
photo credit: kim
owens
SXSW 2006 |
It all starts with a fairly simple plan. Get your mates
together, write some songs, put them on a CD and head
out of town. Nice in theory, but the success of such plans
does not come so easy.
For the Editors, it was no cake walk,
but success they’ve had with last year’s
debut release, The Back Room
on the U.K.’s Kitchenware label, is a tribute
to their talented songwriting and commitment to the
road.
The sound with which the Editors travel is filled with
distinctive, British pop finesse, reincarnating classic
guitar lines while casting their own mold for captivating
audiences far and wide. From the halls of Britain's
Stafford University in Birmingham, these music technology
grads rely on their diverse set of rock ‘n’
roll skills to deliver an up and down ride of gyrating,
frenzied rhythms (“Munich,” “Blood,
“Bullets”), then simmer down to beautiful,
3:00am contemplations and epiphanies (“Camera,”
“Fall,” “Open Your Arms”).
With a solid track record established in their homeland
and surrounding countries, it was time the Editors head
to the expansive lands of the U.S. This plan included
a romp in the bed with the Fader Label (the record label
division of The FADER magazine, which released Saul
Williams’ rock and hip-hop heavy self-titled debut
on the label in 2005), providing Americans with access
to The Back Room.
The Editors first got their feet wet with a few showcase
dates in the west and east coasts in early 2006, and
then it was time for the band to dive into the madness
of Austin’s SXSW.
But that isn’t the end of their U.S. trek.
Using the same determination they did to win the hearts
of U.K. fans, lead vocalist and songwriter Tom
Smith, guitarist Chris Urbanowicz,
drummer Ed Lay and bass player Russell
Leetch have kept going after their filled-to-capacity,
BBC 6 Music Showcase at Bender’s Bar in Austin.
They’ll hit 27 U.S. cities along with stops in
Canada before they head over to Japan at the end of
April. From there, it is time to hit the major music
festival circuit, including Coachella, Glastonbury in
the U.K., the Rockwave Festival in Athens, Greece, Lollapalooza
in Chicago, and the Frequency Festival in Austria.
Before setting up for a show at the Mad Hatter in Covington,
Kentucky, Ed expounded on the rush their lives have
been this past year and a half.
Ed Lay: This is the first time we’ve been here
properly. We’ve all been surprised at the reaction
we’ve got. Pretty much across the board, it’s
been fantastic. There’s a lot of people that know
the album. With our headlining tour there’s a
good mix of bands. We’ve got similar styles but
there’s enough of a difference between the bands
to make an interesting show. The Mobius Band, they deserve
a mention. They have an incredible following, so we’re
really happy to have them as well.
Kaffeine Buzz: I actually got a chance to get
into your show at SXSW, which was not easy to do. A
lot of people I know weren’t able to make it in
because it was full up, so it was obvious that people
were well aware of you already.
EL: Sure. That was our showcase event, wasn’t
it?

photo credit: kim
owens
SXSW 2006 |
KB: Yep.
EL: It was a good show, but very typical with South
by Southwest. Everything’s very rushed and a bit
of a headache with technical difficulties. But the shows
go on and they’re great. They’re very rock
‘n’ roll, so you just go in fast and furious
and get off in half an hour. It’s a very interesting
event and not without its difficulties, as you can imagine.
But it was a vast amount fun. What did you think of
it?
KB: Oh, I had a great time. It was a bit tough
to squeeze in to take pictures but everyone in the crowd
was pretty accommodating and the show was brilliant.
You guys have a stage presence that really pulls people
in, and it was very cool to hear songs from the album
brought out. Tom’s got a really animated presence.
He’s quite a showman.
EL: Yes, that was one of the shows where it was just
fantastic to watch that.
KB: Well, looking back at this last year, so
much has happened for you guys. If you think back to
January of 2005 and what you had set out to do, did
you have any idea that you would be this far along in
just a year?
EL: In a way, yes, but…I don’t know. We
always kind of had a structure and knew how we were
going to build ourselves as a band. The way we wanted
to get out to people in the U.K. was to go out and tour
constantly all of last year. We didn’t have the
money to spend on advertising campaigns. The only way
we could let people know who we were was by going out
to their towns and showing them. So now, we’ve
been stepping up venue sizes and going out to other
towns in the U.K. Our plan was also to come over to
the U.S. this year. Because of the way things have picked
up back home in the last four or five months, it’s
given us the platform to come over here a bit earlier
and try our luck a little bit sooner.
KB: So you’re going to keep up the same
pace this year as you did last year, just in a different
part of the world?
EL: Yes, we’ve got the same attitude over here.
We signed to the Fader label and they’re very
independent thinking, and [we work with them] in the
same way as we do with Kitchenware. We started with
South by Southwest and we’re staying through to
Coachella. That’s a seven week tour. I don’t
know of many that have come over in recent years and
put that much into it for their first tour.
KB: When it comes to the songs on The Back
Room, and with respect to the listener’s
interpretation, I pick up senses of irony, of contradiction
and observation.

