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Brian Molko - Vocals/Guitar
Stefan Olsdal - Bass
Robert Schultzberg - Drums - replaced by Steve 1/97
We're not championing a cause or anything: We just want you to
look at yourself and be scared at what you find". Placebo's Brian Molko
fronts a band who thrive on chaos and disorder, on urgent emotions and unsettling
imagery. Only six months into their career, Placebo have managed to forge
themselves a reputation that has as much to do with delighting people as
it does with dismaying them. Every reaction has been extreme. They have
also, in that time, set up their own label, Elevator Music, via a special
deal with Hut Records, and recorded an astonishing, challenging and beautiful
album, titled simply Placebo". It could be underwritten: 'The
antidote to Britpop'.
You run the risk on the first album of making a record that has
one particular sound, that runs the whole way through it", considers
Molko. And we wanted ours to be like a collection of short stories,
approach every single song individually with the orchestration and vocal
styles. We wanted to take you on a journey, an emotional rollercoaster,
with little surprises here and there, instead of just having a blanket sound."
'Placebo' took just two months to record, in Dublin and London, and was
produced by Brad Wood, a founder member of Tortoise, who has also worked
with artists as diverse as Liz Phair, Veruca Salt and The Jesus Lizard.
He's as much into electronic music as we are," says Molko, and
we didn't want to make pure punk record, we wanted to make something that
was colourful." The moodwings and frissons of Placebo's songs were
carefully textured, using analogue synths, ans more unorthodox sounds from
toy instruments and a didgeridoo.
Placebo's songs invite vivid experiences. There's a lot of characters
in there, and a lot of the lyrics are telling stories too. But if it makes
you feel that it's an emotional record then I'm happy about that,"
offers Brain, I'm happy to walk the line. to make things dangerous,
hopefully. People could really hate the record, it could really annoy them
- which would be cool. Indifference about it would piss me off more."
Placebo's unique vision of music and life began in Luxembourg, where
Brian initially met Stefan, who is Swedish, at school, at the ages of 12
and 11 respectively. As Molko recalls, in the space of seven years
we might have exchanged one sentence." Brian left for London when he
was 17, but a chance encounter in South Kensington tube station brought
the two of them back together. There he was, with a guitar strapped
to his back, and he didn't actually want my phone number he asked for it
out of courtesy," Molko laughs. The singer happened to be playing a
gig that night. Olsdal attended, and immediately decided a band had to be
formed.
After initial dabbling in what they describe as art rock",
the old school network came back into its own. Robert, with whom Stefan
had been at school and in a band with in Sweden, was coming to London to
study music. Stefan called him up and asked him to join his new band. It
was perfect," says Brian, it just gelled".
For all three, London was the perfect environment in which to create
and unleash their musical medicine show, and they've attacked attention
from the outset. Pursued by A&R men repeating the mantra, You
blew me away," Placebo secured their deal with Hut a mere 51 weeks
after their first ever gig. During 1995 they toured with Ash, Whale and
Bush, determined to hook all-comers into their congregation, and released
their debut single, Bruise Pristine" on the hip Fierce Panda
label in November. They began 1996 with the critically acclaimed 'Come Home'
single in January, and toured the UK with Belgian art rockers Evil Superstars
and Europe with David Bowie. We went from 300 capacity venues to 8,000
to 12,000 capacity stadiums almost overnight, which was freaky," Brian
notes. Bowle became a fan of the band instantly, and at his request, they'll
be supporting him again this summer, as well as taking in the The Park and
Reading festivals. Now we've played to 16,000 people in Paris, those
festivals are not going to scare us", Molko promises.
But their most challenging task was to create an album as powerfully
different as 'Placebo'. From the licentious 'Nancy Boy' to the sparkling
abandon of 'Blonic' and the full blown experimentalism of 'Swallow' this
is an album that showcases the band's musical versatility. Its making was,
at times, extraordinary. 'Swallow' is what happened the last time Stefan
and I took acid," reveals Molko. It could mean many things, I
guess at first you might think it's about losing all your drugs, or maybe
it's someone who's so wasted during sex they forget not to swallow. I don't
know, it was never really written in a state of reality." Both 'Hang
On To Your IQ' and 'I Know' employed toy instruments to Bring a real
loss of innocence feel, a real, naive vulnerability to the music,"
says Brian. 'Lady of The Flowers' takes its name from the Jean Genet prison
novel, while the forthcoming single '36 Degrees' suggests plenty of double
meanings. It's called that because 36 degrees is close to body temperature,"
explains Brian. I guess it's all body metaphors. The sleeve has an
arm and a leg wrapped in clingfilm, like they're being preserved. And you
can put something in clingfilm, like they're being preserved. And you can
put something in clingfilm and stick it in the refrigerator, or stick it
in a microwave and warm it up or cool it down."
Brian is not afraid of making people uncomfortable. His unorthodox, androgynous
appearance has already gained him a share of notoriety. What I would
find amusing, a reaction I would like to create, for example, is for somebody,
who in his life has been homophobic, to come to a gig and mistake me for
a woman for the firs half of the gig, and actually think I was quite cute,
and then discover that I was a bloke and have to ask themselves some questions
about themselves, you know." And he draws from his formative experience
as an actor to work through his most uncomfortable and unnerving emotions.
In acting, you could do things you wouldn't normally do in real life
and get away with them," he furthers. In writing, my characters
can do that as well, they can do things you might be afraid of, or feel
thing you'd feel guilty or uncomfortable about. And you can get rid of personal
feelings through them."
'Placebo' is released on June 17th, preceded by the single '36 Degrees'
on June 3rd, while the band begin a UK tour on June 2nd. The most wayward
new spirits of rock'n'roll are not prepared to be taking things easy. The
album carries through the urgency and immediacy of what we are," concludes
Brian. I guess it's moving at very fast pace now, but if there is
a time to be moving at this pace then it's now. We can relax in a few years
- maybe. I hope not." Take a deep breath now.
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