Showing posts with label ykb. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ykb. Show all posts

Yves KLEIN BLUE – Ragged & Ecstatic


Dew Process: 2009]
Young and exciting Australian indie four-piece Yves Klein Blue are set to release their much-anticipated full length debut on June 26. The album title ‘Ragged and Ecstatic’ came from the words of Jack Kerouac describing the meaning of life as “the ragged and ecstatic joy of pure being” – a befitting choice of words for a record that overflows with addictive pop hooks, youthful vigour and impressive musicality. After a tiring year of continuous touring and recording, the boys are home for a national tour ending with a spot at Byron Bay’s Splendour in the Grass festival. We caught up with super enthusiastic and charming bass player, Sean Cook, to discuss the band’s amazing year as well as talk about red hair, champagne and who he’s listening to...
The band recorded ‘Ragged & Ecstatic’ in Fairfax Studios in LA with Kevin Augunas (Cold War Kids) – a far cry from the small local studio in Brisbane where they self-recorded their EP. Sean told us the experience was humbling for the band. “It was a shock for us – having Kevin there constantly wanting something better, re-working the melodic parts, always interested in a better way or a different way of approaching a song… Initially we were really taken aback having someone challenging us constantly”. So did anyone get their feelings hurt? “Ha ha! Yeah absolutely – we all had our moments. The process was a kind of non-stop whirlwind, really a creatively bizarre time. We were spending 24-7 with each other and thinking, breathing, dreaming about this record”. But obviously great things came out of it? “It was an education, because we were challenged and our ideas of how to make a song were challenged… but I think as a result of that we made the best record we possibly could.”
‘Ragged & Ecstatic’ is a really impressive album – especially considering it is the debut of a group of guys that are so freaking young. The album - and the Yves Klein Blue sound in general - is difficult to categorise as it doesn’t stick to one obvious genre. In fact, the album veers from the piano-driven pop swagger of single ‘Getting Wise’ to the acoustic call-to-arms of ‘About the Future’ and the The Hold Steady-esque rock storytelling of ‘Dinosaur’. The diversity of sound is linked to the huge catalogue of bands and songs that the band listens to. “We have a pretty scattered list of influences, but I guess at the heart of it we are into good songs – not necessarily die-hard supporters of particular bands.” At the moment he said he’s been listening to Nick Cave’s “Boatman’s Call”, Led Zeppelin II, Elvis Costello’s “Armed Forces”, among endless others.
It was straight-up rock ‘n’ roll talent that led to Yves Klein Blue signing with Australian label Dew Process in 2008. Sean said to celebrate they went out for steak and champagne, “it was extremely civilised, actually.” Champagne is pretty rock and roll though? “Yeah! And we didn’t use glasses either. Put that in!”
Now a year later, the band will play before the green fields at Splendour in the Grass, for the second time after gracing the stage in 2008. “It was probably my favourite gig we’ve ever played – to put it simply. As kids we used to go there and it’s a great festival to be at – it has a pretty unique feel. So being up on the stage and looking down into the crowd… that is completely surreal! We just love playing music together, and now we are getting to travel around and play our music to people…. It’s like a culmination of all this rehearsing and recording and playing our instruments and actually being rewarded for it. I have to pinch myself!”
We asked Sean what his favourite album of the week is and he said a new album that he’s been listening to called ‘North Hills’ by a band called The Dawds - sunny Laurel Canyon-style California pop. We would like to say thanks to Sean for the tip - and for being such a delightful, down-to-earth guy.
Yves Klein Blue have gained a reputation as an exciting live band, and they certainly have genuine charisma and a stage presence that belies their youth, so keep an eye on their tour dates to check them out for yourself. “Ragged & Ecstatic” will be released to the masses on 26 June. For more information on the band visit their website

taken from: http://www.albumoftheweek.com.au/2009/06/yves-klein-blue-ragged-and-ecstatic.html

News: YKB support White Lies (UK)

The boys announced on their twitter site today that they will be supporting dark-edged UK trio The White Lies during their Splendour sideshows. YKB precede the moody rockers as they hit the stage on the 28th of July at Sydney's Metro Bar for an all ages show, and Melbourne's Hi-Fi bar on the 30th of July.

