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Interview: Optiganally Yours

Sunday, June 29th, 2008
Pea HixPea Hix (a.k.a. Dan “Pea” Hicks) is the world’s foremost authority on Optigans.
What’s an Optigan? Glad you asked.
While Pea will explain it better than I ever could, the short version is this: The Optigan was kind of like a poor man’s Mellotron, intended for groovy early ’70s family room sing-alongs. Pea began collecting Optigans when nobody cared what they were, and when their eBay prices commanded virtually nothing (if anybody bothered to list them in the first place). He created not only the definitive web site on Optigans — optigan.com — but perhaps one of the most entertaining, well-written web sites dedicated to a specific musical instrument.
The story of his quest for Optigan information goes deep, culminating with his legal ownership of the Optigan master tapes and creating the definitive set of Optigan samples.
But wait, there’s more! He teamed up with singer/songwriter Rob Crow from Pinback to form the duo Optiganally Yours, featuring Pea’s Optigan stylings and Rob’s vocal and guitar work.
To date, Optiganally Yours have released only two albums: 1997’s Spotlight on Optiganally Yours and 2000’s Optiganally Yours Presents: Exclusively Talentmaker. Sure, there’s a couple tracks that are laugh-out-loud funny, like their brilliant reworking of Jimmy Webb’s Witchita Lineman, but both albums rise above being mere novelty music. It’s just plain great stuff to listen to, sometimes oddly touching but always full of solid pop songwriting hooks. And the most amazing thing is just how utterly… modern Optiganally Yours‘ music sounds. (To my ears, it sounds a bit like a lounged-up Beck.) Yet, at the core of their sound is a cheesy ’70s home organ from Mattel.
In this interview, Pea takes us on a multimedia tour of some of his gadgets, his other adventures in sound (like his Lucas & Friends project), and explains why the other half of Optiganally Yours just can’t keep his clothes on during a live show.
Jeff: Could you provide a bit of background on what the Optigan is, for those who haven’t visited your web site yet?
Pea: The Optigan (OPTIcal-orGAN) was kind of an adult toy chord organ that Mattel produced in the early ’70s. It’s brown, ugly, and not very interesting-looking. The reason why we love it so much is that it produces sound in a very unique way. Unlike most typical home organs of the time period, which produced sound electronically, the Optigan utilizes LP-sized celluloid discs, which are encoded with concentric rings of optical waveforms. These waveforms are the same thing as optical film soundtracks — except they’re bent into circles so that they can loop.
The important thing is that these soundtrack rings contain recordings of actual instruments and real musicians playing, say, a bossa nova pattern or whatever. So the Optigan was like an early analogue sampler, only you couldn’t record your own sounds on it — you could only play back the pre-recorded discs. Your left hand plays the chord buttons, which has the band, drum loops, sound effects, etc. Your right hand plays the melody on the keyboard, which also utilizes recorded sounds (Hammond B3 organs, etc.). The sound quality is very poor — think AM radio quality, at best. But that’s what makes it so cheesily haunting-sounding.
What’s in your home studio?
I actually have a lot less hardware now than I used to, as I tend to do most of my work on the computer these days. But I have a small collection of oddball instruments. My current fave is a Moog Sonic-VI, mostly because I just got it a couple days ago. It was a lucky Craigslist score — got it for about 1/3 of the usual price. What an amazing, weird synth!
Of course, I’ve got lots of Optigans — I don’t know how many, but at least eight. Then there’s the Optigan’s cousins: the Vako Orchestron and Chilton Talentmaker. I’ve only got one of each of those. I also have a Chamberlin Rhythmate, which is an early tape-loop drum machine:
Another early drum machine I have is a Wurlitzer Sideman, which was a totally tube-based monster made in the 1950s:
In the synthesizer dept, I’ve got a Sequential Pro-One…
…an Electro-Harmonix Mini-Synthesizer…
…a Yamaha CS01-II…
…a Casio CZ-101, an Ensoniq ESQ-1, a Kurzweil K2000, and a MicroKorg. Then there’s the Wurlitzer 200 Electric Piano I scored at AmVets for $20! Other than that, I’ve got loads of Casios and other toy keyboards.
How did the idea of Optiganally Yours come about?
When I got my first Optigan, I immediately had the idea that it’d be fun to do some sort of lounge act with a singer, just singing cover songs with the Optigan. Rob immediately volunteered to sing, but before we ever got around to working up any cover songs, we ended up writing four originals, all in one afternoon. We just made quickie four-track recordings of these, and realized that we had something good. So we kept writing more songs.
Rob came up with the band name, which I hated and I still hate, but it is what it is. I wanted to call the band “Mattellica.”
LOL! How did you and Rob wind up performing in Japan?
It was sort of a fluke. Rob’s in a successful indie-rock band called Pinback, and they were supposed to do a short tour of Japan a few years ago, but had to cancel at the last minute. Since they had already sold tons of tickets, a compromise was worked out, and it became sort of the “Rob Crow Variety Show” tour, which included a set by Optiganally Yours. It worked out well, because we had already released our second album on a Japanese label, and the Japanese are into stuff like what we do anyway, so we got a very enthusiastic reception there.
