Moon Wiring Club
A Spare Tabby At The Cat's Wedding
[Gecophonic,2010]
"One thing I've always wanted for my music is for it to appeal to  children," says Ian Hodgson of Moon Wiring Club. "An ideal listening  situation would be a family car journey. I think children would like all  the voices and oddness. If you present kids with fun, spooky electronic music, then they might grow up wanting to make it themselves..."
Moon Wiring Club - Electronic music, Art Deco, and the England of teashops, stately homes,  ruined buildings and weird magic. Not forgetting computer-games music, a  massive influence. 
Brooks and Hodgson originally met through MySpace. They rapidly  discovered that they were "probably variations of the same person",  according to Hodgson, with a shared passion for vintage 70s and 80s TV  (not just the programmes but their incidental music and theme tunes).  The friendship soon became an alliance. Brooks has done the mastering  for all four Moon Wiring Club albums, including the brand new and  brilliant A Spare Tabby at the Cat's Wedding. Hodgson, in turn, has done  the artwork for Café Kaput. A full-blown collaboration between Moon  Wiring Club and the Advisory Circle is in the pipeline. 
The pair  are chalk and cheese, though, when it comes to the way they operate  musically. A skilled multi-instrumentalist whose music is "98%  hand-played", Brooks makes little use of sampling or computer software.  The Advisory Circle's 2006 debut EP Mind How You Go (reissued this year  by Ghost Box in expanded, vinyl-only form) and 2008's much-acclaimed  Other Channels reveals Brooks to be one of the contemporary scene's  great melodists, with a gift for plush, intricate arrangements.  Hodgson's approach, in contrast, is much more hip-hop raw. Entirely  sample-based, Moon Wiring Club is assembled using astonishingly  rudimentary technology: a PlayStation 2 and "a second-hand copy of MTV Music Generator 2 from 2001". 
Hodgson  turned to this crude set-up after struggling with software typically  used to make electronic dance music. Because he's a longtime gamer,  Hodgson found using a joypad to make music "much faster and more  enjoyable" than clicking a mouse. But it still took him a while to work  out how to get good results out of a PlayStation 2. "After months of  tinkering, I discovered that it's good at sequencing short repeated  phrases." Instead of looping breakbeats, Hodgson builds up rhythm  patterns from single drum hits. Then he'll weave in sinuous and sinister  basslines that are often coated in a dank layer of echo and delay.  "I'll place the bass melody around the rhythm in a very 'stereo' way. I  tend to see it all in my head as a 'cat's cradle'. Then if you add delay  to the bass and time it right you get extra little melodies inside this  structure. They sort of bounce and react with each other. Add melody  and atmosphere to it and you get another interlocking structure –  slightly organic, soggy, bouncy and knackered."
Moon Wiring Club often resembles trip-hop if its "vibe" was sourced  not in obscure funk and jazz-fusion records but from the incidental  music to The Prisoner, Doctor Who and The Flumps. Vocal samples are a  huge part of Moon Wiring Club. Always spoken not sung, and always  British in origin, they're derived largely from videos and DVDs of  bygone UK television series such as Casting the Runes, Raffles and Ace  of Wands. A scholar of "vintage telly", Hodgson can discourse at  persuasive length about the superiority of British theatrical-turned-TV  thesps such as Julian Glover and Jan Francis over American actors like  Harrison Ford. He recently dedicated a podcast mix to 70s voiceover deity and Quiller star Michael Jayston.   
Moon  Wiring Club originally evolved out of what was intended to be "a  peculiar children's book", Strange Reports from a Northern Village."  That project got stalled but it did spawn the Blank Workshop website,  based on an imaginary town called Clinksell, which has its own brand of  confectionery, Scrumptyton Sweets, and a line of  fantasy fiction, Moontime Books.  The children's book project lives on also in the distinctive graphic  look that Hodgson, a former fine art student, wraps around the Moon  Wiring releases, drawing on influences including Biba's 20s-into-70s  glamour, the strange exquisiteness of Arthur Rackham's illustrations,  and Victorian fairy painters such as Richard Dadd. Blank Workshop and  Moon Wiring Club is where all of Hodgson's enthusiasms and obsessions  converge: "Electronic music, Art Deco, and the England of teashops,  stately homes, ruined buildings and weird magic." Not forgetting  computer-games music, a massive influence. "There is something about  the forced repetition that makes you remember the tunes in a unique  way," Hodgson says, adding that in some ways "Moon Wiring Club is meant  to be Edwardian computer-game music."
Simon Raynolds
The Guardian
Dec 7, 2010
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