High fidelity

Sonic Boom’s Spectrum are worth the trip
By DANIEL BROCKMAN  |  May 17, 2010

1005_spectrum_main

“It’s a complicated subject,” says Peter Kember — a man more commonly known by his pseudonym, Sonic Boom — on the relationship between music and drugs. He is, after all, one of the foremost authorities on the matter. Exhibit A would be the lysergic legacy of Spaceman 3, the band he co-founded as a teenager, whose drone-tastic minimalism arguably invented shoegaze while operating under perhaps the greatest band motto ever: “Taking drugs to make music to take drugs to.” Exhibit B would be the sonic maelstrom that is his solo project, Spectrum, who play the Middle East this Tuesday.

“When Spaceman 3 started,” he points out, “we were just being honest about what we were doing. I try not to regret too much — but that isn’t to say that that legacy isn’t a ball and chain sometimes.”

As opposed to the popular conception of Kember as a drugged-out psych-rocker, the real-life Sonic Boom is more like a scientist, investigating new ways to blow minds through sound. This is, after all, a man who not only put together a project called Experimental Audio Research (a long-running and loosely manned conglomerate that at times included My Bloody Valentine’s Kevin Shields) but also spent years as a disciple of BBC experimental sound guru Delia Derbyshire (most famous for the eerie theme song to the original Doctor Who). “Delia taught me the precepts of sound, how sounds are made, the mathematics and the physics of sound.”

With Spectrum (who come to the Middle East on Tuesday), Kember achieves an Owsley-esque distillation of the purest attributes of rock, eschewing things like solos, breakdowns, and other tropes that might get in the way of a tune’s beeline to your cranium. Last year’s War Sucks EP is a particularly majestic slab of monolithic rock, its gentle melodicism hiding beneath grunting scuzz and oscillating weirdness. The EP was meant to be a stopgap until the next Spectrum full-length — tentatively titled On the Wings of Mercury. Then Kember was tapped for a totally different gig, working for nine months with MGMT as producer of what would become their polarizing new album, Congratulations.

“It was odd,” he recalls, “as I worked with them, I found myself able to sympathize with what I now call ‘MGMT Syndrome,’ where a band formed just to have fun and make music that they like, and then literally by mistake were incredibly successful doing it and had to deal with people they didn’t like and do things they didn’t want to do.” Spaceman 3 had a similar trajectory, having existed happily as a peculiar drug-rock oddity in the ’80s UK music scene until a left-field #1 hit — “Revolution,” from 1989’s Playing with Fire — thrust them into a limelight they were ill-prepared to enjoy. “We didn’t have the people skills, as they say. There aren’t many jobs where you might have to go away with your workmates for six months and spend every day and night with them, you know? So working with MGMT, I could see where they were coming from.”

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Ghost stories, Wanting more, Photos: Most popular slideshows of 2009, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Entertainment, Entertainment, Music,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY DANIEL BROCKMAN
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   DIPLO DISHES A MAJOR LAZER  |  October 19, 2012
    After years of putting his sonic touches on other people's tunes, Diplo is hoping to finally step out into the light on his own.
  •   HOW ATLAS SHRUGGED LINKS CANADIAN PROG-ROCK AND OUR TERRIFYING VEEP HOPEFUL  |  October 19, 2012
    If, god forbid, Paul Ryan were to get elected vice president, we might have our first executive-branch hard-rock fan, which is somewhat in line with rock culture's slow shift from radical to conservative.
  •   MILLIGRAM BACK FOR ANOTHER STRIKE  |  October 12, 2012
    The history of rock and roll is endlessly cyclical, with each generation hitting "reset" and trimming the fat of a previous generation's indulgences, getting back to what is essential and absolutely needed.
  •   INTERVIEW: GOD SAVE JOHN LYDON  |  October 10, 2012
    When Sex Pistols impresario Malcolm McLaren coined the phrase "cash from chaos," he may have been describing his own filthy lucre, but for the members of rock's most explosive group, the fiduciary comeuppance was and has been eternally forthcoming.
  •   ADAM ANT TRIES TO CLIMB BACK ON TOP  |  October 05, 2012
    "Ridicule is nothing to be scared of," sang Stuart Leslie Goddard, a/k/a Adam Ant, on his seminal 1981 pop/post-punk smash "Prince Charming."

 See all articles by: DANIEL BROCKMAN