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Joined: March 04 2008
Location: Retirement Home
Status: Offline
Points: 3658
Topic: Psicotropia Posted: September 20 2010 at 08:20
Psicotropia means "mental place". The musical creations of Pablo Tato, Jaime Mariscal and Juan Llull from Madrid, Spain intend to take the listener to an ambient as intense as artistic by treating the music in a complex manner based in the mixture of both rhythmic and melodic modern arrangements like jazz scales, improvisation and the use of theater-like, ambiental, esthetical stage presentation.
This sounds great to me. I contacted Pablo for the Psicotropia story.
Your
biography has been covered in your ProgArchives profile so let's
bypass the biography details. But why did you choose that name and
which bands were you influenced by?
Psicotropia
means mental place. When we founded the band, we were looking for a
name which wasn't particularly Spanish or English, and which
represent the idea of our music having the same effect as
psychotropic drugs, but without using them. We put the band together
as a King Crimson covers project (Starless was our first goal), but
really soon our own ideas started to flow and we decided to start
composing and playing our original songs as well.
Please
tell us more about your first album Psicotropia
from 2003
We
recorded our first album in our rehearsal room, and in the beginning
it was just meant to be a demo for recording the compositions we did
in our first two or three years as a band. After it was done, Juan
José Salas from Luna Negra listened to it and offered us to release
it as a proper album. We happily agreed and since then, we have been
releasing our records with the distribution of Luna Negra.
Psicotropia
was massively influenced by King Crimson and different bands from the
prog 70s, such as Yes, Jethro Tull, Genesis, Zappa... we counted with
many guests for the recording, as Nacho Cuevas, who sang all the
tracks (mostly in Spanish) and played flute, Iván Caramés, who
played cello... We still play some of the tracks in our gigs,
especially the paranoid and quite symphonic Oigo Voces.
Please
tell us more about your second album Grog
from 2005
Grog
was our second release, recorded in 2004 in a scary and abandoned
house in the countryside near Salamanca. This time, we counted with
Koke Díez and Mikel Eceiza (who also took care of the mixing and
mastering) for the production of the album, and clearly the sound is
much better and tighter than the first album. I think this second
album represent our influences from this years, which were much
modern and included metal/experimental bands as Tool, Mr.Bunge, The
Mars Volta, Muse... The sound and composition of Grog
are much closer to a stronger and harder music, and takes advantage
of the weird structures of bizarre music. We released the album with
Luna Negra again and with the Spanish label Psycofonia Records, and
we included the DVD Psicotropia
Live,
half hour of our music played live in a gig in Madrid.
What
were you up to during the five years between Grog
and Psicotropia3?
Composing
new material and playing alive, mainly! We are all full time workers
and it's hard to find enough time for our music, which requires
months of rehearsals and decisions until we finish every song. During
this years we played dozens of gigs in Spain and we visited great
prog festivals, such as Minnuendö Festival (Spain), ProgDay (USA),
Crescendo and ProgSud (France), etc.
Please
tell us more about your third album Psicotropia3
from 2010
Psicotropia3is
our third album and it has been released with Luna Negra and Nooirax
Producciones (for its distribution in Spain). It was recorded during
the year 2009 and we did it again with the producer Mikel Eceiza,
which had amazing ideas for sounds and experimentation with
microphones, etc. I think this is probably our most personal album,
in which we keep mixing loads of different influences, but the
overall sound is much more authentic and not only "prog" or
"metal"... the music is more relaxed than our previous Grog
and all the lyrics are in Spanish. We counted with string
arrangements, and the collaboration in keyboards of Carlos and
Adriana Plaza from Kotebel. The amazing design was made of Estudio
Krauss and it represents the mathematic character of the album. The
third album of the trio has a triangle in the cover and everything
makes a reference to this number.
How
is the creative process in Psicotropia from coming up with a
theme/riff/idea to you get it down onto an album?
Normally,
it is Jaime or I who compose the main riffs and structures of the
songs before taking them into the rehearsal room. Sometimes they are
just isolated riffs and other times the songs are mostly finished.
Anyway, we always try them and change loads of things while playing
the songs together until we are all happy with them. The lyrics,
which I take care of, normally are the last step in the composition
process, when all the music is done.
Just
to give those of us who are unknown with your music a bit of a
reference point or two: How would you describe your music?
It's
rock music sing in Spanish, with a huge influence of the progressive
rock bands of the 70s, with King Crimson as our favorite band, but
that also takes references from different styles of music, such as
metal, experimental, classical and even jazz. Our music tries to be a
challenge for the musician and the listener, avoiding the commercial
cliches and structures, for representing our particular way of
creating music.
How
is your gigs situation in Spain? Is there any plans or wishes to play
gigs or festivals outside Spain?
We
have been already playing in festivals in Mexico, USA, France, etc.
and every single time we had amazing experiences. In Spain, it is
really complicated to survive being a progressive band. Basically,
there's no any support from the media, industry, etc. so every band
in this style has to use its own ways to keep alive. We have been
self-promoting, self-supporting and self-everything our own band
during the last 11 years. Surprisingly, and despite these
difficulties, there is a huge underground scene in Spain in the
latest years, with amazing bands trying to make a different and great
music for themselves.
Are
you involved in any other bands or projects?
I
play guitar in the avant-garde metal band Tinnitia, and we are
currently preparing the recording of our first LP, probably for 2011.
What
are your plans for the rest of this year and next year?
I
am currently living in London and Jaime and Juan are in Spain, so we
are focused now on the promotion of the new record via internet, but
we are already thinking on start booking gigs and festivals for next
year. We'll do our best!
To
wrap up this interview, is there anything you want to add to this
interview?
Anyone
interested on Psicotropia's music can visit
www.myspace.com/psicotropia or order our latest album via Luna Negra
(America) Musea Records (Europe, Japan) or Nooirax Producciones
(Spain).
Thank
you very much for the interview and stay Grog!!!
Thank you to Pablo for this interview
Their PA profile is here and their homepage is here
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