Saturday, May 19, 2012

Ghostland Observatory Interview

November 4, 2009 by The Rock Star Stories  
Filed under Featured, LoonaticTV

ghostland observatory

By Brittany Reeber University of Texas Austin

The Monday after Austin City Limits Music Festival was a day of recovery from a weekend with little sleep and lots of noise. I had my doubts about the interview scheduled with Ghostland Observatory for that Monday night. If I was dead tired, I could only imagine how the Austin duo felt after two days of shows, blowing up both Zilker Park at the ACL Fest Saturday night and then downtown at Stubbs’s BBQ the next day. But sure enough, Thomas Ross Turner, exactly one half of the spacey ensemble and master of multi-tasking (managing synthesizer, keyboard, drums, and backing vocals), showed up on my friend’s front porch around ten o’clock.

This weekend has been crazy for you!

-Yeah a pretty intense weekend, a lot of preparation.

How did you feel about your show at ACL?

-That was really good, really large crowd, and everything went really well. The crowd response was really good and we had a good time up there.

Do you prefer playing a festival or a club show?

-They’re all pretty surprising because say you have your mind set on how a certain show is gonna be or a certain city…in the beginning when we were touring, it’d be like ‘Oh this is gonna be the best ever… it’s this city or its this festival,’ and then you’re kind of let down. Or sometimes it’s the opposite, you go in to some town you’ve never been to before and you’re like ‘Oh I wonder how this is gonna go,’ and it end up being insane. So you never know what you’re gonna get, they can both be fun.

Have you always had the whole light show?

-No, because in the beginning, like right after the Paparazzi Lightening record, we’d go on tour and play a show in Los Angeles for like ten people. After we got home, I was like, ‘yeah this may not work, we may have to think of something else.’ Because you know we’d go up to Seattle and there’d be like eight or nine people there. We played some coffee shop in Bellingham, Washington and people were trying to study and we were trying to rock out. And then we’d have to drive all the way home from Bellingham and have to think about that. Like, ‘okay we just did a string of shows that maybe equaled up to fifty people total and things are not looking to good.’ We did a lot of shows like that in the beginning but we just kept going and eventually it worked.

How did you find the motivation? That seems pretty deterring.

-Well we’d come back to Austin and get rejuvenated. We’d play a crazy show at Emo’s or something and there’d be a thousand sweaty, hot people and a lot of energy. It would be so fun and we’d be like ‘Oh alright let’s try it again.’ We’d go back out and more people would be at the shows and it just started to grow like that.

It all seems to very be connected, the music and the lasers, do you guys work it out a lot beforehand?

-Yeah I mean that’s part of our partnership, being together for three years. It’s like a whole unit now: the sound, the lights, the performance, and the lasers. It’s all the show, the whole thing, so everything works together. I guess it’s sort of choreographed in a way to where it’s like nothing should be out of place.

Do you feel like it really enhances everything?

-I think so…with the lighting and the lasers and the different feelings and climaxes and parts of the set. I think it enhances everything because not only are you hearing it and feeling it, you’re seeing things happen. If there’s an exciting point in the set and the lights are going nuts, you see the crowd reacting and it helps.

Your whole setup on stage, you’ve got your keyboards and everything, what’s going on over there? It just looks like you’re doing so much all at once!

-Yeah I’ve got my synthesizers and my sequencer and my mixer and the drums. I’ve kind of got tunnel vision, I don’t really look out too much to the crowd cuz I try to make sure everything keeps moving along and everything is right. I get to groove out back there, but I can’t move around. That’s why I sport the cape, so I can just be back in my little control station.

I read online that your wife made your cape.

-Yeah and she made me a new one for ACL fest and it had lights on it so that’s pretty cool.

That’s a big deal! You never change from the other cape, right?

-I had the original and I wear the original still, and then she made me another one for ACL fest two years ago, but I threw that one in to the crowd.

Was she mad?

-No, she was alright with it, but she made this one and she was like, ‘no throwing this one.’ She spent a lot of time on this last one so I wasn’t gonna do it.

What’s it made out of?

-Hmm, I don’t know materials and things, but it’s some kind of material and she hand sewed it. Then got these lights and got this engineer to help her get all the lights connected to this thing in the back that has a switch and it runs off batteries.

Do you think you’re gonna catch on fire?

-No I don’t think its got enough juice to light me on fire, but it does get hot in there.

Aaron is your other half and he’s out front singing, do you ever get jealous and want to stretch around ?

-He does what he does and I do what I do. He’s more like live and loose and entertaining and I’m just like: ‘Okay, we need to be here at this time. Alright, what are the lights doing? Okay perfect.’ So he’s perfect for what he does and I kind of stay back in my little area.

The sound that Ghostland Observatory has is really unique, in Austin and in general. How did you guys come to find that sound together? Did you have something in mind or did it just happen?

-I think what we were trying to do when we first started creating was just push it out there, you know, be different. We really wanted to make music that was either loved or hated and not just kind of middle of the road. Same thing with our live show, we either want people to be like, ‘oh yeah I love those guys,’ or they show up and are like, ‘I can’t stand them, I would never go to see that ever again.’ It’s either or, you know, and that’s just all we try to do.

Do you believe in life on other planets?

