- Bishops Stortford – a small market town situated upon the river Stort in Hertfordshire! Gentlemen, with great satisfaction I have the pleasure to announce that you are the first winners of the TOP20 Polisz Czart that come from my own charming Hertfordshire. Congratulations from the radio presenter from St Albans. You are genuine evidence that you do not have to live in London to create a successful rock band. What is your secret?
Maciek Gazda |
- You met for the first time for the purpose of recording the acoustic
version of the song „Prison” by the band Error 24, which is Maciek’s and
Jonathan’s other band. However, quickly you got to like jamming together with
Lukasz who was engineering this recording and is also a drummer. Was it like a
lightning strike or did the decision about forming THC come over time?
Łukasz Makowiecki |
Jonathan: My decision to play with Maciek and Lukasz was
instinctive. We had an initial session that worked out so well that a decision
to pursue working together was inevitable.
Łukasz: I really liked the fact that Maciek and Jon are full of
ideas. It was an initial reason for us to meet up and try to find out whether
we’re able to spend time in a pleasant and productive way while confined to the
walls of a small room.
- Error 24’s „Syria” finished 4th, „Saport” was 2nd, and THC’s “Amnesia” climbed all the way to the top of PC chart. I sense that you approach the promotion of your music with all due seriousness. Have you got any specific plans about how to get through to an ever wider Polish and British audience?
Jonathan: If we continue to integrate our creative ideas, working decisively whenever we have the opportunities, I believe we have a chance to reach an appreciative audience.
Łukasz: We are at the moment finishing working on the material for
our EP, which will contain no more than 5-6 tracks. I think that if we play a
bunch of gigs presenting this material, it will all gain “force” and we should
be able to record a proper LP.
- The abbreviation THC is associated with tetrahydrocannabinol – the
psychoactive substance in cannabis. Does the name of your band have anything to
do with this association or is it truly only about Transparent Human Creatures?
Similar questions were posed about a once charming song by the Beatles – “Lucy
in the Sky with Diamonds”.
Jonathan: What is cannabis?
Łukasz: Transparent Human Creatures – I reckon it makes you think. Finding a name wasn’t easy, we didn’t want to be associated straight away with a criminal activity. In fact THC is just an abbreviation. But maybe one has to look at the name more carefully ;).
- Transparent Human Creatures formed in June 2014. You only needed 5
months to conquer our chart. Do you feel that, despite your vast experience,
you have created the most important band in your lives?
Maciek: Is it the most important? Time will show. We are comfortable working with each other and this, I hope, is a good sign. I think that being in a band is a lot more than just playing music. Although we all have our private lives to attend to, we meet not only during the practice sessions. We feel good around each other, and this is reflected in the emotional side of our music.
Jonathan: I wouldn't say I have vast experience but THC certainly
feels as though it could have future prospects right now.
Łukasz: Taking into the account the experience and time I’ve gone through, I could compare it to riding a bicycle. We know how to do it because we’ve already been riding real fast at some point. But… with forming this band, it all seemed like I had to learn to walk again. I found it to be an incredible re-discovery. At the same time the experience gathered allows you to quickly go from the place where you treat it as a way of escaping the daily grind to it becoming the most important project on which you focus your entire attention.
- Jonathan first started to play guitar aged 9 and Maciek was 12. Who
would you say you owe such a quick start in music to? How is the awareness of
playing rock music being conceived at such young age?
Maciek: I was watching some of my older mates playing blues while they
were sitting on park benches and drinking the famous cheap wine “LaPatik”, then
returning home and trying to copy anything I heard and remembered. I got some
help from my dad who was great at playing country music, but unfortunately his
ability to teach guitar wasn’t that good :-). However one of my friend’s dads
kept playing us the records of Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd. To this day I
remember Zeppelin’s second album or Floyd’s “Dark Side of the Moon” spinning on
the player.
Jonathan: My dad playing classical guitar forms some of my earliest
memories but my propensity for playing rock music is just a persistent
repercussion of an adolescent phase.
- Jon, you started with the classical guitar. Bass has become a feature
slightly later. How many instruments can you play and why has bass become the
first choice? Who is in your opinion the perfect bass player?
Jonathan: My transition to bass guitar came from necessity; it's
easy to find an abundance of guitarists. I appreciate the apparent simplicity
but subtle ingenuity of a well-integrated bass line. I still play classical
guitar for composition and some piano also. I would strive to play bass with
the technical expertise of John Myung.
- Have you been aware of your ability to sing, or is THC the first band where you believed in yourself fully as a singer?
Jonathan: I have always been aware that I enjoyed singing, even at
my first school, though I'd never have admitted it, but I can't say I have ever
believed in my ability as a front man.
- Not so long ago, one Englishman joked to me at one party, that the
greatness of British Rock is largely rooted in the miserable, rainy weather.