I asked Margo Guryan (who also has a fan base in Japan) why that culture appears to be very responsive to pop music. Do you have any idea why this is so?
Well, I’m not really sure — somebody has probably written their doctoral thesis in anthropology on it, though! I guess probably the question is whether this is a post-war phenomenon, or if it comes from deeper within Japanese culture. All I can say is that, in our case, whatever popularity we have in Japan comes from a mix of the pop music and the gadget factor, the gadget being the Optigan, of course.
What’s the deal with the live show? I saw the clip of “Spanish Flea” and Rob is virtually naked on stage! Is this a common thing? WARNING: This link to the video may not be entirely work-safe.
Yes, unfortunately. You kind of have to see the whole show — he has several costume changes (Ed. note: Here’s a concert photo, possibly not work-safe), more or less amounting to a gradual striptease over the course of the set. Believe me, it’s nowhere near as great as it sounds! Spanish Flea is the last song in our set, so he’s pretty close to naked at that point.
Could you describe the usual process you and Rob have when writing songs?
It’s pretty simple. I’ve never been much for writing melodic material — mostly I’m interested in chord progressions. So I usually come up with a chord progression and song structure, using Optigan sounds, and send it to Rob. If he likes it, he’ll write a melody and lyrics and record his parts over the top of it, sometimes adding guitar parts as well. Then he’ll send it back to me, and I’ll do keyboard overdubs and final production/mixing. We almost never work together apart from rehearsals and live shows.
How was the song “Held” written? Is there an autobiographical element in it?
Well, as far as the lyrics go, only Rob could answer you on that. Sometimes I don’t even know what lyrics he’s singing, or what they’re about. We wrote that song the same way we write most of our songs, as I already described.
Hmmm… I thought there might have been some sort of connection between the lyrics of that song and Optigan collecting! (”How come he’s not like any of them / I don’t know”)
Nah… Rob writes all the lyrics, usually off the top of his head, and he’d never probably never have any reason to write anything explicitly about the Optigan. I’m very conscious about not doing the whole Optigan “theme” to death — mostly we just stick to using those sounds. Apart from that, the songs can go anywhere. So, on the one hand, we’re in a closed loop sonically, but on the other hand, things are wide open thematically.
Can you provide an example of a crazy Optigan trick you’ve used on an Optiganally Yours song?
Well, funny you should mention that, because actually I tend to take a very purist sort of approach most of the time, and tend to shy away from “tricks.” I prefer to present the basic sound of the Optigan as it is, and work within its limitations.
The most simple/obvious “trick” you can do with an Optigan is to insert a disc upside-down, which results in the music playing backwards. We’ve never done this on any Optiganally Yours song because it’s kind of like saying, “Well, I like the Optigan, but it just doesn’t do enough, so we’re going to use every last little trick to get as many weird sounds out of it as possible.”
If I went down that road, the next thing I’d be saying is, “Well, I like the Optigan, but it just doesn’t do enough, so I’m going to send it through this phaser pedal and then add some delay and distortion…” But then you’d end up with something that sounds nothing like an Optigan, so why even use an Optigan in the first place?
Obviously, there’s something to be said for using whatever gear you have to arrive at whatever sound it is you’re ultimately looking for. But I guess my mind is just sort of wired in such a way as to think, “I want an Optigan on this recording, therefore the Optigan I record should sound like an Optigan.”
All that being said, something I have no qualms about at all is using other technology to bolster the sound of the Optigan and make it easier to present. To that end, I use the computer a lot, like recording the Optigan and making .wav files of loops and arranging songs in software like Sony’s Acid.
All musicians are “obsessed” with sound to a degree, but the Lucas & Friends album — beyond being an interesting sociological portrait — demonstrates an obsession with sound for its own sake. Where did your obsession with sound come from?
That’s hard to say. I do remember always being fascinated with tape recorders from a very early age, and my dad was a ham radio operator, so we always had electronic equipment and strange disembodied sounds in the house. But other than that, often I think my preoccupation with sound as a medium is more or less arbitrary. I could just as easily see myself having gotten involved with, say, assemblage sculpture or photography instead.
Although, I will say that I do tend to have a fascination with found objects in general. When it comes to writing music, I like to use found sounds because it’s just another way of collaborating with forces outside of my own mind. People collaborate artistically with all sorts of things: other people, folk traditions, drugs, chance processes, etc. I like to collborate with seredipity and found objects. In a way, the Optigan is sort of a meta-found-object, in that it’s really a cultural discard that contains all these faint messages-in-bottles in the form of fragments of long-forgotten musical recordings.
