Press- Interviews
Risky Business
By Jared Story
(originally appeared in Uptown Magazine on May 14, 2009)
In an age of
disposable digital downloads, Ryan Settee doesn't really
fit in. The 30-year-old local musician is the brains behind High Watt
Electrocutions, a psychedelic mind-trip that demands a good set of
headphones and a pair of dedicated ears.
"I like
well-produced albums, albums that flow well and have a bunch of
different gears to shift, too," Settee says. "It's not just one thing
all the time. That's something I think is going down the tubes
nowadays. It's almost reverted back to 1955 to '65 when you have a lot
of singles. The single often sells the album, but now you often don't
really have an album to sell, if people even get beyond the singles.
With iPods, people are hearing it but they're not really listening to
it. There's a difference between hearing it and listening to it. Every
way is right, but I fear a musical world where bands don't take risks
on recordings."
HWE recently released Desert Opuses, an album
based around a Middle Eastern concept. Lyrically, this notion might be
lost on the listener as Settee keeps his vocals a bit buried in the
mix, but the music definitely keeps the mood.
"I usually
write the music first and then I try to figure out what exactly it's
trying to say," he says. "That's why some of the music stays
instrumental, because I think it kind of says it all in that way. I
like the power of mood. You don't always need lyrics. That's something
I want to convey.
"I think there is a paranoid sort of terror
vibe to it. It kind of sounds like the soundtrack to people building
pyramids. It has a creepy quality. If I walked through a tomb or
something like that, I'd be pretty freaked out, so I guess it sounds
like a soundtrack to that."
Mastered by John Golden (The
Melvins, Sonic Youth, Primus) and pressed on translucent gold 140 gram
vinyl (as a well as CD) Desert Opuses is Settee's second album. In
2007, HWE released Night Songs, an epic
Sabbath-meets-Stooges-meets-Spacemen 3 stoner-rock romp. While Desert
Opuses is shorter than its predecessor, it's definitely as
unconventional.
"I wish more bands would take gigantic
risks," Settee says. "I think many bands are playing it safe because
they're hoping to get heard by some record exec instead of expanding on
an idea and saying, 'If this is going to go under, we might as well
captain the ship and drive it into the ground right.'
"If (Desert Opuses') downfall is it's too weird, its upside is you're
getting 100% non-commercial vision."