INTERVIEW: ALEXANDER BIGGS AND THE FEELINGS BEHIND ‘HIT OR MISS’
Melbourne creative Alexander Biggs released his debut album 'I've Been Holding Onto You For Way Too Long' earlier this month and our girl Kayla chatted to him all things Biggs.
Melbourne creative Alexander Biggs has released his debut album ‘Hit or Miss'. The album is about hanging onto the idea of someone after they’ve left the room like you’re hanging onto their ghost or a husk like a cicada—all the insides gone, taken off, old here and new somewhere else—like an outline of dust in a roadrunner cartoon. Our girl Kayla chatted to him all things Biggs.
You’re quite well known for these incredibly distinct, almost poignant emotive songs - ones of which resonate deeply with many people. How do you find that your musics ability to touch so many people has influenced the manifestation of the themes present within your songs?
I try not to think too much about anyone else’s perception of my music. I remember a time when I was like, 19, playing the first kind of iteration of my project, like the very raw, beginner phase of figuring out what you’re going to sound like, and how to write songs, and someone telling me I reminded them of Death Cab, and I didn’t know any of their music, except that one song, so I looked it and then found myself emulating them, and I don’t even think I was the biggest fan at the time. I’m not saying I’d do that now, but I know that feeling now, and I know how you can take your own agency away when you worry about what others think about you, well-meaning or not.
Do you find you often write to appeal to the emotions of your listeners or are these songs truly written on the basis of your own experiences and emotive forethought?
I write solely to explore what I want to explore and to channel what I want to channel. I think there is a desire to connect with people, maybe offer a feeling of our shared experience, but I don’t let that come first, that comes after the fact. I write the songs because I’m compelled to, and they resonate second. I can only write from that experience.
In a 2018 interview - you’re quoted as saying “Melbourne is an inspiring place to live” have you taken inspiration for your new album release from any local talent, locations or occurrences that your listeners mightn’t have caught in your album’s musings?
Nah, I don’t look out at people like that. I appreciate Melbourne artists, any artists, for the unique things they bring to the table, their voices. I think Melbourne is imprinted heavily in my songs, but maybe more in just a personal sense. Songs translate to many locations, but in my mind I see where I was, or where I’m singing about. The new stuff I’m writing has a lot more of a city feel to it with a hint of northern suburbs. The stuff on Hit or Miss feels 90 percent northern suburbs, 10 percent NYC.
You have been a support act for some incredibly talented artists like Stella Donnelly and Julien Baker. If you could pick anyone in the industry to support (past artists included) who would absolutely make your lifetime if they asked you to support them?
I’m really hoping Ruby Gill takes me touring the world with her when she gets famous.
Your discography has a really consistent sound and tone - often as listeners we assume that your album release has direct connotations to your emotional state at the time of writing and it definitely has an almost cathartic feel to it - talk us through the process and feelings behind ‘Hit or Miss’.
The process was a whole bunch of recording, a whole bunch of feeling things, and a whole bunch of stressing about it.
How does it make you feel as a musician to know that people all over the world are listening to your music?
It’s neat to think people around the world are listening to my music. It’s a privilege, but one I don’t think about too much.
If you could think of any scenario or location in which you think your album is best listened to what would that look like? (for example I could definitely see myself crying into a tub of ice cream listening to ‘mostly i feel nothing’ haha)
I think it’s a headphone-walk kind of album. Walk around your neighbourhood at dusk. That’s the mood.
What can we expect from you in future? Are you ever tempted to produce collaborations or experiment with new genres?
Ummmm, I’m really interested in synths and euclidean rhythms but I’m not sure how much they’ll feature in the next stuff. Still exploring. Well, synths are involved a little, but I’m not going full radiohead or anything. They have such distinct characters and feelings, which I feel helped a lot when used sparingly in the last stuff. I’d like to turn it up a notch maybe.
Writing an album can be quite the process - did the songs on ‘Hit or Miss’ come to you over a length of time or did you smash it out and work on the production side of things more?
Hit or Miss was an ever-evolving process. It had so many different iterations, and a lot of songs got bumped out for others. I think it took a lot of time because it hadn’t yet arrived, and then one day it did, and it felt right.
Do you fear being pigeonholed to one type of genre or do you feel as though your current releases are the most authentic reflection of your past, present, and future self?
Yeah, I mean, most artists in my experience don’t like that. The amount times I get put in some, surf chill coffee strum playlist is a little annoying but I’m also grateful, and at the end of the day, you can’t choose who listens to you. I think any of the people I look up to or that my ego would want to be validated by would think my record was trash or trite or something haha
Music often provokes a feeling of nostalgia or provokes emotion tied to events in one’s life. Do you find that performing songs consistently stops this from occurring for you, or if anything does it make you remember events, feelings etc more vividly?
Maybe at first. I get tired of songs sometimes, but I’d say the feeling just develops and evolves into something else. It’s like looking at old photos—they still do something to you, but it’s not the same as being there. Probably for the best.
How has the response to your new album been so far? Is this what you expected or has it exceeded your expectations?
It’s been nice. I didn’t really know what to expect so I just take it day by day.
Congratulations on a super great album it’ll definitely be getting a ton of listens from me!
Thanks :)
FOLLOW ALEXANDER BIGGS
FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TWITTER
APPLE MUSIC | SPOTIFY | BANDCAMP | SOUNDCLOUD
INTERVIEW: THE NYLEX FACTORY CHATS INSPIRATION, EVOLUTION AND SOLO ENDEAVOURS
The Nylex Factory is an Argentinian experimental dance + electronic producer based in Melbourne. Currently making Dark Progressive Electronic House and Techno, his upcoming single sounds like a filthy mix of Bauhaus and the Avalanches. Very dirty.