-I’m sure, I mean, you can’t even chart how large the universe is, right? It’s like ever expanding, so how would you even know? You’d be taking a guess either way. There’s no telling what’s out there.

Well because your music is so spacey, how do you think aliens would receive your show if they saw it?

- Haha, hopefully they’d want to groove out. Especially the light set up we had at ACL fest; it was designed to look like a mother ship.

That’s how I felt when I saw it! I could see the show all the way from the other side of the festival.

-Yeah so hopefully they’d be like ‘these guys know what’s going on.’

What are you plans for the future? What do you hope to happen with the band?

-Just first get through these forty shows from now until January, take a little breather, and then start creating again and try to push it even further.

Dashboard-New Found Glory CANCELLED TOUR

DashboardConfessional_webBanner_300x250CANCELLED!!!

Due to family circumstances Dashboard Confessional has cancelled their tour with New Found Glory, Never Shout Never and Meg and Dia.

Our student press conferences with the above bands has been cancelled!

Still on:

November 18th with AFI at the Pompano Beach Civic Center at 4PM.

December 6th All American Rejects and Taking Back Sunday at The Fillmore Miami Beach 4pm.

email us info@therockstarstories.com for your invitation to both of these.

THANKS AND SEE YOU THERE on the 18th!

LMFAO INTERVIEW ADDED!

October 5, 2009 by zac  
Filed under LoonaticTV, Rock Star Stories

LMFAOThe LMFAO interview has been added to the Loonatic TV playlist, and can be see on demand on the Rock Star Stories Page!!!

Incubus Interview Added!

August 17, 2009 by zac  
Filed under LoonaticTV, Rock Star Stories

IMG_1352a brand new interview with the band Incubus has been added to the Rock Star Stories On Demand, and the Loonatic Tv Lineup!

Off the Bus and On the Record-A Review

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Off the Bus and On the Record Available Now!

Before they graced the covers of magazines, adorned the bedroom walls of fans, and played sold out arenas, they were interviewed by The Rock Star Stories. For nine seasons, television show The Rock Star Stories has interviewed over 200 of the biggest names in the music industry. After a decade of crazy encounters and experiences, it’s the cast’s turn to tell their rock star stories.

Off the Bus and On the Record is a compilation of 22 interviews conducted over the past seasons, told from fresh perspective of the teens who encountered these musicians first-hand. Off the Bus gives readers a candid look into beloved bands, both on and off the camera. The book features interviews from everyone, including My Chemical Romance, Fall Out Boy, Jack’s Mannequin, and Maroon 5. With a foreword written by famed editor Aaron Burgess, Off the Bus and On the Record is a must for any true music lover.

BY Alison Sikes

Jeffree Star Interview Added!

July 30, 2009 by zac  
Filed under Featured, Rock Star Stories

 

JeffreeStar Jeffree Star has been to the Rock Star Stories line up! This fresh new interview was done just the other day with Brittany on Jeffrees stars bus! Look at the Rock Star Stories page to check out interview on demand!

What Bands will still be famous in 100 years?

July 24, 2009 by The Rock Star Stories  
Filed under LoonaticTV

NEW VIDEOS ADDED 7-7-09

July 9, 2009 by The Rock Star Stories  
Filed under LoonaticTV

Latest Music Videos Added-7-7-09

Mos Def ” Casa Bey”                 Metric “Gimme Sympathy”                   Major Lazar “Hold The LIne”      

Motionless in White “Ghost in the Mirror”       Dropdead Goregous “Two Birds One Stone”

David Guetta featuring Kelly Rowland “When Loves Takes Over”   Fall From Grace “King of Lies”

MGMT “Kids”           Chairlift “Bruises”       Pete Yorn “Don’t Wanna Cry”

Peter, Bjorn and John ” It Don’t Move Me”

NBC 6 Interview

July 7, 2009 by The Rock Star Stories  
Filed under Featured

Jaime, Amanda, Brittany and Zac were interviewed by Pam Giganti on South Florida Today on NBC6 on 7-7-09.  They were lucky to be on the same episode with DWade and Alonzo Mourning! NBC6 Interview 7-7-09

Off the Bus and On the Record

June 25, 2009 by The Rock Star Stories  
Filed under LoonaticTV

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Almost 10 years ago sisters Jaime and Amanda Rich started their own local tv show called Swept Away TV.   AT first they interviewed boy bands like NuGround and other local boy and girl groups.  In their second season they began to branch out and interview bands like Jimmy Eat World, New Found Glory and Dashboard Confessional.

The shows were soon seen on more than 67 stations and then 4500 colleges on the OSTN Network.  On the way to more than 1000 interviews more than 3300 students played a part in the show’s success.  Thanks to student director Jeff Hendler and then Zac Rich and a revolving cast of students from all over the State of Florida, the show was part of a pilot for The N, won an AEGIS award for video production along with a national TELLY award and was voted the best video show in South Florida by NewTimes.

Many of our former and current cast members are featured in the book.  Buy it, read it, you’ll laugh and enjoy it.  You will hear from Alison Sikes, Nicole Shevloff, Michelle Nash and Jeff Hendler among others.  Artists include Maroon 5, My Chemical romance, Andrew McMahon from Jack’s Mannequin, Dave Melillo, William Beckett and so many more.

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