FREE WEEK AUSTIN has taken over the city! I didn’t get back to Austin until yesterday, so I missed a lot of the action. Last night I met up with Kevin and Mike of MOTH FIGHT before their free show at BEAUTY BAR in Austin, TX.
This Austin-based experimental pop circus showcased their deliberately chaotic sound in a kaleidoscope of a show Saturday. Moth Fight shared the Beauty Bar stage with The Laughing, All My Friends, and DJ Car Stereo (Wars). Mike and Kevin were kind enough to sit down with me before the show to discuss sound collages, Austin bands to check out, and choose-your-own-adventure stories.
If you can’t get enough of them, Moth Fight are tumblr-ing and twittering their way to an Internet near you.
Full Transcript (Audio):
Nichole Bennett: Hey guys. I’m Nichole, and I’m sitting in Side Bar in Austin. I’m lucky enough to be with members of Moth Fight.
Kevin Attics: Thanks for having us.
NB: Thank you guys. If you had to tell the story of Moth Fight, would it be a pop up book or a graphic novel?
KA: It would be a choose-your-own-adventure.
NB: Oh man, those drove me nuts as a kid. I think I was O.C.D. only as a child. Do you guys prefer studio or stage?
KA: They are totally different animals. We seem to do a lot of our writing on-the-fly on the stage and get the song to where it needs to be. Then we go into the studio to try to get a good live representation of it. We use a lot of samples now when we pay, so there is a lot of pre-stage work that goes into it. It’s kind of a mix of both the whole way through.
NB: I’ve only been here since August, and I saw one of your shows when I first moved here. I haven’t actually heard a recording, and I was wondering how it translated between the two. If Moth Fight could have a superpower, what would it be? You guys can have individual ones. You don’t always have to be collective.
Mike Yaklin: I would be indestructible.
KA: Mike would be indestructible. I would have the ability to turn into a fox.
NB: Excellent. I would hang out with you guys. You guys have this really cool Tumblr and your videos. For a musical outfit, you have a lot of visual. And Jess is a seamstress. I’ve heard about her little moths. So you guys have this visual side….there’s a question here somewhere.
KA: The imagery works it’s way into the lyrics I suppose. Songs take on narratives sometimes. You construct things out of the things you see and the things you internalize. Personally, I like a lot of really weird books and really weird movies with really weird images. That has to filter its way into the music somehow.
NB: Excellent segue way into the next question. Thank you very much. You guys actually use a lot of literary allusion in your songs as well. You have some Cortázar and even some Jabberwocky.
KA: Yeah there is some Jabberwocky in there on one song.
NB: We are here at the tail-end of Free Week. Austin has a lot of local acts that you don’t really see if you are just glossing over indie bands. So if I’m first getting into Austin artists, who would you recommend looking into?
KA: Definitely Yellow Fever. Yellow Fever is absolutely amazing. Any kids that are a part the Business Deal records stable or Otham Empire. All of those guys are doing stuff that, to me, is the most important thing happening in the scene right now.
[Mike attempts to hold back a sneeze away from the recorder]
NB: We made him cry.
KA: Mike teared up a little bit at the mention of Otham Empire.
NB: I cried a little bit too. Do you have anything to add to that or did he cover it?
MY: I think he covered it.
NB: Do you guys have any favorite Austin venues?
KA: We started off playing at Beerland. Then we started moving around to house parties. Mohawk has been really nice to us. Emo’s has been really nice to us these past few months, actually.
MY: Yeah Mohawk and Emo’s. Just setup-wise, it’s a lot of fun to play.
NB: We talked a bit about studio versus stage earlier. When you are watching a Moth Fight show, for those listeners who haven’t heard them yet, it’s a lot like deliberate chaos. It’s pretty awesome, and I wonder how the songwriting process goes.
KA: It’s pretty frantic.
MY: It’s a lot like what you hear. There can be hours of recording a line that gets used for ten seconds or ten seconds of something recorded that gets used over and over.
KA: People think we improv a lot more than we actually do. We work really hard on hammering the songs out to get them to sound the way we want them to sound so that when we go to record them, they are exactly what we want them to be. The process of writing just comes from one of us coming up with a melody or a chord progression or something, just noise sometimes. Then we all filter it. Together, we filter it through the group, and it comes out sounding totally different than it originally started out being. That’s part of being in a band of friends.
MY: We have a song now that is just now feeling out to be the way it is going to be, but it has changed. It’s gone through like four versions of it. Some of the versions might find their way into different recordings here and there which is something I think we like doing as well.
KA: We also like sound collages.
NB: Do you guys have any hidden talents…other than music?
KA: [laughs] I think music’s actually still a hidden talent for us, actually. We’re still working on that one.
MY: I’m really good at useless games. I can win and dominate any useless game. I was never any good at sports, but board games…
KA: I’m really good at capture the flag.
MY: He’s really small and wiry.
NB: What advice would you guys have for a band just starting out?
[laughter]
NB: Be really good at capture the flag? Be indestructible? Turn into a fox?
KA: Turn into foxes.
NB: As often as possible.
KA: Make explosions.
NB: And we’ll end on if you could be any animal, what would you be. And I think Kevin kind of already answered that one.
KA: I would definitely be a fox. No doubt.
MY: I would have to probably be a dragon.
KA: Dragon versus fox. We’d make a good team.
NB: I’d be excited to see that band as well. Thank you so much.