The first track you played on repeat?
C - '12:51' by The Strokes, dancing around in my pants - at five years old.
J - An N-Dubz song - It was purchased when bored in the queue to buy a video game. I looked at the cover and was inspired by Dappys droopy hat which then became popularised, partially by me, mostly by him. The hip-hop pop rap sounds were enough to catch my attention and were then listened to night and day. Until one time I had a nightmare about a tsunami hitting me while listening to the album and couldn't take listening again.
S - As lame as anyone's first obsessed over song is, I remember it to be 'White Cliffs Of Dover' sung by many names over the decades, though this particular rendition was brought back by my Mum on a compilation cd from ‘The 606 Club’. I remember bellowing it around the house in around year 3-4 having no concept of how sad the lyrics were. The song still pops into my head now and again.
A song that defines the teenage you?
'I’ve Had It' by Black Flag.
We’re still teens, but in Jonny and I’s first few years of teen-hood, we found solace in the form of locking ourselves in a sweaty room with two other pre-pubescent boys and playing hardcore punk for hours on end and drinking copious amounts of coffee.
It’s hard to pick a song that defines maybe one of the most pinnacle stages of someone's life, though one lady who held my hand through this confusing thorny time was Kate Bush. It’s one of the few albums I can listen to and taste, smell, see and feel the rooms and scenes she transports you to. Musky perfume to blue ceiling corners. My Mum showed the album to me which was bought for her by her boyfriend at the time while she was confined to her bed due to illness. Though I must say that it was only her first two albums which touched me like this, especially Lionheart. Songs such as 'Symphony In Blue', 'In The Warm Room' and 'Oh England, My Lionheart'.
One record you would keep forever?
'Forever Dolphin Love' by Connan Mockasin. It’s a record that completely reshaped my taste in music and made me seek out progressively darker and weirder stuff. Definitely a modern classic that I want to creep out my future offspring with. Also one of the first records that we all bonded over.
A song lyric that has inspired you?
“Words are just noise” 'Beat' by Bowery Electric.
“We are crane drivers, and we’re fishing for silver” 'Crane Driver' by The Cleaners from Venus.
“Water’s all I need” 'Water' by Alex G.
A song you wished you had written?
'Words' by Low. Each section drifts into the other perfectly while slowly building to a peak emotional intensity that sounds like a mixture of heartbreak and nostalgia. The whole thing is extremely tense and delicate, and we’re envious of their ability to get the tempo and key so perfect. Production wise it is a masterpiece, but that’s for another question.
Best song to turn up loud?
'Hippie Hippie Hurroah' by Jacques Dutronc.
'The Clean' by Beatnik.
'No G.D.M.' by Gina X Performance.
A song people wouldn’t expect you to like?
'Freezing Moon' by Mayhem.
As it is seemingly the antithesis to our music - black metal bands like ‘mayhem’. Black metal is something we respect because it’s all about creating an atmosphere and intensity. The stage show is almost theatrical with candles, incense, robes and mist. The idea of going to a show and being completely intoxicated by the performance is something that we want to be able to do for people when they come and see us.
Best song to end an all-nighter on?
'Arc Of A Journey' by Broadcast.
It consumes you with its dark waves of strangely warming blues, reflected glossy constellations that pour out of any and every speaker that it plays through, slipping you happily in its waters no matter what state you’re in.
Any new bands you are listening to right now?
DUDS, Vinyl Staircase, Ugly, Tanned By The Moon, Barbudo, Dose, Spinning Coin, Looms, Brian Hill and The Noh Starrs and Sumochief are just a few of the multitude of incredible music makers at the moment.