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Joined: March 04 2008
Location: Retirement Home
Status: Offline
Points: 3658
Topic: Matt Stevens Posted: October 05 2011 at 15:43
UK composer and musician Matt STEVENS has managed to make a name for himself in the last few years utilizing the possibilities of social networks, networking and interaction available on the net, with a strong presence on most popular social networks in general and the ones focusing on music and fan interaction in particular. He's also less negative than most musicians towards the phenomenon filesharing, his point of view that obscurity is a bigger threat and challenge for artists than fans who prefer not to buy all their music. With that in mind he has made his studio albums, of which he's made two so far, available to download with a name your own price option, including the possibility to download for free.
I got in touch with him and here is his story so far.
When
and why did you take up music ? Is music your main occupation or do you also
have a sane job too ?
I started doing music when I
was a kid at 14, when I was into Guns N Roses and Iron Maiden and all that. I
wanted to be in Guns N Roses, it didn't work out. I'm in my mid 30's now so I've
been playing for over 20 years. Blimey the years fly by! Music is currently my
full time job, I also do some writing and I help bands with their social media
stuff. I love what I do at the moment but it's tough to keep things going, I'm
lucky but I don't take things for granted, I have a very supportive
audience.
You
are also involved in other bands and projects. Please tell us more about
them.
I'm
also in a band called The Fierce And The Dead, it's kind of epic instrumental
stuff with influences from King Crimson and The Mahavishnu Orchestra to Black
Flag, Tortoise and Sonic Youth. Our first EP is one 19 minute long song. It's
very much a collaborative thing, I really enjoy it. It's very electric and noisy
and some people say it crosses over between prog and post rock. Our first album
is called If It Carries On Like This We Are Moving To Morecambe. It has had good
reviews and I'm really pleased with it, we're starting gigging in a couple of
weeks and we're doing an EP after Christmas. That is also instrumental stuff. I
also play in a more electronic duo called Yonks, really odd esoteric stuff with
my friend Lextrical, not prog but very odd.
Over
to your three albums and your EP. Your debut album was Echo from 2008. Please
tell us more about this album.
Echo is purely acoustic
guitar, we recorded it for £300 and a piece of cheese. Even spending that felt
like a lot of money at the time, there was no real hope of recouping. Amazingly
it began to build an audience slowly, through blogs and forums etc. It's a funny
album as it's very close to my live show. All the pieces are loops of acoustic
guitar parts built up layer upon layer. I'm still quite pleased with it. Some of
the stuff on there l still play live like Burning Bandstands, even though over
the years the parts have grown more dense and complex. When I did Echo I was
really into the Friday Night In San Francisco, the McLaughlin, Di Meola, De
Lucia album. I'm not really that sort of player but I love that record. I'm more
into chords and interesting parts than flash playing. I love Johnny Marr and
Alex Lifeson's open, jangly guitar parts.
The
Ghost album followed last year. Please tell us more about this album.
Some people say this was my
breakthrough record, but to me it felt like the audience grew steadily and
slowly. It had more drums and bass and Mellotron. I love Mellotron. Lots of
Glockenspiel. It's still an acoustic record. After this record came out I got a
lot more press and opened for Panic Room, Credo, Fish and Barclay James Harvest
and got a lot more press and I did some festivals. The audience seemed to grow
and I talked to a lot more people online who liked the music, which was amazing.
I've been very lucky. The press was really positive, which was a big thing for
me. I never expected that. I've met so many lovely supportive people through
this album which is amazing.
An
EP named Song For Dan was also released last year. Please tell us more about
this EP.
This
is another long one, about 18 minutes. I wrote it for my friend Dan who passed
away last year. We really miss him. He was a great bloke and an amazing musician
and film maker. He is in our thoughts all the time. It's another long song, all
improvised. It goes through a few different feels. It was recorded a couple of
days after he died.
You
have just released the Relic album. Please tell us more about this album.
Relic
is my new one. It has got drums and bass guitar on most tracks, it's noisier
than Ghost and is the end of the "guitar trilogy" I wanted to make. The last
song on Relic leads back into the first song on Echo. It's all one big loop
really. Lots of Ebow on guitar, Mellotron, and messing around with the delay
pedal to make weird noises. There is even a metal song in 7/8. Lots of stuff in
13/8, lots of melodic stuff. Some of it is influenced by John Barry, Husker Du,
King Crimson. All sorts of stuff.
You
are gigging England at the moment and probably for the last years. What is the
best venue you have played, which venue have the prettiest groupies and which
town have the best fish & chips ?
The Peel is an amazing venue
because Jon, who runs it, has really supported me and helped me to gain an
audience, the people are lovely. The fast food round there is rubbish though.
Best fish and chip shop is in Brighton where I played Great Escape festival.
