Avey Eucalyptus AMA
Avey on releasing song stems
Q: Hi Avey! I was at the Brooklyn listening party and Eucalyptus sounds great. What do you think of putting out a few stems of some songs you've made over the years? All the songs you and the rest of Animal Collective have made are so layered, it would be interesting to dissect and hear individual layers.
Avey: I think that's an interesting idea for sure. I could see doing that with Eucalyptus. i sort of wanted to do that with the puzzle site but opted for a simplified version. There are so many stems sometimes that it would be hard to do with older ac stuff but maybe we would do something like that if it was composed for that purpose.
Aveys Hawaiian Music Rec
Q: Can't say enough good about Eucalyptus. I love playing it for my newborn son.
Hawaiian music is so special to me and you've mentioned it as an influence on this record. Any particular Hawaiian musicians you can recommend?
Avey: Brother Nolan!
Aveys recommended drink pairing for Eucalyptus
Q: Hey Avey, today is my 21st birthday. Could you recommend me a drink that I should pair with the new album?
Avey: Mezcal Neat
Aveys update on AC-related vinyl reissues
Q: Hi Avey, I'm a big fan of you and Animal Collective. Just want you to know that I love your new album, and Spirit They're Gone, Spirit They've Vanished is one of my favourite albums of all time! I'm just wondering is there any chance of some vinyl reissues of Spirit and Feels any time soon? I know you reissued them a few years back, but I'm fairly new to record collecting, and they're hard to come by!
Avey: yup we are working on it!
Avey on producing sounds on STGSTV and potential doc of their early years
Q: Hey Dave, I have a couple questions, feel free to answer whatever you like
I've always been curious as to how you achieved the harsh sounds on the Spirit album - specifically on the Untitled track. They have a nice quality that I've found hard to achieve with feedback loops or whatever.
Is the documentary about AC's early touring years still being worked on / happening or has the project been abandoned?
[s]Are you guys still planning a live archive similar to Fugazi's[/s]?
Avey: I own this magical sequential circuits delay unit that i have had since early college. It's partly broken now unfortunately so i don't use it as much but we used to use it a lot. I used that with a couple digital reverb units to make those sounds via feedback loops.
It's never really been in the works. i have so much footage. I used to video everything. I'd love to do something with it at some point but i just have to find the right time
Avey on the opening line to Kinda Bonkers and preferred breakfast foods
Q: Hey Avey! First of all, I want to say thank you for all the incredible music you have made, especially your new album which is fantastic.
Anyways, I have a couple questions: In your lyrics you always bring up food like in your songs like Bagels in Kiev or in Kinda Bonkers with "life is pretty french toast to me, if you wait too long it gets black and weak". I also find myself asking friends "what you doing, how's your food?" . So, I love the line from Kinda Bonkers so much but I've always wondered how you came up with it or what led you to it? Also, as a large proponent of breakfast food, I have to ask: french toast, waffles or pancakes?
Avey: I'm not sure how i got to that line. I was actually going to change it in the studio then i heard brian say "I don't know what that means but i like that line a lot". so i kept it.
French Toast. Pancakes always seem like a good idea but i can never eat that many. I'm more of an eggs and greens kinda person in terms of breakfast
Avey on going in the acoustic direction
Q: Hey Avey! Not sure if you remember me, but my friend and I ran into you by coincidence behind Emo's before your peformance in Austin after the whole Levitation fiasco last year haha
Coming off of the manic Centipede Hz and hustle-bustle of Painting With, it seems the Collective is slamming on the breaks with releases like Meeting of the Waters and Eucalyptus. How does it feel returning to a stripped down and more laid back vibe? Would you say you are enjoying the direction so far?
I'd also like to add that I absolutely love Eucalyptus, it's a great album for sitting on the patio on a summer morning. I look forward to more listens!
Avey: It's hard to put a timeline on it cause i was sort of working in this direction before we started working on painting with. I don't really think any of the other ac guys are really focusing on acoustic stuff as much as i am. For me it was just nice to work in this realm outside of working with all the electronics that The group has been using. Thanks!
Avey on fans sharing their music with him
Q: Hey Avey~
I gave u that weird drawing of a hand with the rain patterns at the Big Sur camping wknd. I had wanted to give u one of my albums as well- I’ve always wanted to share my music w/ you, but I didn’t wanna be selfish & make our interaction about me.
