I might as well come clean right now: it is barely the end of October, but I already know that ORANSSI PAZUZU's Valonielu will top my 2013 Playlist. Just like Kosmonument was my favorite album of 2011. Need I say more?... It is a real pleasure to interview these guys as their blackened psychedelic explorations represent the perfect modern blend between shamanic spirit and scientific attitude: in my eyes, those are inextricably intertwined paths, both aiming at discovering the mysteries of life...
While
Kosmonument made me feel like a reckless spacewoman facing unknown dark perils
and mind-blowing cosmic puzzles, for me listening to Valonielu is like being
exposed to music written by aliens announcing the terrible destiny of our
planet: the feeling is disconcerting and exhilarating! Can you enlighten us on
the actual lyrical content, and the viewpoint it was dealt with?
Ontto: I’m very
happy if there is room left for interpretations like that in the music. On
Valonielu, there is a lyrical theme that’s haunting throughout the album, but I
hope that when I talk about it, people don’t take it too literally as a “guide”
for how to experience the sounds. Anyway, the main lyrical theme on Valonielu is
a question about the limits of our world view. I think empiricism is the way to
gain some understanding of reality, but there is also a deep mystery rooted in
it, which is consequence of our natural limitations as human beings. There are
holes in the landscape, like one song title suggests. The human answer to this “problem”
is to fill these holes with illusions that satisfy our needs to feel security
and certainty. But the problem with this is, that these illusions also might stop
you from asking new questions that help us understand the reality better. In
fact, they migh make your brain go into a dissonance state, if you even go as
far as trying to think outside your fixed mindset. The mystery is the real
truth, and if you gaze into it, it gives away small pieces of reality, slowly
and painfully. This is one philosophical point of view for the album, of course
there are other themes as well, like evolution, life’s unity, religion and so
on, but in my mind they all connect to this basic question somehow.
In this album
you let any residual inhibition go with regards to experimenting with sounds
and patterns, which play a mesmerizing part against the unlit scenario. How did
you compose the music this time around?
Ontto: The
idea of letting things evolve naturally had an even greater importance for us
than before with writing these new songs. We didn’t have much rush, and we
tried lots of different ideas and saw which ones felt the most inspiring to us.
Most of them turned out to be actual written riffs, which we just jammed and
played with collectively. We didn’t want to spoil them by pushing too hard, but
rather let the atmospheres, the soundscapes, the grooves and everything settle
into their natural states with time and patience.
Your
songwriting has expanded and refined itself greatly, but the feeling of
freshness and potential for further mind-expanding explorations is now more
evident than ever before. Do you have the feeling that you have made up a lot
of ground as far as musicianship & composing skills go, and that you have
pierced through a wider (but still very mysterious) dimension creatively?
Ontto: The
thing with creating something new is that you are always a beginner in a way. I
mean we have learned a lot for sure by doing those earlier albums, but it is
the uncertainty and the unexpected that makes it all more interesting. I’d like
to see every album as an individual point of musical evolution process. Each
album is just a link in a chain that hopefully leads to new ideas later on.
“Ympyrä On
Viiva Tomussa”‘s eerie, hypnotic atmosphere during the build-up section plunges
me into cosmic scenarios evocative of Pink Floyd’s Ummagumma. Your unique interpretation
of classic psychedelic/progressive rock through the aesthetics of black metal sounds
so genuine and fresh that feels like the fruit of an instinctive stream-of-consciousness
process, not a diligent reconstruction. How important is it for OP to have an
extensive knowledge of old-school music? Do you set out to do some research
into other bands’ sounds and atmospheres to widen your technical toolbox?
Ontto: It’s not
exactly something we do research for, it’s just that we are all very much into the
70’s psychedelic/prog rock. For OP that is just as important musical influence
as black metal, something we enjoy aesthetically, something we want to reach
towards. I have always been especially into the 70’s drum and bass sounds,
because they let the groove breathe more than the modern “snap & buff” bass
drum, and it’s inspiring to smuggle these things into a more extreme music
style. I think fusion is a key to new worlds and atmospheres, and if the fusion
feels at the same time natural and weird to the listener’s ears, the experiment
probably has been a success.
Writing and
working on the final track-list of Valonielu must have been a very intense
experience, starting from the gathering and build-up of its inspiration. The
album sounds so darkly vibrant and terrifyingly organic: the free-jam feeling
that was quite predominant in the past has evolved into a creature almost with
a life, a brain of its own! Do you get the odd feeling that OP music comes from
“elsewhere”, and if so, surely your rational mind must enjoy the bizarre
sensation?