Would you agree that weather-related lack of motivation to leave the house
could have been the reason behind extensive practicing that fired to the top
all the brilliant British musicians such as Eric Clapton, Peter Green, John
Mayall, Mick Taylor, Jon Lord, Jack Bruce, Brian May, Roger Glover, Robert
Plant and many, many others? What in your opinion is behind the British Rock
phenomenon?
Jonathan Eynon |
- What caused your exile to the UK?
Maciek: Better future for my children, adventure and the need to
„breathe”. There were many reasons but most of them have no meaning now. I’ve
been living in the UK for three years now and I’m feeling great here.
Łukasz: I’ve always struggled to stay put. The need for change, a challenge, new possibilities and experiences, studying… Should everything go to plan, in 2015 I will graduate from The Institute of Contemporary Music in Cambridge.
- Fingers crossed then. You came to the world during the 80s rock
revolution. When Grunge music was being born you were about 10 years old. Your
adventure with music started in the year 2000. What musical influences of yours
could you name and why did you choose drums?
Łukasz: When I was 15 years old, I think completely by accident, I
found myself in a practice session of one of few rock bands using the room in
our local Cultural Centre. The impact of it was so huge, that I signed up for
lessons in there the next day. I used to spend whole days there listening to
music and trying to play drums with tracks played on a big HI-FI unit. Back
then I was inspired by the drummers of my favourite bands: Zbyszek Kraszewski
(a renowned polish rock drummer [edit.]), Lars Ulrich, David Silveria… mainly
rock.
- Your former band Quqa isn’t doing at all bad on our chart. Previously they finished 44th, and most recently 29th. You also worked with the group Carrion, who finished 16th. Is the current success with THC a fruit of experience that you gained with these other bands? What other projects have you been involved with and who was most instrumental in helping you to believe in yourself?
Łukasz: I reckon that to keep up the development, the musician
cannot limit himself to one genre or one band. The most important part of it is
to extend your reach and view, as well as pushing yourself further and harder.
It is thanks to playing various genres with many musicians – best if they’re
better than you – that you achieve the greatest growth. What I see contributing
to THC myself the most is the sum of all these experiences from the previous
bands. If there was one person I could thank today, it would be Darek
Piwowarczyk, an incredible musician, drummer, a man with an outstanding talent,
who helped me believe in my own abilities.
- How did you acquire the difficult skill of sound engineering?
Łukasz: In a very natural way, apart from playing drums, after a
while I got interested in the matter of creating, composing and recording. When
for the first time I recorded the drums with Carrion in a professional studio,
I had a chance to have a peak at the work of the engineer and producer Marcin
Limek. I liked it to the point that I decided to gather some knowledge and get
some practice. Through working with some local bands I gained my first
experience, while recording their demo records. Then it was the live work
during gigs of bands such as Carrion and Closterkeller.
- Maciek, I remember well the moment when you appeared in my consciousness. You were asking about musicians looking for a band and it can easily be said, that you started from nothing. Soon you formed a couple of great bands that have always graced the top of our chart. Where did you gain these solid music foundations? It can be heard that you draw your inspiration from the best and you create those juicy rock compositions with a heavy dose of psychedelic progression. Where have this ability and, more importantly, the necessary imagination come from? Who’s your inspiration?
- Maciek, I remember well the moment when you appeared in my consciousness. You were asking about musicians looking for a band and it can easily be said, that you started from nothing. Soon you formed a couple of great bands that have always graced the top of our chart. Where did you gain these solid music foundations? It can be heard that you draw your inspiration from the best and you create those juicy rock compositions with a heavy dose of psychedelic progression. Where have this ability and, more importantly, the necessary imagination come from? Who’s your inspiration?
- On the poster advertising the gig in Half Moon, that will take place
on December the 13th, both your bands are listed. It will surely be a great
opportunity to celebrate the Polisz Czart victory. How do you go about playing
in two bands at the same time? What is the future of Error 24 and THC?
Maciek: A little correction here: the gig on the 13th of December
is only played by Error 24 with our friend Ryan Thwaits. With “Error” I think
we would like to take a break. We have however been invited to play quite a big
festival Stortfest, taking place in May next year. It would be unreasonable not
to take the opportunity to play such a big event. We keep in touch with the
guys from “Error” and we do not rule out any movements. However, now all our
energy and time goes into THC.
Three quarters of Error 24 |
Maciek: It was a really great time and we had a lot of fun working
on this kind of gear. Personally I was disappointed with the final result. We
recorded four tracks and with hindsight I can see we weren’t ready for this.
But the atmosphere was top notch and we’ve learned a lot. Are we planning to
record there again? You never know. Out of two methods of recording that I got
to know recently, I chose Lukasz :). It’s more precise. But as I said, it
could’ve been different if at the time we knew for sure what we wanted to
record.
- On April the 25th, together with Bright Color Vision, as Error 24 you played
in London before Carrion, on May 18th you took part in the concert near
Battersea, on July the 31st Error 24 played in Windsor. On September the 30th
on “home ground”, alongside Bright Color Vision and Error 24 in Half Moon Pub
in Bishops Stortford, the THC had its debut. On October the 24th both bands
played together again in Harlow. In comparison to other bands you gig quite a
lot. Which of these performances you remember the best and what are your plans
for the nearest future in terms of gigs?