photo credit: kim
owens
SXSW 2006 |
EL: Yea, you’re right. There’s definitely
some irony in there, which is something you’d
probably have to speak to Tom about. But I can say that
he picks up on those things quite regularly, so I think
it’s only natural that he writes them into the
songs as well. We always get called ‘gloomy’
back in the U.K. But I really don’t think we are.
Maybe the lack of rock ‘n’ roll drinking
stories may fortify that image. I mean, we’re
just pretty regular guys. Some of the songs can be kind
of dark, but they can also be enlightening.
KB: Well, maybe because they are enlightening,
which can also require one to look in the mirror and
observe their own reflection, that can be scary for
some. So they tend to automatically connect their fears
to something that’s gloomy. The truth is dark
for them.
EL: Precisely. But reflection is an important part
of growing up. Especially at our age, when we were writing
the first album at 22 or 23, it’s a funny time
for people our age. There’s a lot of changes going
on in your love life or in your working life. Tom took
the things he experienced and saw going on around him
and wrote them into this album.
KB: Even within the songs themselves, there
is contradiction within the instrumentation, like in
“The Fingers in the Factories” where in
the chorus you’re blasting the booming drums and
Chris’s guitar parts are very delicate and fragile.
EL: It’s all about balance, isn’t it? In
a live situation you can make things feel more dynamic,
making the loud very loud and the soft, very soft. That’s
why we enjoy playing live, because we can make those
differences even more different. (laughs) We’ve
kind of thought about playing them live when we record
them, if you get my drift.
KB: Oh, absolutely. I’m all for musical
exploration, but it’s a bummer when you really
love a song on an album, but the band isn’t able
to pull it off live without two hours of set up time
or something.
EL: Exactly, and we didn’t want to complicate
things, especially with our debut album. It’s
very much a ‘point in time’ album. That’s
what we were up to back then.
KB: Have you guys written any new music since
The Back Room?
EL: Yea, we’re actually playing a couple of new
songs on this tour that we wrote in the first part of
this year, with intensions for the next record. We have
our ‘next record heads’ firmly screwed on
at the moment, because in the U.K. the record’s
been out for almost a year now. We want to write a new
record and get something recorded possibly by the end
of the year.
KB: With these new songs and what you have
in mind for the new album, how has the last year impacted
your song writing now?
EL: It’s certainly impacted it in a logistics
way, because we can’t just sit in a rehearsal
studio in Birmingham like we did for The Back Room with
the hours and hours, weeks and months; that’s
not a luxury we have anymore. We’re on tour constantly,
so we’ve had to adapt our way of writing. And
to be honest, the major difference in writing tunes
now is our confidence. It’s really high. We’ve
always been able to critically analyze what we’ve
written and throw out the bad bits. We’ve gotten
better at doing that because everything is in a tighter
schedule.
KB: Has it ever been surreal for you, how things
have continued to fall into place and with some of the
experiences you’ve had? I mean, when you get back
in May you have three sold out shows at Brixton Academy.
EL: Hmmm…yea, of course, but we still have to
do our laundry. (laughs) I must admit, I did sort of
had to pinch myself the other day when we were in Miami
at South Beach and we were just hanging out. It was
ridiculous, like we were on holiday. We never take for
granted how lucky we are.

photo credit: kim
owens
SXSW 2006 |
KB: Well, yea, when it comes to the music business
you can’t take anything for granted. And even
within your songs there are also themes of impermanence,
which is just part of life anyway.
EL: Of course, of course. We always wanted to build
a career out of this and so yea, we’re very aware
that tastes change, which you can’t do anything
about. We know we’ve got to make the best record
possible the next time to continue our careers. It’s
definitely in the forefront of our minds, to not rush
anything and make it exactly right. The platform we
built from the first record is pretty substantial, so
it would be a real shame, and we’d definitely
let ourselves down, if we didn’t build on that.
Yea, I think this next time around we’ll be playing
around with instrumentation a bit more to pull different
qualities out…you know, mix it up a bit.
Although the Mobius Band, which Ed mentioned, plays
their last date with the Editors on April 19 in Lawrence,
Kansas, another popular act, stellastar*, stays on the
tour. Los Angeles outfit, Monsters Are Waiting, jumps
on board for the show this Friday, April 21 at the BlueBird.
BUT – before all that, the Editors will play
a free, in-store show at Tower Records in Cherry Creek
on Thursday, April 20 at 6pm, the first of four in-stores
planned, including their Seattle stop at Easy Street
Records(April 26), at Tower in San Francisco (April
29), and at the San Diego Tower in La Jolla (May 1).
Editors' complete tour schedule is available on their
website.
www.editorsofficial.com
www.thefader.com/fader/faderlabel
-Kim Owens, April 18, 2006
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