I was wondering how you feel about fans giving u their records? If your into it, what’s the best way- CD, Usb stick, URL, etc?
Avey: I'm into it. It's awesome to hear what people are doing out there and a good way to discover music. Any way works!
Avey on future releases like Live at 9:30 Club
Q: Plans for more live releases like the 9:30, perhaps of older shows as well?
And what would I do if you wasn't around?
Avey: Definitely. I'd like to put out shows from older times.
Avey on problems in the music industry, musical styles, HCTI, no favorites, and Abby
Q: Hey Avey! Quite a fan (as you can see by the flair!) I've got a lot of good ones for you!
Are there a lot of problems in the independent music scene a lot of regular listeners might not know about?
This year you've released two rather soft spoken relatively acoustic records, one under the Animal Collective with Geologist and, of course, your most recent solo work. We haven't seen this sort of music from you since 2007 with Pullhair Rubeye. Should we be eager to hear more of this sound from here on?
Here Comes The Indian was a really strange endevour for you guys, apparently. Reading through a Pitchfork interview back when Centipede Hz was released, you said it was a lot more improv based. Was this the only album you've done like this? Or have there been other records that had the 'winging it' moments?
What is your favourite album you've made, weather a solo or side project or something with Animal Collective?
Abby recently did an AMA on the /r/AnimalCollective subreddit. Has she had a lot of influence on your music?
Avey: hey sorry for the delay here.
hmm not sure what kind of problems you mean.
Hard to say where i am going next. I doubt the next ac record will be an acoustic endeavor if thats what you're getting at. But again it's hard to say. i've been writing more songs on the acoustic actually that perhaps ill play on tour but i've also been playing more electric guitar so that's really where i am at
The music thats on hollindagain has that feeling but we never made it into the studio for that. Some of the songs on HCTI are composed by me like slippi and Native Belle and parts of hey light. but a lot of the moments were left very open.
I don't really have favorites of anything
Her creativity and drive is inspiring for sure
Avey on the possibility of another visual album
Q: One of my favorite things you have put together is ODDSAC, I am way over 60+ views on it and I always keep finding new things in it. I am not sure if this has been asked before but is there any plans in the future to make another Visual Album with Danny Perez along the same lines of ODDSAC?
Avey: We talk here and there with Danny about that sort of thing and i love his work so it would be interesting and fun. But it's just hard having the time and ideas to do that. Oddsac took a very long time to put together
Avey on songwriting influences
Q: hey avey! loving eucalyptus. one thing i've always admired about your work is your lyricism; do you have any particular influences when it comes to your songwriting? i've always gotten some strong william carlos williams vibes from some of your work with ac.
Avey: My writing style is actually influenced more by fiction or short stories than it is poetry though i like some poetry here and there. Nabokov and Robert Walser were very big influences on me.
Avey on his favorite animals
Q: Avey!! What are a few of your favorite animals? <3
Avey: Crocodilians of all sorts. Otters. Wasps.
Avey on solo vs. band efforts, writers block, and his favorite Eucalyptus track
Q: Hello, Avey! Thank you for doing this AMA as we are huge fans of your work. I thought Eucalyptus was wonderful. My questions are:
How does working on a solo album compare to working with a group, like Animal Collective or Slasher Flicks?
What do you do when you are stuck writing a song or hit a creative wall?
What is your favorite track from Eucalyptus?
Thanks again!
Avey: It definitely takes more time to do a solo record because i have to come up with all the parts and production etc. It can be more frustrating but it feels really good to push through it and reach the goal. On the other hand while working with a group you have to be really open and receptive to other peoples ideas and trust that they are the best for the songs or records. So that can be just as difficult. I feel lucky that i have such an easy musical relationship with the people i play with the most.
Usually i just stop doing it. i try and play music or make something every day. I'm actually a workaholic. But i've finally learned after all these years that you can't force something that isn't there and thats truth for many scenarios. If i start getting frustrated i just move onto something else that day.
I don't really have a favorite but i would put PJ up there because it's one of the most stripped down songs I've ever recorded and been satisfied with.
Avey on psychedelic music and yelling/screaming in music
Q: Hey there, thank you so much for doing this AMA! Loving your new album! I've always wanted to know, what or who influenced you to begin making psychedelic music, especially in the early years of Animal Collective? And what influenced your unique style of screaming and singing on the Strawberry Jam album?
