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About

One of Los Angeles' most treasured new bands, the Silversun Pickups are soon to become a national favorite with the release of their full-length debut, Carnavas. The album delivers on the promise of the alt-rock quartet's earlier EP, Pikul, and its large, fuzzy sound is sure to please fans of the group's stellar live shows. Ticketmaster recently spoke with frontman Brian Aubert about the new album and the band's current tour in support of the release.


Ticketmaster: You're in the middle of a U.S. tour right now. Have there been any highlights so far?
Brian Aubert: Every time I think the highlight has happened, the next show proves that it didn't. There's just constantly being highlights. We're just stunned. The most stunning thing is we've holed ourselves up in making this record, even though we were turning on the EP a bunch but mostly on the West Coast, and to have worked as hard as we have on the record, and then to do this and immediately come out and start playing these places that we have hardly played or we never have played...Like in Minneapolis. Let's use that as an example. I've never been there before. And to play the show that we played with the crowd the way they were and the response, it's just crazy. People are coming up to us and going, "Oh, my God. You sold out D.C., New York, Chicago and Minneapolis." And that's cool, but, man, it's not the selling out part. It's that people are going crazy, like singing songs and just stuff like that. It's just constantly a surprise. Minneapolis, let's say, has been a highlight. And we're super excited we sold out Buckhead Theatre and the Troubadour (club in Los Angeles). We're amazed...they're some of my favorite venues.

TM: Have you noticed any differences between L.A. audiences and other audiences across the States?
BA:
There are little differences. Obviously, you get into the big cities and the people are a little bit more calm. But not too much. If you play smaller towns, people go extra crazy. But so far our shows have been pretty much amazing. L.A. and New York always get credited with these reay bad crowds, and I understand and I see it. They've seen things and there are industry people who really don't care. But I think we've been lucky in L.A. because we've been playing there for so long that people that come to see it really like it. So we never really have bad crowds.  

TM: What's your musical background? When did you first become interested in music?
BA:
I've always really been into it. I've always liked music. I started playing guitar when I was seven just for fun. It's just something I've always sort of liked. And I think it skips a generation. My father is real scientific and a total mathematician. And his dad was a total musician guy...So my kid will be a football player. (laughs)

TM: But your grandchildren... 
BA:
But my grandchildren are gonna rock! (laughs)

TM: How did you get together with the other members of the band?
BA:
I met Nikki on a plane when I moved to England. She was stealing alcohol bottles out of the stewardess's thing and I thought that was really cool. We became friends...Then I started to want to do my own music after being in a friend's band for a while. Nikki was one of my roommates and she wanted to learn how to play bass, so she came down and started plunking on the bass. And our other roommate came down with some drums, and we were just kind of messing around in the studio. And then they sent a tape to CMJ (a music festival in New York) because they thought it would be fun to see what would happen. A boombox in the middle of the room and there weren't even any songs or anything. And we got into the festival.

TM: Wow. That's cool.
BA:
Yeah, tell me about it. I don't even know if we could (get into the festival) now, but we did then. And that's how if first started. Then once we played in New York we didn't really have any songs and I would never sing or anything. And this guy Mitchell Frank who runs Spaceland saw us in New York walking down the street and he said, "Hey, why don't you guys play L.A. when you come back?"  So we started playing Spaceland and all these places and we've been playing ever since pretty much. And everything has just sort of evolved from that time. Everything evolved while playing. Nothing really happened in the practice space beforehand. Everything was always happening at shows. And that's sort of how it happened for us.

TM: How would you describe the music scene in Los Angeles? Is it supportive? Competitive?
BA:
I'm sure it's both, you know...when we leave L.A., people try to pinpoint it all the time, like what it is. And they're always right and they're always wrong. It's just a huge, huge city which is what I think makes it unique. It's still like a complete metropolis. It just doesn't look like one. There are so many people there. So besides the billion people trying to get into the entertainment industry, there are also a billion plumbers and people born and raised there. With the people that we sort of stick with on our side of it all, we don't really see too much of that competitiveness and all that kind of funk. We see that sometimes, but the people that we are friends with and that we play shows with, everyone's in it the same way. Everyone's real supportive. I'd almost say it's super supportive.

