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Massive Attack

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About

Massive Attack's groundbreaking blend of hip hop, dub reggae, techno and rock revolutionized Britain's dance club scene in the early ‘90s and gave birth to the trip-hop sound that would eventually be popularized by such acclaimed artists as Portishead, Björk and Sneaker Pimps. All Massive Attack's albums to date are certified platinum and feature a dynamic roster of vocalists including Elizabeth Fraser, Horace Andy, Tracey Thorn and Sinead O'Connor. Comprised of Robert "3D" Del Naja and Grant "Daddy G" Marshall, the band has recently released Collected (a compilation of select works) and has plans to release a new album Weather Underground in early 2007. While on tour in the US, 3D spoke to Ticketmaster about Collected, their new record in the works, and their current tour.  

TM: How did you come to the decision that it was time for a "best-of" album?
3D:
To be honest it was kind of one of those things that had been looming for the last few years. It's a quite conventional thing to do in the UK and Europe...  We were in this space where we were making our record and the record company wanted something. We thought ok, we give them something commercial and then we get some favors on the next record when we want to do something more unconventional and work with video directors or do something with the artwork which might not sort of add up to count in terms of the numbers and figures. But they'd feel a bit more obliged maybe, or more sort of likely to warm to some of our ideas. Especially in a business which is more difficult to squeeze money out of the companies now, you know.
  
TM: How did you go about selecting the tracks to include on it?
3D:
It took about all of two minutes on a Post-It® note, you know what I mean? With a pencil and then filling it all in with marker afterwards after sort of changing my mind a few times. It was very, very obvious really. Only problem is on a CD you have to restrict it to 14 tracks and not 16, so you have to lose a couple, but you know.

TM: So was it mainly about chart success and they were less personal choices?
3D:
No, because there are things on there that were never singles, which was kind of fun as well. So some singles and I also left a couple singles off which, normally, on a "best-of" is a complete no-no, so the record company weren't very happy with me. There were a few singles that weren't on there at all. But Collected has a really interesting second disc with new tracks and remixes and unheard things and unfinished sketches. And then the artwork, creating all the new artwork and working with (Jonathan) Glazer on the new video. That kind of stuff is the real interesting part of it.

TM: Yes, definitely. So let's talk about what's foremost on your fans' minds at the moment—your highly anticipated new album Weather Underground. How are you coming along  and are you still on schedule for a Feb 2007 release?
3D:
We'll see. We've obviously spent a lot of time on the road this year so we've lost quite a lot of time in the studio you know ... sometimes it's difficult because you're traveling and you're tired, you're playing. There's not a lot of time to really be doing any meaningful writing. So we might sort of lose that February vibe, but there's also a lot of work for me and G (Daddy G) to be listening to each other's things, to put our heads together and get back to a sort of space where we're going to work together on some things. But I guess a lot of it will be done separately like most of our albums that we've done in the past.

TM: Now what's that like working separately? Just logistically, how you do make it work?
3D:
Well it's the way it's always been...from Blue Lines onwards. Mushroom would come in with an idea or G would come in with an idea, or I would come in with one and we'd work normally with an interface person—like a co-writer or co-producer—and then the other guys, or I would suggest something or someone would suggest something that adds life to someone else's idea. We've very rarely sat in the same room writing together. It's very unconventional in that way. It always has been and I guess it will never change. And I think that's the way this next record will be made. It wasn't a shock to me making 100th Window without anyone else because I've spent so much time in the studio without the guys anyway.

TM: How would you describe the direction of the new album?
3D:
It's got a lot of different sort of angles going at the moment. But I don't think it's found its pure direction yet. I was very interested in getting a gothic soul approach out of it which is something I've tried a few times but it's more difficult than it seems. Trying to get the right voice with the right sort of musical textures. But we'll see (laughs).

TM: So who are some of the guest vocalists on the new record?
3D:
Obviously we're working with Elizabeth Fraser and Horace Andy, but also Damon Albarn's on a track, Tunde from TV On The Radio's done a track. There are a few other things floating around but I'm not at liberty to say all of them yet because not all the songs have been developed enough and I don't want to jinx them by saying that they'll all be included.

TM: Of course. You worked on two film soundtracks since releasing your last album 100th Window. How has the experience of scoring music for a visual medium affected the way you're currently producing songs?
3D:
It's fun in a strange manner and, a lot of people have said this before, it's liberating because you're not writing about yourself. You have to work to a picture and a storyline and therefore you have those restrictions that allow you to do something you might never do. And also you're not worried about how you see the history of the band as a part of that. And I think it does free you up to do some quite different things you might not think of doing which you can also then adopt in the writing process of another record because you have so much stuff you never use in the film. But they create little sketches and little moments you might want to build on to create tracks.