You are my biggest inspiration as a musician, thank you so much!
Avey: I think I was drawn to confusion in music and music that sort of became something more than it was at an early age. It's really hard to define what psychedelic music really is cause i feel like some people think it's something completely different than i do. And some people i know think that term is vague and doesn't mean anything. But i also experimented a lot with LSD when i was young and that definitely opened me up to it.
i always liked singers who expressed themselves with louder almost screaming but melodic vocals. John Lennon, Lots of old Soul Singers or like the Four Tops (listen to Bernadette) or Kurt Cobain. It also just started being something i had to do to compete with the volume and energy of our playing.
thanks!
Avey on Selection of a Place's development
Q: Heya Avey!
With the new take on “Selection of a Place” on Eucalyptus, I'm curious: what was the development of this song from writing to Meeting of the Waters to this album like? How did you know it was something you'd wanna include on this release too?
(Excited to catch the opening show of the US tour at Boston too!)
Avey: The song was already written when we went down to Brazil though i changed some of the guitar parts when i actually recorded it. MOTW actually re inspired me to keep playing these songs and record them because at that point i wasn't really sure if i was going to keep them around. It felt really good to play that music down there though. I didn't want to have to take a bunch of stuff down to brazil with me so i figured my best contribution would be some acoustic songs. But i always knew it would be a part of this release i just wanted to make sure we had enough cool tunes for meeting of the waters so i decided to take it there too.
Avey on the fate of "Song for Jerome"
Q: Avey, thanks so much for doing this AMA. I'm in love with the new album and frankly everything you've done. Can you finally solve the mystery of "Song for Jerome" for me? Can you either provide the lyrics or a better quality audio version of it? It's one of my favorite compositions by you and I've always been stuck listening to a low quality youtube concert version of it.
Avey: I have a demo live version of that song and the others i did on that tour which sounds pretty good. i've been wanting to get it out there in some form it's just never been a priority. But maybe sometime soon ill let it see the light of day.
Avey on his songwriting process
Q: Hey Avey! I'm a huge animal collective enthusiast (about to see you guys for the 5th time on saturday) as well as an aspiring musician. I would love to hear some insight into your songwriting process and how it might have changed since you first started writing music.
Avey: I feel like it changes in terms of the instrument I'm using and that often will dictate the songs i write. For example i wrote all my songs for painting with on a synth and all my songs for Eucalyptus on an acoustic guitar. I feel like approaching an instrument with a fresh feeling is really important to me. I have been gravitating back to guitar a lot lately though.
Avey on revisiting/reworking old songs
Q: sweet avey- Over the years I've noticed there's a general consensus between fans that much of your music evokes a nostalgic sort of feeling. I suspect it has to do with some of the themes of childhood that you've dealt with in the past. I was just wondering, do you feel nostalgic listening to records like Spirit They're Gone? Does it sort of bring you back to that time in your life and make you reminisce about the early days of animal collective? Was it easy to put yourself back in that sort of mind state to rework Alvin Row for this past tour?(which was amazing btw.) Also does listening to, say, STGSTV, bring up any specific memories or glimpses into your life at that time? I'd be interested to hear:-) thank you for everything you've done.
Avey: Last question of the day!
I definitely get taken right back to touring those songs or recurring them. I recently had to listen to sung tongs to approve a new pressing of it and went right back to colorado where we recorded it.
Usually reworking songs has more to do with making them feel current than it does feeling the past in them. Though sometimes because of the emotions involved it can be hard to sing or play them. And that's also a reason why we might not play them.
Someday was a really hard song for noah and i to get on spirit and so at one point we went outside and my parents had all these trees in front of their house and we started throwing pine cones and rocks at trees for awhile cause we were so frustrated that we couldn't record that song. i think that worked cause we went back in and got it.
Avey on his upcoming tour
Q: hey Avey, thanks for joining us on here again! i'm loving the gorgeous, natural feel of Eucalyptus and can't wait to catch you live this fall

what is something you're looking forward to on your upcoming solo tour?
Avey: I've been really into just getting out there and playing for people in the last year and a half. We've been having lots of fun on the AC tours and so I'm grateful that i can keep it going and play more for people. Its a good feeling.
