“Chameleon,” from the Maps album
Turning the Mind, begins with flittering
synths and syrupy layers of
Roland Juno-G melodies, a common
feature of James Chapman’s airy,
escapist music. But the words sung by
Chapman—those of Marsha M. Linehan,
a professor and proponent of a
cognitive therapy system called Mindfulness—
are about embracing, not
ignoring reality. The album’s title
came from a book about the practice,
which helped him cope with a “spot
of trouble with certain mental states.”
That self-reliant slant could be a
metaphor for the Northhampton producer’s
current style, which takes his
well-regarded bedroom-production
aesthetic and adds a layer of polish.
While his previous work earned comparisons
to Spiritualized and My
Bloody Valentine, as well as a Mercury
Music Prize nomination (for debut We
Can Create), he’s lately stepped away
from shoegazer bands and more
toward techno, blending ribbons of
synthesizers (and no guitars) with
driving rhythms.
“To be honest, I lost touch with the
whole band thing,” he says. “I wanted
to make an upbeat album, though
some of it is quite dark. This album is
more to the point where the first one
was more abstract, especially lyrically.”
Tim Holmes, half of the ever-shifting
Death in Vegas duo and a
producer for acts like the Chemical
Brothers, was an important collaborator
on Turning the Mind [Mute], helping
to streamline Chapman’s original
bedroom demos with old analog gear
in his Contino Rooms studio. Chapman
isn’t one for unnecessary gear or
self-aggrandizement; when he works
at home in Northampton, he uses a
Yamaha SU10 sampler and records his
work to a Yamaha AW16G 16-track
hard-disk recorder, as he has for most
of his career. He freely admits he loves
his Elektron Machinedrum SPS-1 drum
machine because the operators on
the helpline were quite useful and
professional.
“I have an OCD way of doing things,
and I’m not going to change,” he says.
“If you get into music, start with something
like a microKorg and just find
your own path. Don’t be worried if it’s
not what everyone else is doing.”
Many of the synthesizer melodies
on the album were created on the
Roland Juno-G and the Yamaha RM1x
sequence remixer, with a few extra
layers originating on Holmes’ old analog
gear, such as the Korg MS-20 and
Roland SH-101. The signature Maps
sound involves detuning synths, introducing
an extreme right and left pan,
and raising and lowering the pitch,
respectively. It’s a simple way to get a
dark, eerie sound that’s not out-oftune
or clashing, according to Chapman,
which was accessible with his
limited setup. Bass lines get the same
technique, along with a bit of tremolo
to give an extra psychedelic feeling.
The driving “Everything is Shattering,”
a “wave of euphoric-ness,” contains
one such massive synth line set
off by 12 layered tracks of vocals
recorded with a radio-mic effect on an
SM57 microphone. While Holmes spent
hours cutting and comping layers of
Chapman’s vocals, they went with the
original demo takes because they had
a vibe that wasn’t captured in the studio.
Chapman thought he hit on something
and simply couldn’t stop going
back and adding extra harmonies.
“I wanted a song like ‘Love Will
Tear Us Apart’ [by Joy Division],
which is impossible to do since it’s
one of the greatest songs of all time,”
says Chapman. “By the end, it had
turned into a Beach Boys fest. So we
got Joy Division meets the Beach
Boys, with a bit of [Norwegian band]
a-ha as well.”
The aggressive percussion on the
track was the result of heavy compression
at Holmes studio via a TLA Stereo
Valve compressor and Empirical Labs
Distressor EL-8M Mono Compressor.
The vintage gear imparted a tight,
crispy crunch. Another song, “Love Will
Come,” added Roland TR-909 beats for
an extra-dry thump and used the
Machinedrum to stretch and tweak
bass-drum beats into something
more melodic.
Chapman prefers deep cymbal
sounds, a preference inspired by the
Chemical Brother’s “Dig Your Own
Hole.” He often detunes cymbals and
adds decay to add lots of depth and
give it a fat sound. Snare patterns get
additional clave or clap sounds
slightly ahead of the snare hit, which
results in a satisfying thwack that
sounds like a group of claps or claves.
While Chapman had to forfeit his
status as purely a bedroom producer
after his demo tracks were mixed on
Logic in the studio of a seasoned pro,
Chapman prefers the shopworn
sounds of standby gear like his
Yamaha AW16G (“That’s how Maps’
sound is made,” he says).
“Don’t be pressured into the crap
about buying the newest, greatest
piece of equipment,” he says. “If you
find something in the dumpster, take it
home, and if you like the sound it
makes, make it your instrument.”