Eric Lau New Territories

All the tags for the music that Londoner Eric Lau makes sound contrived: future funk, nu-soul, beat-head jazz–none of these really captures Lau’s confident, cool essence. Sure, artists like Jay Dee, Waajeed, and SA-RA are Lau’s creative cousins, but the 26-year-old beatmaker blazes his own trails via rich, song-based vocal numbers and sweet, spacious instrumentals. New Territories bubbles with optimism, illustrated on “Time Will Tell,” which is buoyed by Bobbi Humphrey-style flute licks and singer Sariah Leah’s hopeful messages. Lau has produced beats for Lupe Fiasco, Georgia Anne Muldrow, and Wildchild, but refreshingly it’s U.K. locals Tawaih, Rahel, and Sariah whose vocals light up his crisp, no-nonsense soul beats.
M83: Teen Dreams
What, exactly, does it mean when you’re 26, it’s 2008, and you still harbor a schoolboy’s crush on Molly Ringwald?
If you’re Anthony Gonzalez, the French producer behind M83, it means picking album-cover models is easy.
“When we were at the modeling agency in New York, I saw this ginger girl,” he says, grinning as he refers to the redheaded Ringwald dead-ringer on the cover of his new album Saturdays=Youth (Mute). “I knew we needed her.”
A cast of high school stereotypes straight from The Breakfast Club–preppie, geek, goth–surround the girl on the cover, creating an instantly recognizable homage to John Hughes’ 1985 classic. “I really fell in love with the atmosphere of teen movies,” Gonzalez confesses, as we sit in his recording studio in Antibes, France, which is adorned with framed posters of Pretty in Pink, Say Anything…, and TheBreakfast Club. “The soundtracks were perfect and the characters were so charismatic.”
The posters are only part of the inspiration for Saturdays=Youth, a collection of ’80s-inspired electronic tracks that’s a hazy, grandiose tribute to adolescence. The record magnifies the indulgent synths, exaggerated emotions, and campy vocals of previous efforts to the power of 10, while exploring the most iconic soundtrack category of all time: high school.
As the fresh-faced, soft-spoken Gonzalez discusses the album and his own memories of being a teenager–skateboarding through the streets of Cannes in the afternoon and smoking weed on the beach at dusk listening to The Cocteau Twins and Tears for Fears–it is clear that that period’s impact still lingers. “I think my teenage years were a mix of the movies Nowhere and Dazed and Confused,” he says. “I just wanted to recreate the feeling of those years. I think it was one of my best periods.”
Blue Skied An’ Clear
On “Birds,” the brief leadoff track from M83’s 2003 breakout album Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts (Mute), a robotic voice repeats the mantra “Sun is shining/Birds are singing/Flowers are growing/Clouds are looming/And I am flying.”
Walking through the neighborhood where Gonzalez lives, it’s easy to locate that exact wavelength. A maze of private drives, stucco houses, and blind curves occasionally tested by fearless Frenchmen on scooters, the area is sleepy and anonymous-feeling compared to most of its flashy coastal surrounds. The pebbled beaches and steel-blue Mediterranean waters of the Côte d’Azur make Antibes, in the South of France, a haven for the rich and retired, with glamorous movie premieres in nearby Cannes and a glut of pleasure boats bobbing in the harbor.
A district of high fences dotted by pines, palms and the occasional tangerine tree, the place where M83 makes his music seems stuck in the shadows. When I reach his mom’s modest home, he greets me at the gate decked out in an “I Love New York” shirt, crisp jeans, and white sneakers. As we sit on the porch drinking muddy cups of coffee, he explains to me that he can’t leave. He tried Paris life for a few years, found it cramped, and promptly returned home. “I’m sure you can find a better place, but this is perfect for me,” says Gonzalez. “I love the light here. It puts me in a good mood to create music. I travel a lot and everywhere I go, I miss this place. I even like the smell.”
His studio is in a small room in the backyard, facing the pool. Inside, vintage keyboards and drum pads huddle around a pair of computer monitors. On the ceiling, above a mattress in the corner, is a grid of glow-in-the-dark plastic stars. This room has always been a great escape. Before it was rebuilt in 2002, it was a garage where a teenaged Gonzalez and former M83 member Nicholas Fromageau would practice with their noisy rock band My Violent Wish. The band “pretended to be a bit rebel,” deadpans Gonzalez, who is quick to be self-deprecating, and laughs easily.
Living on Video
Gonzalez and Fromageau didn’t like each other at first. Impressions on the first day of high school at Lyceé Jacques Audiberti, a concrete slab of a building named after a French writer and poet, were blasé at best. That changed when bands like Sonic Youth and Blonde Redhead came up in conversation–the two became fast friends and eventually started making music together.