Ontto: Haha,
it sure has a disturbing brain… Yes, I get feelings like that sometimes, and
many times those are the best thing. I guess we’re just lost in the music and
trying to find some way out of there as a collective. When we’re jamming some new
stuff together, usually everyone has different ideas of what’s it all about.
Slowly the different pictures start resembling each other and after a lot of
jamming you can recognize them as parts of one unified piece of music. And even
then many people can’t… I wish it was easier, but that’s how it goes. Definitely
there’s an element of unpredictability. You can bring riffs for the guys to
play, but you can never be sure how they twist them into something new, and
that’s one of the great things about playing in a band.
Velonielu
is eons away from mainstream/sellable rock or metal: even when you unleash the “groove”,
it adds layers and dynamism to the complexity of your work. “Olen Aukaissut
Uuden Silmän” is the ear candy of this new album, with its almost
gothic-sounding guitar: it’s an avalanche of swirling colors against a pulsating
black background I am curious about the title, can you tell me something about
its story and how it reflects into the music?
Ontto: The title translates to “I Have Opened A New Eye”. Lyrically it’s a song about personal growth, about gazing into the unknown and finding the enlightenment in the mystery. Jun-His had this simple riff and the song kind of grew from that seed. After the verses there is a short and hazy black metal bridge, that represents the dreams of an individual breaking down, and soon the part itself breaks down too, morphing into an instrumental middle part with guitar melodies and arpeggio synths that represent the mystery. At least that’s how I feel about it.
Ontto: The title translates to “I Have Opened A New Eye”. Lyrically it’s a song about personal growth, about gazing into the unknown and finding the enlightenment in the mystery. Jun-His had this simple riff and the song kind of grew from that seed. After the verses there is a short and hazy black metal bridge, that represents the dreams of an individual breaking down, and soon the part itself breaks down too, morphing into an instrumental middle part with guitar melodies and arpeggio synths that represent the mystery. At least that’s how I feel about it.
I am
already fantasizing about hearing this album in a cool club with a good
projector, and I cannot wait for some European dates to materialize. Are you a
visual kind of composer? Perhaps do you take notes of what you imagine for the
live situation, as well as for the lyrics (if and when they are written after
the music)?
Ontto: Well, we don’t exactly take notes, we’re too unorganized for that... About visuality, I think the worlds that music refers to are created in the listener’s head. At live shows you can ease that path with lights and projectors and stuff, to get people “in the mood” so to speak, but the most important thing is that the person who’s experiencing the music should be there with an open mind and willing to make his/her own imaginary psychic cinema from the music. We just provide the soundtrack for them. It’s up to them if they wanna turn it into something exciting or boring. Actually we have not planned the shows very closely, so we’ll just have to wait and see how it turns out this fall…
Ontto: Well, we don’t exactly take notes, we’re too unorganized for that... About visuality, I think the worlds that music refers to are created in the listener’s head. At live shows you can ease that path with lights and projectors and stuff, to get people “in the mood” so to speak, but the most important thing is that the person who’s experiencing the music should be there with an open mind and willing to make his/her own imaginary psychic cinema from the music. We just provide the soundtrack for them. It’s up to them if they wanna turn it into something exciting or boring. Actually we have not planned the shows very closely, so we’ll just have to wait and see how it turns out this fall…
Ontto: Haha,
it sure has a disturbing brain… Yes, I get feelings like that sometimes, and
many times those are the best thing. I guess we’re just lost in the music and
trying to find some way out of there as a collective. When we’re jamming some new
stuff together, usually everyone has different ideas of what’s it all about.
Slowly the different pictures start resembling each other and after a lot of
jamming you can recognize them as parts of one unified piece of music. And even
then many people can’t… I wish it was easier, but that’s how it goes. Definitely
there’s an element of unpredictability. You can bring riffs for the guys to
play, but you can never be sure how they twist them into something new, and
that’s one of the great things about playing in a band.
The
contribution of Jaime Gomez Arellano in making this album so blazingly vivid
yet swollen with dour eeriness, masterfully highlighting even the finest of detail,
seems crucial. Are you guys all about instinct or are you obsessively anal when
recording?... Did you learn anything from Jaime that has already sown its seed
for the future?
Ontto:
Working with Gomez was great. He had a good understanging of our musical
aesthetics and he also knew how to accomplish that in the studio environment.
