What links a former staffer of American satirical webzine The Onion, the drummer of metal bruisers Helmet, and a couple of refugees from obscure โmath rockโ bands of the late โ90s? Right now, itโs โAtlasโ โ a spinning glitterball of bouncy rhythms and firefly guitars inspired by the glammy Schaffel beat popular in the techno clubs of Cologne, but still addictive enough to score an NME Track Of The Week. โAtlasโ suggests that if, in recent years, avant-garde has become code for bloodless experimentation, New Yorkโs Battles might just be the band to change that. Formed in 2003 around guitarist/keyboardist Ian Williams, Battles are the product of intense studio alchemy. โWriting songs is like putting together a large puzzle,โ laughs guitarist Dave Konopka, as Battles speed along en route to a show in upstate New York. โWe hang up all these charts in our rehearsal room, and give the song parts weird names โ itโs like, โAnjelica Hustonโ totally doesnโt fit with โBrer Rabbitโ! But sometimes itโs all about square pegs in round holes.โ Taking to the stage with guitars strung across their back like broadswords, Battles scramble between fretboard, laptop, and keyboard, Tyondai Braxton (son of radical jazzer Anthony) adding processed vocals or beatbox and drummer John Stanier nailing hard-hitting, complex rhythms. That Battles make magical fusions, not a confused mess, is down to the bandโs democratic take on their diverse influences. โIan really likes African music, John is really into hip hop, Ty likes orchestrated classical music,โ says Konopka. And prog? โYeah. I was totally into Yesโ Fragile. But not so much โOwner Of A Lonely Heartโ.โ One final question: Johnโs cymbal is positioned a good seven feet above the stage โ why? Dave relays the question to the front seat and the van dissolves into laughter. โHe saysโฆโ relates the guitarist โโฆthat he canโt get the stand down.โ Thatโs Battles: taking things just seriously enough. LOUIS PATTISON
What links a former staffer of American satirical webzine The Onion, the drummer of metal bruisers Helmet, and a couple of refugees from obscure โmath rockโ bands of the late โ90s? Right now, itโs โAtlasโ โ a spinning glitterball of bouncy rhythms and firefly guitars inspired by the glammy Schaffel beat popular in the techno clubs of Cologne, but still addictive enough to score an NME Track Of The Week.
โAtlasโ suggests that if, in recent years, avant-garde has become code for bloodless experimentation, New Yorkโs Battles might just be the band to change that.
Formed in 2003 around guitarist/keyboardist Ian Williams, Battles are the product of intense studio alchemy. โWriting songs is like putting together a large puzzle,โ laughs guitarist Dave Konopka, as Battles speed along en route to a show in upstate New York. โWe hang up all these charts in our rehearsal room, and give the song parts weird names โ itโs like, โAnjelica Hustonโ totally doesnโt fit with โBrer Rabbitโ! But sometimes itโs all about square pegs in round holes.โ
Taking to the stage with guitars strung across their back like broadswords, Battles scramble between fretboard, laptop, and keyboard, Tyondai Braxton (son of radical jazzer Anthony) adding processed vocals or beatbox and drummer John Stanier nailing hard-hitting, complex rhythms. That Battles make magical fusions, not a confused mess, is down to the bandโs democratic take on their diverse influences.
โIan really likes African music, John is really into
hip hop, Ty likes orchestrated classical music,โ says Konopka. And prog? โYeah. I was totally into Yesโ Fragile. But not so much โOwner Of A Lonely Heartโ.โ
One final question: Johnโs cymbal is positioned a good seven feet above the stage โ why? Dave relays the question to the front seat and the van dissolves into laughter. โHe saysโฆโ relates the guitarist โโฆthat he canโt get the stand down.โ
Thatโs Battles: taking things just seriously enough.
LOUIS PATTISON