Very nice.
What
is your mode of transports around this green island ? Any plans to gig outside
England too ?
Mostly train or my friends
David or Kev kindly drive me in their cars. I don't drive, I should learn. I
plan to come to Europe and the US in the new year. Details soon, ideally doing a
support tour.
You
are a one man band. Which keeps the “musical differences” arguments on a
managable level.
It makes things easier and I
like not having to hassle people to get stuff done. I hate that. I still get to
do the band thing with The Fierce And The Dead, I enjoy having both. I like
collaboration.
What
is your gigs setup, instruments, amps and PA wise ? How do you see the live
circuit in the years to come ?
My gig setup is my knackered
old Ibanez acoustic with a hole in it into a volume pedal, Whammy pedal, a tuner
and Line 6 DL4 delay/looper straight into whatever PA the venue has, ideally
with some reverb. For electric stuff it is always my old Fender Mexican Tele
with the same pedals plus a Marshall Shredmaster into a Fender transistor amp, I
like the clean sounds. I sometimes use a Filter pedal for weird Fripp/Eno
analogue synth sounds. I have no idea what will happen with the live circuit, I
expect there will be more package tours, just so you are able to fill
venues.
Do
you release the albums to support the gigs or how is this ? What comes first:
the hen or the egg ?
I make the records and pretty
much gig all at the time, so both at the same time normally. Now I'm focusing on
playing solo acoustic gigs and making more Fierce And The Dead stuff. My wife
and I have a baby on the way so I have a busy few months coming up. It's really
exciting!
Besides of
gigging England, what is your plans for this year and beyond ?
No more solo stuff recording
for the foreseeable future. I'd like to do a proper live record or DVD. We'll
see. Lots of solo gigs for the next 18 months and a new Fierce And The Dead EP
and Album, hopefully on Vinyl. I feel like I'm at the end of one era, I need to
change my method of working again to avoid things becoming stale. Sometimes it's
better to stop while people are still interested in what you are doing. I'm
thinking of putting together an electric band to play my solo stuff with a
drummer and a bass player but it's hard to make that work financially at the
moment. If the record continues to sell hopefully it will become an option.
To wrap up
this interview, is there anything you want to add to this interview ?
Yeah that music is changing
really fast and if fans want to see more high quality music from the musicians
they like they will have to choose to pay for it. Whatever happens now if you
have any kind of audience your music will end up on torrent sites, which is
fine. I see it as free promotion. However, if fans choose not to pay for content
musicians won't be able to record music to the same standards. The skills of a
recording engineer and a musician are very different and some musicians need to
record in a pro studio, especially if they want to record drums for example.
Once we are unable to pay for these skills they will be lost and the quality of
music will decrease. Sure you can make a record on your laptop with Garageband
but will it compare to something recorded by a top engineer in a pro studio? I
choose to make my records in a pro studio because I want to make great records,
or at least try. We need to decide. Spotify isn't the answer because it is
heavily weighted in favour of the major labels. Maybe in the future we will only
have musicians with a few fans who do music as a hobby. Who knows, these are
exciting and challenging time and I don't think fans perhaps realise they have
so much power, thanks to word of mouth via social media. I really appreciate the
support of my audience.
Joined: September 18 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 12625
Posted: October 05 2011 at 16:00
great to read this interview, I've discovered Matt's music (Ghost and Echo) this past year and love it. I've given Relic a few listens (on his bandcamp) and he's definitely progressing and developing. Nice to see a musician emerge on his own like Matt has.
Joined: June 24 2010
Location: Richmond, VA
Status: Offline
Points: 2
Posted: October 06 2011 at 14:14
"Spotify isn't the answer because it is heavily weighted in favour of the major labels."
What channel is NOT heavily weighted in favor of the major labels?
Unless you are a seeker of new music on non-major label specific channels (BandCamp, Jamendo, CDBaby, etc.), the major labels will always have the greatest reach and influence capturing the music fan's ear.
But the casual music listener, your average music fan, the majority of people, listen to FM radio, SiriusXM, DirecTV or Dish music channels, Pandora, Slacker, etc.; and shop at Amazon, Target, Wal-mart, Best Buy, etc. Just like Spotify, those channels will always be heavily weighted in favor of the major labels.
Even searching for music via Google or on Twitter and Facebook will tend to favor major label promoted bands and albums.
My point is, unless you are the type of music fan that seeks out new music and indie music, the majority of channels are heavily weighted in favor of the major labels. That's just economies of scale. Don't single out Spotify for not being the indie artist advocate.
Now, I'm going back to looking for some new artists to listen to, since I'm one of those music fans!
Joined: October 28 2008
Location: Wales
Status: Offline
Points: 13721
Posted: October 06 2011 at 14:30
openupandsay wrote:
"Spotify isn't the answer because it is heavily weighted in favour of the major labels."
