Hot Chip
Gang Gang Dance
Wed, July 18, 2012
Doors: 6:00 pm / Show: 7:00 pm
Celebrate Brooklyn at Prospect Park Bandshell
Brooklyn, NY
$35 advance / $40 day of show
Sold Out
This event is all ages
For weather related updates please visit www.bricartsmedia.org
Benefit concert to support free programming at Celebrate Brooklyn! a Performing Arts Program of BRIC Arts | Media | Bklyn.
Rain or Shine
http://www.terminal5nyc.com/event/105793/
Hot Chip

There are five words slipped into the middle of ‘Night and Day’ - the hyper-infectious, propulsive track that comes halfway through Hot Chip’s fifth album - that in many ways sum up what’s In Our Heads. Somewhere between the fizzing percussion and the relentless and addictive bassline, a processed voice intones the line, “I like Zapp not Zappa”.
Although the Alexis Taylor penned words were written primarily as a reaction to ill-informed requests during the frontman’s DJ gigs, if viewed as a statement of intent for the record as a whole they speak volumes. They seem to say this record is playful yet unburdened by extraneous fuss or showiness. That this is a joyous record aimed squarely at the heart and at the heart of the dancefloor.
It’s an ideology that seems to subliminally seep through the rest of the tracks on In Our Heads. You can hear it on the opening track – ‘Motion Sickness’ – where the track seems to dizzily modulate one step ahead of the listener with every four bar loop and on ‘How Do You Do’, a celebration of the joy of life itself stretched over a backing track that sounds like a Chicago house record reinforced with titanium. It’s there throughout the seven-something minutes of ‘Flutes’ in the chopped up rhythmic chant that runs through the heart of it while the rhythm track crackles like electrical cables in heavy weather and it’s in the ocean deep melancholy of the gorgeous ‘Look At Where We Are’. It’s there in the utterly ecstatic wordless chorus of ‘Let Me Be Him’. And it’s there on the constantly evolving, Abbey Road-esque ballad ‘Now There Is Nothing’. In fact, it’s there right through the middle of In Our Heads, helping to forge something akin to the perfect synthesis of electronics and live instrumentation, a place where Alexis’ beautifully soulful vocals sit as perfectly on liquid R&B backing tracks as on songs that sound like Prince beaming back from the 31st century.
Joe Goddard: “We tried to make something joyful and alive and that’s it really. Maybe when people listen to music that’s positive and joyous they might feel like that’s cheesy in some way – for me though, I want to listen to records like Never Too Much by Luther Vandross. I don’t want to listen to a band that’s caught up in their hang-ups and problems. That’s just not interesting to me.”
Alexis Taylor: “There’s no point putting too much emphasis on the recording process but if the sound of the music is joyous, it’s because the way the record was made was entirely enjoyable.”
Without over-analysing the recording, it’s worth pointing out that it represented the first time that the band - Alexis, Joe, Al Doyle, Owen Clarke and Felix Martin - had worked collectively in a studio with an engineer (Mark Ralph).
Alexis: “Although Joe and I had each worked with Mark separately, having someone that’s not in the band as a constant factor was a totally new thing for Hot Chip.”
Joe: “It was so refreshing having someone outside of the band who could organize how everything comes together without it becoming hierarchical. In the past, I’ve been in the studio sat there at my computer trying my very best to record what someone was playing in the room to try to get it into the track. Often I wasn’t able to focus on how the actual track was sounding. This time round, I could get a much more of an objective view of what we were doing.”
As a band, they needn’t have worried about validity of ideas. At Hot Chip’s core is a unique songwriting partnership at its creative peak five albums in; a pairing that joins a very British tradition that arguably begins with Lennon & McCartney then stops to take in the likes of Morrissey & Marr and Tennant & Lowe. The songs Alexis and Joe wrote for In Our Heads were written in tandem with a massively hectic period of extracurricular activity (that includes albums by About Group, The 2 Bears and New Build as well as Joe’s solo single ‘Gabriel’). That said, there was little doubt where the songs the band were to work on collectively belonged.
Alexis: “Charles Hayward (This Heat/About Group) came in to drum on a track that I thought was really different to anything we’d ever attempted before. He immediately said, “Brilliant! Sounds like Hot Chip!” It must’ve had almost subliminal traits.”
Joe: “It’s a brilliant thing isn’t it, when a band or a producer hit a trademark sound? Whether it’s Brian Wilson or J Dilla, I’m often drawn towards producers with a complete sonic signature of their own. People who you recognize their sound straight off.”
As well as representing a change in the recording process, In Our Heads collects the band’s first recordings for a new label. Following the completion of a three album deal with EMI, the band have moved operations to what could be seen as something of a spiritual home - Domino.
Alexis: “One of the main memories I have of Hot Chip beginning is of me and Joe listening to Smog and Will Oldham records. Joe would play me tracks he’d just picked up and that’s stayed at the back of my mind the whole time. In many ways they were foundation points for Hot Chip. Domino didn’t sign us originally but they wanted to. They’ve stayed really interested in our band.”
