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*Arts Café, London, Sat 7th December 2002*
OK,
first things first, we're not talking about the Danielson Famile,
that's Daniel Smith and his whole extended family dressed up in
hospital uniforms. We're not even talking about the Good Ship Danielson,
that's Daniel, all his family and friends dressed up in a multitude
of naval costumes
on a ship. We're talking about Brother Danielson,
that's just Daniel
just Daniel Smith? There's a catch right?
Well kind of. Tonight, Daniel is performing the Nine Fruit Tree,
and so throughout the performance he resides deep within the trunk
of a vast fabric tree adorned with familiar and not so familiar
fruits. Head and arms emerge from knotholes to sing and play guitar,
whilst one foot is rooted for balance the other slams an ingenious
stomp box to catch the beat. Alright then, its atypical music performed
in a more than unconventional manner, and yet when meeting Daniel
in the person he doesn't let you forget for a second that he is
a genuine and normal person. He doesn't find the time to talk to
us; he makes time to talk to us, convincing me once and for all
that outsider music doesn't exist. Go.
Chris Tipton: The first thing I wanted to ask you about was
All Tomorrow's Parties, with Shellac. You brought the whole family
over to play. What did you make of that? Did you enjoy coming over?
Daniel Smith: Oh yeah, what a great way to be introduced into the
UK and Europe also.
C: Did you go on to tour afterwards?
D: We did a week tour in between the two dates; we played Paris
and a couple of shows in Germany and Amsterdam. It was really great!
It's extremely rare that the family can afford to get together and
do that sort of thing, so it was extra special. And to be around
all those great bands!
C: How did you feel to be asked by Shellac?
D: Oh, it was an honour, yeah!
C: Have you always been close to Shellac?
D: No, just these past couple of years, since we've met Steve and
he's come out to some shows in Chicago and then we've been wanting
to record with him and we did that last record, so it came out of
that good relationship.
Luke Nava: Was that a mutual thing? Did he want to work with
you and you with him?
D: I guess, I don't know. He introduced himself to us after a show
and said he really enjoyed the show and gave me his phone number,
so I was flattered and excited and he turned out to be an amazing
person. Since then, Shellac just did a tour on the east coast of
all these kind of grassroots places
L: I thought you played an Irish pub?
D: Yeah, I set up this really small show in an Irish pub and they
actually came to a couple of towns over, a pretty small town and
it was so surreal and wonderful! It was awesome; Shellac on the
third floor of this Irish pub. It was great!
L: Yeah, that's pretty cool!
C: Is it true or has it become some kind of legendary myth that
Albini slept on your floor to record?
D: Yeah, he did, in the living room. He's an incredibly humble man.
C: That's amazing!
L: Wow! Now, you've been invited to play ATP next year, haven't
you?
D: That's right, in LA, by Matt Groening.
L: What do you think of his work
D: The Simpsons? Oh, we love The Simpsons, they're extremely important
American television.
L: And is it going to be the whole family playing that?
D: Yeah, the whole family.
L: That's something that I wanted to ask you about. You're father's
a songwriter?
D: Yeah, a folk/ gospel songwriter.
L: So have you and your family always played together from a
young age?
D: More just in the living room, playing instruments and singing
along with his songs. I've always been fascinated with the song-writing
process, just really interested in constructing a song and approaching
that.
L: When you write, do you just do stuff by yourself and then
go and play it with everyone else?