Avey on his live setup for the painting with tour
Q: Can you tell me a bit about your current tour set up? Without revealing too much about your sound, what are you looking at when performing?
Avey: I'm looking at an octatrack. an esq 1 synth. Two space echo pedals, a waldorf synth box and two mixers. I also have two vocoders on stage and two critter and guitari loopers that i use.
Avey on the inspiration behind Eucalyptus' album cover
Q: The new album art is awesome, was it inspired by anything?
Avey: old nonsuch classical and explorer series covers.
Avey on leaf house, house of leaves, and nicknames
Q: hi dave! eucalyptus is fantastic, congrats! thanks for coming here and doing the ama, we're all happy to have you here! your music has changed my life and inspired me to create my own music, which i am eternally grateful for. the life experiences i've had listening to things like sung tongs and strawberry jam are incredible and i will never forget them. i just have a few questions for ya if that's alright!
1: was "leaf house" based on the novel "house of leaves?" that's my favorite book, so it would be cool to know what you thought of it. there's lots of similarities between the song and book! 2: what is the meaning behind the name "doon" during the campfire songs era? 3: will we ever know the story behind this magical picture??
https://i.imgur.com/5OA1hAo.png
thanks for your time, I'll see you in Austin this October!
Avey: Thanks that means a lot!
No leaf house was a reference to the house noah grew up in. I believe it touches on the feelings of Noahs father passing and no longer being around. I read that book not long ago. It's great.
We have tons of nick names for each other. Doon is one of many. Our group of friends in college and in the first apt we lived in together had all these nick names for each other. Someone gave me Doon. not sure why ha.
Avey on writers block and dealing with it
Q:
---QUESTION: What do you do to combat creative blocks or lulls where you feel too depressed or uninspired to work? For someone as prolific as you, it's hard to believe you encounter them at all, but I know that must be untrue. Bonus round: what DAW do you use?---
Avey: I do get them indeed! Just best to step away and clear your head. I find it's only fun if it feels natural and new and the inspiration can just pour out.
Avey on releasing the album without singles, meditation, religion, and performing
Q: Hello Avey!! Congrats on Eucalyptus! I’m a huge fan. Here are my questions:
People these days like to digest music quickly and efficiently before barfing it back up and moving on to something more buzzworthy. With no singles, an hour + run time, and songs that are tense and delay gratification, it seems to me like Eucalyptus is the most Anti-2017 album of 2017. Was any of this intentional? Were you trying to combat today’s vapid consumerism by creating an album full of slow, dense material?
Eucalyptus seems VERY spiritual and meditative rto me. Do you have any spiritual practices you do regularly? What are your thoughts on organized religion?
I was watching an AC live show from the Danse Manatee era last night. It’s striking just how eerie things seemed back then. What was playing those shows like? Did you find it took more courage to get on stage and play such abrasive music? Will the Danse Manatee tour documentary ever be released??
Avey: I wasn't trying to combat or release a record in response to the things you are talking about but i do agree with a lot of what you are saying. putting out something like a "Single" holds a lot of weight and i didn't feel this was that kind of record. i didn't want to break any of the songs up or out. Also i think its a shame that when you put out a single track from a record, people tend to over play it and it's not as interesting to listen to in the context of the whole thing once that comes out.
I meditate daily. It's a lot of breathing and also mind work. I don't participate in organize religion.
It takes a lot in general to get up on stage still. Not because of nerves but i want to give everything i have. Its a lot of energy. It was more nerve racking back then but the sentiment and feeling i put into it is still the same.
Avey on nature and how it's a part of his music
Q: hi dave! i loved your performance in miami with coral morphologic, and i loved that quote you included in coral lords. there has always been a strong nature influence in all your work, soundwise and lyrically, and i wanted to know if you wanted to share more about how you go about connecting organic sounds and natural things to your personal life. -much love, vi
Avey: I think because i connected my natural surroundings so much with music when i really got into music it became crucial for me and all of the AC guys to have that element in the music. i think having portable mini disc players really changed things for us cause it allowed us to go anywhere and record. And so we'd goto a lake and jam or into the woods and jam. Much like Meeting of The Waters. When we'd listen back we'd start to pick up on how the random ness of nature becomes not so random and we'd hear patterns and things working really well. I still do this all the time. So basically we wanted to start composing music that had space for this.
