I have managed to secure an exclusive interview with up and coming British prog band I Am The Manic Whale, who will hopefully be added to PA soon. Thanks to David and Michael for their detailed and interesting answers.
I Am The Manic
Whale Interview May 2016
Background to the
band
How
did the band come to be formed?
You
recently published a photo of the band in the same room for the first
time. How did you all meet and was the album recorded?
--
Michael:
David and I met at secondary school and have been making music
together in various guises since then. We met Ben a couple of years
later through my sister. Then I met John via email and facebook
through a very unlikely set of circumstances in about 2008 and
eventually met him in real life at a wedding in 2014.
David:
Actually Mike and I met before that… While in primary school a
mutual friend introduced us and we spent the day (all 3 of us)
playing in my parents’ back garden in Reading. We must have been
about 7 or 8 years old. I seem to remember we had some kind of
disagreement and argued about what we would play on the computer, and
I turned it off in a moment of uncharacteristic rage. Since that dark
day (‘Black Sunday’ we call it), we have never had even so much
as a heated debate, for fear of repeating those tumultuous events.
Michael:
We recorded a lot of the album by remote control. David, John and
myself all have home-recording facilities, so I can throw together a
demo of song and send it to them. They can then add all the
shredding, twiddles, bells and whistles in their own time and send
the files back to me. At some point during the process Ben comes
around to my studio and smashes out some hard-rockin’ drums. Quite
often David and John are working independently on the same material
and I have to make some hard decisions when the parts come back as
they don’t all work together, or the textures are just too full!
Then
all the separate files are sent off to Rob Aubrey at Aubitt studios,
who promtply tells me to re-do half of them as they’re not up to
scratch! Rob has an excellent ear for detail and is a stickler for
accuracy and our album is better as a consequence!
Where
did the band name come from? Why is the whale manic?
There
is a secret hidden meaning behind the band’s name, which is
unlikely to be revealed in the near future as a way of maintaining a
sense of awe and mystery around the band.
--
Future Plans
Are
there any plans for gigs/tours in the near future? Can you play
somewhere near my house (please)?
Are
there any plans for more albums? Will they take less than 10 years?
--
Michael:
We have begun rehearsals for live shows and they have been extremely
enjoyable. We have about an hour’s repertoire ready to go, but no
confirmed gig dates in the diary yet. If any readers are looking for
a prog band for an event please do get in touch!
We
have begun work on writing songs for Manic Whale II, and it is
confidently expected to be released by the summer of 2026.
David:
I think it’s important to set realistic deadlines. So let’s say
2036 for now and consider moving the date forward when we start
recording backing vocals.
--
Musical influences
I
hear bits of modern prog bands such as Spocks Beard and IZZ in your
music. Who are your main musical influences?
--
Michael:
I don’t think I’ve ever heard of IZZ! Some have said we sound
like ACT, who I’ve also never really listened to.
I
really like, Genesis, Queen, Manfred Mann’s Earth Band, Genesis,
Yes, Big Big Train, The Flower Kings, Genesis, Neal Morse, Spock’s
Beard, Genesis, Moon Safari, Transatlantic, Genesis, ELO, ELP, ELQ,
Genesis, Supertramp, Steven Wilson, Pink Floyd, Phil Collins, Peter
Gabriel, Steve Hackett, Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford, The Alan Parsons
Project, Genesis, Tin Spirits and others.
David:
I’m a big Spock’s Beard (and Neal Morse) fan, love Dream Theater
(the old stuff), and the guitar heroes like Joe Satriani, Van Halen,
Paul Gilbert, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Tommy Emmanuel.
The songs
The
track “Princess Strange” is about cyber bullying – is this a
subject close to your heart(s)?
Michael:
The song is inspired by some of my experience in teaching. Every time
a student gets into trouble for bullying the immediate response is
“it was a joke”, which is always a very flimsy excuse for some
pretty unpleasant behaviour towards another person. It made me cross,
so I wrote a song about it.
What's
the story behind the 10,000 year clock in “Clock of the Long Now”?
Michael:
I read about the Long Now project in an online article and was
inspired by this idea of building an all-mechanical clock that could
keep perfect time without human intervention for 10,000 years as a
way of promoting long-term thinking. We were very fortunate in being
given permission to use some images of the clock in our album
artwork. The image on the CD itself is the face of the protoype
clock, which you can visit in the Science Museum, London.
If
readers would like to know more about the Long Now foundation they
are encouraged to visit http://www.longnow.org" rel="nofollow - - David:
I envision the tour guide video when you visit The Clock of the Long
Now with us on the soundtrack, and I really hope that comes to
fruition.
And
for the record I asked Mike several times to include a reprise of
“Ceramic Ball Bearings” at the end of Derelict. It was recorded
but strangely didn’t turn up in the final mix & master of the
song.
Is
“Derelict” the first prog song about a disused swimming pool?
Michael:
As far as I know! And we certainly hope so. Lyric writing is
something that I’ve not always found easy in the 15 years or so
I’ve been writing songs. It was listening to a song called “East
Coast Racer” by Big Big Train, which is about the steam locomotive
Mallard, that made me realise I could write songs about stuff I’m
genuinely interested in rather than trying to fit into an existing
lyrical mould. As a child I loved Mallard and the story about the
world speed record for steam, but I would never have considered
writing a song about it. Derelict is a tale about an urban explorer
who breaks into an abandoned swimming pool to take pictures and finds
himself strangely moved by what he finds there.
David:
Er, it’s all a big metaphor isn’t it? Isn’t it?? Is it really
about a swimming pool?
And finally...
Will
you getting new scarves for the next album?
David:
So far we have raised over £4.50 in album sales so I confidently
believe we will have enough money to buy new scarves, possibly in
time for Winter.
Michael:
John and David will. I will be sticking with my existing scarf as it
is 14’ long, which is long enough for at least two albums. Ben
doesn’t believe in scarves.
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