Facebook Slider

Nix Moon – Soul Traffic EP

  • Published in Singles

Dundalk’s Nix Moon are a hugely impressive live band. They bowled me over on the main stage of Vantastival last month, so much so that I had to go see them again later that day. They are the quintessential festival band; baggy trousers, flowing hair and beards, and a barefoot, world-travelling, bongo player. Trying to capture the sound and feeling of Nix Moon in a studio setting is like trying to catch lightning in a bottle, but they have given it a good go here.

There’s a loose, all-encompassing music scene in Dundalk built around The Spirit Store, where they launched the EP last week. Soul Traffic is their first studio outing since the band came together a year and a half ago. They describe their sound as “Eastern-psychedelic-folk-jazz with a hint of prog, and a bit of reggae, ambient, and fusion.” Not so easy to pin down, but easy to shake your hips to.

Opening track ‘Hitchcock’s Eyes’ starts gently with Joycey singing sweetly, but with an undercurrent of menace, much like the late director’s films. The many changes of time signature and musical style within the song are typical of the band, who boast a wide range of influences from eastern music to heavy metal.

The song is radio friendly and the tune has a habit of staying in your head all day. After many deviations and derivations, the whole band weigh in towards the end of the song to great effect. It’s in this section and on the ska/reggae-tinged ‘Bad Seed’, with its psychedelic wig-out, that Nix Moon really get across the power they possess as a unit.

Have they managed to translate the energy and joie de vivre of their live performance on to record? Not entirely, but for a first record they have made a decent fist of it and, in ‘Hitchcock’s Eyes’, they have also written a cracker of a tune.

Soul Traffic is an excellent start to their recording career. Further experimentation with the recording process could yield real benefits, particularly if they can capture the feel of their live shows. Until then, make sure to add Nix Moon to your must-see list at one of the many, many festivals they’re playing around Ireland this summer.

The Soul Traffic EP is out now and currently only available in physical form, which is unfortunately sold out for now.

Read more...

Musos' Guide Meets Nix Moon

 

Dundalk’s Nix Moon played such an impressive set at the main stage of Vantastival that I had to go see them again in the bar later that day. They are the quintessential festival band; baggy trousers, flowing hair and beards, and a dedicated bongo player. The five piece play from a broad palette of genres and rhythms. Their debut EP is out next month and I caught up with Joycey, Fahy and Gavin from the band as they were soaking up the atmosphere at the festival.

MG: We're here at Vantastival with Nix Moon. Who have we got here?

Fahy - We've got Fahy. I'm the acoustic guitar player and one of the singers.

Gavin - I'm Gavin and I'm the percussionist and the court jester.

Joycey - I'm Joycey. I'm guitar, bouzouki and voice.

MG: How long have you been together?

J: Me and Fahy started writing music together in college.

F: Joycey wears the trousers.

J: Sometimes, unless I want to wear a skirt. Me and Gavin used to jam when we were 15 or 16 and then he went away travelling the world for a couple of years. Left me, broke my heart.

G: And then I came back and we opened up like a clam out of the sea. A musical clam. Straight out of the depths.

F: Gavin’s brain never quite came back from travelling. He's here in body with us.

G: The hands still work.

F: The band came together about a year and a half ago. We were writing tunes in college and when Gavin came back from travelling we started playing together.

G: I used to play in another band with two of the boys called The Beached Whales so we got them in too.

J: And now we're in love since.

MG: You have a bongo player.

F: That's Gavin.

MG: Ok, the bongos, the world traveller, this all makes sense.

G: I’ve no shoes on, I'm obviously the bongo player.

MG: You look every inch the festival band! You've an EP coming out?

J: First of July launching in The Spirit Store, Dundalk.

G: It's a three track EP called Soul Traffic.

J: We recorded it with Peter Baldwin up in Ravensdale. The studio is pure class.

F: Real ‘70s.

G: In a cabin.

J: Even the scenery around it. It's etched into the mountain and you're looking up at the whole bay. An amazing building. An amazing sound.

F: An amazing dude.

G: Handsome too.

J: That's why I booked him. I just get lost in his eyes, “Another take, Peter?”

MG: Describe your sound for us. There's loads going on there.

F: Eastern-psychedelic-folk-jazz with a hint of prog, and a bit of reggae.

G: Ambient dribblement.

F: It's fusion. And we don't really stick to a genre. We try and spread it out.

G: My mother, the only bands she likes are B.B. King and Alice in Chains and she says there's something there for everyone. Even if you don't like the band, there's a song you'll like. We play enough that everyone loves it.

MG: My mother is like that too, she loves Leonard Cohen and Smashing Pumpkins.

G: Leonard Cohen, worst singer ever. Great poet, no voice.

F: Tom Waits as well, I suppose you love his voice.

G: Scour! Great music, great words, great lines, muck voice.

J: You're the bongo player, you can’t be commenting on anybody.

F: We studied music, you're out.

J: Growing up, my oul’ fella was mad into everything. There's a big Eastern influence there. He went to Turkey eight or ten years ago to record an album there. It was meant to be a concept album joining the East and the Western influences.

F: My mother was in a folk band called The Limelighters. They played Christy Moore songs and stuff. What's your background, Gavin?

G: What is my background? Heavy metal. Heavy fucking metal. Give me a bit of Pantera or Metallica any day. None of this Middle Eastern shite.

F: You love it.

G: I do. With all my heart. I wish I had two hearts so I could give one to the band and the other to Pantera. You know Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers’ greatest hits? I know every lyric of that album. We were driving to France when I was about six. We left all the tapes on the back window and every tape melted apart from Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers’ greatest hits. So I know every word from every song. See if ‘American Girl’ comes on I'm throwing the radio out of the window.

MG: You're all locals?

J: Fahy and them are from Monaghan, I’m from Swords originally but we all met in Dundalk. There's a class original music scene in Dundalk.

F: Around The Spirit Store.

J: When we have the launch there I think, as a band, we want it to be a sensory experience as well as a musical experience. We'll have some backdrops and visuals, a few art pieces.

F: Gavin’s making one out of willow.

MG: You have a good stage presence too.

G: I think that's what makes us a good band. We're five musicians and five best friends. We love just being with each other even without playing tunes. We love being in the same room, having the craic and being stupid.

MG: Is this your first time playing Vantastival?

F: We played last year.

J: We've been here every year for the past three or four, when it was in Dundalk. It's gonna be a good year for us. We played here and next week we're at B.A.R.E. In The Woods and then we're playing at Knockanstockan. And I'd like to think we're going to play Electric Picnic as well. We were there last year in the Bog Cottage.

G: We were shit. Well, not shit, but we weren't as deadly as we are now.

MG: Why are you called Nix Moon?

J: Nix is the moon of Pluto and we thought we were being spacey bastards. It also turns out that Nix is the Greek goddess of darkness and light.

MG: Any other business?

J: Come to the launch in The Spirit Store on July 1st. Check us out on Facebook and Bandcamp.

G: The songs on Bandcamp are a year old now but still deadly.

Read more...
Subscribe to this RSS feed