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Dead Combo - Tales from Way Out West |
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Please note this is an old page and Fly Global Music has now moved. Please follow this link and search for the entry in the new site. Describe the sources and inspiration for your music... "I guess that all these people reflect the way that the average Portuguese person in their 20s or 30s thinks about their country and the world. Dead Combo's sound is somehow connected with this movement by melancholic ambiances and melodies that sometimes resemble Fado" Right now, we listen to music that ranges from Cesária Évora to Slayer, from Brad Melhdau to Debussy. I guess that the main influence is the fact that we were both born, and lived all our lives in Lisbon, and that influences you in ways you cannot describe, but are deep inside your "musical being". Other obvious influences, I would say are, Quentin Tarantino, Abel Ferrara, John Carpenter and Jim Jarmusch's movies and the ambiances in them. It's funny but it all started with Tó getting fed up with being in bands and recording some tracks on his own. He then showed these tunes to some people and Henrique Amaro, who has a radio program in Antena 3, invited Tó to record one of them in a CD in homage to the great Carlos Paredes: Movimentos Perpétuos-Música Para Carlos Paredes. The tune itself was based on Carlos Paredes 'Verdes Anos' but Tó played it backwards on his stereo and it sounded like a spaghetti western movie soundtrack. I guess that's where it all started, then Tó and I met after a Howie Gelb concert, and Tó invited me to record a double bass on that track. We liked so much working together that we decided to form Dead Combo. Tell us about the Lisbon of Dead Combo and how it affects your music Right now, it still has a lot of that mysticism and magic. We really love the tiny streets of the old boroughs, the people that you meet on the street, it's a very humane city, although in the last couple of years the Mayor is trying to transform the city into a more fashionable style of city. Another thing that amazes us is the fact that there is music all over the place when you walk through the streets of Lisbon, music coming from houses, bars, restaurants. Also the proximity of the ocean is, I guess, very important. As Tó puts it: you know that if you're tired of this city, you just have to look at the horizon and you know that something different lies on the other end. It's kind of liberating. Also Lisbon has some kind of melancholy attached to it, which influences the way you react and think. Vol. 1 is totally distinctive album, how did it come about and what were you trying to achieve with it? As for goals, we didn't have any. We knew that some people really liked the music, because of the reactions after the live shows we did before the recording. We were not expecting at all the very good reviews and opinions we got. We were really amazed that this kind of music would appeal to so many people in Portugal and abroad. How, if at all, does your sound fit with the resurgence of more traditional Portuguese music? Right after the revolution (1974), there was a big appetite for music from abroad and there was a big push-back for Portuguese-made music, except for the people who did more revolutionary music. Then in the 80s there was a big boom in Portuguese rock and pop, but it came to an end in the early 90s. There is, at the moment, a very young audience interested in the more Portuguese way of making music, that is, sung in Portuguese and with some kind of Portuguese musical aspect. Camané is regarded as the prince of Fado by a lot of young people that also listen to Britney Spears and Rammstein. Ricardo Rocha is the new Carlos Paredes and he takes the Portuguese guitar even further. Also there are a lot of very good young writers who write lyrics that relate to a younger audience. I guess that all these people reflect the way that the average Portuguese person in their 20s or 30s thinks about their country and the world. I think that Dead Combo's sound is somehow connected with this movement by the kind of melancholic ambiances and melodies that sometimes resemble Fado. We didn't think about it in any way, except that there had to be a "Portuguese" sound in the music we play, and that was kind of easy since we are Portuguese (laughter...) Where now for Dead Combo? Basically, we want to continue to follow the path that Vol. 1 has laid upon us, and to tell you the truth, we don't really know where it leads to. We thought about inviting some different people to record Vol. 2, like singers on a couple of tracks for example, so it's a very open road for us. Link: www.deadcombo.net |
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