TM: So some of the music that you wrote for those two films we might hear on the new album?
3D:
There's a couple of things, actually, yeah which were kind of left out of both of those films, which were quite nice basics or sort of like background parts for new songs. One of which we've written something on. I don't know if it will make the record because it's a little bit strange. But, yeah, it does have that possibility when you work that way.

TM: On the subject of visuals, how involved are you personally with creating the visual elements of your live shows?
3D:
Well most of the ideas will come from me. And I work with an interface of a company called UV Artists (United Visual Artists) and we've worked with them for the last four or five years. I'll suggest things, we'll work on them together, they'll do the programming and bring it back to me—we'll talk about content, we'll talk about the light source, the strength of the light, the color of the light, the position of the lights, you know. The whole thing is a proper collaboration from beginning to end. It's the same way I've worked on all the (record) sleeves over the years, you know, working with photographers and the graphic designers to get exactly the sleeve we want to make. I mean that's the kind of thing that's not only exciting but it's vital to maintain your individuality as a band and people go "wow that belongs to that band and no one else."

TM: So you do consider the visual aspect to be an integral part of your live shows?
3D:
Definitely. Definitely. As much as the sleeves are. It's always been about the visual with us. I think it's helped us enforce our identity as something tangible. Massive Attack being something that people go "right, I hear the music, I reckon it's them," you know what I mean? I see something visual, I reckon it could be them even without knowing for sure. In an age where there's so much visual and aural medium out there, music's got a lot cheaper and it's more competitive. To maintain and keep an identity together is really what it's about and I think we've always done that and using visuals as opposed to our own faces and our own personalities to sell ourselves, it's given us this room to maneuver.

TM: And who does your tour line-up consist of this time around?
3D:
On the tour we've got... Elizabeth Fraser's with us and Deborah Miller who's been singing with us for the last decade; Horace Andy's with us; obviously myself; we've got two drummers now instead of one which is really kind of funky; guitars; bass; guitarist Angelo Bruschini's been working with us now for over ten years; and keyboards. So the line-up, mostly, is people we've known and worked with for the last ten years so it feels very tight as a live unit. We travel together. We eat together.

TM: Are you playing a lot of new material on your current tour?
3D: Not much really. Lots of stuff we dropped out. We started rehearsing it, but we've not used it. I think mainly because the tracks are either not developed enough or because we're dynamically changing everything. Because the two drummers scenario changed a lot of arrangements I think...it's alright messing around with arrangements with tracks that you know because you have the ability to really destroy them again and rebuild them, but I think the problem is with new tracks,  they've not yet established themselves in any way.  Not in your mind let alone transmitted to an audience...We were already adapting them and changing them but they weren't necessarily strengthening the ideas; it was actually making (us think) "well, what is this?" No one's gonna know what it is and we've forgotten what it is now because we've changed it so much.

TM: Alright. So one last question for you. Who are some current artists that you admire?
3D: Neil Young and Michael Franti.

Reviews

Rating: 4.3 out of 5 based on 551 reviews
  • Rating: 5 out of 5

    by Anonymous on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    Show was amazing--music, lights and everything else. Venue not bad either, although difficult for smaller people to see.

  • Rating: 2 out of 5

    eh.

    by DreamingTwig on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    Acoustics were out of wack and standing where I was is was impossible to escape the bass (which wasn't a bad thing at times). At one point I thought the microphones were off. I get better sound fidelity out of my $1,500 car system. They should add some video monitors and speakers off the main stage the way the place is set up. Massive Attack wasn't on till about 10:00 and on a show where door's opened at 7:00, I wasn't hanging around till whenever to see the end. If I go there again, it's off the main floor and not on a week day.

  • Rating: 4 out of 5

    great show

    by bethzairag on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    Amazing sound and visuals, wished they played longer. Did not think the venue is the best for shows, ok as a club but as a concert hall it does not have good design for viewing.

  • Rating: 3 out of 5

    MA ter5

    by Anonymous on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    Not quite the same as 06,no liz fraser,4older songs,Martina is a great singer but not able to do what tracy or liz did.Horace was good tho.

  • Rating: 5 out of 5

    Fantastic

    by partystock on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    Fantastic, terrific exhibition. Amazing location, lights and sound. It's shame for anybody can't see the show. I'm sorry for them.

