What is your favorite way to start a track?
Either with something spontaneous like a piano line or a drum loop, or with a clear concept that pulls me forward. On Siècle, the concept was the starting point: exploring a new relationship between raw, instinctive electronic gestures and shaped, written arrangements.
How does your thinking differ when you are working on music for film versus when you are working on our own solo projects?
Film music means inhabiting a world that already exists. Albums demand the opposite: building an emotional world from nothing. In a world where images dominate everything, creating an instrumental album makes me feel closer to literature than to cinema. These are forms where the images are generated inside the listener or the reader.
If you had to pair your studio down to one synth and one drum machine, what would they be?
On a small desk: the MFB-503 and the OP-1. In a rack: the Vermona DRM1 and the Deckard’s Dream. With enough space: the TR-909 and the Prophet-6.
What have you been reading lately? And how has that been informing your creative output?
Pascal Quignard has been important for this album. I love his way of writing in fragments and pieces that first appear disconnected but slowly form a coherent thought. It resonates with how I like to build music.