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John Meredith - guitars, vocals
Damon Smith - drums
David Schultz - bass, backup vocals
Ft. Collins is home of the Blasting Room Recording
Studio, Owned and Operated (O&O) Records, and a
number of bands including ALL, Drag The River, Armchair
Martian, and Wretch Like Me. In that musical family
is Someday I, who recently released their second album,
REF 4, on O&O.
After four years, Someday I has continued to take a
very distinct path away from the norm, one that is fogged
with complexities and mood swings that keep you continually
baffled and intrigued. REF 4 starts off with punk melodies,
but the vocal style is more emphatic, emotional, and
somewhat disturbed on tracks such as "I Already
Quit" and "Someday I Will Ruin My Life".
"Live for the Moment" whips up jangly bass
lines, catchy melodies, and riffs come closer to the
sound of a Roland keyboard than an actual guitar. Then
the mood changes into a darker and more intense theatric
presentation on tracks like "Concrete", presenting
a complex mixture of early '90s Feelies or Flop style
and a sinister Tool progression created through the
use of layered samples and synthesizers.
The band's songwriting methods and moods are rarely
found on your average pop, punk or emo brainy rock albums.
It's even a departure for Someday I, who released its
first album, Look Up and Live in 1999, portraying
the group's art rock stylings, but with a lighter, more
floating tone and popish persona.
John Meredith, the lead vocalist, guitarist, and songwriter
for Someday I has spent a good chunk of the last few
years of his life writing and producing REF 4.
As a result, it really portrays a musical diary of what
went on in his mind at that time, an ode to his own
internal torment and passion for everything from rock
influenced by Shiner or Jawbox to the electronic producers
of our day, and his frustration with making those musical
notes and ideas into something that made him content.
Amidst the emotion, on tracks in and around the album
such as "Live Through This Record", one can
also pick up hints of sarcasm and his ability to not
take things too seriously all of the time.
This interview was a long time coming. We're talking
a couple of months. But I was able to track down John
as he waited to play along side his band mates, Damon
Smith on drums and David Schultz on bass and backup
vocals, for a show at 15th Street Tavern.
KB: It's been a real challenge to nail you down
John. What's been going on?
JOHN: I've been on the road on and off since April.
I also do sound for Shiner and just got back from two
weeks in Japan with them. It was a fuckin' good time.
KB: I just interviewed another group, Ming &
FS, who were talking about touring Japan. How was that
for you?
JOHN: It was fun. I think we might head over there next
year in the summer. The promoter was really into us
and he wants to bring us over there.
KB: The Gamits were just in Japan, probably around
the same time as you guys.
JOHN: Oh yea? That would have been cool. I didn't see
many Caucasians. There are a lot of Japanese people
in Japan.
KB: That's funny you say that, 'cause that's exactly
what Ming said.
JOHN: It sounds like a dumb statement, but it's so homogenous
over there. Any place in the U.S. there's blacks, Hispanics,
or whatever. But in Japan - it's ALL Japanese people.
It's weird being a minority too.
KB: How has touring with Shiner impacted what you're
doing with Someday I? You had mentioned you were on
the road since April. Has that been with Shiner or Someday
I, or both?
JOHN: It's been a combination, and touring with Kip
Nash. I don't know if you know who they are. But that's
a different band I'm in.
KB: That's the band Robin from O&O is in, right?
JOHN: Right. The Shiner tours have been pretty educational
as far as how [tours] work. As far as meeting people,
it's been good for me. I've learned a lot about how
to deal with clubs, working shows and everything. They've
always been one of my favorite bands. They're one of
the few bands that I would run sound for 'cause it kinda
wrecks your ears.
KB: You don't use earplugs?
JOHN: You can't really mix with earplugs. You kinda
end up getting blasted every night.
KB: I get blasted every night, but it's with Vodka.
Just kidding. That's rough. God knows I've lost some
of my hearing with all the shows I've been to and I'm
sure bands have it even worse. How did you get into
doing sound in the first place?
JOHN: That was just a natural thing when I started doing
recordings on my four-track when I was a kid. I'd always
sat in my basement and wrote songs, and that turned
into a home studio with an eight-track and a computer.
