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Misplaced Music is a Leeds, UK-based label which is so far responsible
for a fine selection of beautiful countryish/folkish records and
CDs. It was born in 2001 and is developing slowly into a trustworthy
home for quiet, inward-looking music (which often seems to include
scrapy violins, for some reason). My initial exposure to the label
was through buying the Hood tour single at a Hood gig at the Arts
Cafe in London. Ah, that was a gig to remember, if only for the
incredible Cassetteboy performance which took place - but that's
another story.
Through the magic of the e-mail interview I quizzed the label's
founder Sara in order to git y'all the low-down on a label which
you should know about. There are details of the Misplaced releases
so far further down the page, and you should check out www.misplacedmusic.co.uk for
the latest.
For now, to the questioning...
Is it just you running the label on your own?
I started out on my own, but as I work full time, the to-do list quickly got
out of control. These days my husband Richard helps out. He's a great writer
and does our press releases and a fair bit of the fanzine.
You also run the Hood website, is that right?
It seems like I've been doing the Hood site (www.hoodmusic.net)
for ages, though it's been only about five or six years. I was looking at the
wayback machine the other day (www.archive.org)
and they have a couple of earlier incarnations of the site. By no means am
I a great web designer, but things have progressed quite a bit!
When did Misplaced start, and why?
It started back in 1999 (I think) when I used to DJ at the University radio
station in Duluth, KUMD. They really had nothing as far as a library is concerned,
so I had to bring in all of my own collection to play. I literally spent
hundreds and hundreds of dollars on absolutely crap records. There are too
many labels with more money than sense, shoving out any old thing that crosses
their path. It was (and still is) disheartening, but it made me think I could
make a better job of it.
How did you get tracks off bands such as Low, Idaho, etc?
Do you know them, or did you just write and ask?
Well, Low was an easy one as I'm from Duluth, and Hood, Empress, Vibracathedral
Orchestra and Dakota Suite are all from Leeds, where I live now. It's nice
to be able to deal with bands face-to-face. I struggle a bit when everything's
done by e-mail and you don't really get to know the person you're writing to
all of the time.
Are there any labels (now, or from the past) which you have
found an inspiration - and in what way?
I used to aspire to be something like Secretly
Canadian, but that was just because they happened to put out a bunch of
records at the same time that I really loved. There aren't any labels that
I follow these days, I can't seem to find any that are reliably good for more
than one or two releases... I may be a bit picky though.
Do the releases you've put out reflect your own personal musical
tastes? What other things do you like musically?
Yes I suppose they do, in a way... Though with the spit 7"s, I asked a
band and they picked who they would be paired with. I think it worked well,
as I had never heard Vibracathedral Orchestra, Two Dollar Guitar or Idaho before
I put those 7"s out!
I am most inclined to listen to singer-songwriter or country
music at the minute. The funny thing is that I was never really
interested in country music until I moved from the US... same
with American literature. Being away from the line of fire
definitely puts a different perspective on things.
What are your views on the state of independent labels these
days? Do you think MP3 downloads are having an adverse effect
on indie labels? Are you a vinyl purist?
I think things are incredibly difficult for indie labels right now. It's practically
impossible to release something on vinyl and expect to break even. CDs are
a bit easier, but it's always a challenge. MP3s are an excellent way to get
people to hear music they probably wouldn't otherwise. I do like vinyl, and
hope that I can continue to release it, but it's getting more and more difficult.
In a way MP3s are good for labels like us who get little or no radio play,
as people can hear t
he music before buying it. But whether they actually go
ahead and buy it or not is anyone's guess.
Who designs your packaging? Is the visual element of a record
important to you? Which are some of your favourite record sleeves?
There
are loads of great records that I've put off buying just because their
sleeves were so awful I couldn't believe that the music they contained
would be anything I could possibly like. So, from a business point
of view, I guess it is important what the art looks like, but does
anyone really give it another thought once they've got the record home
and on the turntable?
So far with everything I've released the bands have designed their
own artwork, except for the Low/Vibracathedral Orchestral split 7" which
I did. I'm not really bothered about who does the artwork, and it is
nice to see what the bands come up with.
As for my favourite sleeves... well, I'm partial to Hood's The Cycle of
Days and Seasons and The Court & Spark's Ventura Whites.
You produce a Misplaced fanzine. Are you a fan of fanzines,
and do you have favourites from now or the past? How do you feel
the internet has affected the 'international pop underground'
network of fanzines?
It does seem that there are fewer fanzines around now than there used to be,
and I'm pretty sure that's because of the internet. Publishing a fanzine is
a time-consuming and expensive business, and I can see the appeal of just putting
it on the internet. Personally, I like a tangible object, and will always keep
an eye out for a new issue of The Big Takeover or Hermenaut.
To be honest, I never really planned on doing a fanzine, but
it seemed like it would be a nice thing to add in with orders.
I've always loved getting lots of inserts and things when I
buy records, and the fanzine is an extension of that.
You recently put on your first Misplaced gig (Maher Shalal
Hash Baz/Empress/Deerpark) - do you have plans for more? How
will the label develop/diversify?
Misplaced is a hobby, so there aren't any long-term plans. Whatever happens
will be the result of natural evolution, maybe we'll put on a few gigs in Leeds,
maybe we'll do some t-shirts or badges, we may even sign a band one day...
I really don't have any idea where things may lead.

mm01
Low/Vibracathedral Orchestra 7"
Low's song is very short, sparse and drowsy sounding,
with Calvin Johnson on melodica!
Vibracathedral Orchestra have hypnotic mantra-style drones, insistent
violins and a tense relentlessness in a Velvet Underground style. |

mm02
Hood 7"
(tour single)
Chilly and forlorn sounding, this is Hood at their most
open and honest. Hollow cymbals, restrained bass and guitar
arpeggios slowly build tension. |

mm03
Simon Joyner & The Fallen Men/Two Dollar
Guitar 7"
Simon Joyner is slightly too miserable for my liking.
Plaintive acoustic guitar, violin and don't-bother-cheering-me-up
singing.
Two Dollar Guitar is more of the same - a bizarrely depressing cover
of the Rolling Stones' 'Last Time', featuring Sonic Youth's Steve Shelley! |

mm04
Dakota Suite/Idaho 7"
Both sides remind me of Red House Painters, with very
well-played and very well-recorded sad music. Dakota Suite
keep things quiet, including a heartbreaking piano number,
'Narcolepsy Lake'. Idaho get a bit more electrified, feedback-y
and pissed-off sounding, and bring to mind Jeff Buckley. |

mm05
Empress 7"
Loops of scratchy sound build up repetitive melodies,
with hushed vocals, simplistic guitar lines and piano overlaid.
This reminds me of the homemade, warm sounds of Electroscope
in a way. |

mm101
Hood 'Singles Compiled' CD
mm102
Hood 'Compilations 1995-2002' CD
These two came together in a limited edition rough fabric
bag with a polaroid stuck to the front. Gotta love that
packaging!
mm101 is a double cd of singles from 1994-1998, mm102 is a single cd
of tracks used on compilations/split singles. It's Hood, therefore it's
fantastic. |

mm104
Charlie Parr 'Criminals and Sinners' CD
Nine-track CD of excellent, foot-tappin', smile-inducin'
country blues tunes which sound not of this time. Excellent
steel (I think?) guitar and biscuit tin drums! |
mm103
Time for Rodeo 'Extended Play' CD
This isn't out at the time of writing. So, er, not much
to say about it. Yet... |
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Interview
by Simon Minter
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