TM: Let's talk about the new album Carnavas. How does it compare with your EP Pikul?
BA:
Well, the EP was basically a collection of stuff that we self-released, including a song or two that we recorded specifically for the EP. It was just going to be a holdover for us to make the record. We basically just documented what we were doing. We didn't have much time in the studio. We had like two days to make a bunch of songs. So we just go in there and play like we play live and record it and there it was, you know. And the EP kind of grew legs, which was crazy. We thought in L.A. for sure people would be into it, but outside of L.A. is what we tripped out on. Because of certain radio stations like KEXP in Seattle and WOXY in Cincinnati and a bunch of online stuff, it grew some legs. And that made us go out and tour for the EP more, and the EP really started to exist further than we thought. And it was great because that gave us time while we were touring to really think about the record. The EP had a certain aesthetic in the way it sounded, and we wanted the record to be a whole different thing. Not in the way where we're all of a sudden a ska band. But we just wanted the record to have a different sound. The EP was very warm and kind of acoustic-y a little, and we wanted the record to sound kind of metallic and shiny. It was the first time we actually got to go into the studio for a while and just focus on making a record. So we got real meticulous with sounds. We got producer Dave Cooley and this engineer Tom Biller who works with Jon Brion all the time, so that guy's a genius. And we just got really into the technical aspects of it and instead of just going in there and documenting what we were doing, we thought about songs and sounds and shapes and how it all went together and made one sort of full thing. And the irony kind of being that it sounds more like us live than our EP does. With the EP we played live and recorded it and it sounds warm. But the record is really thought out with a lot of work behind it...and all that work made it sound more like we do live than the EP. We were kind of hitting a ceiling before, because live we like it really, really loud and really crazy. We like it to be very big sounding. And the record, with all its work, I think we achieved that.

TM: Do you prefer recording new material in the studio or playing for audiences live?
BA:
Playing for audiences, straight on. That's just what it's all about really. We know people that just love to record and don't really like to play live, and I think that's just crazy. Recording is fun in a different way. It's a lot of work and you kind of lose your mind. But live is just really gratifying. It's really fun. That's how we started. We were a live band for a while in L.A. That's what we like to do, and we weren't even thinking about other things. And I think that's how the band will always be.

TM: How do you approach your live shows?
BA:
We really approach them the way we always have. Playing things exactly like they sound on the album or the EP, that sounds okay, but they just don't quite punch in like we'd like it to. So we kind of get it to be a little more reckless and play things a little bit quicker. A little bit more energy and stuff like that. That's how we do it. It's fun in L.A. too...again, we didn't move there to start something. We were just there and L.A. happened to be our backyard and there are all these great clubs. It was fun because people sort of knew who we were and we were able to do things...In certain towns that had never seen us before, especially before our record came out and when people didn't know our material, we would just kind of focus on the louder songs. Just get in there and make a big noise. What's cool about Los Angeles for us—just cool about anybody's hometown—is that we can do that sometimes but we can also play shows at Tangier or something where we play acoustic and make things really strange and play all of these other songs that we wouldn't necessarily play in front of new audiences...It's fun.

TM: Can you take us through the typical songwriting process for the band?
BA:
Here's basically how it goes. It's almost always this way, but sometimes it may change. I start out with a song pretty much. And I come in with a blueprinted way that it can change and all this other stuff with melodies. So I've kind of written the song, but I didn't really. I just bring it in like that, instead of bringing in an idea and you just jam it out ‘cause we don't really like to jam. (Jamming) is kind of boring and stupid things happen for us. I come in with a blueprint with things like that and the other guys, the three of them, attack it and tell me why I suck and how to make it better. Then they take it and form it and the whole thing kind of comes together. So it either changes completely or stays the same. But everybody adds their stuff on it and gives input. And that's pretty much exactly how it goes. I'll start the ball rolling, but they make the ball big.

TM: Some fans have praised you for bringing back a ‘90s alternative rock sound. How would you respond to that?
BA:
It was not a mission statement or anything like that. I think more with Carnavas we've gotten that response and I can see it too, especially since Carnavas is our rock record. We didn't get that very much with the EP but we definitely get that with this. I think it's cool. I mean, people have to compare it to something. That seems the way it always goes and we've actually learned a lot about bands from who people have said we're influenced by. We're like, "Oh, we've never heard of those guys, but we'll listen to them." Obviously, we knew who My Bloody Valentine were and we knew who the Smashing Pumpkins were...We knew who those guys were, but it wasn't necessarily stuff we were listening to. That's just kind of how it sounds. We like the big warm guitar sounds and stuff like that. So I think it's cool. And the bands that people compare us to seem to be really good bands. And we're kind of like, "Wow, really? You think we're like them? Wow. Thanks!" People always go, "Are you offended?"  But it's like, "Why? No, it's great." But it was never our thing to bring some sort of thing back, and we've been playing the way we've been playing for a long time in Los Angeles, and that never really came up until lately now that we're a little bit out there and the record sort of sounds like that. But I can see it and I think it's cool. I just did an interview and the guy was like, "Did you make it your statement to bring back the shoegaze movement?" And I was like, "What? No, but if you want, yeah, sure." We're pioneering the ways of the past (laughs)...People usually come up to you and say you sound like this, and they're kind of pulling from their pool of what they like. Unless they hate you and they don't talk about you at all. 

