Little White Earbuds Interviews Osborne
Artistic curiosity is a volatile force which can lead to stunning new sounds or, more often, regrettable messes. But to get to the former, artists need the courage to endure the inevitable latter and soldier on. Todd Osborn is fully equipped with both, both in his personal life as a veritable Mr. Fixit and under the musical aliases Osborne, Soundmurderer, Superstructure and TNT (with Tadd Mullinix). So when he’s not busy pulling apart an airplane engine or editing his music software, Osborn dives into writing whatever kind of electronic music fits his fancy. His self-titled debut album as Osborne gathers a mix deep house, electro, techno and electronica tunes while maintaining an unlikely coherence that assures listeners that his curiosity is a well needing to be tapped. Todd was kind enough to be interviewed twice to discuss retro instincts, the interaction between his musical personalities and his well documented inquisitiveness. (interview by Steve Mizek) Did you listen to electronic music before you started producing it? Oh yeah, of course. I’ve been buying all sorts of records since I was in pre-school. Actually my dad’s copy of “The Plastic Cow Goes Mooooooog…” was probably the first music I heard that I thought was entirely electronic. I remember thinking, “This is really awful… and really interesting,” haha. Tell me a little bit about a few electronic records you loved which convinced you to try it for yourself and why those records specifically. How has your growing up in Michigan impacted your sound at all? I understand you built the software you used to record the Osborne album. Tell me how it’s different and why you chose to that instead of using Ableton or Logic or something else along those lines. Do you think the democratization of producing through Ableton is a positive or negative thing? Definitely positive. If someone has as idea they want to get out and Ableton (or any other program) helps them express that then more power to them. The press sheet that came with your album really played up all the new stuff you’ve learned to build and do. Why do you find yourself so drawn to building and learning about new things? I get easily bored with everything, whether it’s making music in different styles — I don’t want to make the same 4×4 song over and over. If you’re into mechanical stuff… I don’t know, it doesn’t apply to everyone, but if you’re into motorcycles and dirt bikes with two stroke engines you can apply that to airplanes and their engines. Being a mechanic, you’re interest in how things work and you become interested in how a variety of things work. I’ve had good opportunities and friends that are into… I have a friend who’s a commercial airline pilot, so I’ve had a chance to be around those engines. I have friends that are bigger electronic music stars than me, and I help them with their gear that I would otherwise never have a chance to touch. Before hearing your album I sort of presumed it was going to be more deep house-oriented, based on the singles I’d heard previously. Instead it’s stylistically all over the place. Tell me about how you arrived at such a diverse sounding album.
With an album that diverse I was curious, who are some of your musical heroes? Do your Soundmurderer instincts impact your Osborne sound? Yeah a lot, I think… and not usually in a good way if you’re the listener. Because I’m used to cutting up drum breaks pretty intricately and when it comes to doing something like a house track I start making the melodies intricate and dense and more often than not it’s just way too much and doesn’t work well for the tracks. Just like painting, there needs to be some negative space there. I really liked your collaboration with Ed DMX. Have you known him for a while? Tell me about your relationship with him. It seems techno/house producers are feeling rather introspective lately, revisiting past themes and offering their own take. You do a bit of that yourself on the album. Why do you think that’s where we’re at right now? What do you think it would take to move things forward? What can we expect from you over the next year’s time? |
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its good to see this guy getting some love, for my money the best producer on Ghostly/Spectral. he just makes good tunes, that is all that matters!
That’s the first tnt interview I think I’ve seen. Thanks, it’s a good one. Special artist, special label.
[...] ever interesting Little White Earbuds blog did an interview with the man. Good reading. Check it out. And check the man’s [...]
He really has a way with gear…
I like the sound card he made…