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sick among the pure interview 2005

satp:
first off, i’m sure you must have had a lot of offers from record labels.  what made you sign to dependent? what ended your relationship with endless records?

krischan:
first of all we have to thank tina and endless records.  she did a great job promoting merging oceans and truth is fanatic and worked very hard and effectively to get rotersand started and known in the scene.  so it was a very hard decision for us to leave endless but we wanted to do the next step and reach another level with rotersand and realised the limitations of endless as a one-person record label.
we signed to dependent because the package they offered to us was simply the best.  stefan herwig as label owner, manager, and a&r is someone who has built up bands in this scene for a long time and formed two of the most successful bands in this genre, vnv nation and covenant (which we will support on their eu-tour in november 2005).  he has a genuine passion for the music and isn’t just a marketing analyst or a money driven business man.  we liked that.

satp:
from the looks of things, you put on a fantastic show.  is performing live something you see as being the high point of your art, or is it just one more part of the job?

krischan:

no, it’s nothing like a job… we love playing live.  i know, everyone says that… but we really mean it.  for me it’s even better than spinning as a dj, to present our own music is really special… and with rasc doing his dynamic show in front of gun and me its easy to feel good on stage and to get the energy in the place.  it’s very simple, we think that playing live is the best way to understand our music and get in touch with it.  strange, eh?

satp:
stage personas aside, would you describe yourselves as extroverts or are you more withdrawn?

krischan:
surely rasc as front man and singer is more extrovert than gun or me as musicians and producers.  but gun and me have examined some new sides in us while playing live-gigs.

satp:
i understand you mastered and helped with the production on [:sitd:].  do you enjoy working on other people’s albums, or do you more prefer focusing on your own work?

krischan:
i do like to work on material and songs brought to my studio.  both parts work well together and influence the other parts and vice versa.  in rotersand’s songs there are lots of creative decisions that have to be made… decisions that push the boundaries of my own production knowledge and force me to keep up with all the latest technological advances.  however, every time i get the opportunity to remix a track or produce an album, i get the chance to experience how other musicians construct their tracks.  and how they set their focuses on certain melodies, parts etc.  then if i’ve done a solid job to them, i not only
photography courtesy of metropolis records
meet new people and make new friends (tom and carsten  from [:sitd:] are certainly good friends!), but add to my own abilities as a producer and remixer.  and that can only be good for rotersand in the long run. 

satp:
you have a strong sixth sense of what works on the dance floor, i’m not even much into dancing, but i could really get into your club tunes.  is rotersand’s influence what brings the dance floor to the forefront in the music you make?

krischan:
no, to be honest it is rasc.  he has the ability to feel what will make a dance floor burn and what makes the people move in this scene.  we’ve answered the same question in another interview and rasc told me not to push him so hard to the front…so its once again a mixture of ras’cs feeling and my dance-floor-knowledge and experience in arranging breaks (we love breaks), producing hook-
lines, and programming beats.

satp:
rotersand seems to draw influences from a wide spectrum of bands.  i can sense influences as diverse as the aging rock of pink floyd (“hush”) and techno pioneering bands like orbital and underworld (“lifelight”).  and yet you seem to seamlessly blend and manipulate these influences into a unique sound.  how do you create the rotersand sound, what is at its essence?

krischan:
the rotersand sound in all its facets is nothing we have planned or designed.  in a band with three members, like you said, each with a background of decades of music composing, producing and djing, it is inevitable that everyone has their roots in some styles of music and these roots influence our work – sometimes obviously, sometimes unrecognisably.  rasc likes '80s new-wave, pink floyd and early '90s electronics; gun is influenced by his education in classical music and his work with guys like mousse t, moloko, etc;  and i am informed by the dj-culture i am in - acid house and detroit techno, and artists like felix da housecat are amongst some of my influences.  so no, we don’t have a plug-in “rotersandilizer” which i can turn-on and suddenly everything we do sound like rotersand, it’s a blend of some very different influences!

satp:
how does your music come into being?  do you all sit around and compose the music in a studio or do the lyrics come first and then you all add your own parts?  what does the creation of a rotersand song entail?

krischan:
there are several ways we create songs….  sometimes we hang around in the studio talking about things that are happening around us or that has happened to us in our own lives or a good headline or phrase and bang!  there is an idea for a story –  we love to discuss things, which can be very inspiring… or gun and me will have made a sequence, beat, and harmony maybe.  then using that, we will debate and start to form a story and vision of how the song has to feel when it’s finished, what its content is, and what we would like to say in it.  most times though, rasc brings us a vocal line or an initial melody he has recorded on his mobile phone or sings it to gun’s or my mailbox!  then gun will start to transform this into a harmonic song structure and than it’s up to me to destroy everything and reconstruct it  - that’s normally the rotersand song making process!