Avey on the octatrack
Q: hi avey, it seems like the octatrak has been a big part of the anco live set and now also a part of your image. what is your favorite feature of the octatrak? how would you describe your workflow?
Avey:I think the octatrack is a very challenging piece of equipment. Took me awhile to really figure it out but i think my favorite thing about it is that i can use it in my own personal way and don't really have to worry about a way I'm "supposed to be using it"
I usually have songs in mind and written when i start using the octatrack so i often just use it for orchestrations like on eucalyptus. i don't use it for writing really.
Avey
Q: I think the octatrack is a very challenging piece of equipment. Took me awhile to really figure it out but i think my favorite thing about it is that i can use it in my own personal way and don't really have to worry about a way I'm "supposed to be using it"
I usually have songs in mind and written when i start using the octatrack so i often just use it for orchestrations like on eucalyptus. i don't use it for writing really.
Avey on editing his own work
Q: Hi Avey, Love the new record! When first creating a song how do you balance your creative side of adding instrumentation and shaping the feel of the song to the analytical side of editing your self? Do you record lots of things then later edit your self or do you edit in real time?
Avey: When i'm writing the songs are usually pretty stripped down at first. Especially with these songs. Ill record myself playing the song then take a break from it and then go back the next day listen to what i recorded and decide if feels right or sounds good or if i need to change some melodies. Sometimes this process carries all the way to the studio sometimes songs just stay the way they are. In terms of sounds and production its the same thing. i tried to compose all my parts for eucalyptus before i recorded them because i wanted the flow to feel really organic and live when recorded. But certain things i came up with as we were recording such as the santurn parts in Ms. Secret and some of the more riffy guitar stuff. These days it always feels best when i have more then i need and it feels good to take stuff away.
Avey on his past Halloween costumes
QUESTION: What were some of your favorite Halloween costumes as a kid or an adult? Do you have any costume ideas brewing for this year?
Avey: I've been pretty happy with my halloween costumes over the last years. It's my favorite holiday. I was really happy with my charred robot from the end of the movie West World costume from three years ago. Also two years ago i was a dada ist women in mourning.
Avey on the inspirations behind Eucalyptus
Q: Hi Dave! I loved this album and it's made my best of all time list. What were your inspirations for making this beautiful album? Will you ever play in Mississippi or Memphis?
Avey: I would love to play in those places. Hope it can happen.
Inspirations...California. Seasons. Ends. Beginnings. Birth. Death. My friends. My loves. My family.
Avey on what material will make up his upcoming tour
Q: Hi Dave. I loved Eucalyptus. So different yet complimentary to Painting With.
My question is, on your next tour, do you plan to play any of your older songs rearranged to match the tone of Eucalyptus? Or will you be entirely be focusing on new music.
I can't wait to see you on tour. I'm driving to Minneapolis from Winnipeg.
Have a good summer
From Andrew
Avey: Im thinking my tour will be a mix of eucalyptus songs and newer songs I've been working on. I hope to have a large bag of tunes i can switch around from night to night but we will see.
Avey on the connection between Meeting of the Waters and Eucalyptus
Q: Hey Avey! Long time fan, first time caller
I was just wondering, can you elaborate on the relationship between Meeting of the Waters and Eucalyptus? They sound very sonically similar and obviously the inclusion of "Selection of a Place" in both ties them even further together. Were they envisioned as companion pieces from the offset? Thanks!
Avey: I think it was just the timing of when the songs were written and having selection to work with. I felt it would fit into what we wanted to make down there and i didn't have a lot of time to write new material for it so i decided to include that song and brian liked it so we went with it. But Meeting of The Waters kind of came out of nowhere and really fast. Eucalyptus had been on the horizon for a bit at that point.