"did we mention we are supporting White Lies? sydney metro on 28 july is ALL AGES... Melbs hi-fi on the 30 July.." - twitter.com/yveskleinblue

Interview from Jan '09 Courier Mail

Yves Klein Blue are about to head off on The Big O tour; an orientation week festival hitting universities in each state. They're also getting ready to release their debut album in May, and as a sneak peek of things to come, you can download a free copy of their current single, Polka.

They're obviously pretty busy at the moment, but lead guitarist Charles Sale took the time to answer a few questions for BrizBands:

1. You're named after a type of paint who knows enough about painting that you were able to come up with Yves Klein Blue as your official band name?
Well, someone owned a calendar which featured prominent 20th century artists. None of us are particularly knowledgeable in the field or art history, but it sounded nice!

2. What's the first album you bought that really got you considering music as a career?
Personally it was The Living End and I would have been about 10 years old when it was released. I then became thoroughly obsessed with the band for about a year, and would draw the Living End as if they were animal cartoon characters. I have no idea why.

3. What band or musician, alive or dead, would you like to meet?
I have been in the presence of a few people who were influential to me in the past, though I never say anything to them in fear of being an annoying fanboy. For the sake of the question… I’ll say Alex Chilton.

4. If you could ask them one question, what would it be?
It’d probably be something along the lines of “OH MY GOD PLAY A SHOW IN AUSTRALIA.” Though hopefully not that out of control.

5. Do you guys ever get nervous before a show?
Occasionally, though most of the times my senses are dulled by 4 different factors.

a. Too much alcohol, this can happen and it’s not a good thing. Be responsible!
b. Fatigue.
c. Bloating from bad food.
d. Completely forgetting to either restring my guitar, or just completely forgetting the guitar. That has happened, twice. On the same occasion. With the same guitar.

With these factors in place, I often even forget I have a show to play before I’m onstage.



6. If so, what do you do to ease the nerves?
If I’m nervous I will just listen to aggressive music loudly and have a drink. That tends to ease things a little.

7. What are the best and worst parts of a tour?
The best part is when you’re onstage and it’s wonderful and the crowds are great and you meet cool people. The worst part is having to then lug 100KGs of gear into a waiting van and then get up at some brutally early time and go on a flight and your head hurts.

8. What's your favourite thing to do on the weekend?
Well, when we’re generally on tour we’re playing shows! Otherwise I will stay at home and do very little. That’s usually the case, though sometimes I’ll venture out of my bedroom into natural light to forage.

9. How will you be celebrating Australia Day?
Probably going to the coast with my girlfriend and having a BBQ. There is nothing more Australian than cooked animal, apparently.

10. As a fairly successful local Brisbane band, what one piece of advice would you give to emerging bands?
Work hard and play shows, and if you can’t get shows, throw a party and then play at it!

taken from: http://blogs.news.com.au/couriermail/brizbands/index.php/couriermail/comments/yves_klein_blue_interview/

KEEPING THE BEAT




AS THEY EMBARK ON THE TOUR CELEBRATING THE RELEASE OF THEIR DEBUT ALBUM RAGGED & ECSTATIC, YVES KLEIN BLUE FRONTMAN AND SONGWRITER MICHAEL TOMLINSON AND GUITARIST CHARLES SALE TALK TO STEVE BELL ABOUT CONFRONTATION, ISOLATION AND COMING OUT ON TOP.

It’s been a steep learning curve for aspiring Brisbane rock quartet Yves Klein Blue, but from afar it seems that they’ve managed to cross every hurdle placed before them with relative ease. In the past two years they’ve toured extensively overseas, played a host of high profile supports, strutted their stuff on the stages of the big Australian festivals and even had songs soundtracking high profile commercials, and all on the back of their presciently-titled debut EP Yves Klein Blue Draw Attention To Themselves.

Now they can add to their catalogue the remarkably assured full-length effort Ragged & Ecstatic, a diverse collection of songs that they recorded in North Hollywood under the watchful eye of American producer Kevin Augunas (Cold War Kids). While justifiably proud of the final product, as the band members explain it the road to the album’s completion wasn’t all smooth sailing.

