Electra-fying sound
01/07/2013 22:23
Following the release of its second album, local rock band Electra is ready to light up Tel Aviv.
Electra, Photo: Yaniv Alon
Sound is something that can be challenging to describe in words. For Nitzan
Horesh, lead singer of Electra, music is more than just sound: it’s a blank
canvas being painted with melody. “Our music has all kinds of edge and color,”
says Horesh.
The punk-rock-pop fusion band Electra is back with another
album and a whole new perspective.
This native Israeli group, which
perform only in English, is all about energy, explains the 35-year-old musician,
who also has written most of the band’s songs. That’s why their upcoming album,
Second Hand Love, was recorded entirely analogue, meaning without digital
editing.
“That is the only way to feel our band’s energy. You have
to feel like you are watching us live,” says 37-year-old Boaz Wolf, Electra’s
drummer.
The band was more comfortable and willing to take risks when
recording their new album, and it shows.
“We have grown a lot since our
first album and wow, we are really excited,” says Wolf. “We tried a lot of new
things with the production of our songs. More instruments, a string
section.”
The album, which was released last month, is their second album
and Wolf, Horesh, along with Electra’s bassist Doron Farhi have come a long way
since they first came together in 2008.
Having played together for almost
six years, the band members have grown together as musicians and as friends,
explains Wolf, who currently lives in a flat with Farhi in Tel Aviv.
The
recording process, which began January of last year, was very experimental.
During the month-long process, the band improvised many of their recording
sessions and “pressed record, just to see what happens,” Wolf says.
Quite
different from their first album, when the band say they over-rehearsed to make
sure everything was perfect prior to recording, Second Hand Love provided them
with an opportunity for musical freedom.
Diversity is really important to
Electra, and many of the band’s favorite songs came from experimenting in the
studio.
One of the songs Horesh is most proud of is the ninth track on
the album, “Starve,” which was also released as a single. The song was written
seven years ago, and the group struggled for years to figure out the best way to
play it live.
“It took time orchestrating the song, and it’s really
different than a lot of the music we play.
It’s a mix of James Bond,
Arabic music, and 60s pop,” describes Horesh.
Track No. 5, “Start All
Over,” was not always a favorite of Wolf’s. When Horesh proposed the song to the
group, Wolf insisted it wasn’t a good idea and that he didn’t like the style,
but they decided to give it a shot anyway.
“I fell in love with this
song, the texture of the song. It reminds me of a Friday afternoon radio
tune.”
Creating new sounds and keeping true to their individual style is
very important to the gentlemen of Electra, but “these are hard times for bands
that are not playing mainstream sh*t,” adds Horesh. “This is a troubling time.
It’s not an easy time for rock and roll, especially in Israel,” he says of
Israel’s recent political troubles.
That is why the band has taken
advantage of many opportunities to tour in other countries.
After
releasing their first album, Heartbreaks for Fools, Electra played at venues
throughout the United States and Germany. They will continue to promote
themselves internationally in the upcoming year, with more shows in the US and
Europe.
Although they try to avoid being labeled as “representing
Israel,” Horesh understands that they have a certain responsibility to give
Israel the representation it deserves.
“We need to show that Israel has
some normal elements. Not hate, fear or racism. We are normal people, and we are
not afraid of the world,” he says.
Electra will be debuting Second Hand
Love on January 9 at 9:30 p.m. at the Barby nightclub in Tel Aviv. The album can
be purchased online at: http://electra.bandcamp.com.