OptiganDo you feel you’ve exhausted the musical possibilities of the Optigan?
Well, there’s always more to explore, if only because we can always bring new musical ideas to the table, and interpret them using Optigan sounds. Within any closed system or palette, there’s an infinite amount of exploration you can do — it’s just a matter of getting the most out of your limitations. I personally find that much more liberating than being constantly faced with a much broader, general palette.
In other words, I don’t think I’d ever get any Optiganally Yours stuff done if I was constantly saying things like “Well, I like the Optigan sound on this, but could I make it even better if I added some Kurzweil K2000 to it?” I have a very hard time working that way, with too many options. I’d spend all my time considering the options, and never get around to doing any actual writing or recording.
Are you a Brian Eno fan? Your philosophy of working within specific limitations sounds a lot like what he might do.
I’m a casual fan — I only have a couple of his records. But every time I read an interview with him, I tend to find myself agreeing with a lot of points he brings up. I had an original Oblique Strategies deck several years ago, but I never actually used it for anything. I ended up selling it on eBay for like $400 or something.
What’s the status of the next Optiganally Yours album?
The third Optiganally Yours album, Optiganally Yours in Hi-Fi, has been a frustrating project. It’s been in the works literally for years. Rob and I just can’t seem to get our schedules together to finish it up. In terms of the songs, it’s about halfway finished, though we have plenty of song sketches from which the remaining songs will emerge.
For this album, we’re actually not using any Optigans at all. Rather, we’re building songs from loops taken directly from the Optigan master tapes, which were the original studio recordings of the musical material on the Optigan discs. Sonically, this album will be different than our others, in that it will be all studio-quality hi-fi, but the songwriting process is the same, so it will sound like Optiganally Yours in that respect.
Are there any other projects you’ve got in the works?
I always have a million things on the back burner. It just tends to take me forever to get around to finishing anything. As an example, I like to write chamber operas, and have had a few of them produced, but it’s expensive and requires lots of resources.
Woah — chamber operas? Did you study music composition?
Yeah, I have a degree in music from UCLA. It’s not worth much, though. I mostly just hung around the Ethnomusicology department, messing around with all the exotic instruments they had there. I wasn’t really in tune with most of my teachers.
Here’s an excerpt from a workshop production of my opera The World Is Round, which is a setting of a Gertrude Stein children’s book. You can find some more info about this piece at operazero.org.
I’ve also been working on a sort of Lucas & Friends opera, which basically means an opera made out of found sounds. I put together a sort of short “demo” version of that last summer, it’s just a matter of getting the resources together for a full-length production.
Any chance for an Optigan coffeetable book? Your Optigan site is so thoroughly entertaining that I’d almost rather have a hard copy of it than read it on a computer screen.
You know, I’ve had many people suggest such a thing over the years, and I guess I’m just not the guy to do it. I tend to be good at gathering raw materials and information, but not so good at editing and organizing it. That’s why the web is a nice medium for me — I don’t feel any pressure to “finish” something before I present it to the world. Things can always be works-in-progress. If I were to make an Optigan book, it would take me forever, because I’d get bogged down in the minutiae of making decisions about what to set in stone, etc.
What’s the best thing you’ve found at a garage sale?
Well, these days most of the good stuff I find goes on eBay. I have to make a living somehow. I have this loose policy that basically says that if I find something I like, and I paid, say, a buck for it, and it’s going for, say, $100.00 on eBay, I just ask myself: “If I saw that on a store shelf with a $100.00 tag on it, would I buy it?” And if the answer is “No,” I sell it on eBay. In other words, NOT selling it on eBay for $100.00 is financially indistinguishable from buying it for $100.00. I’m choosing the thing over the money.
So… that being said, I’ve found lots of valuable old hi-fi gear, vintage microphones, records (I had a Bob Dylan promo recently sell for over $4k — I paid a buck for it at a garage sale), and countless other things. I’ve been doing eBay for ten years, so there have been lots of great scores.
In terms of great garage sale scores that I’ve kept, I suppose I’d have to include my Chamberlin Rhythmate, alot of my Optigan stuff, some art, lots of weird records, things like that.
Ten things which inspire Pea Hix:
  • Serendipity
  • Purity
  • Sincerity
  • Flaws
  • Repetition
  • Organic structures
  • Landscapes
  • Velocity
  • Myth
  • Lydian mode
  • Optigan web site | Order Optiganally Yours CDs and Optigan sample CDs from Optigan.com | Optiganally Yours MySpace page | Lucas & Friends web site | Lucas & Friends MySpace page | Opera Zero | Pea Hix’s YouTube videos