  • Rating: 5 out of 5

    MASSIVE ATTACK was Massive

    by Robiwan101 on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    Massive Attack have 20 years now and they still the best in trip hop music. They are one of the most contemporary music.

  • Rating: 4 out of 5

    Great Band. Mediocre Venue.

    by PeelingPaint on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    Overall I enjoyed the show a lot. My biggest beef was definitely the venue, because I felt it was too big and clunky for their style of music. They definitely should have increased tickets prices and performed at Bowery. Anyhow, I give it a 8.5/10 and I would recommend this to people who like Massive Attack, though not to people getting into it. Oh! And I would recommend (taste thing) that Tricky's vocals should be increased a bit since the instrumentals drowned him a bit too much for my taste.

  • Rating: 4 out of 5

    by UpInTheHeights on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    Excellent. They There's an amazing LED backdrop that merges visuals with reams of facts and quotes. It's mesmerizing to watch and pairs well with the live music. Without saying too much, they are cool messages that lend a cohesion to the show and bring the songs into a new context. Martina Topley-Bird is the perfect vocalist to lead the show, as is Horace Andy. The session band is totally on-point, and the sound is generally well-engineered so that everything was nice and sonorously clear, and loud.

  • Rating: 4 out of 5

    Slick techno - sophisticated show

    by unfinishedsympathy on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    brilliant articulation of some of the songs by a powerful band. The combination of strong industrial beats didn't sound industrial at all but very modern. Admitted: the slick stage design really helped to create a post-Mezzanine / avant-gardish atmosphere. Very original even when some of the "rant" on the screens got a bit old... The crowd pleasers (Karmacoma, Unfinished Sympathy) were not that strong but still... PD: people smoking pot all over the place is annoying. Where's security?

  • Rating: 5 out of 5

    Massive were Massive !

    by Anonymous on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    Anyone who say's they are into music, should go and see Massive Attack,once in there lives... especially if MA can bring Horace Andy and those amazing female vocalists to the stage. The idea to bring a light show like the artist Jenny Holzer,s all made it a worthy idea too. Politics and Music together interesting..."Arizona what's UP ??" was just one of many!

  • Rating: 4 out of 5

    by djpayam on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    Massive Attack was amazing, the venue was not. A seated venue would have been better to see them.

  • Rating: 4 out of 5

    Massive Attack was FIRE!

    by TravoBlasto on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    The openning act was good (she later sang with MA), the second act was wack, and then came Massive and it was dope! Great singers, huge beats, all the songs you want to hear. To quote Jay-Z "What more can I say?!"

  • Rating: 5 out of 5

    True to its origins

    by ElQueKi on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    My first Massive Attack concert and enjoyed it. They sang the songs one would like to hear and the lighting show they setup was truly original. It was nice to hear some old songs and the promotion of the new album. Also, I was a little surprised with the political statements they made throughout the concert and liked it! I didn't know Massive Attack was so into this topic.

  • Rating: 5 out of 5

    brilliant!

    by schbrooklyn on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    you must see massive attack live. they played a mix of old and new. the light show was beautiful.

  • Rating: 5 out of 5

    Very cool

    by walkman666 on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    Such a cool band. Groooovy songs, atmoshpheric. Sounded great. Great vocals. Entrancing.

  • Rating: 5 out of 5

    by Kydroon on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    Massive Attack is best experienced life! A climax of sound and light!

  • Rating: 4 out of 5

    by Anonymous on 5/12/10Terminal 5 - New York

    Amazing sound, visual --- VERY crowded, but people were cool about 'squeezing' in to get a view.

  • Rating: 5 out of 5

    Incredible.

    by Anonymous on 5/11/10Sound Academy - Toronto

    Absolutely stunning......................................................................................................................

  • Rating: 5 out of 5

    by AnnaLee on 5/11/10Sound Academy - Toronto

    Opener Martina Topley-Bird was hypnotic. A one woman show except for the fellow she nicknamed 'Ninja' that came out to strum guitar for one of her songs. Surprising how just her voice alone was enough. Loved the last track with her playing electric guitar. The moment Massive Attack started performing, it was one amazing performance after another with various guest singers. Powerful, intense, and informative performances(little interesting stats on the giant marquee backdrop appeared occasionally, and other times a bit of art). My first Massive Attack concert. Will never forget it!!

  • Rating: 5 out of 5

    by Anonymous on 5/10/10Sound Academy - Toronto

    great show, played a nice long set , amazing light show