Avey on "bad" audiences and his favorite snacks
Q: Hi! My name is Aliyah and I'm such a huge fan. I listen to your music every single day and your lyrics speak to my heart and the way I experience emotion in a way that I've never experienced in music before. You make me feel at home in my feelings so I wanted to thank you for that. You are my favorite lyricist and I will always be grateful to you for your wonderful sentiments. So, here are my questions! 1) I saw you in Sioux Falls, South Dakota (where I live) in October and I was extremely disappointed with the crowd for not dancing or singing much or interacting in other ways. Is it disappointing for you when you play a show where the crowd isn't hyped, and does it make the experience of playing the music different for you? Would you ever consider going back to a location where the crowd isn't as receptive as you're used to? (Btw I loved it, it was an amazing show and I'll cherish the experience forever!!) 2) Which people in your life have had the most influence on the way you see the world? Have you always felt like a sensitive and emotional person or does it come in waves or phases? I've always related to the lyric "I have a coat of feelings and they are loud." But being a more emotional or sentimental person can make life more difficult (at least in my experience.) Is it hard to be a feeling person in the world of music/entertainment or while dealing with any level of fame? 3) do you have a favorite snack?

Answer none or all or any you prefer. Thanks so much again for everything you have created. You are truly an inspiration.
Avey: Its always a little disheartening when the crowd feels like a stone wall staring back at you. But it's hard to predict. It definitely doesn't stop me from going back. It's funny sometimes ill read fans comments about shows and some will be like "sorry the crowd sucked" or "what a lame crowd" and i will not have had that experience at all and perhaps thought the crowd was cool. So i think it's important to keep in mind everyone experiences it differently and that even if a person isn't dancing their face off they are getting something out of the show.
Ive been eating a lot of cantaloupe this summer
Avey on playing ODDSAC live, having no favorites out of his work, and MPP
Q: Hi Avey! Welcome to our little corner of the internet, I among others are very glad you've decided to pay us a visit. Animal Collective and your solo work have been a really important part of my life for a while now, it's really changed me for the better. I have a few questions:
(1) Are you ever going to play any ODDSAC songs live? Mr Fingers and What Happened are some of my favourite songs of yours ever.
(2) Which of your studio albums (whether it be AnCo, Terrestrial Tones, solo or otherwise) was the most fun to write and record? Why?
(3) Merriweather Post Pavilion is one of the very few albums I consider to be perfect, so it would be interesting to find this out: What would you do differently? If you were recording the album today, what would you change?
Avey: No plans to play odd sac stuff live but you never know. We've changed our minds about things like that in the past.
Too hard to pick a favorite and they all signify really important times in my life so it's hard to discount any
I don't think i would change anything about that experience. It was a good time.
Avey on ASMR, Roamers, and live requests
Q: Hey Avey, Cody here from the Missoula, Mt show! Thanks for taking the time to do this!
In the song that was playing while trying to complete the puzzle it sounds like there are some ASMR samples, perhaps from Gentle Whispering on Youtube. Do you listen to ASMR?
Is a Roamer the creative being that comes and takes you to a creative headspace (in the shower)? Leaving fans to ponder the lyrics?
Did you play Alvin Row because of the Slasher Flicks AMA request? (It’s amazing you listen to your fans!)
(Again thank you so much for talking with my nervous self at the MT concert, it meant a lot despite my inability to ask all the questions I had! You and AC are my biggest inspirations!)
Avey: No i don't really listen to it but some of that stuff fascinates my and i've always like voice recordings and whispering and so i find it's really good for sampling.
No Roamer is more of a person like me who travels around with love in their heart
certainly kept it in mind YUP.
Avey on home recording vs studio
Q: Hey Avey! First off I love the new album! I wanted to know how you compare the making/recording of this album compared to the other albums in the Animal Collective Canon having Deakin record the album. Was it different from something like Enter The Slasher House? Thanks in advance and much love from Baltimore.
Avey: I feel like the only real difference is that we recorded it at home and it's been a while since i made a record like that. It just slows things down although I always have a deadline in mind. Recording in a studio can feel rushed and overwhelming sometimes cause i don't know the lay of the land. where as with this record and with down there, A lot of the equipment we used like the mics and pre amps and effx etc are mine and so I'm quite familiar with them.
Aveys advice to aspiring musicians
Q: Greetings Avey, hope you're doing well! What kind of advice would you give to a young, aspiring songwriter who is trying to find "their" sound? Where do you personally look for inspiration for your music?
Avey: I think trying to break free from any influence in some ways is the best way. Don't doubt your gut feeling about things even if someone else doesn't get it or might not. Challenge yourself. Try making a song on an instrument you can't play.
Lectures on Bees
Q: Hey Avey! just wondering what you have been reading recently
Avey: Some Rudolph Steiner Lectures on Bees.
