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10-4 Blog

AV by Matt Dixon, April '06

Photo by Paul Hammond

Art Star 2001 from Control Change
 

1. Please introduce yourself + give a brief history of A/V.
My name is Philip Clark and I've been playing as A/V for over 5 years now. For the first couple months it was me and my friend Selwyn, but I have been performing solo since December 2000.

I'm 35 years old and I played guitar and bass in bands for many years. I bought a drum machine in the early '90s, then a roland jx-3p synthesizer, which blew my mind. A/V evolved gradually out of all that science.

2. How would you describe your music to someone that has yet to hear it?
A/V is a big pile of synths with a drum machine and a bunch of stomp-boxes and a Behringer mixer and an Alesis sequencer to run it all and I rock all this shit and sing over top. It's electronic music but there are no laptops or samplers involved so hopefully it's less boring to watch.

This gear was all made in the '80s which means it's going to generate a certain type of noise. A lot of people want to compare A/V to '80s new-wave but I try to keep things gnarly and chaotic. I think of A/V as danceable punk rock music.

3. What are the goals of A/V?
My goal is to grab you by the hair and smush your face up against a plate glass window, and I'm not letting go until I feel like letting go.

4. How has the DIY ethic influenced your music and how you go about living your life?
DIY has been the best and the worst thing that's ever happened to me. Obviously being a one man band involves taking do-it-yourself to an extreme. I do pretty much everything myself- the essence of A/V is a shopping cart, a cd burner and a bunch of spraypaint. I'm glad to be free of a lot of business bullshit but sometimes it's difficult to conceive of projects that I cannot execute myself using my own two hands. If anything I wish I were capable of being more ambitious.

5. What bands/artists, past and present have influenced your music?
Much of the inspiration for A/V comes from the gear itself rather than any specific artists. Just trying to figure out ways to hook all this shit up and make it go. As far as musical influences--even though I use synths I'm mostly influenced by punk and hardcore bands. Shotmaker, Fugazi, Black Flag. Joy Division, New Order, The Fall. For electronic stuff I like minimal Detroit techno, Plastikman, Basic Channel, Swayzak, as well as lots of '90s jungle and drum&bass, congo natty ragga-beats, techstep like Ed Rush, )E|B(, Technical Itch, Panacea...

I'm also inspired by anyone in a band who can't really sing but doesn't let that stop them.

Mostly however, I like my friends and their bands.

6. What do you try to communicate through your music?
For most people life involves a lot of pain and suffering much of which is caused by other people. Just try to have a good time when you can because one day, you're gonna die.


Photo by Tony Dawe

7. I heard you played a show in an alley once, is this true? If so, how did it come about? What's the strangest place you have ever played?
I didn't have a car in Halifax and I'd move all my gear around in a shopping cart. I used to take a synth and a drum machine and a Peavey guitar amp and play outdoors all over the city. All I needed was an electrical outlet. I played all the time down on the boardwalk, in the parade square, in parking garages, usually at 3 in the morning when no one was around, just to hear the sound of beats bouncing around in a concrete urban space.

For example: http://swordfight.org/video/9_volt_garage.mov

Pretty soon I got a power inverter so I didn't even need a public outlet and I could play pretty much anywhere. I did two shows by candlelight in the north end after Hurricane Juan when most of the city was blacked out.

Nowadays I'm a hermit and I live in the woods in Gaspereau Forks, New Brunswick. When the weather's nice I set up in a clearing in the woods and jam for the benefit of foxes and deer.

8. When do you think is the best time and situation to listen to A/V?
In a live situation would be the best. or really friggin loud in a packed, sweaty dance club. or on your ipod as you're walking down the street after you've just got done dumping your boring boyfriend.

9. What can we expect from you in the future?
The new cd is called 'Hot Action' and it comes out May 20 2006. I'm also putting out a DVD of all the weird Swordfight art-videos I've done. Then I plan on getting in my '93 Ford Tempo and touring to the moon and back.

10. How can ppl reach you?
http://swordfight.org is my site for music, text, photos, video or whatever I happen to be in the mood for on a given day. I'll have a music myspace as soon as I can figure that shit out. philip[at]swordfight[dot]org.

11. Anything you would like to add?
I would like to encourage people not to hurry through their lives. Take your time with things, relax. Take a deep breath. Life's too short to be in a hurry all the time.