That allowed us to relax and just focus in the musical side and the playing. We
are pretty interested about the recording process, but when you have a
professional taking care of that, it allows you to get into the atmosphere and
go with the flow. Definitely we learned a lot in the sessions, about ourselves
as musicians, how we play and what things are meaningful in the pursuit of a
more spacious soundscape. Gomez had many cool ideas that we wound’t have
thought of ourselves, for example he divided Evill’s keyboard soundscapes to
stereo “widscreen” signal before recording and that made his playing sound
fucking cosmic! Gomez also loves to play with effect pedals and wanted to make
all the effects old school way, with pedals while recording, instead of using some
digital studio plug-ins afterwards. I like that attitude.
Your
commitment to making the kind of experimental music you love in total freedom
is apparent. How has your relationship with creativity changed after the accolade
that “Kosmonument” received? How was your experience with a big label like
Spinefarm, and are you happy to go back to nesting within a more underground
niche?
Ontto: With
Spinefarm we felt a bit like outsiders, as you might guess, because they have
all these huge mainstream metal bands and then us… I guess we didn’t fit into
that equation very well. The people with Svart on the other hand are really
into the same kind of music that we like too, which is great. This fall they
are releasing many re-issues of old Finnish prog classics on vinyl, Wigwam and great
stuff like that. I also like the fact that there is a kind of small underground
scene in Finland and Svart is very involved in that. They are releasing music
from our friend’s bands, Dark Buddha Rising for example. That makes us feel
like we are at the right place. We didn’t think about label things too much when
we started writing the new album, we just hoped someone would want to release
the album eventually. But when Gomez got involved, it made things a bit more
complex because we needed a label to help with the recording costs in his London-based
studio. Our previous albums were recorded in Finnish cottages, so it was a pretty
long leap from that. Luckily Svart thought working with Gomez was a good idea
and also 20 Buck Spin, our label in North America, gave us a green light. They
made it possible, and I’m very glad they did.
Costin
Choreanu’s artwork for Valonielu which symbolizes the natural cycles of the
earth, which seem ever more ominous today due to our failure to make the right
sociopolitical, environmental and ethical choices. What has the Orange Pazuzu
got to say about the little commitment that most people show towards a sorely
needed change, individually and collectively? I’d rather go down fighting: have
people lost their balls completely?
Ontto: I
don’t think people have lost their balls, but rather they don’t know which is
the real ball in the sea of balls. There are too many intuition-based views against
each argumented one, and too many lobbers, who demolish the democratic and
scientific systems with their selfish agendas. This makes people feel helpless
and apathetic. But illusions don’t help. There are usually no simple solutions
to complex problems, and this is what they trick you to think. I think that if
you want to change reality, you have to first try understanding reality, even if
it’s incomprehensible at times. Maybe better public awareness is a way to the
change, but people can be very frustrating in their ability to take only the
facts that fit into their fixed world view and dismiss the ones that might help
them see things in a wider perspective. That is not very promising, because environmental
and social problems are not going to slow down even if people refuse to take
them for real.
Psychedelic music should not just remind us of lysergic escapism but of an era
when music fans were actively committed to change foreign politics, break
taboos and achieve social liberties. Crucially, does underground music still
make culture these days? Do you feel there could be a renaissance of positivity
and proactive attitudes after two decades spent wallowing in self-indulgent
bleakness?
Ontto:
That is an interesting point about psychedelic music. To me an important aspect
of the genre, and art in general, is that it tries to see reality in a new, possibly
very unorthodox way. Psychedelic music celebrates freedom of the mind, hopefully
without many social restrictions, and this is a good starting point for fresh
ideas. It might be that the disappointment that followed the optimistic late
60’s also reflects on today’s music scene, maybe in a subconscious way. The
word “hippie” actually used to mean something more than a lazy person who’s
constantly too stoned to say anything understandable. Personally for me,
Kosmonument was the high point of our nihilistic self-indulgence, a very bleak
and unoptimistic album, whereas Valonielu is actually a counter-reaction to it,
in it’s own way. On this album, some of the lyrics criticise thought patterns
that are very common and in my view very unhelpful in terms of cultural and
social evolution. That’s not the same thing as straight action, I admit that, but
it’s not like we’re putting our heads in the bush and ignoring the reality
either. Hopefully there will be a movement that smashes
the super liberal economy bubble with all it’s sick
consequences. If it happens, I think there will be many soundtracks for that
change.
(All photos by Maija Lahtinen, except for live shots)
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