
Mellow Gold
Taking Its Time With Two New Albums, Japancakes Is Slowly Resurfacing
originally published November 7, 2007
Tortoise, Mogwai, Don Caballero and other bands who glutted magazine covers and college radio playlists during the ’90s instrumental rock boom are now but mere shadows of their former selves. Their best albums - and maybe even all of their decent ones - are behind them. They peaked early. And the lackluster albums that each has released this decade are tepid enough to make a guy wonder if said peaks were even that great in the first place.
Jason Thrasher
Japancakes
Japancakes, Athens’s own vocals-free rock five-piece, has been careful to only improve with age. Giving Machines, the band’s new album on Darla Records, is its most rewarding yet. It’s the work of a quintet whose members have worn their contours into one another. The band’s playing sounds as comfortable as a favorite recliner, as pliable as a childhood baseball mitt.
When Japancakes released its first album on Kindercore in 1999, the band didn’t create much of a stir on the national scene. But the group’s languid blend of pastoral bliss-rock and droning ambient electronics, as well as its unorthodox instrumentation (How many other rock bands dole out their best leads to a cellist and a pedal steel player?), grew more interesting with each record. By the time Japancakes released Waking Hours, its fourth album, in 2004, the band had developed a cult following among folks who like their indie rock drowsy and spacious.
After Waking Hours, Japancakes slipped out of the national and local spotlight, and it’s been almost three years since the band’s last show. Flagpole caught up with group leader Eric Berg and bassist Nick Bielli to find out how Giving Machines (released a few weeks back almost unnoticed) and a second album (out later this fall also on Darla), a cover of My Bloody Valentine’s classic LP Loveless, came into being.
- Flagpole
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How did the band spend its time between Waking Hours and the new albums? Why the long stretch of minimal public activity?
- Eric Berg
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Heather [McIntosh] and John [Neff] are very busy with other projects, whereas Nick and Brant [Rackley] have been busy with family. Nick and I went back to school and graduated from UGA this past year. I like to travel, and that has taken precedence for me over the past few years. We’re a bit lazy about Japancakes. We are going to change that soon.
- Nick Bielli
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Even when we’re publicly active we don’t do all that much! Seriously, though, after Waking Hours, we were trying to get it together and capitalize on whatever momentum we had generated with that release, and things just went haywire. We were and are really proud of that record, but it came out at a really weird time, and maybe we weren’t really prepared to deal with everything that was going on then… ultimately, it’s for the best. If we had just cranked out a new record for the sake of having another record, it might not have been as great as I think Giving Machines is.
- Flagpole
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From what I’ve read, Japancakes began by one night improvising a Terry Riley-like, 45-minute drone piece. Now, your songs are more linear and, to my ears, carefully put-together. What brought about this progression?
- Eric Berg
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Our recording style. Since we don’t play or record together, we can think about the parts more and the flow of the record. There’s more time to think about individual parts recording that way and what works best on record.
- Flagpole
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The songs on Giving Machines are perhaps your most conventional, from a pop standpoint…
- Nick Bielli
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I think the opposite. I feel like The Sleepy Strange and to some extent, Waking Hours, are pretty conventional, or more specifically, that they sound more like pop records to me than this one. I think this drifting pattern we’re in now has its beginnings on Waking Hours. The new one’s short and to the point, which in itself is kind of a departure for us. I think there’s something to be said about the overall economy that we’ve kinda grown into as a mode of playing. We’ve taken more care to respect the spaces in between the notes as much as the notes themselves, which seems pretty abstract to me.
The other records, I think, were performed more like pop records (with the exception of our first one, If I Could See Dallas, which was like an exercise in blindfolded finger painting or something). And add to that the notion that we were really still learning to play together and hadn’t really shed the tried and true, go-to conventions we were individually bringing into the band. By now - and I think it’s pretty apparent on both Waking Hours and Giving Machines - we’ve developed our own Japancakes “vernacular” that relies less on our common influences (some of which are kinda conventional) and relies more on us having the collective power and experience amassed from playing together to dictate just what it is that Japancakes is going to sound like.
And I really think that’s a sound that’s always floating a bit further from the conventional. It’s not that we’re avant-garde, experimental, or taking a philosophical standpoint against pop conventions or anything like that; it’s just that we’ve drifted a bit from how we used to sound.
- Flagpole
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How did the Loveless idea develop?
- Eric Berg
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While recording “Heaven or Las Vegas” [a Cocteau Twins song covered on Giving Machines], another song being thrown around was “When You Sleep” by My Bloody Valentine. We wanted to stay with just one cover on the Giving Machines record, but we had such a good experience with it. The idea to cover an entire record came up and Darla Records thought it was an exciting idea.
- Flagpole
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What’s your response to folks who treat the original Loveless as a holy grail that shouldn’t be reinterpreted by anyone other than My Bloody Valentine?
- Eric Berg
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They should give our version a chance. We wanted to approach the original respectfully and not do an entirely different version or a carbon copy. We just wanted to showcase the amazing songs and melodies. I would hope that people who think it is the holy grail respect the songwriting and try it out played in a different style.
- Flagpole
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Aside from instrumentation, what do you think are the key differences between your version of Loveless and MBV’s?
- Eric Berg
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Style choices, and where the focus is on a song. Our version is very soft and clean compared to the original. The vocal melodies aren’t the main focus. We used a lot of the background tracks or parts we loved, and used them as main melodies.
- Flagpole
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What’s on the horizon for Japancakes?
- Nick Bielli
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We’re open to just about anything at this point. We’re all itching to play, so hopefully we’ll be able to do some shows in the near future. We haven’t played since December 2004 as part of a WARM [Records, the label that released Waking Hours] night at Little Kings. I’m sure if everybody’s schedules permit, we would probably be able to do something live. I know we’re looking forward to getting our reissues out, and Eric’s in the process of doing some digital transfers of that stuff now, so that’s exciting. Who knows what’s going to happen? Whatever’s up, we’re looking forward to it. It’s good to be a Japancake right now.
- Eric Berg
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We are trying to work out how we can all get together long enough to tour, as well as what kind of show we would like to perform. There will at least be an Athens show.





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