At the end of Mastodon’s show-stealing set at Bloodstock a couple of weekends back, Troy Sanders announced that, with their summer of festival touring wrapped up, they were returning home to Atlanta to work on a new record.
That’s gonna be a wait. But good news: drummer Brann Dailor already has new music about to drop, with the second album from Arcadea, The Exodus Of Gravity, coming out this Friday.
It sees Brann once again teaming up with Core Atoms for a synth-driven funk-prog journey into the future, where the the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies have become one, and spore-riddled AI machines are in charge and becoming the next stage of evolution.
It’s as weird and wonderful as it sounds. To unpack it all, Brann took us through their mystical journey to the stars to explain the concept, the creation, and why he’s planning to perform live as “a debonair clown…”
It’s been a while since the last album, and a lot of people would have guessed it was a one-off. Was the vibe just right to pick it up again?
“I just really liked the project, but it's so busy and life happens. The way it came about in the first place was through my buddy Core, who I've been friends with since the early ’90s. He's a guitar player, and he had this band called Gaylord, who I ended up being the drummer for. It was kind of funky Mr. Bungle worship type of thing. It was pretty fun. He ended up moving to Atlanta a number of years ago and getting a keyboard. While I was on tour he was like, ‘Hey man, I wrote all this music on this keyboard.’ So I checked it out, and it was great, and I said, ‘Let me do some drums on this, and I’ll do some vocals.’
“So that was the first record. It was already done and I just jumped on. When we discussed possibly doing a second one, I said I'd really like to get more involved in the writing side of it, him and I putting things together. We did that in my basement, he’d come over and jam his keys. Lo and behold, we had a spine for a new album. Two years later, here we are.”
What were you looking for when you were jamming?
“The core of something cool. If we had the core of a decent song, we can branch out from there, do your noises and stuff. It really comes down to the mix – put too much stuff in, and then start subtracting from there to make sure that everything grows in the right way. We definitely wanted the new one to be more dancey. That was more of an emphasis that I wanted to put on, because I already have a pretty proggy band, which is fun, and there's still those elements, but it'd be cool to just have something a bit sexy.
“That was what we were going for, and I think we achieved it. For me, it's always about hooks. I need hooks to like music! I don't feel like I'm one of those people that can go without them. Something needs to get the hook in me, and I know lots of people are the same way. I do enjoy some music that's outsider crazy stuff, but I don't enjoy it for that long. If there's nothing to grab onto, I can't grab onto it. We were looking for those, but I think there's enough balance. There’s some weird, far-out moments, some of it’s a little bit ’80s and ’70s, synth worship, there’s some new wave parts that remind me of New Order or something, and some bits have a Bowie vibe.”
Was that an intentional influence?
“Yeah, I mean, for the vocals I go for [Genesis singer] Peter Gabriel’s solo stuff, or Station To Station-era Bowie. I'm always looking at Bowie with this. When I’m recording I think, ‘I need to close my eyes and get into my best early ’80s Bowie.’ My buddy Tom, who engineered it, knows what I'm going for. He can be like, ‘Okay, yeah, I think you're in the realm.’ I'm never gonna sound like Bowie, but it's the thought that counts.”