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toroddfuglesteg
Forum Senior Member Retired Joined: March 04 2008 Location: Retirement Home Status: Offline Points: 3658 |
Topic: Rosetta Posted: February 11 2011 at 16:08 |
Rosetta, hailing from Philadelphia, was formed in 2003 with Michael Armine on vocals and samples, David Grossman on bass, Bruce McMurtrie, Jr., on drums, and J. Matthew Weed on guitar and violin. Rosetta, with their 2005 double debut, "The Galilean Satelites", are pushing the boundaries of music by combining gleaming ambience with crunching sludge riffs for a truly unique way of creating post-metal. They have cited Neurosis and Isis as a main influence. I got in touch with the band and here is Dave's answers to my questions. ================================================== When, where and by whom was Rosetta started ? Did
any of you, past and present Rosetta members, play in any other bands before
joining up in Rosetta ? Why did you choose that name ?
The four of us formed Rosetta the summer of 2003 in
Philadelphia. Current members are the original members. We all
played in bands before Rosetta but nothing really of any note outside of our
singer being in a band called Mykado which but out a release on Translation Loss
records. The name sort of just happened, someone blurted it out and it just
stuck.
How was the music scene in your area when you
started ?
The music scene was ok in our area. There have
always been some great bands in Philadelphia and there still are. Bands like
Paint it Black, Restorations, The Menzingers, Towers, Balboa, etc. It seems like
there are never all that many places to play but I think that’s true of most
places. Over to your albums. Your debut album was The
Galilean Satellites from 2005 and this album is regarded as a classic album in
your genre. Please tell us more about this album.
We pretty much just got together and jammed for a
while and came out of it with those 5 songs. We recorded that record in
ourselves in our drummer’s bedroom. The second disc was born out
of recording stuff over those 5 songs through trial and error. To us those songs
sound very raw and underdeveloped, we don’t play anything from that record
anymore. Most of us were 20 or 21 and still in college when that record was
being written and recorded. Your second album was Wake/Lift from 2007. Please
tell us more about this album.
With this recorded we decided to get Colin from
Dysrhythmia/Behold The Arctopus to record the drums and we recorded everything
else ourselves again in our drummer’s bedroom. The first track
from the recorded was written almost right after we finished up The Galilean
Satellites, the rest was written over the next year and a half. I think we
started to move a little bit more towards how we sound on A Determinism of
Morality but still with the sound from The Galilean Satellites. Again most of
these songs came out of jamming which can be a hard way to write sometimes. Some
songs took a long time to come together as a result. Your third and so far last album is Determinism of
Morality from 2010. Please tell us more about this album.
The last song was the first thing we wrote post
Wake/Lift and we started playing it live early 2009. Ayil was written early 2009
as well. The rest of the album was written after we decided to work with Andrew
Schneider. The decision to have someone recorded and mix everything for us was a
huge step for us. It made us focus a lot more on song writing. We needed to have
complete ideas ready to go into the studio with him. We wrote the other 5 songs
during a 3-month period and just tried to focus on less jamming and more focused
song writing. We recorded an mixed everything over a 2 month period of time but
only 9 of those days were actually spent in the studio. Andrew just did a great
job of adding clarity to our sound, which is why we’re working with him again in
the future. How is the creative processes in your band from
coming up with an idea to it's being recorded ?
One of the three of us (drummer, bassist,
guitarist) will start with an idea and the other two people will start to add
their parts until we come up with something that the four of us are all happy
with. Armine will add his samples and vocals over time. The way we
work now the music will be almost 100% figured out and demoed by the time we’re
ready to recorded for real. Parts always have a chance of changing by the time
we record it for real.
For those of us unknown with your music; how would
you describe you music and which bands would you compare yourself with ? I think the statement a heavy version of The Cure
fits us very well. Obviously Isis and Nuerosis are to bands we’ll always be
compared with. For the most part we leave that stuff up to the people who listen
to us.
What is your plans for this year and beyond ?
We just got back from a tour with Kylesa and Fight
Amp that went extremely well. We’re about to go into the studio to record some
stuff for a split with Junius that will be out later this year. A month long
tour of Europe during the summer and hopefully another short trip into Canada
later in the year. After that I think we’ll start writing for an ep.
To wrap up this interview, is there anything you
want to add to this interview ? Thanks for taking the time to do this. Thank you to Dave for this interview |
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Prog Geo
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 09 2010 Location: Athens (Greece) Status: Offline Points: 2555 |
Posted: February 11 2011 at 17:13 |
Nice interview Torodd!
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Sonorous Meal show every Sunday at 20:00 (greek time) on http://www.justincaseradio.com
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NecronCommander
Special Collaborator Prog Metal Team Joined: September 17 2009 Location: Madison, WI Status: Offline Points: 16122 |
Posted: February 11 2011 at 19:42 |
Thanks for the interview, Rosetta are one of my favorites in the post-metal genre.
If anyone is interested the band started a Kickstarter drive because they're lacking the funds they need to go into the studio for the Junius split due to high repair bills for their van on their most recent tour, you can send a few bucks their way here if you want to help them get into the studio on time, and you can get a copy of the split signed by the band when it's all finished. EDIT: Looks like since I donated 2 days ago they've already doubled their goal. There are still a few spots to donate left though.
Edited by NecronCommander - February 11 2011 at 19:44 |
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sleeper
Prog Reviewer Joined: October 09 2005 Location: Entropia Status: Offline Points: 16449 |
Posted: February 12 2011 at 20:07 |
Nice interview. Sorry to read that they dont play anything from the Galileon Satilites any more, by far their best album.
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Spending more than I should on Prog since 2005
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