Lament Cityscape is an atypical project, made by a distinctly
different sort of person. Riffs echo in long and slow repetitions,
subtly boiling and shifting like so much tectonic plating and magma.
Percussion is often mechanistic and distant, recalling bits of Godflesh
and Pitchshifter, though probably not using a drum machine. Tracks are
entirely instrumental, which is often the case for drone metal, but this
is not exactly in the vein of Earth or Sunn O))). It has just as much
in common with the sludge of Yob and Graves at Sea.
Mike McClatchey recently reached out to me, kindly thanking me for
playing this music on Undead in Studio Z. I figured an interview would
be an appealing proposition, and the following resulted:
------------------
1. You're listed as the producer, engineer, and mixer for a
lot of the music that you play on. Do you have a home studio, and if so
do you record your guitar directly into a computer or do you use an amp?
Man, I use Garageband with a couple plug-ins. I twist digital knobs
until things sound cool. Most of the shit I've done recently was
recorded direct.
2. Do you regularly write and demo songs for yourself, or do
you only start that when you've got a project lined up with other
people?
I don't ever demo anything, I just start writing and recording.
However, I'm constantly mixing shit, rearranging and adding new shit.
Somewhere along the line the first recorded tracks are still the ones
being released, only after being butchered to hell from their first
version.
3. I noticed you tagged Flood Peak as being from Portland.
Was that a project done over the internet? If so, is it more difficult
to revise songs or communicate ideas and expectations when you're
working with someone who's hundreds of miles away?
Flood Peak started off several years as a project between Peter
Layman [who has been my friend and writing partner in almost every band
that we've been in] and myself, and he was living here, in the Bay Area,
at the time. We released an EP together [with our buddy, Jake Wright]
and shortly after that Peter moved to Portland, taking the project with
him. Earlier this year he came down to Oakland and spent a week with me
so I could record some demos for the new version of Flood Peak, hoping
that it would spark some interest in finding members up in Portland to
join the band.
4. Judging by your various bands, I've noticed that you like
to mix hardcore and crust punk with extreme metal. This is a trend
*mostly* limited to North America, and even then, it's something mostly
limited to the past 15 or 20 years. You can still find older metal fans
and punks who are disgusted and misanthropic over the idea. What do you
think has changed in recent years, and perhaps why?
Honestly, I have absolutely no idea what this question means. I
don't feel that I connect with any scene. I enjoy heavy and ugly tones,
but my knowledge of bands is pretty limited. I'm sure there are a
handful of bands from every sub-genre that can write a song that I can
connect with and enjoy, but music is music. Bands will rip other bands
off and find creative ways of disguising it. I'm stoked to be part of a
limited trend, fucking finally.
5. I've read that you drifted away from metal for some time.
Is there any truth to this? Did you leave recording and playing
altogether, or did you just move into other genres? Are there any
particular reasons?
After spending a decade in rather active bands I DID take a couple
years off of playing live shows so I can learn how to record and wrap my
head around what I wanted to do within music. I got burned-out on the
traditional dynamic of a band. Not sure that I left any genre, or was
ever clearly a part of one to begin with.
6. Rumor has it that you were a founding member of Early
Graves, who are also a pretty darned impressive band in their own right.
why did you split?
I was never in Early Graves, but I was the last original member of
Apiary. I guess I was on that first album they did since we recorded it
while under the name Apiary, but I'm not sure if anything I did made it
to the released version.
7. Do you have a day job, and is it in any way connected to music?
I have a day job that has nothing to with music.
8. Are you originally from the San Francisco Bay Area? If so, how do you feel about it? If not, why did you move there?
Yeah, I was born here. Lived here my whole life. How do I feel
about it? I feel that it's home. I didn't really know how much I
appreciated it until I started touring.
9. Do you have a musical background in your family? Did your
family encourage you to take up playing at all? How did they react to
your interest in loud and abrasive music?
The only person in my family to play any music was my grandma. She
had a little Casio keyboard that I remember her playing. I got into
playing music rather late, around the end of high school is when I
picked up my first instrument. There was general support by my family,
but they definitely didn't have to be subject to loud sounds for too
much time. Of course they were bummed that I wasn't writing music that
was safe for parents, but parents aren't the "target audience" for
anything within rock.
10. When you're writing music, do you think "know your
audience" or "the most important person to please is myself?" Is there a
way to strike a balance between the two, and should you ever want to?
When writing music I've never considered that there IS an audience.
I'm completely self-indulgent when writing. There aren't any labels or
investors backing anything that I release so that allows me the luxury
to not care how the fuck anything is received.