D: Much of the time more recently, Chris (Palladino), our keyboard
player, has been collaborating with the song writing and that's
been really fun and exciting. But for at least the first four albums,
I pretty much always wrote everything on the acoustic guitar first
and then p
resented it to my family. Or some tracks just remain kind
of acoustic tracks, so there's a fair representation of bare, acoustic
songs on all the albums and those are the songs that I play when
I'm in the tree; those kind of songs that I actually prefer to be
more open air. And vice-versa, when it's the family. When it's me
and the tree, I don't play certain songs, which I think are stronger
with all the instruments. So it's been an exciting time, to develop
those two live shows. In the states, we've done much more touring
as the family and here it seems like it's fairly new, it's much
more rare. We've had very few appearances over here with the family,
but hopefully if the records do well enough, then we can afford
to bring everyone over. But I've decided to just keep going and
this tour with me and the tree has really been fantastic for showing
the other side of what we do. It's been great this whole tour; almost
every night people have come and said that they saw us at All Tomorrow's
Parties. It's pretty amazing.
L: Yeah, everyone I spoke to at the Union Chapel said that.
C: It was a kind of historical event.
L: Yeah, because I went to ATP thinking of just seeing some arrhythmic
heavy guitar bands, but when I saw you and your family, it was quite
shocking and surprising, but also completely amazing; kind of out
of place, but also one of my strongest memories of the whole weekend.
C: It almost took on this strange resonant harmony in the festival,
just from being so different. It was a kind of haven from the relentless
J-J-Jang-J-Jang (sings Oxes-style riff). When you play altogether,
do you actually practice at all?
D: Some, yeah. We practice a little bit before recordings and before
a tour. We all get together and try to get a couple of days of practice
in, but it actually comes quite naturally to be honest. Nobody's
been in any other bands; they've all just been in this group.
C: So they can all read each other quite well?
D: Yeah, I think so.
L: Do you still practice in the New Jerusalem Recreation Room?
Is that in your parents' house?
D: Yeah, that's our studio. It's in my parents' basement. In fact,
they just gave us the whole basement, so I just built an actual
real studio down there, so it's quite exciting, it's now sound-proofed
down there and has a sound booth and all.
C: I was going to ask you about A Prayer for Every Hour. You
proposed that as your thesis, didn't you?
D: That's kind of not really it. It was more of the thesis art opening.
I had this group of sculptures and things like that and at the opening
I performed these songs, probably about eight songs or so. That
was when I first brought my family in and had them back me up on
these songs that I'd been writing. And the songs were in direct
relation to these sculptures and they were all talking about the
same things and I wanted to work music into that because it's pretty
frowned upon. It's seen as low art and I really despise that mentality;
I thought Warhol already took care of that. So I thought I'd disguise
it as performance art and I'd get away with it. So we played these
songs and it was just supposed to be for that one time, but it was
so much fun and had such a great response, that I took those recordings
and kind of built the album out of that time period, trying to capture
all that and that was the first album.
C: So when did you decide that you were going to take this idea
and actually make it a full-fledged career?
D: When I put that album together. For me, I'd always wanted to
do music full-time. The rest of my family have their own hopes and
dreams as well.
C: So it was actually when you put all the songs together on
the album?
D: Yeah, so then I wanted to seek out somebody who'd be interested
in releasing this thing. There was this label in Seattle, who put
that out and the next three, and then Secretly Canadian came along
and reissued them all and presented them more to an audience, who
I think would be interested in the music- that's a fair way to say
it.
L: Surrounding the music you put out, there seems to be a kind
of homemade ethic behind everything; you do all the artwork and
the merchandise and you run Sounds Familyre. I also read somewhere
that you were a carpenter?
D: Yeah, I still am.
L: Is that how you make your living?
D: Yeah, certainly not from the music!
L: Is it something that's important to you, to make the whole
product?
D: I think so. I like the process from the beginning to the end.
I'd like to put my hammer down and I'd love not to have to do carpentry
anymore, mostly because it takes up so much time, but in terms of
releases and things like that, I love the whole process of recording;
the writing, the recording and the artwork and that whole presentation.
L: Are you planning to do more production stuff, because you've
done the new Half-Handed Cloud album?
D: Yeah, the new June Panic, we're going to do that this year in
the new studio, so I'm excited about that. And then we're going
to do two new Danielson records and I think there's some other stuff
that's going to happen too, so I think it's going to be an exciting
year.
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