Thursday

Bloc Party: Four To The Floor

09 August 2012
by Poppy Reid

Backstage at last month’s Splendour In The Grass festival, Bloc Party have only just arrived and they’re already being haphazardly shuffled to separate corners. It’s clear drummer Matt Tong and bassist Gordon Moakes are relieved they’re put together as they sit down with TMN and enjoy their first beer before the headline set.

Since landing in Australia three weeks ago, the British band have incited their fair share of controlled controversy to publicise upcoming fourth album, Four - both quashing rumours that frontman Kele Okereke was kicked out of the band in 2010 and sparking uncertainty about a fifth release (from quotes taken out of context, of course). Backstage at last month’s Splendour In The Grass festival, drummer Matt Tong and bassist Gordon Moakes open up about the truth behind the band’s hiatus, admitting the two-year break was almost a unanimous decision.

“We were jaded,” he says. “I can remember that time when we were at the end of touring the last record. We were just doing it without thinking. Turning up at the show wherever we were supposed to be and going through the motions.”

“Every record cycle has an ending,” Tong chimes in, “and I think we just weren’t interested in carrying on after that.”

“Matt was the most vocal about it,” Moakes continues, outing his comrade. “Russ [Lissack] and Kele would have been happy to keep going. To be fair to Matt, it was about time somebody was vocal about it, for too long we all just were going on with whatever was deemed the right thing to do; it took someone to stand up and say, ‘Whatever you guys want to do is fine but I’m not doing this.’”
Okereke spent the time waiting for Bloc Party’s reconnect by recording and touring a solo EP in 2010 and an album last year; guitarist Russell Lissack toured with Irish band Ash, and Moakes founded post-hardcore band Young Legionnaire. But while heading back into the studio together was inevitable, the band made a conscious decision to do things differently when they reconvened last October, taking a stripped back and less convoluted approach to touring and recording. The new album’s title may seem remissive, but we’re told it’s a reflection of the simplicity of the record as a whole.

“The aim of the record is to just be the sound of the four of us,” explains Moakes. “It sounds a bit like an old fashioned record in a way, which is the sound of a band playing,” he laughs. “No frills really, but No Frills would be a crap title.”

Recorded with Grammy-nominated producer Alex Newport (At The Drive In, City and Colour) in New York, Four was intended to be recorded live at Stratosphere Studios, but time constraints forced the quartet to switch tacts.


“It wasn’t like we started and it was suddenly like a sea change,” Tong assures. “The approach we had, was pretty much the same from start to finish.”

“In a way, not doing it,” Moakes interjects, “potentially made it sound more live than if we had played it live and handed it over to the producers.”

With two of Bloc Party’s past three albums charting within the ARIA top 5, Australian zealots needn’t worry about a departure from their Intimacy-era sound; as Moakes explains, Four will run countertype with past projects. “I think there was a precedent set when we came out with our first record [2005’s Silent Alarm]...We’re now in a position where we can kind of do what we do in a bubble away from everyone else. For me at my age, when you’re in your thirties you hardly listen to music radio.”

“Apart from Radio 4,” Tong jokes.

“I just think that you’re not running around trying to chase what’s hip anymore. Give me a guitar and I’ll express myself now, how I am. I think we’re all like that to varying degrees. We’ve matured as players and our taste has matured, and our music is a result of that.”

Moakes is aware of the public’s conception of Bloc Party; their evolution from taut smacks of sound walls and syncopated fervour to more reflective lyrical musings and layered staccato has been celebrated in Australia since before Triple J listed Banquet at #54 in the Hottest 100 Of All Time poll. Tong is more diplomatic about the possibility of alienating fans, suggesting he’d be okay with just five people at the front barrier of The Supertop tonight.

“In the early days we’d be excited with a couple of people at the front dancing and we’re still that way. You’re lucky to be doing it if at least somebody likes your band.” This sentiment is easy to adopt after the band’s multi-Platinum sales, but is aptly illustrated by the band’s humble, tight, pre- show huddle before an even tighter live set.

“You have to be happy within yourself and then happy as a collective band,” Tong continues. “You can’t start thinking about what everyone else is thinking. You want to make sure you’ve done the best job personally; for me, if I’ve done that then I don’t need anything else.”

Take away the 991,000 Facebook likes, the 81,000 Twitter followers, the 13 award nominations, and the pair guarantee they would still be making the same music together. Although Moakes would return to his earlier aspirations of becoming graphic designer, Tong says he would be more resourceful in his effort to make rent.

“I’d probably start cooking meth actually... I think there’s a good market for it in Bournemouth.”

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