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MICACHU & THE SHAPES

Micachu And The Shapes

Good Sad Happy Bad

    That Micachu & The Shapes’ return, three years after the release of their last record ‘Never’, is almost an accident: the trio of friends decided to rehearse in an East London studio, and found themselves immersed into an hours-long jam. Drummer Marc Pell had an Edirol field recorder in hand, and unbeknownst to his bandmates, recorded the whole session; Pell, Mica Levi, and Raisa Khan were so enamored of those off-the-cuff audio experiments that they became the underpinnings of a new record.

    "For me it's the most free we have been,” Levi explains. Rather than showing up to the studio with songs written out, the trio started with a collaborative improvisation, from which Levi chose sections to develop into songs, writing lyrics to the entire record “non-stop, in one avalanche."

    With one listen, it’s easy to hear why they loved the tracks. ‘Good Sad Happy Bad’ maintains the experimental-pop sensibility the band has brought to previous efforts, combining the lightness and bounce of their best singles with the sonic textures of field recordings, industrial effects alongside straightforward instrumentation. Levi’s affected vocals eschew easily readable emotional tone, instead relying on quixotic lyricism, repetition, and immersion into the song’s landscape, to evoke warmly - rather than show - the sentiments underpinning the songs.

    The record’s irrepressible energy, across both the upbeat and a handful of sadder songs, seems to be a direct result of the live recording process. “Jams are really quite a healthy release, it’s a way of getting stuff out without consciously thinking about it or making decisions,” says Khan.

    Conversely, because the band worked out the final mixes together over a number of months - rather than in a traditional, multi-track studio over a shorter period - Pell found a new degree of creativity. “I think the best drum part I have ever written is the stick-clicking at the beginning of ‘Peach’ - a moment, he explains, that he wouldn’t have been able to notice without the luxury of seeing the recorded tracks as more than simply songs, but as collections of sonic ideas.


    Micachu & The Shapes

    Never

      Rough Trade are excited to announce Micachu & The Shapes’ second studio album, ‘Never’.

      ‘Never’ was self-produced by the band, recorded at band member Marc Pell’s studio in Stratford and mixed by Dillip Harris and the band. It is the follow-up to their critically acclaimed debut ‘Jewellery’ (2009).


      STAFF COMMENTS

      Ryan says: Mica Levi's obscure song writing genius shines through once again on their second studio album. More sonically in your face than ever before but sticking to their usual interesting instrument modifications.

      Micachu & The Shapes / London Sinfonietta

      Chopped & Screwed

        Micachu & The Shapes have collaborated with London Sinfonietta, one of the world’s leading contemporary orchestras, to create "Chopped & Screwed". Recorded live in front of an audience at Kings Place, London in May 2010.

        The Sinfonietta invited Mica Levi, Micachu & The Shapes’ frontwoman, to compose a series of pieces that would reflect her interests and influences, whilst giving the Sinfonietta an opportunity to develop a relationship with a young and exciting composer. She then presented the ideas of Shapes Raisa, Marc, alongside her own, to the Sinfonietta’s players, who then helped the trio to expand and enhance their ideas during a series of workshops prior to the concert.

        The concept behind the album was inspired by the popular ‘chopping and screwing’ technique in American hip hop which was developed in Houston in the 1990s. The technique involves halving tempo, skipping beats and affecting portions of the original music. The approach was thought to have been developed by DJ Screw and largely influenced by Purple Drank, a codeine-based cough syrup which creates the effect of slowing down the brain, giving mellow music its appeal. For this exciting, innovative project Mica Levi and David Sylvester handmade the instruments played by Micachu & The Shapes.

        Accompanying both formats of the album will be a download code for a mixtape featuring the artist Brother May, repeats and extends the concept further by chopping and screwing the original album into grime tracks.



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