Then I started working at the Blasting Room doing sound.
I hooked up with Shiner because they ended up putting
their third record out on Owned And Operated. So we
did some touring with them. I was willing to run sound
for them dirt-cheap. They pay me pretty good now, but
that was the main reason.
KB: So the Someday I CD, it came out this year.
But I understand it was actually recorded a year ago?
JOHN: It was actually recorded about a year-and-a-half
ago. It's been a long time. I don't know why it took
so long. It was pretty obsessive. It took a LONG time
to write and we spent a lot of time doing over dubs
and mixing. Jason [Livermore] and I actually remixed
it three times. We were ready to go last October. It
never worked with publicity, so they wanted to wait
until the Spring of Summer of this year.
KB: So it was a business decision more than anything?
JOHN: Yea, which was unfortunate. But we've kept ourselves
busy. We've got some new stuff and have been playing
around with the new record.
KB: I can tell that a lot of work went into it.
It's pretty dense in terms of layered sounds and effects.
There's a lot going on from song to song and within
the songs themselves, and change ups in styles. You
have some more punk and pop influences at the beginning
on tracks like "Opener" and "Live for
the Moment". But on "Filler", at least
sonically, it almost sounds like something that would
be a backdrop to a soundtrack where there's some massive
tidal wave going on. The depth of the keyboards seems
to get muddled and then the treble is sharpened like
it's washing in and out of shore. How did you come up
with ideas like that?
JOHN: I think a lot of that is just the influences I've
had recently. I've been listening to a lot of electronica,
like DJ Shadow, who I think is a direct influence on
that style of songwriting and production. He's definitely
one of the most talented people working in electronica.
KB: Aside from the influence, how did you come up
with the actual song itself?
JOHN: Well
heh. [sighs] That was a long time ago.
The whole album is really somatic. "Filler"
is based on riffs that appear in "Opener"
and "Computer". I was trying different things
with the whole record-like we had the punk rock part
of it, but the part on "Filler" that fades
in and out, we actually recorded that first then wrote
the rest of the song around that with the sequence drums,
strings, and the rest of the
junk.
KB: You had that sort of intense style and then
more melodic, popish styles on songs like "Live
For The Moment." It shows a lot of diversity. When
you have some of your influences going like DJ Shadow,
how are some of the other guys involved in adding theirs,
or do they?
JOHN: Especially for this record, I got pretty obsessive
about it and kind of did the whole thing. I'll pretty
much bring in songs finished then we'll kind of work
it out together. I guess this band started that way.
The band I did before, we did a lot of writing together
and it takes forever.
KB: What band was that?
JOHN: It was called Abaisser, a local band from around
here that no one ever heard of. But I'd like to get
away from that type of songwriting. I've been way more
into coming up with stuff collaboratively as a band.
It represents everyone's influences better. Hopefully
we'll be doing more of that in the future.
KB: Do you have new songs that have been created
that aren't on the CD?
JOHN: Definitely. We probably have about an album's
worth of material that's not on any of our records.
KB: And you've collaborated on those songs?
JOHN: Definitely. One of the songs we did right now
that's not on the record is a cover of a Deee-Lite song,
which was really fun. I brought it into practice so
we could learn to use our instruments in a different
way. So we learned the song and it worked out great
as an experimental project. We got some really cool
effects coming out of our stuff that sounded electronic.
We never intended to play it live, but now it's one
of [the crowd's] favorite songs.
KB: Which song was it?
JOHN: It's off of Dewdrops In The Garden. [sighs] I
can't remember it
it's like track nine or ten.
Now this is something I am personally guilty of to
a fault. As one who catches up on listening to music
in the car, I always take note of the track number more
than anything, unless I have the CD sitting right there.
Then I'm trying to read the damn song name and drive
at the same time. It's like dialing your cell phone,
which can be a little dangerous. So I'm glad I'm not
the only one who does that. But I do know track nine
on Dewdrops In The Garden is " Music Selector Is
the Soul Reflector" and track ten is " Sampladelic".
JOHN: I have much respect for Supra DJ Dmitry. He's
awesome.
KB: Talking about outside influences, I couldn't
help but notice the name of the track "Not OK Computer".