Aveys favorite music from 2017
Q: Hi Avey! Over the past year I've become a massive fan of your and all the other Anco guys work. Thanks for making music that has such profound impact on my and many others lives.
I wanna ask... what is your favorite 2017 non Anco family release? And maybe your favorite album overall? Thanks!
Avey: It's hard for me to pick favorite records cause they're all so different. Circuit Des Yeux is putting out a great record this year. Angel Deradoorian as well. I also really like the SlowDIVE record but I'm a long time fan!
Eucalyptus' sounds, favorite video games, slow vs fast music, dogs, cats
Q: hiii avey im a newer fan but totally loving all your stuff!!! im super excited to see ya live soon!!
1- you've mentioned before 'jungle' sounds & themes in ur music, what sort of sound were you going for with this one?
2-which do you prefer, the slower stuff like eucalyptus, or more upbeat stuff like w/ slasher flicks?
3- what's ur fave video game?
4-dogs or cats??
5-any new music you've been into??
thank you so much for doin this!!! you're so rad
Avey: Expansive California Coastal sounds.
I like a balance. for this record it just felt right to keep it all slow and mellow.
Hard to pick a favorite. I don't play new video games but i like old nintendo games like legend of kage and megaman and the adventures of Link
I'd say both though i own two cats and no dogs.
Avey on choosing performers for Eucalyptus
Q: Hi Avey! Thanks for doing this AMA. Whether as part of AC or in solo endeavors you all seem to have strict rules for who's involved in a project. Eucalyptus may be the most collaborative album in terms of how many songs feature another (non-AC) performer and how high their parts are in the mix. What drove this decision? Was it a hard choice? Thank you!
Avey: It's usually just a matter of what i hear in my head and how easy it is to make it happen. I mean like finding the right people or sounds. It happened rather easily with eucalyptus because i was familiar with all the people i asked to be involved and i knew they could all accomplish what i was hearing.
Avey on mainstream music, blending sounds, and Grateful Dead
Q: Hey Avey! I cherish your latest release and have been listening to it on repeat.
I am an aspiring musician myself and your approach to music-making (particularly the ease with which you manoeuvre between styles and setups) inspires me greatly. That is why I have decided to ask you:
What do you think is the direction towards which mainstream music is heading nowadays? (with rock music having been superseded by hip-hop, according to latest reports)
How to successfully blend the electronic and the organic - do you think that such a task requires a specific approach, or can the either side be made subaltern in relation to the other?
What music have you been listening to most recently?
Cheers!
Avey: I don't really listen to a lot of Mainstream music. I love Kendrick Lamar and appreciate people that are in the mainstream really making their own stuff. But a lot of it seems so methodical to me now and pre packaged and manufactured. I don't really like to judge or be negative about it. Maybe some older people would say it's always been this way. But theres a sound in there now that just doesn't feel genuine to me.
It's tough. For us i feel like we kind of just grew into it but it's hard to force or plan out. Usually giving up control is the way to go.
The Grateful Dead
Avey on the seasonal qualities of ACs early music
Q: What season and emotion could you relate Spirit They're Gone/Hollinndagain to?
What inspires your writing style, its endlessly changing and I admire it strongly.
Avey: Hmm Spirit reminds me of traveling back to baltimore on the bus from new york to mix it in the fall. So I'd probably relate that to fall. Autumn was always a pleasant time in baltimore while growing up.
Most of the songs on hollindagain take me back to the hot summer of 2001 when we toured with that record and played those songs all the time. So probably summer at night.
Avey on his old PRS, Julianna barwick, and Eric Copelands visual art
Q: Do you still have the black PRS?
I've been listening to a lot of Julianna Barwick's music and it reminds me of some stuff AC has made. Have you ever listened to her music/what do you think?
Are there any 2D visual artists out there right now that you've been digging lately?
Avey: I do but it was busted at a show and so i don't really use it anymore.
I haven't listened to it really. Ill check it out.
Eric Copeland has been making some amazing paintings. I hope he will sometime share them with the world.
Avey on choosing effects for his music
Q: what are your choice effects, for vocal as well as guitar? additionally, how has josh shaped your solo work
thank you for providing the sound track for the best 3 years of my life, your songwriting is unmatched.