TM: So who are some of your musical influences?  
BA:
We listen to all kinds of music. Usually, it's like Neu! and Can and Neil Young. Lately it's been Tom Petty like mad...We were hugely active in going out to see bands all the time in eastern Los Angeles, like in Silverlake and Echo Park and all those places. There are just so many clubs and so many different kinds of bands happening all the time. We were constantly out. If we weren't playing, we were out watching bands and seeing new bands. I would say we were almost influenced by a lot of the bands from Los Angeles, like The Movies, 400 Blows or Autolux. The Secret Machines, before they signed with Warner Bros., they used to stay with us all the time and we'd see them play and go, "Man, look at that!" Friends' bands pretty much. Sea Wolf is just killing it right now. Bands like that. They kind of influenced us and not necessarily in a sonic way...In Los Angeles, we're just so proud of how much great music is happening. There's just so much going on.

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Setlists

    1. 1.Sticks and Stones
    2. 2.Pins and Needles
    3. 3.Panic Switch
    4. 4.Rusted Wheel
    5. 5.Empty Nest
    6. 6.Long Gone
    7. 7.Lazy Eye
    8. 8.This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody) (Talking Heads cover)
    1. 1.Well Thought Out Twinkles
    2. 2.It Doesn't Matter Why
    3. 3.Panic Switch
    4. 4.Empty Nest
    5. 5.Little Lover's So Polite
    6. 6.Alone on a Hill
    7. 7.Kissing Families
    8. 8.Don't Know Yet
    9. 9.Three Seed
    10. 10.Substitution
    11. 11.Circadian Rhythm (Last Dance)
    12. 12.Dots and Dashes (Enough Already)
    13. 13.Lazy Eye
    1. 1.Well Thought Out Twinkles
    2. 2.It Doesn't Matter Why
    3. 3.Blood and Thunder (Mastodon cover) (Just the intro riff (I didn't hear this; I heard "Crazy Train" and "Iron Man" b4 Panic Switch))
    4. 4.Panic Switch
    5. 5.Scared Together
    6. 6.Little Lover's So Polite
    7. 7.Alone on a Hill
    8. 8.Kissing Families
    9. 9.Don't Know Yet
    10. 10.Three Seed (Guitar intro from theme of "Last of Us")
    11. 11.Substitution
    12. 12.Circadian Rhythm (Last Dance)
    13. 13.Dots and Dashes (Enough Already)
  1. Encore

    1. 14.Long Gone (New song from upcoming album)
    2. 15.The Pit
    3. 16.Empty Nest
    4. 17.Creation Lake (The Movies cover) ((Only excerpt played))
    5. 18.Lazy Eye
    1. 1.Well Thought Out Twinkles
    2. 2.It Doesn't Matter Why
    3. 3.Panic Switch
    4. 4.Scared Together
    5. 5.Little Lover's So Polite
    6. 6.Alone on a Hill
    7. 7.Kissing Families
    8. 8.Don't Know Yet
    9. 9.Three Seed
    10. 10.Substitution
    11. 11.Circadian Rhythm (Last Dance)
    12. 12.Dots and Dashes (Enough Already)
  1. Encore

    1. 13.Empty Nest
    2. 14.Creation Lake (The Movies cover)
    3. 15.Lazy Eye
    1. 1.Well Thought Out Twinkles
    2. 2.It Doesn't Matter Why
    3. 3.Panic Switch (Crazy Train by Ozzy Osbourne intro)
    4. 4.Scared Together
    5. 5.Little Lover's So Polite
    6. 6.Alone on a Hill
    7. 7.Kissing Families
    8. 8.Don't Know Yet
    9. 9.Three Seed
    10. 10.Substitution
    11. 11.Circadian Rhythm (Last Dance)
    12. 12.Dots and Dashes (Enough Already)
  1. Encore

    1. 13.Empty Nest
    2. 14.Creation Lake (The Movies cover) (The Movies' Timothy James on Vocals)
    3. 15.Lazy Eye

Reviews

Rating: 4.6 out of 5 based on 1192 reviews
  • Metric & Silversun rocked but the venue sucked!

    by Anonymous on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 3 out of 5

    Metric and Silversun Pickups were great! I wasn't that impressed with Henry Clay People or Against Me! although their fans rocked out, its just not my type of music. Metric should have had a longer set than Against Me, in my opinion. The concert would have been awesome if the temps had been cooler and the sound system hadn't malfunctioned right before the Silversun Pickups performance. There were no explanations, we were just made to suffer in silence and humidity. I look forward to future shows by Metric and Silversun Pickups but not necessarily in Philly (I drove 3 hours to treat my brother to this show).