    Interview: Mister Fusty

    Thursday, March 27th, 2008

    Mister Fusty is not your ordinary electronica. The brainchild of UK-based Rob Gibson, Mister Fusty pulls sounds reminicent of ’60s sunshine pop and wraps it in glowing electronic blips and bloops.

    There’s a distinctly British sensibility to quirky, bouncy instrumental tunes like “Saturday,” “Mavis Enderby,” and “Tiger Jones.” The music is often reminicent of a peaceful vacation in the English countryside… That is, if the countryside were overrun by robots.

    Mister Fusty’s 2007 full-length, Sparkly Darkly, consists of twelve ethereal, slightly funky tracks sounding much like what the title promises. Sprung, a new, freely downloadable EP, stretches the Mister Fusty sound in different, intriguing directions. In this interview, Rob reveals his creative process in crafting his electronic pop gems, plus makes a surprising admission.

    Jeff: Tell me a little about how you got started as a musician and how Mister Fusty came to be.

    Rob: I used to be a drummer, many years ago, in a band with friends. The reason I ended up as a drummer was purely because my friends roped me in because they couldn’t find anyone else! We were around for a few years and played a lot of gigs locally - then I relocated to Liverpool, so that was the end of my drumming career! I was actually a guitar player, so it was a bit frustrating being sat on the drums! For a brief period, I was rhythm guitar in a covers band, playing Hamburg-era Beatles rock ‘n roll. The band is still going, but as the rest of the band came from another part of the country, it was hard for me to rehearse, so I gave that up.

    Ever since I got a computer about nine or ten years ago I’d always sought out bits of music software, mainly playing around seeing what I could come up with. It was always a hobby and I rarely played my stuff to other people. It wasn’t until the software got better, and I got more adept at using it, that I started impressing other people I played the songs to. I wondered what to do with the stuff I was making. I started discovering sites like MySpace, where it was easy for people to hear my music, and then sites like CDBaby, which made it really straightforward to put your own music out — even if you weren’t on a label. So I decided to challenge myself and do a whole album, mostly just as an experiment to see how easy it could be and to see if I could actually do it.

    Where did the name Mister Fusty come from?

    It was a nickname given to me by my girlfriend once on a holiday in Prague, although I can’t quite remember why she called me that! It stuck anyway and it seemed a good name to go under. I didn’t want to put stuff out under my own name, mostly due to being a bit coy, but also Mister Fusty doesn’t have to be one individual, it could be (and may even be) a band also. My girlfriend Andrea can also claim the naming of both albums too. She’s good at that kind of thing!

    Is that Andrea as the telephone operator at the end of “Antimacassar”?

    Well spotted! Yes, I coersed her into that. I thought it’d be a funny and a typically British self-depreceating end to the album. All Mister Fusty is good for is telephone holding music!

    That made me chuckle out loud the first time I heard it, because I thought that’s what you were implying. So who comes up with the song titles?

    I do. It’s a bit tricky to come up with titles sometimes because, as there are no lyrics, you have nothing to refer to and I want to avoid titles like “bouncy song” or “slow groove” that describe what style they are!

    Usually I will spot something that I think makes a good name for a song. For example, I saw a poster that had all the different breeds of cattle in the UK on it and I saw one kind of sheep was called “Castlemilk Moorit,” so I thought that would make a great title. Similarly, “Perpetual Spinach” is a type of spinach we are growing in the garden. Often, places that I have been to or know crop up.