When Gonzalez talks about his school days, he becomes animated, able to channel his high school experience with a single-minded clarity. The worst parts were math classes, hippies, and Elodie François, the best pupil in the class, who “was also ugly and mean.” The best parts were smoking joints before Spanish class, skating to school, screwing up chemistry experiments, and making Elodie François cry. Weekends were spent with friends strumming guitars and doing drugs in secluded spots in the Alpine foothills, chilling on secret beaches on the coast, partying and drinking cheap wine, and picking up cute international tourists visiting the French Riviera. On Friday nights, they’d get high in Nicholas’ older brother’s room, and watch his movies. Yann, who is a director and former film critic, was often gone and had a good collection to delve into, leading to Gonzalez’s fascination with Truffaut, Wenders, Lynch, and Van Sant.
“What’s important in my projects is the connection with movies,” says Gonzalez. “It’s a real influence, maybe more than music. Before the Dawn Heals Us was like a soundtrack, a movie in itself. There was an intro and huge, cathartic moments. I think that the new [album] is more like a collection of songs taken from different kinds of movies.”
The soundtrack comparison is even more apt for the new album, which takes a decidedly warmer, more ethereal and pop-oriented approach than the colder, denser Dead Cities. The monologues or snippets of conversation on his albums aren’t samples, just original dialogue (sometimes written with his brother), meant to heighten the dramatic (or often melodramatic) mood and further the “scene.” Gonzalez usually composes with certain visions in his head. The new track “Kim & Jessie” originated from thoughts of two teenage girls lost in the forest, getting high. “Graveyard Girl,” a cascade of ecstatic synths with overwrought teen goth vocals from The Romanovs’ Morgan Kibby, came from visions of Molly Ringwald dressed in black.
Dream On
While the thought of an album adorned with Brat Pack iconography may seem a bit tired, Gonzalez pointedly avoids making music that is simply retro. “I can definitely understand why people think ’80s music is really cheap,” Gonzalez says. “But I really love it. I take it seriously. I still cry when I listen to ’80s music. That’s why I wanted this to be a personal album, not an ’80s tribute–lots of bands already did that, so it would be useless to do it again.”
Gonzalez is very personal and possessive about his music–traits that led to Fromageau leaving M83–but Saturdays=Youth marks the first time Gonzalez has worked with outside producers. Ewan Pearson was enlisted to give the music a contemporary gloss while Ken Thomas’ experience recording bands like The Cocteau Twins helped him capture certain electronic sounds. The result is a record that can be excessive and occasionally formulaic in its emotional highs and lows, but also grandiose and gorgeous… not unlike adolescence.
Zipping around Antibes in his grandfather’s car, tracing back across coastal roads and the narrow cobblestone streets he’s seen all his life, Gonzalez himself is an almost perfect picture of the sort of nostalgic bliss that Saturdays=Youth embodies. Hair blowing in the wind, I ask if he fit into a certain clique in high school, if he perhaps resembled one of the characters in The Breakfast Club. Gonzalez pauses for a second, searching for words. “I don’t think I was a bad guy,” he muses. “I was a bit of a dreamer, you know?”
Download “Graveyard Girl.”
Moving Pictures
M83’s Anthony Gonzalez lists his favorite movie moments.
Nowhere
This is my favorite Gregg Araki movie. It’s a true alien in the world of cinema. What really fascinates me is this world going adrift, in which the kids seem to feel totally lost and hopeless. The final scene between Dark and Montgomery is my favorite–it’s as moving as it is puzzling.
Favorite track: “Avalyn II” by Slowdive
Pretty in Pink
I think it’s one of the best teen movies from the ’80s, maybe my favorite. What I find interesting with this movie is that it manages to avoid all the silly cheesiness that is so common in other films from that same period. Molly Ringwald is just wonderful in it. She was one of John Hughes’ muses, and it’s not hard to see why. That was just before she came to live in France, I reckon…
Favorite track: “Elegia” by New Order
Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes
My favorite film by Werner Herzog: a small raft drifting away in the midst of a sweltering jungle, and a sountrack made by Popol Vuh and Klaus Kinski that is just terrifying. The final scene, in which the monkeys get on top of the raft and all the passengers get killed by invisible enemies, was one of my first cinematographic shocks.
Favorite track: “Aguirre 1 (L’acrime di rei)” by Popol Vuh
Le Berceau de Cristal
Philippe Garrel’s trilogy–La Cicatrice intérieure, Athanor, and Le Berceau de Cristal–owes a lot to his relationship with Nico, who was the muse of the Velvet Underground. The film focuses on depicting evanescent bodies and doesn’t leave much room for dialogue. The soundtrack was made by Ash Ra Tempel and embodies everything I like in music: LSD and pads of synths.
Favorite track: Hard to say. This was my first encounter with German Krautrock of the ’70s.
Lost Highway
To me, this is one of David Lynch’s most fascinating movies. The whole way through, it makes you feel just as lost as the characters and you never know where the film is going to lead you. The atmosphere is really tense–often scary, totally strange, but also moving at times. I listened to that soundtrack a lot when I was around 16. This is also for me a means to do justice to Angelo Badalamenti, a composer that I deeply respect.
Favorite track: “Eye” by Smashing Pumpkins
Silje Nes Ames Room