Was that a dig at Radiohead?
JOHN [Laughs]: It was a joke. We called the song "Computer"
because the guitar noises I make in the intro that are
kind of harmonic sounding like a computer. Then when
we went into record it, Jason, the guy who produced
the record with me, typed it up on the screen as "Not
OK Computer." I was just like, 'That's pretty funny.'
It kinda worked out with the theme of the lyrics and
how the song was anyways, as far as production and using
keyboards and synthesizers.
KB: Speaking of lyrics, you get pretty somber on
a number of songs. When you're going through the songwriting
process, do you write the lyrics first and then the
music around it, or in reverse, or does it change from
one song to the next?
JOHN: In general I'll have riffs that I've been working
on. But it never comes together until I have a lyrical
kind of idea of what the song's really about. Once I
have that, it jells around that. Both sides have to
change as the song comes together-both the lyrics and
the music. They have to work around each other.
KB: That makes sense. I supposed if you had some
really dark lyrics you wouldn't want some bubbling melodies
going on around you, although that contrast would be
interesting.
JOHN: Yea
KB: What about "Live Through This Record".
Was that written when you were up a 4:00am and had writer's
block or something?
JOHN: The year that I wrote the record I WAS just trying
to make it through it. It was a lot of work. It was
definitely an experiment, and I'm ready to get away
from that. It was good to do it. It was a time in my
life where I was pretty depressed and obsessed with
music, and NOT getting what I needed from music. That's
really what the record is about.
KB: So how are you now?
JOHN [Chuckles]: I feel a lot better now. I kinda got
out of my funk. I started smoking cigarettes again.
That helped.
KB: And that was a lot different from your first
record.
JOHN: Yea, it's a lot more pop. There's a huge challenge
in writing an interesting pop song that's not just crap,
you know? This record was a product of going in a completely
different direction. I didn't care at all about format
or if anyone liked it. I've always been shocked when
anyone does. The record was kind of a selfish thing.
Have you heard of Aversion.com?
KB: Yea, I know the guy who runs it, Matt. I have
interviewed him actually.
JOHN: He wrote a review that was exactly what I expected
to get from everybody. It was pretty scathing. It doesn't
bother me at all. He definitely was not into the wallowing
and self-depression. Then I was talking to Al from Shiner
about it, and he said something that made me feel a
lot better about it, which is, although it's really
specific and self-obsessed as far as the format like
the lyrics and the themes and everything, there's some
sort of universal relation that people have to being
obsessed about trying to do something, and having a
passion for something, and not having it work out. I
think that's a theme that most people can understand.
Ironically, I found Matt Schild's original opinion
of the Someday I that was written after its first release
in 1999. At the time Matt thought,"Someday I brings
a background putting many of its art-rock compatriots
to shame. This combination of youthful idealism and
experience puts Someday I in a position to storm the
gates of the art-rock community
"
Maybe it was the group's loss of that youthful idealism
that bugged him. Or maybe it was something simple, like
Matt was irritated because he was supposed to be meeting
friends for beers and instead he was writing a CD review
(and I say that because I found that on the site as
well). That's cool. God knows I've been there before,
showing up hours later than I said I would, complete
fried, only to be met by all my drunken friends who
have been enjoying themselves for hours while I was
typing at keyboard.
Or, maybe it was the use of electronics that can sometimes
turn a fan into a fiend when it comes to art rock or
punk formulas that go astray, and dive into genres that
are considered the enemy. Who knows? Matt's a cool guy
and a music journalist with his own opinions. But that
is the beauty of music. There IS something for everyone,
and in REF 4, the intricate complexities, thoughts,
themes, and textures that appeal to those in that mindset
are something to be admired amidst the angst.
The trio is heading out on the road, again, this time
to travel with a enough inventory of cigarettes to happily
make it through the mid-west, down to Florida and through
to the east coast.
You can get a hold of REF 4 and Look Up and
Live at most retailers, or online at www.interpunk.com.
The www.somedayi.com
Website was down when I last checked, but www.oandorecords.com
has a section for Someday I along with their other artists.
-Kim Owens, kim@kaffeinebuzz.com
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