Drew McDowall
Future Music|January 2021
Ex-Psychic TV and Coil member Drew McDowall solidifies his reputation as an industrial outlier with his latest album Agalma. Danny Turner discovers his longstanding addiction to modular
Danny Turner
Drew McDowall

Scottish musician Drew McDowall formed the art-punk trio Poems in 1978 before spending a brief spell with boundary-breaking Throbbing Gristle offshoot Psychic TV. The band split in several directions and McDowall’s own studio experiments never saw the light of day. However, he eventually became an integral member of the post-industrial band Coil from 1994 until the tragic death of founding member John Balance.

Modular synthesis has fascinated McDowall since the early eighties and, remarkably, the influential producer would not release his debut solo Collapse until 2015 – an album itself based on a series of live experiments with modular equipment. Further releases Unnatural Channel and The Third Helix swiftly followed, setting the stage for McDowall’s latest collaborative release Agalma, a starkly beautiful juxtaposition of acoustics, found sounds, and eerie ambient-industrial soundscapes.

Does your environmental upbringing attract you to the darker side of electronic music?

“A lot of it was serendipity, but the environment I grew up in on the periphery of Glasgow in the ’70s was pretty rough. I loved pop music – it wasn’t an either/or situation like noise or industrial to the exclusion of anything else. Maybe pop music would be the escape and industrial would be the full-on unmitigated reality, but I liked a mixed bunch of stuff when I was a kid, from soul music to Krautrock, but nothing obsessive. Punk happened when I was 16 and in very short order I got into bands like Throbbing Gristle, who were probably the key that unlocked the door to what ostensibly could be considered the darker side of music. When I saw Suicide they blew me away and made me realise the barrier to entry was super low because you could do a lot with just a couple of pedals and a tape deck.”

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