Maciek: I have this memory in my mind, of us playing an acoustic
set in Battersea. Rafal Wrona, the basist from Gabinet Looster, sat with us
next to the stage and sang along to “Dream”. But I think my fondest memory will
have to be of the Half Moon where Error 24, according to those present, “lifted
the roof”.
We and the audience, all had a great time, but Error 24 played their first gig after a year of hard work in practice sessions. It helped us to avoid many (though not all) mistakes made by the bands that start playing their first gigs. I think that with THC we are now finishing off the material that we start preparing for the live shows. Our practices have become endless musical orgasms :-). We love playing live and we will do this as often as possible.
We and the audience, all had a great time, but Error 24 played their first gig after a year of hard work in practice sessions. It helped us to avoid many (though not all) mistakes made by the bands that start playing their first gigs. I think that with THC we are now finishing off the material that we start preparing for the live shows. Our practices have become endless musical orgasms :-). We love playing live and we will do this as often as possible.
Łukasz: As soon as we’re done working on our EP we’ll try to play
live as often as possible to promote this material. Maybe a joint tour with our
friends from BCV? Who knows?
- I’ve noticed you have a good rapport with Bright Color Vision. What
is it about them that causes you to draw to each other.
Maciek: They are amazing live and on top of that they are great to
be around and talk to. I really think that it is important what people really
are like. It seems we have a good connection.
Bright Color Vision |
- Maciek, you started playing aged 12. You formed your first band in
Primary School. When you were 18 years old, together with the band “No Name”
you entered the Nationwide Youth Song Contest in Sandomierz, Poland, where you
received a special mention. Tell me more about your beginnings. You are one of
the best guitarists that I play on my show. Are you born with it or is it
acquired?
Maciek: Can you see me blushing ;-)? I reckon it’s a slight
exaggeration, but thank you Slawek. When it comes to my skill, I am very
critical. I lack some of the theoretical knowledge. I am entirely self-taught
and can’t do anything else.
- Yet again we see humility paired up with greatness :-). You can also
sing. I really liked one of Error 24’s songs featuring your vocal. Have you not
thought of doing few songs sung by you in Polish?
Maciek: I would really like to record the Error 24’s song „Dream”
in Polish. These are my lyrics and although Monika S. Jakubowska translated it
brilliantly, it has a stronger expression in Polish. I’ve never thought about singing;
just want to focus on playing guitar and writing lyrics.
- Who is Kasia Glowacka and how did she get in the band? Does it mean that
Jon will now stop singing for THC or will they share the vocal
responsibilities?
Maciek: We met Kasia through our mutual friend Jagoda. At the
moment we are trying to merge the two vocal forces of Kasia and Jon. It starts
to sound interesting. However, I cannot imagine a scenario where Jonathan stops
singing. It is not an option. Jon, on the other hand, doesn’t feel comfortable
as a frontman. Also, in the studio you can do anything, but to sing and play
his bass lines live, it becomes a right challenge. I wouldn’t want to simplify
the bass parts just so it can be played along with singing. It would reduce the
value of our music. Because we are a three-piece live, we all have to work hard
to match our studio recordings. But as I’ve already said, Jonathan’s voice is
THC’s signature.
Łukasz: At the start we didn’t think that we’ll need someone else.
It was while we were working on our material that we felt like it would be
worth to try and enrich our sound. Here instead of an extra guitar we went for
additional vocals. We are now trying to make it work together. What will be the
final result? We shall soon find out.
- Is there something that you would like to get across to your fans
during this interview? What else do they need to know about Transparent Human
Creatures?
Maciek: Thank you for being there. We would wish for you, while you
listen to our music, to feel what we feel when we’re playing it. :-)
Transparent Human Creatures:
Jonathan Eynon - bass, voc
Maciek Gazda - guitar
Łukasz Makowiecki - drums
author: Sławek Orwat
Łukasz and Maciek speech and all the questions translation:
Mick ChwedziakMick Chwedziak
He is a singer songwriter from Wroclaw, Poland, living in London. His music sits somewhere between blues and folk-rock with a hint of country. For sometime Mick has been exploring his other passion and has become a co-writer for the Music Journey blog, reviewing music releases.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umLUFJMjHOw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSGIiEvyE_k
Maciek Gazda - guitar
Łukasz Makowiecki - drums
author: Sławek Orwat
Łukasz and Maciek speech and all the questions translation:
Mick ChwedziakMick Chwedziak
He is a singer songwriter from Wroclaw, Poland, living in London. His music sits somewhere between blues and folk-rock with a hint of country. For sometime Mick has been exploring his other passion and has become a co-writer for the Music Journey blog, reviewing music releases.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umLUFJMjHOw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSGIiEvyE_k
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