  • Great show

    by nhinton on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 4 out of 5

    Head lining, silversun pickups, were amazing!!! great performance. good sound. good band that certainly cares about the fans. wish metric had a longer set - they performed well and were great to see! great show overall - not the biggest fan of against me!

  • by Anonymous on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 5 out of 5

    Amazing. Against ME! is always incredible and silversun pickups put on a great show!

  • against me rocks, silversun-i don't get it

    by jsahara on 6/29/10The Williamsburg Waterfront - BrooklynRating: 3 out of 5

    Against Me was aweome, I wish they played longer. I recommend the even b/c Against Me played, but silversun pickups are terrible, i don't get the hype, weak , all songs sound the same, they basically suck.

  • Awesome

    by Anonymous on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 5 out of 5

    Silversun Pickups were so lively it was great, they played an awesome set and i plan on seeing them every time they come back to philly. Metric and Henry Clay People were also really good. Definitely worth the money.

  • Metric -silversun pickups

    by oracal9 on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 4 out of 5

    silversun was great as always, could have played some deeper cuts but shorter sets are what you get @ these multiband shows. METRIC was fantastic !!! why this band and Emily Haines are not headliners is beyond me they are SOooo good, the set was 1hr and felt like 15min. could not get enough of this band and they have a ton of material for a full show. I cannot wait till they come back to philadelphia Emily Haines voice is sultry sweet and her on stage personality is wicked sexy fun love, lady gaga is a bag lady by comparison. against me was ok jukebox bar singalong art punk Ehhh. missed henry clay people heard they were ok as well

  • Everything BUT the Silversun Pickups

    by chewie20 on 6/29/10The Williamsburg Waterfront - BrooklynRating: 4 out of 5

    Against Me! played a great set list and were very entertaining. Silversun Pickups were good, but not as good as I thought they would be. The event is beautiful at night when Manhattan lights up in the background. Brooklyn Brewery was clutch!

  • Silversun Pickups Were Amazing

    by Anonymous on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 5 out of 5

    The show started off pretty weak, with a late gate opening, and a set by the Henry Clay People that could have been missed if you blinked, and an Against Me! set that was louder than it was good. SSPU put on an excellent show, though, with good staging, a long, energetic performance, and a good encore.

  • Silversun Pickups was Awesome!!!

    by FrankTheRabbit on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 5 out of 5

    The show started out with The Henry Clay People. This band wasn't my taste but they did sound really good. Next came Metrix who rocked the house this band sounded great. The only thing that I was disappointed with this band was that Best Buy had a meet the band & get a CD signed & they were the only band that refused to do it. My son & I meet the Silversun Pickups & got their CD signed. They were really nice to my son and let him take a picture with the band. Next was Against Me who sounded great & also rocked the house. Finally came Silversun Pickups who we had to wait 45 to an hour for since they were having audio problems with the mics. It was worth the wait because they were just plain awesome. I really liked when they did The Royal We. The light show was kinda cool when all they used was a huge white sheet & lights. The wind made it look like waves.

  • Metric made me forget the heat!

    by GlamBKiddo on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 3 out of 5

    My main gripe with this show was the sound. Henry Clay People and Silversun would have been way more enjoyable if you could understand what they were singing. The vocals were completely drowned out. Silversun took way too long to come out...some sound system difficulties it seemed like...but that really didn't add to the experience. Silversun was entertaining/great/etc but after that delay, their set went on a little too long. Like 3 songs too long. Metric shined. Emily Haines was a mesmerizing musical mad scientist...her vocals were clearer...the band sounded great. They should have had a longer set. Against Me was god awful. Their songs all sound the same...which is made worse by the fact that they sound like any high school battle of the bands contestant.

  • by scotty17killer on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 4 out of 5

    great bands great booz great times. all the bands kickd ass for philly

  • SICK SHOW!!!!!!!

    by cwang521 on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 5 out of 5

    All the opening bands were amazing and they really rocked the house. The only issue that i had with the concert is that against me got as much playing time as silversun pickups. Since silversun pickups were the headlining band, i expected them to play more. They of course played all of their hits, but their playing time got cut short due to some delays. It was a great venue, the seating allowed everyone to enjoy the show and to not be right on top of each other.