Joe: “From my perspective, it quickly became clear that it was the right thing to do. Going into this knowing that we’ve got a group of actual friends and fans who are willing to fight for the record… That’s one of the most positive things you can have as a group really.”
So, a career best fifth album that’s been produced via an exhilarating new way of working and released by a record label made up of friends and supporters? Slots booked across the globe closing festival stages as well as a series of already announced gigs that include a sundown headline slot at the Hollywood Bowl?
Yeah. Definitely more Zapp than Zappa.
Although the Alexis Taylor penned words were written primarily as a reaction to ill-informed requests during the frontman’s DJ gigs, if viewed as a statement of intent for the record as a whole they speak volumes. They seem to say this record is playful yet unburdened by extraneous fuss or showiness. That this is a joyous record aimed squarely at the heart and at the heart of the dancefloor.
It’s an ideology that seems to subliminally seep through the rest of the tracks on In Our Heads. You can hear it on the opening track – ‘Motion Sickness’ – where the track seems to dizzily modulate one step ahead of the listener with every four bar loop and on ‘How Do You Do’, a celebration of the joy of life itself stretched over a backing track that sounds like a Chicago house record reinforced with titanium. It’s there throughout the seven-something minutes of ‘Flutes’ in the chopped up rhythmic chant that runs through the heart of it while the rhythm track crackles like electrical cables in heavy weather and it’s in the ocean deep melancholy of the gorgeous ‘Look At Where We Are’. It’s there in the utterly ecstatic wordless chorus of ‘Let Me Be Him’. And it’s there on the constantly evolving, Abbey Road-esque ballad ‘Now There Is Nothing’. In fact, it’s there right through the middle of In Our Heads, helping to forge something akin to the perfect synthesis of electronics and live instrumentation, a place where Alexis’ beautifully soulful vocals sit as perfectly on liquid R&B backing tracks as on songs that sound like Prince beaming back from the 31st century.
Joe Goddard: “We tried to make something joyful and alive and that’s it really. Maybe when people listen to music that’s positive and joyous they might feel like that’s cheesy in some way – for me though, I want to listen to records like Never Too Much by Luther Vandross. I don’t want to listen to a band that’s caught up in their hang-ups and problems. That’s just not interesting to me.”
Alexis Taylor: “There’s no point putting too much emphasis on the recording process but if the sound of the music is joyous, it’s because the way the record was made was entirely enjoyable.”
Without over-analysing the recording, it’s worth pointing out that it represented the first time that the band - Alexis, Joe, Al Doyle, Owen Clarke and Felix Martin - had worked collectively in a studio with an engineer (Mark Ralph).
Alexis: “Although Joe and I had each worked with Mark separately, having someone that’s not in the band as a constant factor was a totally new thing for Hot Chip.”
Joe: “It was so refreshing having someone outside of the band who could organize how everything comes together without it becoming hierarchical. In the past, I’ve been in the studio sat there at my computer trying my very best to record what someone was playing in the room to try to get it into the track. Often I wasn’t able to focus on how the actual track was sounding. This time round, I could get a much more of an objective view of what we were doing.”
As a band, they needn’t have worried about validity of ideas. At Hot Chip’s core is a unique songwriting partnership at its creative peak five albums in; a pairing that joins a very British tradition that arguably begins with Lennon & McCartney then stops to take in the likes of Morrissey & Marr and Tennant & Lowe. The songs Alexis and Joe wrote for In Our Heads were written in tandem with a massively hectic period of extracurricular activity (that includes albums by About Group, The 2 Bears and New Build as well as Joe’s solo single ‘Gabriel’). That said, there was little doubt where the songs the band were to work on collectively belonged.
Alexis: “Charles Hayward (This Heat/About Group) came in to drum on a track that I thought was really different to anything we’d ever attempted before. He immediately said, “Brilliant! Sounds like Hot Chip!” It must’ve had almost subliminal traits.”
Joe: “It’s a brilliant thing isn’t it, when a band or a producer hit a trademark sound? Whether it’s Brian Wilson or J Dilla, I’m often drawn towards producers with a complete sonic signature of their own. People who you recognize their sound straight off.”
As well as representing a change in the recording process, In Our Heads collects the band’s first recordings for a new label. Following the completion of a three album deal with EMI, the band have moved operations to what could be seen as something of a spiritual home - Domino.
Alexis: “One of the main memories I have of Hot Chip beginning is of me and Joe listening to Smog and Will Oldham records. Joe would play me tracks he’d just picked up and that’s stayed at the back of my mind the whole time. In many ways they were foundation points for Hot Chip. Domino didn’t sign us originally but they wanted to. They’ve stayed really interested in our band.”
Joe: “From my perspective, it quickly became clear that it was the right thing to do. Going into this knowing that we’ve got a group of actual friends and fans who are willing to fight for the record… That’s one of the most positive things you can have as a group really.”
