Zy 54: MUCC
sun acquisition

With the recording of Karma, was there anything different about how you did things compared to your previous albums?
YUKKE: I think that more than anything else we were in a light mood while recording. We didn’t have to work really hard at it, and didn’t stay up all night quite often doing it.
SATOchi: Most of the time, we went back home at about 10 or 11 pm. It was good mentally and a change of pace. I thought it was more efficient than usual.
Miya: We didn’t want to work too much on things this time, but we gave ourselves more time to look at what we were doing. When recording sometimes you play a song and you think that it sounded really good, but then when you go back and listen to it you think “Huh?” So we tried to keep a balance between being impulsive and reflective.
So you had time to listen to the recorded songs calmly after you went back home?
Miya: Yeah. And after we composed songs, it’s not good to live too close to the studio. I think that the time it takes to get home is the most important in a day. You work on songs and you get stressed, so I go to bed and awake refreshed. That way when I travel to the studio I often get some good ideas.
Tatsuro: I think about the lyrics while commuting.
Miya: And it’s better to have sunlight in the studio. For example when we say “Here, the rhythm is totally bad”, the words just feel softer when there is sunlight.
All: burst out laughing
YUKKE: It's good we had sunlight this time then! (laugh) We could see outside and on some days we could see it raining. We were working on a song with the temporary name Rain, so once when we were thinking about what song to play next, it was raining so we played Rain.
Tatsuro: In an underground studio, I feel like I’m shut in and put into a corner and told, “You have to work hard!!”
Miya: But that doesn’t mean that we want to work in a resort studio, because we never go out.
YUKKE: There are good points to doing a music camp and staying somewhere, but we wouldn’t go out at all.
Miya: That’s why our songs are introspective.
So the environment can have an effect on the music you create.
Miya: When we made Shion, we worked on it in a studio in Yokohama for a while, and we drove along the highway to get there. Along the way we would think about the arrangements. A good example is Shiva. It had been a ballad but became much harder than before as we thought more and more about the arrangement.
Really?!
For the full interview, please refer to Zy 54.
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