  • Blazin show in blazin heat!

    by Swampfox77 on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 4 out of 5

    I think Metric pretty much stole the show with an incredible set. Silversun Pickups did put on a pretty stellar set themselves, but the wait was a bit much in the ridiculous heat. The Henry Clay People were a really pleasant surprise and Against Me were solid.

  • Metric IS the highlight! SSPU are primadonnas?

    by MisterConcert on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 2 out of 5

    I didnt see the first band, but i got there just in time for Metric. Emily Haines is still as energetic as ever, as is the rest of the band. Jumping around, covering the stage, singing to the crowd, getting them pumped up. Didnt work - crowd was mostly lame, only a few people (including myself) were jumping and moving with the beats, and we were scattered. Some girl even complained loudly to the rest of the crowd about how they werent dancing. Maybe they were there for the other bands, but the crowd still wasnt jumping much even when the main band Silversun Pickups came on. Ive gone to a ton of other shows over the years, and I've seen better, more energetic crowds at other festivals and shows, big and small. This one is too reserved (or do they not know how to party? who knows.). Against Me didnt do it for me. Sounds like a mix of 70's arena rock vocals and tame punk rock. If thats what you like, good for you. Their highlight: an accordion! i give minor props for being creative that way. Silversun Pickups took OVER 45 MINUTES to start. WTH? Supposed to start at 8:45pm, they didnt start til 9:30pm(!!!), giving them just a little over an hour to perform instead of the 90+ minutes they were supposed to. Why? too little material to work with? Or just being primadonnas? The other bands all started ON TIME, why cant they? No one explained what was going on. I wasnt alone in wondering what was going on - the crowds were restless by the time they came up. They were good, but making people wait THAT LONG is totally unprofessional. NOT COOL, Silversun Pickups. All in all it was an "OK" show. Bands were good, but a good majority of the crowd not being into it much, just standing there gawking (these kids need to learn how to party!), and Silversun Pickups making people wait 45 minutes to start (and NO explanation whatsoever, making them look like thirdrate primadonnas), sort of marred an otherwise great day. Thanks to Metric for rockin it hard enough to save it. They should be headlining next time.

  • Silversun Pickups - So Disappointing

    by SuperReeRee10 on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 2 out of 5

    For whatever reason, they started late and rushed through the set. The band rocked, but the lead singer was horrible. What a disappointment! They were better when they opened for MUSE.

  • by Anonymous on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 5 out of 5

    this show was awesome! The bands were totally in the zone and loved the energy from the crowd. I had such a great time, the only downside was that they played so hard, they blew the sound-board. Luckily, they had a back-up and Silversun was able to go on!!!! Can't wait till they come back into town :)

  • Silversun Pickups - Best Live Band

    by peasetill2 on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 4 out of 5

    While I don't go to as many concerts as I used to, I contend that SSPU are the best live band out today. Obviously, this is subjective but I would highly recommend seeing them live. Their songs come across much better than their albums so don't judge them by the latter. Can't say I am a big fan of Against Me! and it seems I am in the minority. Vanilla music. Teenage Anarchist??? Are you kidding me. Metric was good. I would see them again.

  • Metric stole the show

    by JoJo7 on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 4 out of 5

    As great as Silversun and Against Me! were, I have to say that Metric would be the one I would go see again...and again....and again. The lead singer's stage presence was mesmerizing, and the music unforgetable. It's rare when I go to a show and hear a new song that becomes my favorite, but after hearing 'Like a Drum' I am totally a converted metric fan.

  • Best Summer concert!!

    by Luika on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 5 out of 5

    Well organized, crowd was super cool. Metric, Against me and Silversun Pick ups were fantastic!!!

  • Worth the wait and the weather

    by Shirleypc on 6/29/10River Stage at Great Plaza - PhiladelphiaRating: 4 out of 5

    Silversun Pickups put on a show that was short but in full throttle once they got on stage last night. One can't review them without mentioning the obstacle in their path which was the outrageous heat and humidity for which Philadelphia summers are well known. In spite of the oppressive weather both the audience and band hung in there for an engaging show. I have to admit that each member of the band had something unique and special to bring to the performance. However, to me, the drummer excelled in showmanship, style and shear raw energy. I only wish my daughter, who wasn't feeling well and went home, could have seen them.