“It’s been a long time,” Tomlinson reflects on the album’s genesis. “For us it’s been almost a year of continuous slog. We started the demos mid last year, and we didn’t finish the record until this March on the first day of the Laneway tour. Then it was getting mixed while we were overseas on tour around America and the UK. We’d wake up and go sightseeing, then we’d play a gig, and then we’d get home and as we’d get home as the sun was rising and the mixes would be there waiting for us. It’s been flat out – not only the writing process, which went on indefinitely before that, but also the whole recording process was incredibly intense for a long time. Seeing the album finished is incredible. This is the first time that we’re able to have a definitive record of what we’re about. It’s all been leading to this for us.”

After decamping to America to record the album, the band found themselves confronting a very different recording experience than the one that they had initially envisaged.

“There was an agenda for what we wanted from the album going into the studio, but it got changed as soon as we got there,” Sale recounts. “It was, ‘Why the hell are we here? What’s the point of this? Why are we booked in for a month just to go in there and play the songs?’ At the start we thought that we were going to go in there and do it live, but once we got there we realised that we weren’t good enough to just fire it out and needed to spend some time on the songs.”

“Because we’d been playing together for two years we had a number of songs, so the most important thing for us was to make the best possible record with the best possible songs that we had,” Tomlinson continues. “We wanted to show the full range of songs and give the record an ebb and flow, and make the record like a record that we would love to listen to ourselves. We wanted to make it an experience, a sit down pop record with ten to twelve great songs. We thought what we’d do is tour the fuck out of it and then cut it live, but in the end we wouldn’t have got the record that we ended up with – and the record that we’re so proud of – if we had done that.

“So we got to the studio thinking that we were going to cut it live, and Kevin Augunas – the producer that we worked with – said, ‘What song do you want to start with? What song are you excited about?’ And we started with a newer song called ‘Soldier’, and we listened to the demo and he said, ‘Well, this song needs a lot of work’. And we’d been thinking that all of these songs were perfect and ready to go. So he began to rearrange it by stripping it back and we immediately realised that the drum beat and the bass line weren’t lining up, and that was a fucking awful moment for us. It was a really challenging moment – we were four cocky guys who thought we had it all, and then we realised that we still had a ways to go. Kevin’s contribution to the record was that he said, ‘Is this good enough?’. And as soon as that seed of doubt was planted by an objective third party, we knew we had to work really hard in the studio. The result is just that five percent extra – in grooves, arrangements, lyrics and everything – which has made this record better than what we thought would be possible.”

Being confronted in this manner, while somewhat threatening at first, was ultimately an invaluable lesson in the eyes of the band.

“It was definitely tough to face at first, but once we realised that Kevin was right it was awesome,” Sale offers. “We had a love/hate relationship with Kevin at times, but he did some really good shit and he changed our way of thinking, and we’re way better off for the experience. Hopefully next record will be even better again.

“We learned a great number of lessons about the music that we make and the music that we like to listen to,” Tomlinson agrees. “To become an editor of your own work takes a huge amount of discipline, and I think Kevin taught us a lot about discipline by being so uncompromising. In the end Kevin was right some of the times, and sometimes we were right, but there were two people going head to head and this synthesis – this huge dialectic.”

The impact of this clash of ideas on the young band was magnified by the fact that they were overseas and out of the confines of their natural respective comfort zones.

“At times we felt totally alone and isolated, and we had no choice but to face the confrontation,” Tomlinson continues. “I don’t think we would have been so receptive if we were in Sydney and could just get on the phone to our friends and family – if we had our support systems we wouldn’t have had to face it. So in many ways I think that was crucial to the whole thing – that we were away from home trying to stand on our own two feet. It was too important for us to fuck up – that was the main thing. There was no way we could fuck this up because there was too much at stake, and if we ever gave up we’d just be screwing ourselves over, so we were determined.”

It’s apt then that the album’s title Ragged & Ecstatic is taken from a passage of iconic Beat author Jack Kerouac’s legendary travel tome On The Road.

“In On The Road Kerouac talks about ‘the ragged and ecstatic joy of pure being’ – which is something that my little brother suggested we call the album after I recommended that book to him. Immediately I felt that it summed up what our band was like – a little bit of a shambles, but maybe like a well-oiled shambles,” Tomlinson laughs. “We’re just thrilled to be doing it – we aren’t the best and we aren’t the worst – but we’re trying our hardest. The experience in the studio was one of absolute despair and absolute triumph, and the lyrical content of the album is all about finding out about the world by living and experiencing defeat. I guess the mantra of the lyrical content is ‘hope not defeat’, so it seemed to be really fitting and indicative of both the band and the album.”

