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Front 242Article from Phaze 1, June 1989 | |

"there are no borders for us..."
"We only buy the latest things if we think they can provide us with something new", Daniel explains. "Around 50% of our work is based on the effects we've used, which include things that are available to anyone, like Quadraverbs, Roland reverbs and so on. Basslines are originated by a reverb quite often, where we only use the treated signal. For example, the bass on 'Headhunter' is only reverb, whereas if you hear the original bass track it was really quite different."
In a recent TV interview, vocalist Jean-Luc De Meyer denied there was any space for emotion in Front 242's music. This is an area of controversy within the band itself, however, because Daniel takes the opposite view. For him, even the electric guitar is a machine, and the emotions he creates are the most important part of his work.
"You can treat the sound of a synthesizer so badly that it can inspire fear in people, and fear is an emotion", he opines. "We don't try to program a human feel into the machines, but that's because there's no real need. They make so many mistakes on their own, especially with MIDI sequencers and samplers, that when you get all of it together it's not machine-like anyway.
"The basic philosophy of Front 242 is that we like heavy, strong emotions, like fear and war, but sometimes we only try to create craziness."
Daniel cites Bomb the Bass, S'Express and Adrian Sherwood as artists he admires, but feels Front 242 are currently not as good as they could (or should) be.
"I see other people working with the same kind of ideas as us, but most of them seem to be succeeding much better", he laments. "I really feel as if I'm doing nothing good for the moment, although that's not the feeling of the band as a whole. Every time we do a concert the public really like it, but I sit there thinking that what we're doing is really shit. I would like to continue... and I think maybe we should start working with other producers who are 10,000 miles away from what we're doing."
If you listen to Daniel B you may think Front 242 are a band to avoid, but if you listen to 'Front By Front', their latest album, chances are you'll come away with a very different set of opinions. Front 242 are often misunderstood, misquoted and misleading. But they're not easily ignored.
Front Line (Front 242) |
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Interview by David Bradwell
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