Young Galaxy
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In October, Lissvik sat down at his computer in Gothenburg. Stephen Ramsay and Catherine McCandless sat down at theirs in Montreal. And across 3,500 miles, Skype-ing with a friend they have never met, Young Galaxy heard their third album for the first time.
None of this was an accident. Young Galaxy first contacted Lissvik during the making of 2009's Invisible Republic, asking him to mix one of its songs. They were fans of his work with Studio, his remixes for acts like Fever Ray and Kylie Minogue. But although Lissvik's mix wasn't the right feel for the epic, rocking Invisible Republic - he "deconstructed the band", recalls Ramsay, - his vision of Young Galaxy stayed with them. When the dust from the record had settled - barely - the group already knew what they wanted for LP3. They knew - and they didn't.
Young Galaxy were changing. "We came into the business with great innocence and a big- hearted approach, and we felt a little duped in the end," recalls Ramsay. First their self-titled debut, released by Arts & Crafts in 2007, was not the smash their label had hoped for. "To be told we were a losing endeavor, economically, was very hard to take." Scalded by that experience, they released Invisible Republic on their own. "We went independent and kind of said 'Fuck you' to a certain kind of success, but we were also trying on a certain musical trajectory. " If Young Galaxy was a big indie rock record, Invisible Republic was even bigger. "It was all or nothing."
Invisible Republic garnered a Polaris prize nomination, gigs with Arcade Fire and Stars. But almost as soon as the album was finished, the band were seeking something else. "At a certain moment you tire of yourself," Ramsay says. "I could see it coming. I could see it coming and I hated that. There is no worse idea to me, in art, than to make something for the purpose of making a living." By the end of those tours, in a year filled with brutal personal loss, Young Galaxy were not the same band, were not the same people. Their art had to reflect that. "We let go, rather angrily, of something we had hoped for," says McCandless. "And because we were not what we hoped to be at that point, we let the process teach us what we actually were, instead."
Young Galaxy made Shapeshifting. They wrote songs, at home, songs with coo and shift, informed by the Eurythmics, New Order and Fever Ray. "Instead of picking up a guitar and finding the most beautiful melody we could," Ramsay says, "we tried to erase the shape of the songs." They wrote songs without verses and choruses, songs that were subtle, not epic; with software synths, scraps of Stephen Kamp's sinewy basslines, they made music that was impressionistic, esoteric, almost unrecognizable. As a singer, McCandless was inspired by the wild "monstrousness" of Kate Bush, Annie Lennox and Grace Jones. "The only mantra we had was, 'Let's not fill all the space in the songs.,'" Ramsay explains. "Let's let the space be as important to the songs as the sounds we put in there."
In January 2010 they sent these songs to Lissvik, across the sea, and almost every day they spoke over Skype. Young Galaxy had never met their producer (and still never have), and he was not even a face on a screen - he was invisible, audio only, "the voice in our computer". Some days they talked about music, geography, coffee or astral projection. Some days Lissvik sang a melody down the wire. And sometimes he played a tiny morsel of the album they were making together - just a bassline, a beat, 12 seconds of a mix. But that was all, until that day in October when he said: Here's what we've made.
Now, Young Galaxy are releasing the thing they created together, this risk and collaboration. Shapeshifting is the album Lissvik sent back home - without edits or compromise. It is sparser, stranger than anything Young Galaxy have done before; and more intimate than anything by Studio. "We're not going to do a Bowie - shave our eyebrows and rename ourselves," Ramsay says. "We didn't need to change our name. It feels true to us to be changers." McCandless agrees: "To be the same people, at different coordinates: that feels very natural to me. It's baldly honest of where we're at."
Shapeshifting is out Feb 8. McCandless and Ramsay are expecting their first child on April 28..
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Young Galaxy
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Life is Beautiful acoustic -
Young Galaxy posted 4 events
Music
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11 Songs | Feb 8, 2011
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12 Songs | Jul 27, 2010
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11 Songs | Apr 24, 2007
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3 Songs | Nov 28, 2006
Comments
- Pogo Star And His Frien…1 year ago
Love!
- a Jigsaw1 year ago
Hola Young ,
Nosotros vamos estar en gira por España.
esperamos contar con tu presencia!
Gracias y pasarlo bien!
a Jigsaw - Pedro Esteves1 year ago
hey, you are ON the RADIO here this week: http://programaladob.com/?p=2157
greetings from Lisbon - Lorna GEntry1 year ago
Wishing you a magical week with lots of happy stuff. - K2 Entertainment, LLC1 year ago
Any chance y'all will be touring the US w/ Stars now that Delays have cancelled??? - krystal
- Bedouin Punk1 year ago
Bedouin Punk My Highness knows who Rock & who sucks Cock declares my fave album for Nov: Invisible Republic by Young Galaxy
- Hope DOnel1 year ago
Thanks for the add. Great music.
- LA GRIETA RADIO.1 year agoTHANKS!!
HEY !
JUST PUSH PLAY
AND ENJOY THE RIDE
THROUGH LA GRIETAINDIE,POST PUNK,NEW WAVE,SHOEGAZE,
ALTER, ELECTRO,NOISEPOP, POWERPOP - 1 year ago
- Mo n a amin1 year ago
Hey :)
General Info
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Genre: Other
Location Montreal, Ca
Profile Views: 630504
Last Login: 1/27/2012
Member Since 2/15/2006
Website www.younggalaxy.com
Record Label Indie/Paper Bag
Type of Label Indie
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Bio
For their third LP, Young Galaxy gave themselves away. SHAPESHIFTING's 11 new songs, lithe and mesmerizing, were completed at home and then sent away, across the ocean, to one of the world's most acclaimed and secretive producers. For nine months, Dan Lissvik, half of the Swedish duo Studio, curved and refashioned these tracks; he made and remade them. In October, Lissvik sat down at his computer in Gothenburg. Young Galaxy sat down at their computer in Montreal. And across 3,500 miles, Skype-ing with a friend they have never met, Young Galaxy heard their third album for the first time. The finished album is glittering, seductive and utterly unlike anything Young Galaxy have done before. After the Polaris-nominated INVISIBLE REPUBLIC, Young Galaxy were dreaming of transformation, transmutation, change. They imagined the parallel universe version of their own band, a Young Galaxy that was never "epic", rarely "rock" - instead sexy, spacious, haunted by ghosts in silver, black and primary colours. Whereas they once wrote songs of pounding drums and cresting guitar, this time the four-piece sketched their love of New Order, the Knife and the Eurythmics. Lissvik, best known for his work with Studio and recent remixes for Fever Ray and Bear In Heaven, has helped make SHAPESHIFTING a thing of cold reverb and hot drums, synth and coo, luck and loss. After a year that's seen them play with Arcade Fire, Stars, Twin Shadow and many more, Young Galaxy will bring these new songs on tour beginning in 2011. .. CONTACTS: .. BOOKING USA: boche@billions.com.. BOOKING CA: robzifarelli@theagencygroup.com.. BOOKING UK/EUROPE: kalle@pitchandsmith.com.. BAND: younggalaxy@gmail.com.. LEGAL: gbar@ccgglaw.com.. PRESS US: samantha@highrisepr.com PRESS CANADA: darryl@stagefrightpublicity.com TELEVISION/FILM LICENSING USA: marisa@zyncmusic.com -
Members
Stephen Ramsay Catherine McCandless Stephen Kamp Matthew Shapiro Andrea Silver -
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