The Continuing Story of Vostok Lake: news, updates, blogging

So here we are once more

Submitted by dafnjo on

(... on the playground of the broken hearts...)

Website's updated. Because it needed an entire "brain transplant", as it were, we've made a conscious decision not to restore some really crusty ancient pages from before Tricia joined the band. Some of the photos were pretty, but they didn't add anything to the future. There might be room for a "VL History" subsection, featuring pre-2018 material; or even load such stuff up on the "Daphne's Old Music" website. If there were any public interest.

The Stories of Comics and Stories: Part 12 and last, "Under the Mountain"

Submitted by vostoklake on

Our long, strange trip nears its end. “Under the Mountain” is another piece with pre-2010 origins, which refers to a famous New Zealand children’s novel by Maurice Gee, in which the volcanic hills of Tāmaki Makarau/Auckland play a central role. It’s a song about leaving home and finding a new one, about faith and trust in the future, about new life. The last tracks were laid down with the album at about the time our second child was conceived. So there’s that.

The Stories of Comics and Stories: Part 11, "A Limousine in a Cul-de-Sac"

Submitted by vostoklake on

“A Limousine in a Cul-de-Sac” is at the intersection of Tom Wolfe’s Bonfire of the Vanities and Peter Hammill’s “Losing Faith in Words”. Not much more to say about that, apart from that we're particularly proud of the percussion line. Tricia's backing vocals really make this track, her "unearthly calls" somewhat freaking out the producer; the image of the party bus on the roundabout is hers.

The Stories of Comics and Stories: Part 10, "Your Next Show"

Submitted by vostoklake on

“Your Next Show” came fully formed to me in a dream in 2009, in which Split Enz were performing it (it possibly bears some relationship to their “I Got You” and “129”, possibly Bauhaus’ “Spirit” while we’re at it). The lyrics don’t make a hell of a lot of sense because they, too, were downloaded fully-formed from the dream world. In hindsight, I'm not sure it fits with the rest of the album, but it didn't deserve to be forgotten either. We sometime open the live gigs with it.

The Stories of Comics and Stories: Part 9, "Silicon(e)"

Submitted by vostoklake on

“Silicon(e)” is a relatively straightforward piece about virtual sex, the cyborg and the end of human subjectivity; I asked the producer to make the drums sound as deliberately artificial and eerie as in Kate Bush’s “Mother Stands for Comfort”. The title is a smart-arse reference to these nerds.

The Stories of Comics and Stories: Part 8, "Don't Tell The Doctor"

Submitted by vostoklake on

“Don’t Tell The Doctor” began as one of Tricia’s poems, written from the point of view of a mental health consumer, which I decided to package as a synth-punk quasi-Ramones piece. Tricia’s improvised “Batmannery” in the bridge had the rest of us cracking up in the studio, though we’re still working on her confidence to do it live.

The Stories of Comics and Stories: Part 7, "The Ballad of Ghost Point 5"

Submitted by vostoklake on

Tricia’s decision, first, to provide backing vocals on the recording, and then become a full-fledged member of the band, was the catalyst without which this album would never have been completed, because it would have been difficult to make it something more than a re-hash of Small Group Psychosis. “The Ballad of Ghost Point 5” is a prime example.

The Stories of Comics and Stories: Part 6, "Dress Me Up, Dress me Down"

Submitted by vostoklake on

“Dress Me Up, Dress Me Down” is possibly the most intimate song I’ve ever written to the point where I’m not going to explain the lyrics. However, it’s probably the closest I’ve ever come to the Western art music (“classical”) tradition in my recorded output.