my god, he's going to spend all this time on the song, and he's going to show it to me, and I'm going to have to tell him, dude, the vocoder sucks'."
Ultimately, though, Hemphill was convinced that Andrew's "incredible creative talent" would make the track unique, and he was right. "It's just singular tones that aren't fluctuating so much, so it adds this really beautiful resonance to his vocal," he explains.
"Darkslide", an instrumental track with a tribal, My Life in the Bush of Ghosts feel, has been a favorite of those the band have asked for advice, although it nearly didn't make it onto the record. Liars spent a considerable amount of time attempting to write a vocal for it, but the band felt it "expressed what we wanted to with the instruments, and that the sounds moved the song and progressed the arc of the song better than words could."
Mess on a Mission
When the world sings from the halls, and the demon's at the door Let the one inside and sing along - "Dress Walker"Though Liars' work ethic remains meticulous, this time around, we see the band giving themselves permission to be Messy, to invent wildly weird moments that aren't necessarily deathless artistic statements. On "Mask Maker," Andrew uses a voice manipulation tool to intone, "Take my pants off," and, "Smell my socks," in a commanding baritone. "Mess on a Mission" has an early video game's sense of purposeful urgency, as if the "Mess" is its own character in the Liars canon and he's ascending cheaply animated levels against all odds to save a groovy noise princess. "Darkslide" feels like following a waterfall down into the mercurial jungle river of a Werner Herzog film, and splashing around insouciantly as the natives come closer. It's not totally an escapist record, though. It's alert and reflective; even the title of "Left Speaker Blown" suggests that Liars knows it's all fun and games until someone loses an eye. Mess ends on a meditative drone, with a sampled male voice bringing us back to the present:
"Say the word shout... say the word limb."At first blush, the instructions seem disjointed -- Messy, even -- but further listening suggests they might be part of a lie-detector test, or a hypnotism session where secret truths are revealed. Confidence sometimes has connotations of being dishonest, putting one over on people, but it's also a marker of being real with yourself. The voices trying to shut down the accepting-without-judging brain of an otherwise confident person are, in fact, the liars.
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Liars - Mess Full Album Stream
music art film review - REDEFINE magazine
Liars Band Interview (2014) Brooding in Ecstasy With Mess’s Playful Catharsis