What channel is NOT heavily weighted in favor of the major labels?
Unless you are a seeker of new music on non-major label specific channels (BandCamp, Jamendo, CDBaby, etc.), the major labels will always have the greatest reach and influence capturing the music fan's ear.
But the casual music listener, your average music fan, the majority of people, listen to FM radio, SiriusXM, DirecTV or Dish music channels, Pandora, Slacker, etc.; and shop at Amazon, Target, Wal-mart, Best Buy, etc. Just like Spotify, those channels will always be heavily weighted in favor of the major labels.
Even searching for music via Google or on Twitter and Facebook will tend to favor major label promoted bands and albums.
My point is, unless you are the type of music fan that seeks out new music and indie music, the majority of channels are heavily weighted in favor of the major labels. That's just economies of scale. Don't single out Spotify for not being the indie artist advocate.
Now, I'm going back to looking for some new artists to listen to, since I'm one of those music fans!
Matt Stevens' albums are fantastic!
Welcome to the forum - great first post
You are absolutely right in what you say. I use Spotify to listen to new stuff, also as part of my PA Collaborator work. If I like, then i buy, so it serves its purpose very well.
Matt is, BTW, a beneficiary of this process.
Enhance your life. Get down to www.lazland.org
Now also broadcasting on www.progzilla.com Every Saturday, 4.00 p.m. UK time!
Joined: August 18 2008
Location: Anna Calvi
Status: Offline
Points: 22989
Posted: October 06 2011 at 14:58
Good to hear about the development of new material for TFATD, I thought the first releases of the band showed a lot of promise. Looking forward to that!
Joined: April 04 2010
Location: London
Status: Offline
Points: 72
Posted: October 08 2011 at 12:55
lazland wrote:
openupandsay wrote:
"Spotify isn't the answer because it is heavily weighted in favour of the major labels."
What channel is NOT heavily weighted in favor of the major labels?
Unless you are a seeker of new music on non-major label specific channels (BandCamp, Jamendo, CDBaby, etc.), the major labels will always have the greatest reach and influence capturing the music fan's ear.
But the casual music listener, your average music fan, the majority of people, listen to FM radio, SiriusXM, DirecTV or Dish music channels, Pandora, Slacker, etc.; and shop at Amazon, Target, Wal-mart, Best Buy, etc. Just like Spotify, those channels will always be heavily weighted in favor of the major labels.
Even searching for music via Google or on Twitter and Facebook will tend to favor major label promoted bands and albums.
My point is, unless you are the type of music fan that seeks out new music and indie music, the majority of channels are heavily weighted in favor of the major labels. That's just economies of scale. Don't single out Spotify for not being the indie artist advocate.
Now, I'm going back to looking for some new artists to listen to, since I'm one of those music fans!
Matt Stevens' albums are fantastic!
Welcome to the forum - great first post
You are absolutely right in what you say. I use Spotify to listen to new stuff, also as part of my PA Collaborator work. If I like, then i buy, so it serves its purpose very well.
Matt is, BTW, a beneficiary of this process.
Agreed its useful for discovery, unfortunately the major label artists get paid more per play than DIY artists, which is a bit unfair. Its owned by the big 4 labels. More info here:
"Ghost is a phenomenal piece of work that has already garnered countless frothing plaudits within the online prog and post-rock firmament" Classic Rock Presents Prog
Joined: April 04 2010
Location: London
Status: Offline
Points: 72
Posted: October 08 2011 at 12:56
And thanks loads everyone for all the kind words about my music, its hugely appreciated :)
"Ghost is a phenomenal piece of work that has already garnered countless frothing plaudits within the online prog and post-rock firmament" Classic Rock Presents Prog
Joined: December 28 2006
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 11401
Posted: October 08 2011 at 14:37
Same goes for royalties due to radio play incidentally. The majors and most-selling artists gets a greater slice of the pie, while those played the least get less than what they should have been due. Unless the system's been given a massive overhaul the last few years, which I very much doubt...
On topic: I've finally penned down some good words myself. When they will be published I don't know, as I'm on a good way to filling up my share of the next two updates for the site I'm writing for. Words have been written and sent to the webmaster of that site though (www.progressor.net - just in case someone have managed to miss out on that part of my endeavours...).
Joined: April 04 2010
Location: London
Status: Offline
Points: 72
Posted: October 11 2011 at 01:44
Thank you :)
"Ghost is a phenomenal piece of work that has already garnered countless frothing plaudits within the online prog and post-rock firmament" Classic Rock Presents Prog
"Ghost is a phenomenal piece of work that has already garnered countless frothing plaudits within the online prog and post-rock firmament" Classic Rock Presents Prog
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