    A lot of the titles on “Honest Blundering” were village names from my home county of Lincolnshire, like “Silk Willoughby,” “Temple Bruer,” and the Heckington in “Flipping Heckington,” they are all great names and people are surprised they actually exist! “Unter Den Linden” is a main street of Berlin, a city I have visited a few times. So places are very much an inspiration for titles too.

    I listened to a couple mp3s from both the “Honest Blunderng” and “Sparkly Darkly” albums before ordering them and was intrigued with what I heard. However, I found that Mister Fusty is most enjoyable when listening to the albums the entire way through. Do you intentionally craft your music to work well as an album, or does it just turn out that way?

    I do have a think about what order the songs go in, like what makes a good opener, etc. Also, I try not to bunch up too many similar tempos together, but there’s no overall concept. I really like deciding what order the songs go in, it’s part of the fun of doing an album. With the second album, I spent more time on this and had several different versions and listened to them before I got the right one. I was also listening out for the way they sounded as well i.e. did they need a bit more mastering, etc.

    What’s in your studio?

    I use FL Studio and Adobe Audition. Most of the music is made and composed using FL Studio (plus external samples and VST plug-ins are used with it) and I put it all together (and sometimes add guitar/bass) using Audition.

    I have a Tanglewood Memphis electric guitar, a Crafter acoustic guitar, and a Yamaha bass. Oh, and a computer, of course.

    Is there any gear you’ve got your eye on?

    I’d love a proper microphone — a really good one — and I’d love a vintage keyboard, but I guess I’ll have to sell quite a few copies first!

    What’s your usual process for writing songs?

    It nearly always starts with a chord sequence. At the moment I would say there are two types of Mister Fusty songs — the more electronically inspired, and the more guitar inspired. Meaning, it’ll either start with programming a few chords into FL Studio and building from there, or I will come up with some chords on a guitar and record them into Audition and build from there — creating drums and other bits in FL Studio to go with it. It’s usually pretty easy to guess which Mister Fusty songs started from what method. But starting with a nice chord sequence is usually what happens, though not always. Some have started from a drum beat I’ve particularly liked.

    Where do you get your ideas for chords? Did you study jazz piano? It’s kind of rare to hear that sort of harmonic vocabulary in electronic or pop music.

    It may be a bit embarrassing to admit, but I can’t play piano at all. The computer does all that for me. I just tell it where to play the notes.

    Wow, I would’ve never guessed that! I thought for sure you had played the chords from a MIDI keyboard into a sequencer…

    I am a big fan of interesting chord sequences — that’s where Brian Wilson is an inspiration. The software I use has a list of chords that you can place into the song. It’s cheating, I know, but some chords I can figure out where to put the notes — some I can’t. So I tell the computer to do that. I have never studied music, so I just put things where they sound nice. Sometimes I have no idea what chord it should be.

    Is some of the music also automatically composed by the computer?

    The computer doesn’t do any composing — it can make things easier though. It’s a bit like using a graphics program. You still have to draw the pictures, but if you want a box or a square the computer can do that instantly for you. I place a note marker on a grid where each row represents a note on the keyboard, but it has a handy function where, say, I want a major seventh chord, it’ll fill in those notes for me to save time. Moving about these notes on the grid is how I compose, and you can have it playing on a loop so you can hear it as you are going along. It’s very useful. I will hear a melody line in my head and try and figure it out on the “piano roll”.

    How did you go about writing “Gin Clear Skies”? That’s an amazing, haunting track.

    Thanks! It started from a chord sequence, like most of my songs do. I’d just got a new plug-in which emulated a Rhodes piano and another one which had some nice orchestral sounds. If I get a new plug-in or sound sample I usually want to use it straight away and often build a song around it. That’s why you’ll find a lot of flute and Fender Rhodes sounds on the new album — I’d just got a couple of nice new plug-ins, so I tend to over use them! Once I’d got the sounds I wanted to use, I just built it up, adding new melody lines as I went along, I think it only took me a couple of hours to get the basis of that track. Sometimes it happens like that, you get on a roll and it’s almost like magic. I was particularly happy when that came pouring out.

    The textures and sounds you use are very colorful — very visual. How do you go about choosing what kind of sounds a song needs?

