The Walkmen
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The Walkmen
You may have heard The Walkmen when their song,
"We've Been Had," was featured in a
Saturn Ion commercial last year. That spot and
lots of critical praise gave The Walkmen, a New
York-based quintet, more than enough cred to sign
a record deal with Record Collection, a division
of Warner Bros. Records.
With their sophomore album, Bows and Arrows,
The Walkmen, prove that their brand of rock is
solid, classic and most of all, passionate. Fierce
songs like "The Rat" and "Thinking
of a Dream I Had" make you flinch in awe
of the rabid vocals, while songs like "No
Christmas While I'm Talking" and "138th
Street" are slower-paced and lyrically more
introspective.
By the end of the album, it is clear that these
five musicians – Hamilton Leithauser on
vocals, Peter Bauer on bass, Matt Barrick on drums,
Paul Maroon on guitar and Walter Martin on organs
– have pushed themselves to exceed expectations
on the follow-up to their critically-acclaimed
StarTime International Records debut, Everyone
Who Pretended To Like Me Is Gone. The effort
is paying off with national publications like
Entertainment Weekly singing their praises.
Playback recently spoke with lead singer Hamilton Leithauser to
chat about the new album and his songwriting process.
Playback: How would you say Bows
and Arrows is different from Everyone
Who Pretended To Like Me Is Gone?
Hamilton Leithauser: It was
all done within a smaller amount of time so
there's a more consistent sound throughout the
album. Bows and Arrows also has a more
developed sound because we recorded it after
we'd been a band for longer. Plus, it's got
a lot of rockers on it, which we didn't really
have on the last album.
How do you think the album is different from your live performances?
We tried to make this album closer to our live
performance than the last album was. When we
recorded the last album, we never played live
before. It sounded a little bit like a studio
recording, not that that's a bad thing. That's
just what it sounded like. So for this recording,
we cut the overdubs out as much as possible,
and we just concentrated on performance. It's
tough. Trying to get the live sound across on
a CD is the hardest thing.
What do you think has contributed to your growth as an engaging performer?
We just got more comfortable playing together. When we started out, we
didn't know anything. We were sort of nervous
and being and playing on stage. It's an awkward
thing. It's also kind of hard when you're performing
and people are writing about it. You don't know
what you're doing and sometimes you just know
you suck.
When you begin to write a song, what inspires you?
It's really tough to get inspired. So we go
into the studio and try to play. Somebody will
have a musical idea. We literally start with
a guitar note. It's so weird how it works because
it'll usually sound like nothing. Pete, Walt
and I are gonna go meet today to try and come
up with stuff. We'll probably come up with like
five things that sound great to the three of
us. And then once we bring Paul and Matt in,
they'll just sound terrible. It's just really
tough to get it sounding good with everyone
in the room. But if everything does come together,
then I take it home and write the lyrics and
the melody. I also begin to arrange the song.
Some songs will just take forever. They're the
ones that I usually end up not liking as much
-- the ones that have the really forced melodies.
The more you think about it, the less spontaneous
it becomes so it never really comes together
as well. But it's only one in a million that
that actually happens. So you find yourself
most of the time trying to think of stuff and
coming up with sort of second tier stuff.
Which Walkmen song is your favorite?
I've played "The Rat" a lot in my
life so I think I have a real attachment to
that song. When I think of Bows and Arrows,
I think of that song. We spent so much time
recording that song. It was horrible trying
to get that song done, but I'm pleased with
the way it came out.
The Walkmen recently inked a record deal with Record Collection, a smaller division of Warner Bros. Was it important to look for a small label?
Major labels don't give a crap about bands.
All they care about is if you have a radio hit
or not. They tell you they're gonna stick with
you, but that's just not true. So we figured
we were never gonna have a radio hit because
we just don't really sound like that. We knew
that if we had signed with like a big label
that they would just shelve us.
By Jin Moon |