Do you seek out that feeling that you get when you're on a bill where you're the outlier, or are you happy to play with people that sound like you? People who are also playing acoustic sets.
At least up until this point, I've tried to keep things quite eclectic, and I don't think I've yet found a group of people who are doing something stylistically similar to me. It tends to be that the shows I play are with artists where we share similarities which are not so literal. They may be friends, or they may see things from the same perspective, but we're not sounding that similar. As it goes on, I'd obviously be happy to find people who play music that has some relationship with mine. I think they'll emerge.
Something I really love about the album, and your catalog in general, is that the lyrics are really intense, and then all of a sudden you'll sing something hilarious. Is there a conscious effort to be funny in certain songs, as to not write a serious song? Is it just British humor?
I would say that a lot of the humor comes from Rowan. That's probably rubbed off of me since meeting her. She's one of the funniest people I know. I feel like her humor slowly got woven into how we write songs. She's a very lyric-focused songwriter. I would say that I'm the opposite, where I'll normally write melody with gibberish words and then dissect that into something that resembles meaning. But really, the focus for me is the music. I don't know if that answers your question, but the humor in the lyrics definitely comes from Rowan. Even if there are instances where I'm contributing to that, it's almost me pretending to be Rowan. It makes it fun to record the songs if we can laugh every time we hear them back.
There are a lot of samples on this album. What are they coming from?
It's the internet, basically. I just get things off the internet, as I guess most people do.
Do you have a running list of stuff you'd like to use? Or are you looking for things to put in specific songs?
We're working on the next couple albums at the moment, and there's definitely moments where I'm like, Okay, I need to find this sample. I'm looking for a really great sample of waves for a song I've written about surfing. I'll have a concept like that, and it will just be about hunting it down. I still can't find the waves. DM me if you've got any good wave samples, because I need them.
Do you know how to surf? Is it just a Californian fascination?
No, I don't surf at all. It's just a funny song, a kind of pastiche surf song.
Are there any hidden references on your album? I hear a lot of Beach Boys in this, which is what everyone else gets.
We’ve got a Beach Boys cover coming up on the next record. When we started working together, the memo was kind of like … 60s on a calculator. If we can get it sounding like that, then for me that's some kind of success. It was definitely an opportunity for me and Rowan to really indulge in our love of 60s music while trying to make something new, and trying to make something which felt relevant to us. The 60s was, for this record, the biggest inspiration. Beach Boys, Beatles. Rolling Stone Top 500 albums. Just that kind of shit.
That's what I like so much about this project. I feel like it reinvents the wheel without reinventing the wheel. So much of it is just really great pop music.
Parents really love it, because it's familiar enough for them to feel comfortable, but it has enough bells and whistles for them to feel like they're listening to something new-ish.
I read that you have an “irrational disdain” for the music scene in the UK. I'm just wondering why that is. You already touched on people being a bit standoffish, or less willing to celebrate things.
Well, the music scene that I'm involved in in the UK, I love, and I have to pay a lot of tribute to.
It feels like you guys invented it yourselves.
There's a group of friends who Worldpeace DMT and Rowan and stuff have completely come out of, and I feel extremely inspired by them. Maybe what I was referencing more is the scene that's aside from us. We made for ourselves an alternative. I mention it only because we are a UK band making guitar music. I think sometimes you can help define yourself by working out what it is you don't want to be. And maybe in the process of making this record, and putting this project together, there was a feeling that if I decided I didn't want to be that thing, then I could more quickly get to working out what it was that I did want to be.
When you use the collective “we" and you talk about the band, is Worldpeace DMT a revolving door? Are there specific people that you'd name as a part of the project? Is it always changing?
When I say we, I suppose at this point I'm referring specifically to me and Rowan. We've released this record, and we've got one or two more in the works, and our collaboration is deepening. We're functioning more or less as a band. Rowan's in another band called The Femcels which are a great band, and we made a decision during the process of making the first album that we wanted this to be an ongoing collaboration between two solo artists, rather than starting a whole other band. It's a bit unusual. I don't know if it's been done like this before, but it's a band of two parts, and I suppose we'll just keep making music together for as long as we have songs to record. We may be as in the dark about the relationship as anyone else, but we're taking it each day at a time, each song at a time.