WHO: Yves Klein Blue

WHAT: Ragged & Ecstatic (Dew Process/Universal)

taken from: http://www.timeoff.com.au/html/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2951:yves-klein-blue&catid=11:features&Itemid=29

News: EP now available in Canada


The boys announced today on twitter that they have secured a digital release of the 2008 EP is available for download in Canada:

"our first EP 'Yves Klein Blue Draw Attention To Themselves' is released digitally in Canada today, so if you are in Canada, go forth & buy!" - twitter.com/yveskleinblue


you can get it here: http://www.amazon.com/Draw-Attention-To-Themselves/dp/B001H5W0X2/ref=dm_cd_album_lnk


The boys are also reporting that they are traveling to Melbourne on there first national headline tour, but a bout of the flu has infected the camp - probably blaming Berkfinger from support band Philadelphia Grand Jury for that one ; )

"en route to melbs - sickest tour bus in all the land, and we don't mean in a fully sick bro manner ... yves swine flue on the road..."

poor boys, go buy their ep or better yet new album and make them feel better!!!

Yves Klein Blue @ Oxford Art Factory, Sydney (04/07/09)

Just over a year ago, Yves Klein Blue were playing to handfuls of people for free beer. Now, they are selling out Sydney’s Oxford Art Factory.

Philadelphia Grand Jury offered their hand in support for YKB. A near-capacity OAF felt inclined to cease conversation and pay them a little attention with EP tracks I’m Going To Kill You and Ready to Roll turning a few heads. Their onstage energy, combined with a raw rock ‘n’ roll sound, had these three mismatched men putting their best toe-tapping foot forward.

If their old school vibe wasn’t entertaining enough, the recorded banter in between songs proved very humorous. Luckily, there are good reviews all round from me (otherwise I would run the risk of a PGJ assault, as the recording warned!). After looking away for no more than a second, I missed MC Bad Genius take a tumble off the stage. I did however catch the aftermath, which involved dancing with the audience before running through the crowd and out the door.

High-rotation single Going to the Casino Tomorrow Night predictably received a rousing response from the crowd. If you are keen on a good old-fashioned, hip shakin’ rock ‘n roll show, Philadelphia Grand Jury are the band for you.

Shortly after, four very talented and charming Brisbane boys came on stage to play us some new tunes off their debut album Ragged and Ecstatic. Yves Klein Blue launched into their set with Silence is Distance, which had frontman Michael Tomlinson displaying his trademark animated facial expressions. Dinosaur followed with its witty lyrics and fun pop sensibility, before Tomlinson traded his Rickenbacker for a spot behind the keys to play new single Make Up Your Mind.

New songs Digital Love and Solider were intertwined with the likes of older songs such as Blasphemy. The set seemed quite short, because before we knew it Charles was tapping out the intro of Getting Wise and we could sense the end was near. Getting Wise is probably my favourite YKB number to date. It has an unpredictable melody and a great vocal, but I just can’t put my finger on what it is that compels me to smile and dance.

After briefly leaving the stage, the oh-so-dreamy Michael Tomlinson returned, acoustic guitar in hand, to do a lovely version of About The Future. The other three lads joined him for what everyone assumed would be Polka – but boy, did we get a surprise! Instead, they did a cover of Bruce Springsteen’s hit, Born To Run. Now, I am a self-confessed, die-hard Springsteen fan, so you can only imagine my excitement. Although it lacked a few E-Street band layers, they unquestionably did the hit justice. Coming from me, that’s a hefty compliment.

Of course, they didn’t leave us without playing their most popular song, Polka. “This is the last chance to dance motherfuckers,” declared Tomlinson, and dance we did. Give Yves Klein Blue another year and they will be playing to 5000 fans. It’s amazing how much can change in just a year…

taken from: http://www.fasterlouder.com.au/reviews/events/19260/Yves-Klein-Blue--Oxford-Art-Factory-Sydney-040709.htm

Blue about the future

Yves Klein Blue sing About the Future

Noel Mengel
June 25, 2009


"WHAT this generation needs is a war," Michael Tomlinson croons on a song called About The Future.

It's not so shocking as it reads in print, as he goes on to sing about the ills and dilemmas facing his generation – he's 22 – part-serious, part-mocking.