Avey: I think for effects it's always different depending on how i want a record to sound. like for Down there i wanted everything to be drenched in Flange and space echo cause i thought it would make it very murky and swampy. For eucalyptus i really didn't want many effects on things but we used some delays and some moog filters here and there.
Josh has shaped things really just by being an amazing friend and funny person to work with. His confidence in what I'm doing is extremely uplifting. He's also becoming quite a proficient engineer. when we did down there it was really more trial and error and messing with the space we had and just kind of figuring out things as we went. For this record he was able to move things along a lot quicker cause he's been working at recording a lot longer now.
Avey on his pursuits as a solo artist
Q: Hi! First of all I want to say thank you so much for all the music you’ve made over the years. Animal Collective is by far my favorite band, and your music has done a lot of great things for my life. I also really appreciate how you treat your fans, and go out of your way to meet and talk to us after shows, so thank you for that as well. It means a lot to us!
Eucalyptus is a really fantastic album, and there have been a ton of great ac releases lately as well. I’m always so impressed with the volume of quality stuff you and the other ac boys manage to put out on a regular basis. when you start to think about a direction for a song or album, how do you decide what to pursue as part of a solo project, and what to work on with the band?
Next question is a little off topic, but after a dj set you did with Deakin in Asheville in November, I gave y’all a tiny hand. did you keep it? have you learned to love it, or do you still think its weird?
Thanks for taking the time to do this, and I’m looking forward to seeing your show this weekend at MPP!
Avey: I think things just fall into place timing wise and sound wise. My solo records become a lot more conceptual to me at first before the songs are there and they are something i think about for awhile before i make them. where as AC records come from many minds so it's a lot more about playing things together and finding the sound in there and seeing what works. Usually it just feels like theres a time for group stuff and a time for solo stuff. Right now I'm writing so much music actually that it's hard to know what will happen with it. But it also feels good to not worry about it right now since we are sort of in between things.
Avey on long drives vs. long walks
Q: Hi Avey! Do you prefer long walks or long drives?
Avey: I like Both. I've been really into long drives lately. If you would have asked me this a couple years ago i would have said walks but now it's tough to decide.
Avey on getting in the mood to write, cassette releases, and having no favorites
Q: Hi Avey! Big fan of your music, especially loving eucalyptus so far. My questions for you are:
1) What do you do to get in the mood for writing?
2) Will we ever see any of your stuff on cassette? (I sure hope so)
3) what is your favorite song you've ever written, and who/what is your favorite band/singer.
Keep up the good work!
Avey: i usually just relax for a bit in the am but then get into writing soon after. I also like to get any errands i have out of the way so i don't have to worry about things while working on music. Ill listen to music often to get into a playing mood.
I love cassettes so hopefully
Thats too tough of a question.
Avey on memorable band practices, Pet Cemetary, and his favorite (spoiler: none) guitar pedal
Q:
My first question is, What was the most memorable band practice you've ever had?
My second is, What was the one horror film that freaked you out the most as a kid?
And lastly, What is your favorite guitar pedal?
Avey: two that come to mind are one where noah threw his drum sticks at me after playing one song cause i wasn't being very nice (it was a long time ago) and the session where we put banshee beat together. I just remember us all smiling and feeling like we had something really sweet happening.
Pet Cemetery Just because of the Zelda footage.
Don't have one.
Avey on the lyric-less noise in Kinda Bonkers
Q: It sounds like you are saying “it’s like I’m a man of oil.. Jesus Christ!” right before the second “are you seeing me?” part in Kinda Bonkers can you clarify what the actual lyrics are?
ETA:
Do you have any intention of recording and releasing any of the new material you debuted at the Mothlight? Likewise with the Coral Orgy show?
Keep on doing what you do, you're making the world a better place... one earhole at a time!
Avey: It's definitely not that but i sort of made that up on the spot and it was recorded many years ago at this point so i can't really remember.
Avey on sequenced sounds in Eucalyptus
Q: Hey Avey,
I was curious how you recorded your new album. There are so many sounds on the new record. It's hard to imagine how they all come from a single person. Did you sequence sounds on a sampler while you played over top of them with an instrument?
Avey: Yup I sequenced most of the sounds on an octatrack. Some of the other stuff i over dubbed live after the initial takes were laid down. The remaining sounds are angel and Jessika singing and eyvinds orchestrations and susans pedal steel all of which were recorded after the initial session