Lovers of sweet, sweet pop music, take
note: the singer/songwriter/main creative force of The Apples In Stereo, Mr Robert Scheinder, is on his way to Australia and will be doing some intimate solo
shows while he's here. This is a major cause for celebration as Schneider's one
of the greatest writers of melodic, harmony-drenched guitar pop on the planet
(as the new Apples Best Of, #1 Hits Explosion, makes more than clear).
However, that's not the only reason he's
coming to our nation. He's one of the guests of Queensland's Big Sound music
conference, where he'll be imparting wisdom to the next generation of young
musicians and producers. Not that he's actually thought it through at this
point...
"Oh
my goodness. Oh my gosh. I have no idea," he responds with machine-gun pace
when asked what he'll be talking about. "I don't think I have any wisdom to
impart. Maybe I could tell you how to
mike a snare drum or something like that. Um, I don't know. I haven't really
planned anything out exactly in that way. I just thought I would let the spirit
of pop music speak through me for a short time. I mean I've spoken at some maths conferences and stuff like that, but
I do like public speaking and stuff. I guess it's just not a particularly well
planned out sort of thing."
Yes,
aside from all things musical, Schneider's a total maths nerd. How many other
indie pop musicians can you think of who've developed an entire musical scale
based on logarithms? The scale made its debut on some
interludes on 2007's superb New Magnetic Wonder, as well as creating a strange,
unnatural-sounding chime intro to ‘Can You Feel It?', which begs the question:
since the scale sounds so "wrong" to most people's ears, how on earth does
a melodic pop nut like Schneider even think in those terms?
"It
was hard for me to write in such a strange scale," he admits. "It makes my
brain feel like it's twisting in my head, but I really like that feeling. On
the new Apples record that we're working on, I've just finished a song where a lot of the chord progressions are in both regular scale and the
logarithmic scale, but the solo sections are played in the logarithmic scale."
He pauses for a second for breath. "I called it a ‘non-Pythagorean scale',
though, but that's just because I thought ‘logarithmic' sounded kind of cold.
It's something that seems so futuristic. Often when you say futuristic you get
kind of a cold feeling, but in reality one would like to imagine that the
future will be very warm - not in a global warming kind of way, of course. I
mean more emotionally warm."
As to where his interest in experimental
music comes from, he credits "my friend Jim Mcintyre [Apples co-founder and leader of
Olivia Tremor Control] and Jeff Magnum [reclusive genius behind Neautral Milk
Hotel], they've all been really into experimental music for many years. I mean,
I'm not really in an experimental scene as most of my
friends are. I'm more interested in the pure tones, not so much the music
theory aspect. I'm interested more in the strange harmonies, that's what really
turn me on. Like my ear might crave them
from time to time like, you know, an avocado or something. Or a fig!"
While
it's good to hear that Magnum is still experimenting with music, like everyone
else who had their mind blown by Neutral Milk Hotel's 1998 swansong In The Aeroplane Over The
Sea (which Schneider produced, incidentally), it would be even better news if he'd just pick
up a standard-tuned guitar and, just as a suggestion, write some fucking songs.
"I
guess I understand," Schneider laughs. "But for me, him being one of my best
friends, I don't really think about it. It's just like: OK, he's not producing
songs. But at the same time he's informed me a lot because I've only really
ever released pop music."
And pop music is the plan for Schneider's
Sydney show - which is not to say that he's actually got that at all worked out
either, really...
"I kind of just pull out the acoustic guitar and close my
eyes see what song I'll play and usually I'm able to remember the whole thing
and usually it impresses me by the time I'm at the end of it," he laughs. "Oh,
except that at the end of it, it's always like ‘oh, man' because I'm playing
acoustically I don't have a planned ending so you sort of have to come up with
something clever on the spot, and then it's the next song. That's my plan of
action."
Robert Schneider plays at the Hopetoun on Sat 13 Sep. #1 Hits Explosion is out through Popfrenzy
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