So, a career best fifth album that’s been produced via an exhilarating new way of working and released by a record label made up of friends and supporters? Slots booked across the globe closing festival stages as well as a series of already announced gigs that include a sundown headline slot at the Hollywood Bowl?
Yeah. Definitely more Zapp than Zappa.
Gang Gang Dance

The arc and trajectory on which Gang Gang Dance has propelled themselves since their inception can only be described in terms of evolution. Five individuals with strong ties to the art community and almost boundless creative energy orienting themselves into a musical collaboration, the direction of which is almost as unpredictable as it is focused. It can be said that Gang Gang Dance grew out of the turn of the century Null New York scene, as various members played or worked with such outfits as The Cranium, Actress, Russia, SSAB Songs and Jackie-O Motherfucker. The genesis of the band was very much collaborative in nature with Brian Degraw, Tim Dewit, Lizzie Bougatsos, Nathan Maddox and Josh Diamond experimenting in tiny practice spaces and only somewhat larger public venues with various other musicians peripherally involved. At this point the band was called Death & Dying, but by 2001 or 2002 the GGD moniker had been embraced. A trip out to a studio in Kentucky and a few long nights in a tiny studio in Chinatown birthed the 40 minutes that would become their first self-titled full length. Tragically, in 2002 Nathan was struck by lightning and killed while watching a storm on the roof of his apartment building. By 2003 the band had refined the tribal-futurism sound which they had been working with to it’s purest form. In October Revival Of The Shittest was cut together and released on The Social Registry, first in a limited CDR edition of only 100. The release of their first full-length followed. The band was playing to packed clubs in NYC, exploding on stage, often passing out drums and flutes to audience members, their sound one of perfectly controlled havoc. Through the spring and summer of 2004 they began to resurface, often unannounced, with new material that found them preoccupied more than ever before with song writing & dynamics. The live performances were untouchable; bombastic and structured yet still resonating perfectly upon those innate elements of the psyche that their music had been playing to in the earlier years. By the close of 2004 they had played with Slint & Sonic Youth, toured with Animal Collective, cut together and released Hillulah, a live cdep, and tracked most of the material that would become their second full-length God’s Money. With God’s Money set to be released in April the band headed to out play the Vincent Gallo curated All Tomorrows Parties in March of 2005, doing a short tour of Europe which found them playing both Portuguese punk clubs and museum atriums. A proper tour of North America was embarked upon with Blood Lines, an outfit built around the other two members of Tim & Brian’s first band The Cranium. A riot was started in Seattle, members of the press found a new band to champion, and they ended their tour with a legendary outdoor performance on Spring Street in New York City. By the end of 2005 the band had also toured in Australia and Japan. In June of 2007 Gang Gang Dance followed up their constant touring and the critical success of God’s Money with Retina Riddim, a multimedia project which consisted of a 33 minute art film and a 20-minute audio collage both of which were drawn from the band’s archives of their activities from 2005 to 2006 and authored by band member Brian Degraw. The release showed the band’s willingness to embrace all aspects of the their creative nature as well as their ambition to work out of the standard preconceived notions of the music industry. This release was followed in September of 2007 by RAWWAR, a three track EP culled together from material recorded earlier in the year, and hinted at the direction the bands vision was taking. Even more based in classic song structure than God’s Money it featured songs that showed the pop potential of the band’s sound while maintaining their firm commitment to pushing the boundaries of musical convention. Gang Gang Dance’s ambition did not go unnoticed through 2007 as they were approached by The Whitney Museam of Contemporary Art to be included in their 2008 biennial, an offer rarely extended to musicians. For the exhibition, the four again chose to incorperate visual manipulation into their performance; utilizing film projections, a number of participants dressed in ceremonial masks – all elements combining to create a spectacle that was by all accounts breathtaking. Throughout 2007 and early 2008 Gang Gang Dance continued work on a new full-length studio album, Saint Dymphna, to be released in October of 2008. The album takes an even dancier, inclusive direction that continues to emphasize the ritualistic elements of their music. It features a guest appearance from UK Grime artist Tinchy Stryder and represents the most fully realized work by the band.. Saint Dymphna will be preceded by a single, House Jam, that will feature a remix of the track by Hot Chip. After the recording for Saint Dymphna was finished Tim Dewit decided to take a break from his duties in Gang Gang Dance to work on other projects. In his absence the band have bought in Jesse Lee on drums.
Venue Information:
Celebrate Brooklyn at Prospect Park Bandshell
Prospect Park West and 9th St.
Brooklyn, NY, 11217
http://www.bricartsmedia.org/performing-arts/celebrate-brooklyn
Celebrate Brooklyn at Prospect Park Bandshell
Prospect Park West and 9th St.
Brooklyn, NY, 11217
http://www.bricartsmedia.org/performing-arts/celebrate-brooklyn




