The Books | |
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Left to right: Nick Zammuto, Paul de Jong |
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Background information | |
Origin | New York City, New York, United States |
Genres | Folktronica, experimental, sound collage |
Years active | 2000–present |
Labels | Tomlab, Temporary Residence Limited |
Website | www.thebooksmusic.com |
Members | |
Nick Zammuto Paul de Jong |
The Books are an American duo, formed in New York City in 1999, consisting of guitarist and vocalist Nick Zammuto and cellist Paul de Jong. Their releases typically incorporate samples of obscure sounds and speech.[1][2] They have released three critically acclaimed albums on the German label Tomlab, and released their fourth studio album, The Way Out, on Temporary Residence Limited in July 2010.
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Zammuto and de Jong first met in New York City in 1999 as they shared the same apartment building.[3] De Jong invited Zammuto to dinner at his apartment, where he played him some of his collection of audio and video samples, including a Shooby Taylor record.[4] Zammuto said of their meeting that "we both kind of knew at that moment that we listened (to music) in interesting ways and had similar approaches to music."[5] Soon after, they began playing what they considered to be pop music, in comparison to their own works, under the name The Books.[5]
In 2000, The Books started work on what would become their début album Thought for Food.[6] Zammuto and de Jong moved locations constantly during this time,[6] recording in New York, Los Angeles, Boston, and finally in the basement of a hostel in North Carolina where Zammuto worked for a while after hiking the Appalachian Trail.[5][7]
Thought for Food was released on October 22nd, 2002.[8] Praised by critics for its distinctive sound,[9] it featured extensive sampling from obscure sources coupled with mostly acoustic instrumentation.
Shortly after the release of Thought for Food, the band relocated to North Adams, Massachusetts, near where Zammuto had graduated from Williams College in 1999, studying chemistry and visual arts.[10] Zammuto and de Jong began the recording of The Lemon of Pink around this time. Anne Doerner, a guest vocalist on the album, said the process was much more arduous than the recording of Thought for Food, with Zammuto working on the album for five straight months.[5]
The Lemon of Pink was released to critical acclaim[11] on October 7th, 2003.[12] It is similar in style to Thought for Food, but oriented more around vocals performed mostly by Anne Doerner.
In 2004, the French Ministry of Culture asked The Books to compose music for a new elevator in their building. The Books released a Mini CD of this work in 2006, under the name Music for a French Elevator and Other Short Format Oddities by the Books.[13]
On April 5, 2005, The Books released their third studio album, Lost and Safe. Zammuto has a greater vocal presence in this album, and the album was criticized for this change of sound.[14] Aside from this, Lost and Safe was well received by critics.[15] Throughout early 2005, The Books collobarated with the electronica artist Prefuse 73. The Books appear on his album Surrounded by Silence ("Pagina Dos"), and the E.P. Prefuse 73 Reads the Books E.P. collects remixes of material sourced from The Books' albums.
Before starting a three-month[16] tour of North America in April 2006, The Books had played only one concert,[7] in October 2003 at a festival in Chicago, Illinois.[17] Zammuto has expressed apprehensiveness towards touring, but says it is necessary to make a living, given his belief that people downloading The Books' music via file-sharing[18] has put him under financial strain.
Following the release of Music for a French Elevator, the band took a break from recording to tend to their new families, tour in support of their albums, and pursue some of their own projects, which included Zammuto scoring a feature documentary about the Biosphere 2.[10]
In 2007, The Books released Play All, a DVD of thirteen music videos and three previously unreleased tracks.[19] The Play All videos are composed of found footage transformed into a collage that matches their music. The Books often screen these videos during their live performances.[20]
The Books toured heavily between 2005 and 2007, including two tours in Europe and two Canadian shows.[6] In early 2009 The Books covered the Nick Drake song "Cello Song" in collaboration with José González for the Red Hot Organization's Dark Was the Night fund-raising album.[21]
The Books began working on The Way Out in late 2008.[22] Zammuto spoke of the album's New Age themes in an interview in April 2009, saying they took samples from self-help and hypnotherapy cassettes. When asked to describe the album, Zammuto said "You're getting verrry sleepy."[3] On April 5, 2010, the duo announced that The Way Out would be released through Temporary Residence Limited in July.[22] On April 27 Pitchfork Media began streaming the track "Beautiful People",[23] which Zammuto described as "a three part christian harmony mixed with a sort of euro-disco-trash beat, an orchestra’s worth of sampled brass and lyrics about the twelfth root of two (my favorite irrational number), trigonometry and tangrams".[24] The album was released on July 20.
The Books played the ATP New York 2010 music festival in Monticello, New York, in September 2010 and are currently touring North American tour with the Black Heart Procession. The band have been chosen by Portishead & ATP to perform at the ATP I'll Be Your Mirror festival that they will curate in July 2011 at London's Alexandra Palace.[25]
The Books are commonly cited by critics to be of a genre of their own,.[26] Zammuto has described it as collage music.[18] Although they have said that their influences include Nirvana, David Bowie, Roxy Music as well as new wave and classical music, these do not show prominently in their music,[27] though Zammuto was directly influenced by electronic musicians Squarepusher, Aphex Twin and Boards of Canada.[28][29] The Books' music usually consists of acoustic instrumentation of folk melodies usually played on guitar, cello, banjo and more, combined with a diverse range of samples obtained from cassettes found in thrift stores,[18] which are digitally processed and edited.[5] They also rarely use a drum kit in recordings and performances, instead favouring inanimate objects like children's toys and filing cabinets, which are sampled and looped.[27] Some observers contend that their music is aleatoric,[30] but Zammuto has disagreed, saying the music is very tightly controlled.[18]
"The Books: Thought For Food". HBDirect.com