the Klaxons explained
February 7, 2007
philip sherburne: The easy way:
when I interviewed Klaxons’ Jamie Reynolds (lovely chap, by the way, even if he talks a mile a minute–total interviewer’s nightmare), and we got on to talking about pop, he confessed something interesting. Not just that he envisioned Klaxons strictly as a pop band, aiming to reach the greatest mass of people possible, but that he had studied the manual as well: that’s right, The Manual: How to Have a Number 1 the Easy Way, by the KLF’s Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty, in which they prescribe their foolproof plan for landing a single in the UK charts.
“I literally read that book and put it into practice,” said Reynolds when I talked to him. “I took direct instructions from it, if you like. Get yourself a studio, get a groove going, sing some absolute nonsense over the top, but a breakbeat behind, it and you’re away! That’s what I did! That’s genuinely it. I read that, I noted down the golden rules of pop, and applied that to what we’re doing and made sure that that always applies to everything we do. That way, we always come out with a sort of catchy hit number.”
You wonder why more peoplep don’t do it, I said, and he agreed. “This is it! It depends whether or not you want to be a pop band, we said we wanted to be a subversive pop, and for our structure, I’m following the golden rules every step of the way.”