James Murphy schreibt auf seiner Website über die geplante Reunion, die Festivalauftritte und eine neue Platte von LCD Soundsystem unter der Überschrift Let's just start this things finally with some clarity Folgendes:
"i write songs all the time. sometimes they’re just weird songs i
sing while changing a baby, or songs about annoying things that i sing
to myself, or to friends while sitting at a bar, or about christmas, or
new york. sometimes these songs live in my head for years and have
verses upon verses added to them, almost infinitely. sometimes they’re
just ghosts of ideas, and sometimes they’re fully-formed things which
float in front of me, seeming like they’d be easy to make flesh, only to
fight furiously as soon as i try to pin them down in any way. some of
them I make with friends in a room with instrument things. only a tiny
fraction of these ever become Songs; get recorded, feel like something
that should be shared. those ones, i write the title or some lyrics of
down on a page in a little book i carry around. or i sing a bit of them
into a tape recorder (or now a phone, I guess). i’ve been doing this
since i was a kid.
early in 2015, i realized i had more of those than i’d ever had in my
life. more of them than when i went in to make any LCD record, or when
i recorded tapes upon tapes of terrible things in high school. just
loads of them, and i found myself a little perplexed. if i record them,
what do i do with them? maybe I shouldn’t record them at all? i
considered that, which was in a way the easiest option, but it also
seemed like a weird and arbitrary (and sort of cowardly) cop-out. but
to record them—well then, suddenly i have, what—a record?
so i asked pat and nancy to come over to my apartment for coffee and
told them: “i’m going to record some music. should i make up a band
name, or make a “james murphy” record, or should it be LCD?” we all
thought a good amount about it. we have had lives for the past 5 years,
which has been nice, and those guys have made amazing music with Museum
Of Love, the Juan MacLean, and all sorts of other things. i’d managed
to do a bunch of fun, dumb stuff which mostly annoyed people who were
into the band because, well, subway turnstiles and a coffee aren’t LCD,
basically.
at any rate, they both said “let’s make an LCD record”. you see, if
they didn’t want to, which i’d half assumed, then there’s no such thing
as LCD. imagine this: me making a record, calling it LCD, and then you
go to the show and there’s just some guy playing drums over there, or
some other person playing keyboards. horrifying. then imagine this: i
make a “james murphy” record, or, i don’t know, an “everteen” record, or
whatever made-up name i come up with, and there’s pat playing drums,
and nancy. maybe al isn’t too busy with hot chip so he comes to play.
what the fuck is that? here were our choices: 1. make music with your
friends and call it something else, which seems hilarious (everteen) or
egomaniacal to the point of sociopathic (james murphy solo record). 2.
make music, but WILLFULLY EXCLUDE your friends because of the horrors in
option 1. 3. make an LCD record with your friends, who want to make
said record, and deal with whatever fall-out together. 4. don’t make
music, to avoid the horrors of all of the above. 5. make music and,
like, hide it somewhere.
we decided, clearly, on option 3, and i was fully prepared for a certain
amount of “oh fuck that guy” over-it stuff—in fact welcomed it. it’s
strangely energizing to have people who don’t make music themselves take
potshots at you from the internet. and there’s always been a current
of O.F.T.G. with me (i’m saying me and not us because, let’s be honest…
no one hates anyone else in LCD, partially because they’re unhateable,
and also because they have the wisdom to not shoot their mouths off
nearly as much), and that’s just fine. i’m pretty used to it, and find
it relatively funny.
but in my naiveté i hadn’t seen one thing coming:
there are people who don’t hate us at all, in fact who feel very
attached to the band, and have put a lot of themselves into their care
of us, who feel betrayed by us coming back and playing. who had
traveled for or tried to go to the MSG show, and who found it to be an
important moment for them, which now to them feels cheapened. i just
hadn’t considered that. i know—ridiculous on my part. i saw some
comments online a few days ago from people who felt that way, and it
blindsided me, and made me incredibly sad. i saw some other people
replying with stuff like “if that’s what you cared about, and you don’t
want them to play anymore, maybe you liked the band for pretty weird
reasons”, and it made me think. the truth is, while i get what the
replier is saying, i kind of side with the original complaint: if you
cared a lot about our band, and you put a lot of yourself into that
moment (or anything about us you chose), and you feel betrayed now, then
i completely understand that. it’s your right to define what you love
about a band, and it’s your right to decry their actions and words as
you see fit, because it’s you, frankly, who have done much of the work
to sustain that relationship, not the band. i was so clearly expecting
the cynical cries of foul, that i hadn’t seen the heartfelt complaint
coming. we’ve always talked about how we’d never betray anyone who
cares about us, but here we are now. given the chance again to make new
music with the people i care about, and who have given a big part of
their lives to doing this weird thing together, and who wanted to do it
again, i took it. and in doing so, i betrayed whoever feels betrayed by
that action. i by no means think that everyone who liked our band
feels bad right now. a lot of people who liked our band are very happy,
and we’ve been pretty blown away by the almost overwhelmingly positive
response. last night i sat with al and nancy in a weird italian bar and
we talked about how fucking awesome it was that so many people were
happy to have us back. but that doesn’t take away from those who feel
hurt. to you i have to say: i’m seriously sorry. the only thing we can
do now is get back into the studio and finish this record, and make it
as fucking good as we can possibly make it. it needs to be better than
anything we’ve done before, in my mind, because it won’t have the help
of being the first time. and we have to play better than we’ve ever
played, frankly. every show has to be better than the best show we’ve
played before for anyone to even say “well, that was good. i mean, not
as good as they used to be. but, you know. it was good.” we know all
that. which is healthy for us, because it means we go back to war, like
in the beginning. for us it was always war, but now it’s really with
ourselves. maybe we have a chance to make it right.
in other, more pedantic news: we’re not just playing coachella.
we’re playing all over. we’re not just having some reunion tour. we’re
releasing a record (sometime this year—still working on it, actually),
so this isn’t a victory lap or anything, which wouldn’t be of much
interest to us. this is just the bus full of substitute teachers back
from their coffee break with new music and the same weird gear—or as
much of it as we still have (it’s very interesting to re-buy the same
gear, and in some cases buy gear BACK from people you sold it to), and
rambling around trying to be louder than everyone else. thank fuck we
were never skinny and young. or at least i wasn’t. that always happens
with bands… they aren’t fat when they come back, typically, just, i
don’t know, thicker. i was lucky to start this band kind of fat and
old, so there’s no, like “look how YOUNG they were!” shit to even find
on the internet. i mean, we were younger and everything, but we weren’t
young, if you know what i mean.
one last note: thank you to everyone who has been absurdly kind to us
over the past 14 (!) years. if you have moved on and don’t like us
anymore, that’s obviously ok, too. but please, if we ever gave you any
joy, just find something new and good that blows you away, and post it
on our facebook page or something with, like, “hey fuck you guys! this
is the REAL shit!” so we can hear new good stuff. that would be the
best for all of us."
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