    A lot of the time, I have in mind what sounds I want in the track. But sometimes, it’s a case of just experimenting with different sounds. That’s the great thing about using a computer — it’s very easy to change the sound as you are going along. In “Tiger Jones,” I found, on a sample CD, an asian instrument (sorry , I forgot what it’s called). I liked the sound of it, so I added it to the song I was working on and it made the song — it gave it that extra bit of colour that it needed. Sometimes though, you can tweak forever and lose sight of what you wanted in the first place. The track “(I Want To Live On) Toronto Island” I had a hard time getting the sound I wanted. It still doesn’t sound right to me! But sometimes you just have to let it go.

    Is it a deliberate decision to utilize so many sounds which are reminicent of ’60s and ’70s music? Or is it a matter of “these are the plug-ins I have and this one happens to sound like a Mellotron”?

    A bit of both. I was after a particular Mellotron sound, so sometimes I do seek out sounds like that. I like sounds and plug-ins that sound “real” i.e. as much as possible sounding like a real Mellotron or Rhodes. In an ideal world, I’d like to have a real Mellotron and Rhodes, but I haven’t, so you try to make do with the plug-ins and some sound pretty good.

    Do you stockpile song ideas, do you finish every song you start, do you throw lots of stuff away…?

    I have a lot of half-finished ideas on my hard drive. Some I will dig out again and have another go at, some remain unfinished. There were a couple of tracks that didn’t make “Sparkly Darkly” like “Whirlygig” (which you can download for free on my website) that I thought didn’t quite fit or were too similar to something on there. Looking back now, I think “Whirlygig” should’ve been on there ‘cos I like it more now than when I did it. But it’s too late now and what would I take off?

    You mention some of your influences on your web site: The High Llamas, Brian Wilson, Burt Bacharach. Who are some others, and what kind of impact have they had on your music?

    I’m a big Beatles fan. They were my first great musical love. I guess it’s their eclectic-ness (if that is a word) which is one way they have influenced me. But more recent artists like Jim Noir, who did his album on his own in his bedroom, inspire me too. The fact that you can make something pretty good at home, these guys have done it, so why can’t I?

    For a electronic musician I don’t often listen to much electronic music! I like more guitar based stuff really. My favourite current musician is Richard Hawley, I love his sound. It’s very melancholic, yet uplifting. Very northern England. I love the pure pop of stuff like the Apples in Stereo and the classic style of bands like Teenage Fanclub and the Green Peppers. Probably the best band around at the minute is Super Furry Animals, a band from Wales who are eclectic and write great pop songs. They’ve been around for over ten years now, and every album they make is great. The new one is stunning.

    What’s the most unusual or pleasantly surprising thing you’ve come up with in the studio?

    I’m not a brilliant guitar player and I can’t do solos but I had a go at one on “Perpetual Spinach” and it took take after take after take to get it right, but I finally nailed it. I was very surprised and pleased when I finished the track. I listen back and think, did I really play that? I doubt it I could play it again!

    What’s your favorite track from Sparkle Darkly?

    “Perpetual Spinach” for the reason given above. Also, I have a fondness for “Saturday.” It’s exactly what I was after — a proper pop song, but without any words.

    What’s next for Mister Fusty?

    Vocals. Possibly. I think I’ve gone as far as I want to go with instrumental-only tracks. I want to do something a bit different and I’m thinking of adding vocals. Unfortunately, I’m not the greatest singer and I have a really cheap crappy microphone, so it’s going to be an uphill battle!

    I’ve also been talking with friends about starting a band, but it’s usually a drunk-in-the-pub kind of conversation. So who knows if that will happen, but I’d like to as I miss playing live and Fusty is not a live act.

    I’d also like to get into soundtracks a bit more. I think that’s something that would be really interesting to have a go at, but it’s tough to get into.

    Last question. If money and resources were no object, what would be the ultimate Mister Fusty project you’d like to take on?

    I’d have a proper band and orchestra and things like that. Get a decent singer too! I’d make sunshine pop inspired album, stuff like the Association and Roger Nichols and the Circle of Friends, The Free Design, etc. I’d take that sound of late 60’s California pop and bring it kicking and screaming back into the 21st century. It’s about time we had some proper pop songs again!

     

    10 Things That Inspire Mister Fusty

  • John Barry
  • Ennio Morricone
  • Brian Wilson
  • Travelling
  • Library/lounge Music
  • Jim Noir
  • Cities
  • The weather
  • Michael Palin’s Diaries
  • My fianceĆ© Andrea
  •  

    Mister Fusty’s web site | Mister Fusty’s MySpace