There are some occasions in life when doing the wrong thing can be exactly the right thing to do, and making a rock record is one of them. The art of engineering and producing is something that can be taught in a classroom, but learning when to bend the rules, when to break them, and when to throw orthodoxy on the bonfire comes from instinct. It comes from knowing the material.
The songs that Saint Agnes' vocalist/guitarist Kitty A. Austen and guitarist Jon James Tufnell had put together for Bloodsuckers, their major label debut for Spinefarm and follow-up to 2019 debut Welcome To Silvertown, told them all they needed to know. This was a record made during difficult times. Kitty's mother had died in the months before they went to work. This was never going to be finessed onto the tape, quantised, manicured. It was to be a bonfire of the rulebook, ugly and confrontational, and they knew this from the get-go.
"We're producing even before the song is written," Kitty says "I'll have a concept in mind, a vision of the song, and that will include things like, 'I want a guitar that sounds like this band, or this bit in a specific song.' We never, ever sit down with an acoustic guitar and work out chords and melody. It is always the whole thing, complete in my head as we go."
What Saint Agnes had in mind was raw nerves, feedback, nasty fuzz, chaos. When the pair speak to TG, Jon doesn't need to be wearing a Nine Inch Nails t-shirt to reveal the Trent Reznor influence. You could add Rage Against The Machine in there, too, for the off-road guitar sounds and quiet/loud dynamic. Bloodsuckers is every inch the studio record but has a live feel, leaning hard on drummer Andy Head's ability to come down hard with big, clean hits. "You can really crank the overheads and get the excitement from the snare," Jon says.
This story is from the September 2023 edition of Total Guitar.
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This story is from the September 2023 edition of Total Guitar.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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