First time BackBeat writer Kayla debuts with us by interviewing one of our own - Dan with his act ‘The Nylex Factory’.
Did you find that “If I never make a profit” came quite easily to you or would you describe it as an arduous task, something that required labour and extensive thought?
It came really naturally. I wrote it as they were announcing the new easing of restrictions. I'd been up eagerly waiting for them to say one thing or another but at around 8am decided I should do something else and then spent the next five hours in the garage. By the time I was finished I barely noticed that now be able to get a haircut, let alone play golf... (I did neither of those things). I hadn't had any intentions of 'going' for any particular sound; it sort of just happened to be what I was feeling at the time.
The cover art is super intriguing considering on previous single releases you’ve used your own artworks. (super cool ones might I add!) What is the concept behind the cover art for this single and what appealed to you the most about using someone else’s artwork in this instance?
The amazing artwork is by @geraniumthief. To me it represents someone communicating through a fake/sterile environment in order to get a message across to new ears. Just like the song, the message might not be conventionally 'pleasant" but it's certainly important to hear it because it comes from an honest place. Also, I think my art has a very particular style that is immediately recognizable as its own, and since this release marks the start of something new, I needed an artwork to play against what people have come to expect of me both visually and sonically. This isn't to say I won't use my own artworks again in the future but I needed some separation to really establish this sound as a new and concrete path. This wasn't another sound experiment, rather a bold new world for The Nylex Factory to dig into.
It seems as though this upcoming release has underlying tones of resisting the need to make a profit off things we’re passionate about, for them to be considered worthy pursuits. Would you care to elaborate on this concept for your listeners?
It's about whether or not you'd continue to do something even if it never gives you any long-term economic relief. And of course, you never know that for sure but I think this is a common source of anxiety for creatives so I wanted an entire song dedicated to that energy. As artists we're told our entire life to look for other career paths and this is a response to that with a very blunt and cathartic execution (and a slapping 808 kick). Beyond wealth, local artists need to realize their reach extends beyond their own beliefs of how popular they are. People will dig your work if you're honest, even if it's just for those three minutes. If your own biases get in the way, send your draft mp3 to somebody and get some energy back. You'd be surprised how empowering and rare a compliment can be.
Is there any advice you wish to give new creatives out there hoping to experiment with their sound?
Go for it. I think vulnerability (which comes through experimenting with sounds and taking chances) has always played an important role in music and it may just be the next big thing that people want, especially as human connection dwindles, live/human sounding releases are comforting to hear. Seeing someone take a chance is inspiring and energetic. As releases get more and more expected and cliche and perfect everyone's eventually going to want something new and raw and by experimenting with your sound you give the audience exactly that. If you think it surprises you just wait to see what somebody who isn't you might think.
It’s often understood in the music industry that evolution is integral to the growth of Artists. Taking note of that, do you foresee The Nylex Factory venturing further into new forms and genres?
I expected that at some point I'd put vocals into the songs but I always assumed it would be purely singing as opposed to the rapping you can hear on the track. So, with that logic I'm pretty open to exploring anything and everything under the Nylex moniker assuming that it is electronic. Otherwise I may need another name. For me the deep dive into garage dnb and hip hop was a natural way for me to give the project a life of its own. Isolation has been extremely hard on inspiration lately so I've had no choice but to look for new and strange places to find it.
Can you identify any influences or thought processes that really pushed you to create this new single?
My thought process for the song came after hearing a few artists such as Jk 47 and Nerve on triple J the night before. It was the first I'd heard of both artists and I dug them but I started to wonder where Nylex Factory existed or fitted in the Melbourne cultural landscape. And I wasn't sure it did as of yet, so I turned the radio off and started writing in the car and that's where the chorus developed that cathartic self-defeating kind of energy, which is the headspace of an artist in modern times. The song was a response to finding the balance between trying to please people while attempting to maintain one’s own innocence and purity in the process.
The Nylex Factory really appears to be a passion project and starkly different to your other releases under Tall Relatives. As someone who also plays in a band, how have you found the creative process during the switch to solo endeavours?
There's no gigs so I have a lot of time on my hands. I wouldn't say I spent much if any time on Tall Relatives since March up until after I wrote this song as a sort of vocal warm up to meet the demands of the next Relos single 'State of Disaster' (coming soon) which I recorded shortly after. It's a garage studio set up that I've recently made for myself so it lends itself to either of those vibes whether it be rock, edm or rap. It was actually art I had to temporarily stop doing at the time (which I'm back to doing daily at @millkman) to have enough energy to approach the song writing and beat making for this single.
Have you found quarantine has had a profound impact on what works your creating and the processes in which you create and form such works? Is there anything you wish you could change on this release particularly, that quarantine made impossible?
For art, yes. I've made over 250 pieces this year since March. For music, no. Quite the opposite. It's taken me eight months since I've presented myself as a musician so it's safe to say there's a lot of pent up energy here. If that's good for the songs then great but it doesn’t mean I had fun or enjoyed myself from a musical perspective for a very long time. I think the single has a certain rough energy to it that makes it work in the context of what it represents; a sort of anarchic setting of tone for the ep that's to come after. I could change a million things or record it at a studio but then it wouldn't be what it was; released. I'm too much a perfectionist to really give into that sonic kind of scrutiny. I prefer to ask myself whether or not an atmosphere is created and if it is it then to me it means it's ready for release.