
James Murphy is the tragically hip super-producer behind one of
the most eagerly anticipated albums of 2005. The "Pharrell Williams
of punk-funk" took time out from wrecking dancefloors to talk to
Fused about Daft Punk playing at his house, sounding like Mark E
Smith and his underground dancefloor classic 'Losing My
Edge'.
"It's surprising how long 'Losing
My Edge' lingers around…"
It still kinda weighs on me a bit because we keep getting better
and better at playing it live. It's surprising how long Losing My
Edge lingers around, for a dance song. But everyone's silly and
shallow and insipid and vain and the more they accept it the less
boring records we'll have. This year I made 'Yeah', which pretty
much consists of me saying yeah over and over, to try and erase the
expectation that it was gonna be another clever diatribe of lyrics.
Etched into the vinyl of Yeah is, "Not as good as Losing My Edge".
I always try and help people write the reviews.
"Daft Punk would still end up
playing in the basement next to the washing machine…"
I used to play house parties in punk rock bands. You don't really
get paid, but what you do is sell a ton of merchandise, and get a
place to sleep. When I got into dancing, taking E and being
optimistic, I thought; wouldn't it be great if some kid wanted Daft
Punk to play at his house? So he rings the agent who says they'll
cost £40,000 and he saves for seven years and finally gets enough
money and flies Daft Punk over. And, of course, they'd have no idea
where they would be landing, 'cos the rider includes two
first-class tickets on Air France. And the kids would be earnestly
trying to meet all the rider requirements, but Daft Punk would
still end up playing in the basement next to the washing machine,
which we all did. A local hardcore band is supporting, and the PA
consists of all the local kids' amps and stereos taped together. I
thought that would be like the best show that anyone would ever
see. My goal is to actually make that happen for a video - find a
really great punk rock house, get Daft Punk to play, and LCD
Soundsystem would be the opening local band. It just makes me
happy.
"A movement without the bother of
having any meaning."
That's mostly about the 'new rock', which is a movement without the
bother of having any meaning. You know a journalistic movement that
announces, 'Rock is back! The guitar is back!" Whoo-hoo. But
for what? Its like saying, "The high-waisted pant is back!" Its
fucking vacuous and the bands are tedious. They all sound like The
MC5. I get excited about The White Stripes 'cos they're some people
who are obviously trying to do something of their own. But most
bands will never be good because they don't even ask themselves why
they're bothering until it's too late.
"I'd rather think about what I
like, and sound like Mark Smith."
I thought about trying to hide it. But then I thought, we all sing
like The Beatles and The Stones, don't we? And nobody tries to hide
that because it's so pandemic. For me The Fall, along with The
Velvet Underground, are the best rock 'n' roll bands of all time.
The Fall are my Beatles. So, rather than sound like Mick Jagger,
I'd rather think about what I like, and sound like Mark Smith.
Although I'm sure he's gonna fucking blast me one of these
days.
"Am I just not paying enough
attention to Canadian gay folk bands?"
The more I work the more I realise that very successful people have
very different brains than I thought they did. Pharrell came to a
party we were having and he looked nervous and out of place. And I
suddenly realised that he was just a kid who's terrified, I'm sure,
that he will not be the Golden Boy at some point. So everything
that's happening must be nerve-wracking. If one of these things
jumps up and he's behind on it, you just kill yourself. I feel that
way sometimes myself - am I just not paying enough attention to
Canadian gay folk bands?
"A lot of my favourite musicians
are the bass-players."
The bass is the best instrument. It's the most important but the
least egotistical. A lot of my favourite musicians are the
bass-players, like Richard McGuire from Liquid Liquid, Holger
Czukay from Can, and Jah Wobble from Public Image Ltd. When it's
right it's the best thing in the world. If you think about The
Stones' Emotional Rescue you think about the vocals. But if you
listen to it, the bass on that record is totally schizophrenic and
insane. If a guitar player were doing that it would be a much more
of an egotistical exercise. You don't play bass like that for
glory, because there isn't any for bassists. Even drummers get more
attention. I love things like The Stranglers and The Birthday
Party, where the bass is just this monster. One of the reasons I
love The Fall is because the guitars are as ego-less as the bass.
And that's a rare fucking thing.
"Oh, how ironic. I'm wearing a Bon
Jovi shirt - and I hate Bon Jovi".
For me, irony's a dirty word that's been overused in the past ten
years to mean something cheap. "Oh, how ironic. I'm wearing a Bon
Jovi shirt - and I hate Bon Jovi! Ha Ha Ha." Being aware of
the crassness of your own taste is not so cheap. Being aware that
we're vain and manipulative and silly because we're humans. We're
pack animals. We're like dogs. We whine when we want food and make
a little face when we want to be petted. Investigating that is
exciting for me. It makes me not want to go jump under a bus.
Apparently, that's ironic. To me, it's just dealing with real
life.

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Artrocker
Artrocker Saves the World from Keane, or so they say - we find
out what the band are all about.
LCD Soundsystem
The "Pharrell Williams of punk-funk" took time out from wrecking
dancefloors to talk to Fused about Daft Punk playing at his house,
sounding like Mark E Smith and his underground dancefloor classic
'Losing My Edge'.
M.I.A.
From the depths of Sri Lanka to the streets of London, M.I.A
(aka Maya Arul) has found herself with the re-release of her debut
offering, 'Galang'. We go behind the scenes to find out what the
hype is about.
Ooshka
Ooshka bring fine style, design and fun into the often cheapo
tacky market of the sex toy. Founder of the Ann Summers for the E
generation Paul von Bergen tells us the unfinished story of O…
Vinyl Will Kill!
A deadly new phenomenon is gripping the nation - a lethal media
format that should be avoided at all costs?
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