satp:
bands like yourself and a few others are redefining the electronic music genre, and breaking new ground that still works at clubs.  is this something that you think of when writing rotersand music, or does it cross your mind at all?

krischan:
i don’t know if we redefine anything or push things forward, but if you see it like that, thank you.  i feel the answer to this question lies in our musical influences and bands and music that give us inspiration.  for me it is necessary to follow the trends in some other music genres and to know what is “state of the art” and to listen to it, this keeps me open-minded and helps me to find solutions for musical problems, which are not so usual, especially in this scene.  actually i’m listening to a lot of progressive music like music by deep dish or deepsky and its amazing how “dark” the mood and flow of a lot of this work is without being so “cheap”, “evil”, or “posy” like a lot of this scene’s stuff is, it’s worth listening to.  during the final-production-
period of welcome to goodbye i was listening to quite a lot of tunes by sander van doorn, dj tiesto, armin van buuren, or techno like robert hood, joey beltram, slam, and dave clarke…. sure, we’re doing a different style of music, but when i listen to the album now i can find some bits of those tracks i was listening to at the time - for those of you who are interested, have a close listen to the album track “would you buy this”(full of quotations) and you will see what i mean!

satp:
you all have a wealth of experience behind you, rasc and gun coming from the fair sex and rotersand having dj and production experience.  so although this is a fairly new band, you’ve all been around a bit.  does this past experience influence what you’re doing now?

krischan:
of course! our experiences are bound to influence the work we do as rotersand; the way we interact, our musical style all has a lot to do with our pasts.  we have all released music, worked in the music industry, and run our own recording-studios and labels… so we
know that every comment, suggestion, idea is based on solid experience and knowledge which means that there is no real hierarchy in the band.  i know that gun is able to do production work, that rasc is able to program drums –  we each know our talents, so although each of us has his own expertise we also put essential creative input into each other’s parts.  i’ve never worked in such a competent collective.  it’s like a constellation of stars all of which work together to shine.  it’s amazing, and an honour to be a part of. 

satp:
some of your lyrics, such as those for “content killer”, flirt with politics and social issues.  do you see your music as primarily entertainment, or do you have a higher artistic or social purpose behind it? on that train of thought, are songs like “content killer” directed at any group of people in specific, or are they general commentary?

krischan:
we all are interested in what is happening in the social and political scene.  rasc studied communication-science.  i studied culture and media management.  gun worked in music education.  all are related to media and how it influences us and society. so we think and discuss a lot about questions and problems related to media-presentation, tv, internet and so on and naturally it transforms into song lyrics.  but we haven’t ambitions to judge something, or curse it.  we have an opinion, but we don’t want to do missionary work in a way of our opinions.  we just try to start a discussion and add maybe some new points of view or aspects… nothing really special.  maybe if we are able to entertain, then afterwards we will manage to make some people think.

satp:
i’m sure a great many people are eager for the next rotersand album to be released.  can we expect it anytime soon and will it be a natural progression from truth is fanatic or more dance-floor orientated?

krischan:
the album welcome to goodbye will be released on 27th june 2005.  the title is related to a story rasc read last year.  the story is about a woman whose daughter is missing after a plane crash.  the mother can’t accept that her daughter has died and is waiting for her to come home.  she finds solace with another bereaved mother and together they begin to build their lives again and get over their shared grief… the article closes with the line – “welcome to a world that knows goodbye.”  that was the inspiration for the album.  we like the idea that every end has the possibility to start anew.  music wise it will be more open-minded than truth is fanatic.  there are some harsher tracks on it, some more trance-influenced songs, and some stirring ballads.  for us it is a significant development in the rotersand sound, hopefully you and the listeners will share our opinion.

satp:
what are your future touring plans? who do you plan on touring with in the near future?

krischan:
we will support covenant on their european tour in autumn 2005.  hopefully we will manage to play some shows in the us and canada next year.

satp:
finally, it seems that there is a philosophy behind the rotersand ‘brand” if you were to sum up what rotersand was about, what would that be?

krischan:
rasc tried to strip it down to “hard beats with wonderful melodies,” but to me,  it’s a little bit more than that.  words i would use would be: “pure, dynamic, deep, authentic, electronic, epic, open-minded and maybe … mature or grown-up” (like you said).

imterview taken from http://www.sickamongthepure.com