The Death Of Her Money |
Post Reply |
Author | |
toroddfuglesteg
Forum Senior Member Retired Joined: March 04 2008 Location: Retirement Home Status: Offline Points: 3658 |
Topic: The Death Of Her Money Posted: October 26 2011 at 09:19 |
The Death of Her Money is a post-metal / sludge band formed in Newport, Wales in 2004. They have so far released two albums and some EPs. I got in touch with them and Darren Kaskie answered my questions. ####################################################################################
When,
where and by whom was your band born ? Did any of you, past and
present members, play in any other bands before joining up in your
band ? Why did you choose that name and which bands were you
influenced by ?
In
class registration in Rhymney Valley high School when one morning
while everyone had to call out their names to the teacher we said
let’s “start a band” for a laugh, me and Nicky (original
bassist) had a guitar and a 40 watt practice amp. We asked Ian to
play drums because we saw him play snare for the school marching
band, he didn’t have a drum kit, just a pair of sticks. We also had
a guy called Adam Kent in the band for the first couple of practices,
our original line-up was 3 guitars and a pair of drum sticks, this
was our first band that morphed and progressed over the years into
TDOHM, some people may say it’s a different band and I guess
officially TDOHM started in 2004 but we had been playing music
together since 1998.
The
band name came from one of our song title’s from this period of
around 2002 – 2004 when we were finding it hard to make the band
worth doing, we felt lost creatively, we’d all also moved to
different parts of South Wales so it was harder to practice and I
think there was a sub conscious barrier holding us back, we just felt
we needed a fresh start so we wanted to change the name of the band,
plus we’d had a break for about 6 months and during that time I had
started writing heavier and more focused songs, we got the name from
an old song we had, it was a very angry song that was designed as a
vent for our frustration of this era, the song was kind of like our
set closer that we’d just f**k sh*t up to.
I
wouldn’t say we were influenced by any band’s in particular at
the time, we have always had very different taste’s in music and I
was listening to all sorts of stuff around this time, Warp records
stuff, dance music, Metal, Hardcore, drone music, punk, hip hop
e.t.c.... I listen to pretty much everything so we were influenced by
everything we liked.
The
only band I know from Newport, Wales is Desecration. How is the scene
in Newport now ?
Desecration
have been around for a long time but they rarely play in Wales let
alone Newport, it’s a special occasion when they do. The Newport
scene is struggling at the moment, there are very few gig’s going
on as some venue’s have shut down, more bands seem to practice in
Newport rather than play gigs, Cardiff has the gig’s these day’s.
This
is an archive based interview also intended for the fans you get well
after both you and I have passed away so let's go straight to your
albums. Please give us your views/some words on your Eps &
albums, starting with.......
sh*t
Shaped from 2004
This
was a home made demo that we recorded with our friend Mr Eduardo from
Newport electro / noise band “Snork Maiden” on his digital
8-track recorder, I remember him being really happy with the radio
effect he put on my voice. I made the packaging myself after spending
hours copying CD-R’s and printing off CD labels and sticking it all
together but I loved doing it, it was exciting, i didn’t know I was
being DIY and all that sh*t, it just made sense. “American
Cemetary” was the b-side song and it was this demo that got us
noticed by some good people around the South Wales scene at the time,
we started getting on good gig’s after its release, it was fun
making this demo.
Scandinavian
Accent from 2006
A
local hardcore / punk label called “Rat Patrol Records” who at
the time were a collective of South Wales punk / hardcore types asked
us to record this song and that they would pay for it to get pressed
onto vinyl, we obviously jumped at the chance. It was recorded
underneath Cardiff Central train station underneath an arch of a
viaduct, it was during winter time and it was so cold in that arch
our hands were too numb to play our guitars, we recorded it with Jim
Williams from SW punk band “The Take” on analogue reel to reel
tape, Jim was such a nice guy to work with, we bought the tape but
couldn’t pay him hardly anything and it was f**king freezing for
the whole 3 day’s we spent there and he didn’t complain once.
Flood
Of Love from 2007
This
was recorded with Jeff Rose and Martin “Ginge” Ford (ex-Dub War)
at Nott-in-pil studio’s in Pil, Newport. This came from the
“Spirit Of The Stairwell” session’s but these song’s had
slightly out of tune bass on the original mix’s that we never
noticed in the studio, we only noticed what the weird sh*tty noise
was weeks later but we couldn’t afford to go back into the studio
(or maybe we were too embarrassed) but we were still waiting for our
album to be released and it seemed like it was never going to happen
any time soon so I got the audio files from the studio and we
re-recorded the bass and re-mixed the 3 songs ourselves, on the CD
there are only 3 tracks because we decided to connect the two songs
“Your Time Is Over” and Serpent Sleeps” together so you can’t
skip straight to the latter. The last track “Chinese Swimming”
was written and recorded in my house specifically for this E.P.
because we felt the 3 tracks wasn’t enough to call an E.P. It was
never intended to be 16 minutes long it just came out of nowhere and
we went with it, it’s the only TDOHM song we’ve never played
live.
