Monday 2 April 2018

ALBUM TRACK BY TRACK : Carousel Clouds - Tales Of Coincidence


Carousel Clouds launch their debut album Tales Of Coincidence on Friday and preview it with a launch show at the Peer Hat in Manchester tomorrow, April 3rd.  We had a chat with Neil from the band and he walked us through the album track-by-track.

Starts & Ends 

We selected this as the opening track because the title seemed quite appropriate, but also because this was in many ways the start of how Carousel Clouds sounds, with the drone-y keys and feedback, and lots of vocal harmonies. When this song was written, it laid a path for the direction to take the band and sound – moving from an acoustic sound and a smaller number of people being involved, to adding keys, drums, guitars, harmonies, and more people to hop on and off the carousel! The shoegaze-y build-up in the intro gives a good indication as to what's to come on the record.

Believe 

A ghost story. I went on one of those ghost tours. It was entertaining, but also quite interesting to watch unfold. The song explores the thoughts and ideas of ghosts; people's fondness or fear of them. The drone-y sounds mentioned when Starts & Ends was written seemed to lend itself to this song both musically and lyrically, with feedback always to me sounding quite spooky, and pounding toms like an incessant warning.



Invisible Lines 

Three of the five of us who recorded the album are bass players (Tam with LIINES, Dickon with Bone-Box and loads of different acts, myself with Optional Wallace and Monroe Hips), but there is not a single note of bass on the whole record. When I demoed this track, I couldn't settle on a bass line, so just put a low-octave organ on and held down the root note, to fill out the low-end. It sounded loads better, and so set the blueprint for the 'bass-players-but-no-bass' approach to the record.

Only Off the Screen

This song had been around before this band, and was I think the first we tried working on. The song adapted quite quickly to the band's sound of feedback, psych-keys and some drone, with lots of harmonies.  For the recording, Tam and Ben added a do-wop style vocal harmony they'd worked on, whilst Matt was giving it everything on the drums at the outro, which we think works really well. There's all kinds of other sounds at this stage, we can’t remember exactly what, but Dickon layered everything together brilliantly to make bring some cohesion to the chaos.

The Greatest Noise 

The last track written for the album, which was written and demoed in a couple of days. A large proportion of the original demo is what you can hear on the final record, which kept the freshness and rawness intact; it was written at a particular time and therefore hopefully captures that moment. A suitable antidote to follow 'Screen', and a good point to close part one of the album.



The Torment 

A song in four parts. The Torment came from two things I had been working on, and then placed together. The coda was a completely separate piece Ben had started, which I thought would fit well as well. We then spent hours in the practice room making it into a coherent song. The five of us were never all together at any point during the making of the album, and Dickon hadn't heard any of this track until he recorded his guitar parts over the top of the rest of the song – he sent it back with his parts on, and we all and thought, 'wow'.

A song comprising of four pieces all stuck together, discussing organised religion, with different time signatures and no conventional chorus – perfect to use as the album's promo track, at Easter as well! (or commercial suicide... ha)

Blood Red Sky 

Way before Carousel Clouds existed, Ben asked me to add a vocal line to a piece he had written. He had the title, but no lyrics or melody, and emailed me the track. It sounded great as an instrumental, an ambient electronica.

I re-demoed it for the record, to fit more with the band's sound and instrumentation. Then we worked on the dynamics and the time signatures, so it's taken on a new life, We will have to release the original version at some stage, to hear where it came from. It still sounds great.

Always Talking 

Another old song, which had started as an acoustic track, but then seemed to fit with the Carousel Clouds sound, once that had emerged. Probably the most personal song for me to write, lyrically. It's another song with ghost references, and Tam's harmony on the chorus really gives that haunting feel. We released this as a single, and the video involved me at various festivals, gigs, parties and even a wedding with tape and assorted items covering my mouth, ie not talking. Luckily the bride and groom were very understanding!



Grace (Look No Further) 

We're proud of the whole record, but from a songwriting perspective I am personally pleased that, on Grace, we tried to match the lyrics to the music in a way I haven't done before, to the extent that an actual heartbeat is used for they rhythm at one stage. Hopefully, the subject matter dovetails perfectly with the sounds we are making, changing moods accordingly, including repetition, monotony, hope and euphoria. We think it does, anyway! Similar to The Torment, it is almost like two songs bolted together, with multiple time signatures and no traditional chorus – obviously, this is the next single...!

Fortune Quarter 

I wrote this the day after the General Election; The lyrics came together quite quickly. Sonically, and lyrically, it is supposed to represent extremes: light and shade, loud and quiet, ending with the crescendo coda. When Tam added her vocal for the outro, there was no set part. We discussed the lyrics and turned the lights off to set the tone, then left her to it. When she finished, Dickon and I turned to each other in stunned silence. In a good way! Not sure where her part came from but it was raw, organic and completely off the cuff – and the perfect climax for the song, and record.

You can hear bits of Starts & Ends woven in, before the album finishes, which we think neatly brings things around and closes the record off.

Carousel Clouds' website can be found here and they are on Facebook and Twitter.

They are Matt Anderson on drums, Dickon Kyme-Wright on guitars, keys, programming, vocals and heartbeat, Neil Meehan on vocals, acoustic guitar and keys, Tamsin Middleton on vocals and Ben Mulvey on keys and vocals

The album is available to preorder via Bandcamp.

The launch show takes place at The Peer Hat in Manchester on Tuesday, April 3rd, with support from Abbie Ozard. Tickets are available here.
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