I am mainly a graphic storyteller,
a writer who's lucky enough to be an artist too, so I can illustrate my
own ideas. Generally, I work within the thriller, horror and science fiction
genres. Running as a strong influence through much of my work is music
-- weird music.
One of the unusual characteristics
of your work is its fusion of science fiction (spaceships, aliens, weird
astronomical phenomena) and electronic music. However, some of our readers
might find the history of electronic music a bit confusing -- could you
please enlighten us as to the origins of "space music" and its relationship
to science and science fiction?
There are many accepted origins
of electronic music (a/k/a space music). Let's look at one more targeted
to the SF genre. In the 1950s, Louis and Bebe Baron created the soundtrack
for the "Forbidden Planet" movie by constructing little cybernetic brains,
each one making their own noise. They spliced it all together to create
what is still today a thoroughly enjoyable soundtrack. Over the next two
decades, a bunch of people invented synthesizers and various devices to
create unearthly sounds. Most of the "music" made with these early devices
were confined to the noise genre (bloop bloop, beep beep, no melody --
applied to pseudo-classical interpretations).
In the early 1970s, two factions
of creative endeavor became obsessed with electronic expression of music.
These two factions are what introduced me to this music: the European electronic
scene (Conrad Schnitzler, Klaus Schulze, Tangerine Dream, Heldon, Kluster--a/k/a
Cluster) and the acid rock found in Great Britain (Gong, Hawkwind, Van
der Graaf Generator, Pink Floyd, David Bowie). While bands from the Euro
scene pursued the other-worldliness of instrumental tapestries, the UK
based front delved into adding science fiction to modern rock'n'roll, producing
a fusion of the two in the form of weird music that told spacey tales.
The Euro scene explored the technical side of electronics, and the UK scene
fused actual SF with the music (as with the involvement of Michael Moorcock
with Hawkwind's early releases).
Neither of these factions
saw much financial success, despite the critical acclaim accorded to both,
then and now. Kraftwerk applied dance sensibilities to the Euro electronica,
gaining international renown as the fathers of a sound that had existed
for nearly a decade. In England, fashion created a flurry of bands who
applied their music to SF themes (Ultravox, Duran Duran, Gary Numan). Again,
despite some meager financial success, the electronic genre faded from
public awareness and continued to grow in the shadows.
Enter the techno scene, whose
entire existence owes fealty to these earlier incarnations. This electronic
movement finally plugged firmly into the dance aspect. Because the concept
of music from a pile of machinery (instead of guitars and bass) and percussion
produced by sampling rhythm boxes are concepts not easily understood by
the public, the entire scene has been labeled by outsiders as science fiction.
But is it? These synthesizers have been around for decades, used by everyone
from the Beach Boys to Billy Joel. Oh well, it's called science fiction
because there are no lyrics, just spacey melodies. But what is classic
music or movie soundtracks if not lyricless melodies? Beethoven and the
theme from "Jaws" -- really spacey stuff, huh?
Please give the stock
speech here about how you got into electronic music and its role in your
work. Bonus points if you use the phrase "sonic curiosity."
When I was a kid during the
early 1970s, there really wasn't much opportunity to hear such amazing
things as electronic music -- unless you knew where to look. I must admit,
that my initial introduction to these bands was visually motivated. A local
shopping mall had a chain record store, and hidden way in the back of the
store was an import section (mostly Hendrix and folk rock stuff). Among
those records sitting in sealed plastic bags with outrageously high prices
were some albums that bore weird names and even stranger covers. It was
the cover art of early Tangerine Dream and Can albums that attracted my
sonic curiosity. And once I had heard what these bands had to offer, I
went looking for more. The weirder the better. The more obscure it was,
the stronger I suspected it would delight my ears. Neu, Harmonia, Amon
Duul II, Magma (now, there's a good example: a French jazz band who were
prolific at rhythmic intensity, and they were telling a long tale that
spanned many albums of a vast space opera, and they were doing it in a
totally alien new language!).
Music became a vital part
of my life. I would sit and draw for hours, listening to this curious music,
allowing its strangeness to inspire me to wild new associations and incredible
visualizations. It was no surprise that I would find means to incorporate
this strange music into the equally strange storytelling I was doing.
The new, dance-oriented
electronic movement in music still uses a lot of futuristic imagery. Do
you like Orbital, Future Sound of London, and all these other new-futurist
artists?
Since my sonic heart is rooted
firmly in the European electronica of the 1970s, I perceive the current
techno and rave music as simply a maturity of that earlier scene. I could
rant for hours on the wonders of these modern electronic bands and the
beauty of their computer generated visuals. But I won't.
What are you listening
to these days, anyway?
Okay, maybe I will... I very
much enjoy Orbital and FSOL, but, as is often the case with my tastes,
I tend to concentrate on the more obscure bands. I've recently heavily
gotten into Radio Massacre International, a UK based group who are producing
some excellent stuff in the vein of the old sequencer & guitar style
1970s electronica. Another band further exploring this abandoned sound
is Mark Shreeve's Red Shift. Dweller at the Threshold are another electronic
band injecting life into the ambient scene.
There's been a strange movement
in the last few years, wherein some of the more savage industrial rock
bands have been injecting a strong electronic ambience to their sound,
like Haujobb, Front 242, Front Line Assembly (in their offshoot identities
of Syneasthesia, Intermix, Delerium). I've become particularly fascinated
with the brutal electronic music of Autechre, who produce savage almost-dance
music comprised of harsh electronics and e-perc that are so richly devoid
of any humanistic trait.
Other bands that recently
frequent my CD player: Anubian Lights (mixture of space music and ancient
Egyptian), Lindsay Buckland (electronic dulcimer stuff), Philharmonie (guitar
trio onslaught of an intellectual nature), Soma (modern weirdness meets
Ennio Morricone), Kinder Atom (crisp dance electronics), Robert Rich (somber
atmospheric soundscapes), Ian Boddy (more electronic ambience), Ozric Tentacles
(grand blend of space rock with maximum guitar brilliance), Spicelab (electronic
rave music with a tasty SF twist).
"NO SOUND" effects notwithstanding,
if we could record space, filter it through some kind of computer program
to translate it into sound and then play the tape back, what would it sound
like? You can either list an album(s) here or pose your answer in the form
of a challenge to any musicians reading.
There are numerous bands
whose music approaches this manifestation of the infinite void. Steve Roach,
Robert Rich, Dweller at the Threshold, Dilate. Much of the music by Chuck
van Zyl (a/k/a Xisle) is clearly a tribute to the frontier of space. Why,
if one considers the intensity that must surround naked singularities out
in space, I wouldn't be surprised if their output came close to Autechre's
music.
In the last section of
this exclusive interview, to be published September 2, Howarth sums up
his views on extraterrestrial life, do-it-yourself comic book publishing
and other far-flung topics.
In the first part, "From
Bugtown to the Heart of Space", Howarth shared his thoughts on the
changing role of science fiction in the marketplace, singling out "Star
Wars: Episode One" for special attention.