We
self released it in November 2007 through our own Suntreader
Recordings label with hand made sleeves.
Spirit
of the Stairwell from 2008
This
was our debut album released on Superfi Records and Rat Patrol
Records, we were happy to be involved with Superfi as allot of bands
we respected were on that label. The release took ages to come
because of money and distribution deadline’s getting pushed back
all the time, it was tiring at the time, we felt momentum had been
lost but it actually turned out for the better because just as the
album came out we had some tours booked and some press coverage in
Rock Sound magazine. When Rock Sound included it at number 44 in
their top 75 albums of that year we were very surprised, we’d never
had any involvement with magazine’s or anything like that before.
Scandinavian Accent is the song that people still shout for when we
play live, after the release we played allot of gigs and toured the
UK, we had some fun times and met some great people and bands, it was
at this point that it became obvious that Nicky was in another place
to the rest of us, sometimes he would be too drunk to play gig’s
and would get very aggressive towards the rest of us, also his
playing was suffering and he walked off stage one night leaving me
and Ian to finish the set and I think that was pretty much it for
him. He played a few more shows after that but stated his feelings
towards us and the band and we decided to let him go. We still have
allot of respect for him, he taught me how to play guitar, It’s sad
we never speak to each other anymore.
The
Death Of Her Money / Helga from 2010
“Helga”
approached us via the internet one day out of the blue about doing a
split CD with them, we’d never heard of them but loved how dark and
deranged they sounded when we checked them out so we said yes, they
arranged everything with the artwork and the two labels “Opposing
Music” and “Delicious Music”, we just gave them our 3 songs at
that was it. “Poems” was actually taken from a session we’d
done with Carl Bevan (60ft Dolls) around that time but we only used
the drum tracks and vocal take. We re-recorded everything else
ourselves. “Truth” was used as a little teaser for “You Are
Loved” and “Down + Out” was taken from a cassette tape of weird
jam’s and experimental idea’s called “Development From Other
Chambers” we were planning to self release on cassette at the time
but never did.
You
Are Loved from 2010
Since
“Spirit Of The Stairwell” we just focused on playing live, we got
our friend Alex Morgan into the band to replace Nicky, we had already
written “You Are Loved” by this point and just played the songs
live for about two years before releasing it, It’s a very live,
straight up rock album in a way, I guess we wanted to rock out a bit
more playing live. The recording was a horrible experience as the
session’s were difficult and the final mixes got lost due to a hard
drive malfunction, we were gutted, somehow the album got recovered by
some patient computer tech people and we were back on again, then we
were struggling to find a label to release it until the Russian label
“Slow Burn” asked if we’d be up for doing it with them, that
connection came from the split with “Helga” so we have them to
thank as well as Slow Burn for the release of this album.
For
those of us unfamiliar with your music; how would you describe you
music and which bands would you compare yourself with ?
I
personally struggle to describe our music but that’s because
whenever someone asks the question I probably think about it too
much, I guess its pretty simple primal music, it relies on a constant
beat that pulls the listener in and the guitar’s fill the space
with heavy ambience. Our riffs are more like soundscapes with
fragments of melody and discordance and the vocals give it the primal
intensity that reminds the listener that there’s humane emotion in
it, so pretty simple.
I
don’t like to compare us to any other bands, I have respect for all
bands and everyone who has influenced me but I think that
namedropping makes it too easy for people to categorise our music and
we want to be as individual as possible.
How
is the creative processes in your band from coming up with an idea to
it's being recorded ?
We
try to be as spontaneous as possible when it comes to writing, we
like jamming idea’s weather that’s the whole band or on our own,
then find something you like and work on it a little bit to then find
that the first version was always the best one.
We
try not to over think our creative process, sometimes an idea will
pop out of the time in practice where someone’s setting up
equipment or tuning their strings, we always record our practises
just in case someone plays something we think we could use in a song,
and if we don’t catch anything then we still have hours of us
arguing on tape which is always hilarious to listen back to.
What
is your schedule and plans for the next weeks and months ? Touring or
anything else ?
In
just over a week we’re heading to Ukraine and Russia for two and a
half weeks on tour with our label mates “Starchitect”. It’s our
first time to play in these countries so we’re very excited and
hopeful that it goes down well. We’ve been very busy building up to
this tour getting everything sorted for our trip.
We’ve
also been writing new songs for our third album that we’re very
excited about, we plan to record it ourselves early next year and
hopefully more touring around Europe around the same time.
To
wrap up this interview, is there anything you want to add to this
interview ?
Thanks for reading this, go check out
our blog - http://tdohm.tumblr.com/ and listen to TDOHM radio on Last
FM here - http://www.last.fm/music/The+Death+of+Her+Money
Thank you to Darren for this interview |
|
Post Reply | |
Forum Jump | Forum Permissions You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum |