One question that I, and all of the OMD fans, would
like to know - is Virgin Records planning to remaster all the OMD records and
reissue them again? I have seen Soft Cell and Ultravox CD's being remastered (and
they sound beautifully!). Let us see some justice done!
Dewey Lam
Given the fact that the singles collection has been remastered and really sounds
good it would be nice to get some of the old stuff remastered if Virgin continue
to have the catalogue on sale. We'll see about that when we've got a bit of time
next year I think.
Is there going to be a songbook to accompany the best
of release? Is there any place to get sheet music for OMD songs? I have The Pacific
Age and Original Best Of songbooks, but are there any more. I'd love to get the
sheet music for "Was it something I said". Maybe you could consider
this for part of your web page?
Mark Heale
Frankly no, for all the usual questions regarding finance and Virgin/EMI Publishing.
We can certainly do songwords on the website and if people want to request them
after the OMD Singles ones, we'll put them up. Sheet music would be harder because
unless it actually exists we'd have to get someone to transcribe the songs because
I can't read or write music in manuscript form.
Some of my favourite OMD songs from the '90s are the
ones co-written with Stuart (such as Best Years Of Our Lives, Only Tears, Black
Sea and Too Late). What unique qualities does Stuart bring to your songwriting?
David Lee, Ottawa, Canada
Basically Stuart and I are very different people in terms of our character
and our musical influences so Stuart will do things and write things that I have
no idea how he does them or why he does them and I certainly wouldn't do them
myself, but it's great to have access to all those different styles and sounds
so that's what he brings to the songwriting team.
What is your favourite synthesiser to use?
Mike
Currently I am a big fan of the Roland JP8000. Basically a digital Jupiter
8. Also I still have a soft spot for our first synth - the Korg Micropreset.
Does your collaboration with Bartos in Elektric Music
reflect the influence of Kraftwerk in your music?
Jose C. Corchado
Not directly but because we did the cover version of Neon Lights on the Sugar
Tax album and I asked for sample clearance that's when Karl got in touch with
me and that's when we got to know each other and got friendly and I enjoyed doing
the song on the Elektric Music album but I thought that song sounded more like
Erasure than it did Kraftwerk or OMD.
Has the appearance of digital synths affected the OMD
sound?
Jose C. Corchado
Definitely. Because we started out on the crappiest little analogue things,
then the sound in the eighties with digital did definitely change and now I use
a mixture of both.
What kind of music are The Honey Heads and when are they
going to be released in the US?
Mr Phil
The Honey Heads don't exist anymore and we're putting a new band together so
wait and see.
Do you think there's a way to allow me to remix Genetic
Engineering with access to the original tapes? I am quite disappointed that that
one of my very favourite songs is not on that album.
Marc
Sorry, Genetic Engineering was a real problem for me on this album. I love
the song and would have liked to have it on the album. However, I feel it didn't
fill my criteria. It is not that well remembered, nor often played on the radio.
Personally I would have no problem, in fact I would be very interested, but it
would be a big job to track down the tape.
What will Andy & Paul be up to in the future? Will
Paul go back to The Listening Pool and will Andy concentrate on OMD?
Geoff Wright
I don't think Paul will go back to The Listening Pool. Just as I have decided
to move on from OMD I think Paul wants to move forward also.
I once read you were working on a song called No One
Loves You. Did you ever complete it, and will you ever release it?
Ezra Chowaiki
There is a song about a girl who died in a circus fire that I've had for some
time. I've still never recorded it to my satisfaction. The chorus begins with
the words: "No one loves you like I love you".
After following OMD since 1981, do you not feel that
the jump from "new age " to "calypso" (Junk Culture) was too
much of a radical change, adding to a loss of direction the formula that OMD had
now seemed to have been lost .
Paul Deavin
It all really came from the Dazzle Ships situation in which we confidently
strode off to do the Dazzle Ships album assuming that we would carry on with the
success that we'd had. I think, musically, it wasn't a failure but commercially
it was and yes I think we chickened out. I think we consciously and unconsciously
played safe on the Junk Culture album and I would say that was the beginning of
a problem because I felt the Crush album, and The Pacific Age album after that,
we accept that we kind of got on the treadmill of pop music that we promised we
never would: album/tour, album/tour. We were trying to write records when we didn't
really have the time to write good enough songs.
I
like Junk Culture, I think Junk Culture is a great collection of mid eighties
pop music, but it certainly doesn't have the distinctive OMD style that now I
can look back and I look at things like Enola Gay and Souvenir and Joan Of Arc
and the first three albums were very, very distinctive and very individual and
I still don't know to this day whether we consciously bottled out or whether it
was just an unconscious move to being conservative because we were frightened
of not having any hits, I don't know. But you can clearly see that we got a lot
safer as we went on. I felt that some of the stuff off Sugar Tax got a bit more
interesting. Liberator, I went in the wrong direction again although there's some
good tracks on that and I loved Universal, and I think I got the feel back on
Universal, but for various reasons it didn't sell so that kind of answers the
'did we go in the wrong direction since Junk Culture?' question, and with regards
to Paul and I getting back together and producing catchy and poignant music -
I'm not sure. Paul and I have been enjoying doing the interviews together but
I honestly don't know if Paul and I can work together again on a large project.
I just think we've spent too long in completely different areas and I'm not sure
that it will really fit back together again but who knows?
|