Despite her classical piano training, Norway’s Silje Nes developed her songwriting abilities by teaching herself to play guitar and recording that process on her laptop’s built-in mic. Her debut, Ames Room, documents that progression with messy edits, old synthesizers, and humble guitar playing. The result is a bedroom record that parallels artists like Múm in sonic warmth and singer-songwriter Chad VanGaalen in exploratory willingness. “Over All” opens the record with tinkled keyboard pop, while “Shapes, Electric” drowns her plaintive guitar in blips and glitches. They may be over-ambitious at times, but the songs on Ames Room remain dreamy and charming.
Ocrilim Annwn

Best known as the relentless guitarist for avant-metal duo Orthrelm, Mick Barr, who has contributed to nearly 40 releases, works under many aliases. His debut for Hydra Head as Ocrilim, a word he describes as “thoughts” instead of actions, is a remarkable 80-minute blast. Through seven movements of Barr’s unmatched and over-thought technique, Annwn bears the mark of high art. Unlike the calculated irony of The Fucking Champs or the schizophrenic skronk of Hella, Barr’s layered guitar-work draws from the intensity of free jazz and the mechanization of electronic music. Remarkably intense and unconcerned with the outside world, Annwn is a mind-blowing listen.
Prolyphic & Reanimator “Survived Another Winter feat. Sage Francis, B. Dolan, and Alias”

Strange Famous label boss Sage Francis played matchmaker to bring Prolyphic and Reanimator together for their debut collaboration, The Ugly Truth. Reanimator has contributed production skills to every Sage Francis album while Prolyphic has been trading demo tapes with him since his first recording in 2000. The Ugly Truth has been three years in making, and the result should turn some heads in the indie-rap scene. “Survived Another Winter” brings together some New England camaraderie while serving up West Coast slander. Wyatt Williams
Cool Kids, Zion I, Janelle Monae Participate in Darfur Now College Tour

On May 27, Ted Braun’s documentary, Darfur Now, will drop on DVD via Warner Independent Pictures. The film follows the first-hand experiences of Don Cheadle, Hejewa Adam, Pablo Recalde, Ahmed Mahmoud Abaker, Louis Moreno-Ocampo, and Adam Sterling as they explore the ongoing humanitarian conflict in Darfur and attempt to raise awareness about the region’s struggles.
Prior to the film’s release, a slew of artists will gather together and tour the country for a series of screenings and concerts to be held a various colleges and universities. Confirmed performers thus far include Cool Kids, Goapele, Zion I, Janelle Monae, Anthony David, Wale, Asheru, and DJ Drama. Artists will perform at each school, following a screening of Darfur Now. Check out trailers, clips, and more information here.
Dates
04/12 Boulder, CO: University of Colorado at Boulder
04/13 Boston, MA: Northeastern University
04/24 Berkeley, CA: University of California, Berkeley
04/25 Atlanta, GA: Emory University
04/27 St. Paul, MN: William Mitchell College of Law
04/28 Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota School of Law
04/28 Washington, DC: Georgetown University*
05/21 Chicago, IL: University of Chicago
05/29 Los Angeles, CA: University of California, Los Angeles
*w/ Wale, Asheru, DJ Yzo, Mastamind DJ
One Pure Thought
Fat Ray & Black Milk “Take Control feat. AB”

Detroit hip-hop veteran Black Milk has teamed up with MC Fat Ray for an 11-track collaborative full-length entitled The Set Up, to be released on Black Milk’s own Music House label. While Guilty Simpson, Elzhi, Scorpion, and Phat Kat all show up for superb guest appearances on the album, Fat Ray rules the mic throughout, with sharp lyrics that compliment synth hooks and slick beats. “Take Control” also features AB on the production end of things.
Hakan Lidbo Expands Audience: To Space

Håkan Lidbo is dreaming of a crossover success, but it doesn’t involve MySpace sponsoring his tour or MTV promoting his video. In fact, the prolific techno artist is trying to reach an audience even wider and stranger than the mainstream pop crowd. That’s right, he wants to play music for aliens.
In the first attempt that we know of since the Voyager missions of the late ’70s, Lidbo is seriously trying to get his music “out there.”
“We will send radio waves,” he says. “They travel with the speed of light so that the composers that send out the musical messages might still be alive when we receive the answer.”
XLR8R doesn’t currently have an astro-physicist on staff, but the plan seems to be technologically legit, especially because the Swedish Space Corporation is involved.
Also involved is a crew of Swedish artists, including Olof Driejer of The Knife, Andreas Tilliander, Smyglyssna, and plenty others willing to have their music “picked up by alien civilizations.” In case you think you might be missing out, they’ll be broadcasting the transmissions on Swedish Public Radio and even putting out a CD “for the earthlings.”
We’re not too sure what to expect as a response to the project, but Lidbo isn’t worried. “The answer will come some day,” he says. “We are totally convinced.”

