RETRIBUTION GOSPEL CHOIR

Shadow steals the light








Retribution Gospel Choir, the rock band formed by Alan Sparhawk (guitar, vocals, sampler), Steve Garrington (bass), both of whom are also in the band Low, and Eric Pollard (drums, vocals), is back with 3, new album featuring just two songs which continue the spirit of dense and high-energy of classic rock-infused riffage compositions and performances, in contrast with the more minimalist sound of Low. Retribution Gospel Choir debuted in 2005 as primarily a live enterprise spearheaded by Low's Alan Sparhawk and Mark Kozelek. From their eponymous debut album released in 2008, with Kozelek no longer as member of the group but as producer, which opened with They knew you well, the sound of Retribution Gospel Choir has been growing up and achieving a specific personality beyond the Low project. Now they are on tour presenting the recent 3 featuring the songs Can’t Walk Out and Seven and we’ve had the chance to interview Alan Sparhawk.

From where and why can’t you walk out?

From here. I've come too far to turn back.

Why a retribution and for who?

Once the deed has been done, the only way to pay back is retribution.  You can't return it back to how it was before. Retribution for ourselves - it's the only hope for the enlightened.

Third album, how do you see your artistic evolution?

It has taken this long for our recordings to reflect what happens on stage.  We thought we were playing songs, but we are playing the wind.

Your debut album opened with They knew you well. Do you aspire to be well known or do you prefer mystery?

Everyone wants to be loved and understood, but they want to be loved more than understood.

Your sound creates always dense and dark atmospheres. Hopeless minds?

No, not hopeless. Violent and afraid, but not hopeless.

Why did you shout Revolution! in your 2012 EP?

I was inspired by the riots in Barcelona a couple years back - young people still go into the streets, put their bodies up as proof - people who face the impossible monolith.

In the latest album features just two songs, could you tell us about its creation process?

They started as simple ideas.  We had a series of shows one month where we worked on the songs.  Each night, the songs would get longer and longer, the air stood still.

In Seven you sing Look at your shadow you feel like an animal. This shadow is the burden of the past?

The shadow reminds you that your very existence affects the world around you - even your shadow steals the light and alters the course of time. Your shadow is the other you.

Nels Cline plays guitar in this one, and the result is magnificent. How it was the experience?

Wilco played in our city one day - we called Nels and kidnapped him after soundcheck.  He plugged in and we started playing the song all together in the room.  One hour later, we ended the song and brought Nels back to his show.  The record is an edit of the first 25 minutes of the one hour-long take.  there's a lot of great stuff later in the song, but the first-half "learning curve" seemed the most interesting, so that's what you hear on the record.

What about the fourth?

I have a few new songs but they are too controversial to record.  We will see.

And we will wait for it.









An interview by Juan Carlos Romero
Photo courtesy of Retribution Gospel Choir
Retribution Gospel Choir website www.retributiongospelchoir.com
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