Those ills, it turns out, aren't so very different from the problems every generation of youth faces: Where do we fit in this big world, how can we best make use of our allotted time in it, why the hell are we so apathetic in the face of the challenge?

About the Future is a fantastic song, one among numerous gems on Ragged and Ecstatic, the debut album by Yves Klein Blue.

"Ragged and ecstatic" is a phrase borrowed from Jack Kerouac but it neatly sums up the pop thrills on the Brisbane four-piece's debut album, recorded in Los Angeles earlier this year.

About the Future is a big topic – Tomlinson, guitarist and chief songwriter, isn't afraid of those – and it's delivered as a simple but energetic acoustic guitar tune.

As with the band's best-known song to this point, Polka, there is something old-timey about it, like some escapee from a particularly black stage musical.

"It's difficult to know what phenomena are unique to your generation," Tomlinson offers. "You know how in the '60s people had a movement and something to get behind, bucking the system? Today everybody is doing their own thing. It's very easy to feel little about everything."

Tomlinson is sitting with guitarist Charles Sale, his musical collaborator since they met at high school in Brisbane.

Their conversation is as entertaining as the band's colourful songwriting, bouncing ideas and asides off each other in the way that old friends can do.

Tomlinson: "The first time I played guitar was at my grandma's house. It only had two strings on it and I wrote this really crappy song. Then I wrote a song about a rapping chicken. And one about eating vomit for the primary school talent show in grade seven . . ."

Sale: "At high school, you interviewed me. You were, 'So what music do you like?' And I was like, 'Led Zeppelin'. You were, 'Cool. See you later'. That was it!"

Tomlinson: "We had a rocking high school band called The Mighty Morphine Powder Railers. Not that we did morphine at high school or ever, except for the time I got my arm broken and . . ."

Sale: "We didn't sound too far off what we do today but there were more Strokes references and Stooges references."

That band fell apart after school, Sale and Tomlinson continued their university studies while spending plenty of time in a home studio working up new songs.

With the addition of bassist Sean Cook and drummer Chris Barnham, Yves Klein Blue was born.

Independently recorded 2008 EP Yves Klein Blue Draw Attention To Themselves certainly did that – as did the youthful fizz of their live performances.

The band signed to Brisbane label Dew Process, home of The Grates and The Living End.

Chief among the EP's pleasures was the daffy, scuzzy Polka, which also appears on the new album. It starts with a bouncy, polka-ish rhythm before exploding into a howl of, well, ecstatic guitars.

Clearly Tomlinson is a songwriter who enjoys exploring deeper than last year's pop charts. Summer Sheets has a ska beat; Gin Sling is an authentic slice of country-rock; Make Up Your Mind and Getting Wise are delirious pop tunes.

"Polka," Tomlinson reveals, "that's all about listening to (gypsy jazz legend) Django Reinhardt. That's the rhythm I was apeing but obviously it's not what came out. I also listen to old blues guys, crooners, old cowboy songs.

"I just love songs and melody.

"When I was younger I messed with the sound of guitars and synthesisers but doing this record I realised, I don't listen to music like that. I listen to Lou Reed, Elvis Costello, The Clash.

"It seems like the most important thing is not changing the order of the parts or making a huge art show out of it, but just having those incredible parts and arranging them in the classic way.

"That seems to me to be the most beautiful form.

"We don't think about styles. If something's cool, we don't care if it's a ska song or a country song. We like The Specials and we like Neil Young, so what's the problem?"

And the LA experience, recording with producer Kevin Augunas?

Tomlinson: "The level was intense. We were in a two-room apartment that was 10 minutes walk from the studio. There was nothing else for us to do but obsess about the music . . ."

Sale: "Michael is definitely obsessive."

Tomlinson: "It's also fun for me to be obsessive."

Sale: "You can't have fun unless everything is being obsessed over."

Tomlinson: "That's true. That's what I get a kick out of I suppose."

With Ragged and Ecstatic, there are plenty of those kicks to share around.

Ragged and Ecstatic (Dew Process/Universal) is out tomorrow.

Yves Klein Blue play Bon Amici, Toowoomba tonight; Powerhouse Theatre, Brisbane tomorrow (sold out); Sound Lounge, Gold Coast, Saturday; Woombye Pub, Sunday.

taken from: http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,25684824-5003421,00.html