INTERVIEW:
Mark was questioned by Jason from www.somewherecold.com
Q: Hello all in Explosions in the Sky. Introduce yourselves to our readers
please. Who plays what? How and when did you form?
Mark: Michael = bass and guitar, Munaf
= guitar, Mark = guitar, Chris--drums
Michael, Munaf, and I have been friends for going on ten years. We played
music together in the town where we grew up (Midland, Texas). Then we
all moved to Austin (where we all live now) and met Chris in early 1999,
and pretty much immediately started playing music together.
Q: The soundtrack for Friday Night Lights
was your last released work, as far as I know. How did you come upon
that project? What inspired you to say yes and how did you approach
writing and recording the material?
Mark: It was all a pretty strange
experience but definitely a positive one. We were approached by the
music supervisor of that movie, Brian Reitzell (who has also worked
on the soundtracks for Lost In Translation and Virgin Suicides). He
really liked our music and was somehow able to convince the studio
(Universal) to use us for the score and soundtrack. the film is based
on a book of the same name and it's a nonfiction story that takes place
in Midland, Texas, which is where Munaf, Michael, and I grew up. We
all read the book or had already read the book and it's actually really
good, very insightful and touching and of course it meant a lot to
us that it took place in our hometown. So we said yes and just tried
to do the best we could.
Q: Since you haven't recorded an Explosions
disc since 2003, are there plans to record new material any time soon?
What are the current plans for writing?
Mark: We are currently in the midst
of writing new music. To be honest, we have gone through some rough
patches this year with writing. We took the year off just to write
(i.e, not tour), and we started off well. We did an EP for Temporary
Residence's Travels In Constants series (it should come out in august
or september). It was the most fun we've ever had with a project. We
decided to make up and record a song every day for eight days (generally
a song can take us several months to write, so this was pretty unusual
for us). But since then, we have been struggling to find a new way.
We definitely don't want to just repeat ourselves, and we're pretty
hard on ourselves, so it has been slow. It's picking up lately, though.
Our only goal right now is a new album, and it's hard to imagine finishing
a new one before the end of the year, so it wouldn't come out until
next year.
Q: How do you as a band and as individuals
approach writing? What led you to write instrumental tunes?
Mark: As i said, it's a long often
rough process. We used to work faster and probably more naturally,
but now we know more of what we want a song to sound like, so we often
continually go for the ideal way we want the song to go, rather than
just letting whatever comes out come out. Basically, one of us just
starts playing a riff and someone else starts playing on top of that
and then it grows. None of us really remember choosing to be an instrumental
band, it just seemed natural when we started playing with Chris, it
felt like we were able to express what we wanted to "say" without
vocals.
Q: What makes a good song in your minds?
When do you accept a tune as being "done" or "good enough" for recording?
Mark: I know how inane this sounds,
but we seem to know whenever all four of us play the song and go "holy
shit, that's what we were trying to write." I don't really know
how to explain it other than that. It's almost like once we come up
with the starting riff, the song is already written in some untapped
piece of our brains and we just have to keep chipping away until we
figure it out.
Q: As you have progressed as a band,
how do you see your art progressing? When you hear your first and second
albums, what strikes you as different between them? Do you have any
favorite tracks on either disc?
Mark: I've always thought of "those
who tell the truth" as
sort of an act of desperation. None of us were really happy with
our lives and it seemed like all we had was this music. It was just
us bursting with all these feelings (mostly dark, dismal feelings)
that we had to do something with. So that was sort of a catharsis.
After that album, we felt like we had "found ourselves" and
were able to think more about the kind of thing we really wanted to
write. So we set out to make a more romantic, longing album ("the
earth is not a cold, dead place"). We wanted to lift ourselves
out of those bad feelings and reach a more triumphant, uplifting place.
But i still hear the tragedy and sadness in that one too. My personal
favorites on the albums are "the
moon is down" and "the only moment we were alone," but
that's just me.
Q: For the gear heads out there, what
sort of equipment do you use?
Mark: Michael plays an Ibanez guitar,
Munaf plays a Stratocaster, and i play a Fender Toronado, and we all
use Fender amps (Michael plays the Bassman, Munaf the dual showman
reverb, and I play the quad reverb). And a lot of pedals between us--line
6 delay, big muff distortion, sans amp distortion. I don't know what
kind of bass Michael plays or his bass amp. Chris uses Fibes drums,
i think.
Q: The scene in Austin seems to be exploding
with experimental and instrumental bands. What do you attribute that
to? How have you seen the scene grow? What it like playing in Austin
and surrounding areas?
Mark: We always feel oddly unprepared
to answer this question. We certainly like bands here (American Analog
Set, Trail Of Dead), but we don't seem to be part of any scene or know
too much about many bands here. In real life, we kind of keep to ourselves,
and we seem to as a band too.
Q: You have been touring a lot in the
last year or so. Any good tour stories? What are your favorite places
to play?
Mark: Some of our favorite places
to play are Chicago (anywhere), New York (anywhere), Philadelphia (first
unitarian), this place called The Vera in Groningen, Holland.
Q: Are there any artists that inspire
you or have influenced your work? Are there any writers that influence
your music?
Mark: There are many, many artists
and writers and filmmakers that influence us and inspire us and break
our hearts. To name just a few: Terrence Malick, David Foster Wallace,
John Steinbeck, Eluvium, Fugazi, Cormac Mccarthy, Four Tet, Jose Saramago,
David Gordon Green.
Q: If you could give an young artist
any advise, what would that be?
Mark: There is really nothing i can
think of that wouldn't sound unbearably cheesy, so I would merely say
to work hard. the only way we ever get anything done is when our work
ethic is healthy.