In A Trance: Truss & Tessela’s Overmono Interviewed – The Quietus

Posted: April 13, 2017 at 11:56 pm

We were driving down to our Mums one evening and it suddenly just hit us that we should start properly making music together, Ed Russell, otherwise known as Tessela and one half of Overmono, tells me over a bowl of noodle broth in Soho. That sounds strange, but wed never written music together for our own enjoyment outside of a specific brief. What followed was a five-day writing session in a cottage away from the distractions of city life in London, freeing up Ed and brother Tom, otherwise known as Truss and the other half of Overmono, to work completely independently, free of record label expectations and outside of their respective solo projects.

Tom is 10 years Eds senior, and the brotherly partnership between the two seems to have been void of any disputes through the course of their time spent working together, having previously, although accidentally, established an improvisational live techno project known as TRER for a run of shows across 2013 and 2014, and just one release on a label called Brothers in 2012. Ed admits that he actually finds it impossible to write music with anyone else, adding that he has actually tried a few times before with friends, before Tom cuts him off mid-sentence: You can be pretty stubborn.

Having emerged from some fruitful early studio sessions, which gave the pair the chance to simply experiment away from what might be expected from their club-focused output and try something outside of the techno that they had come to be known for individually as well as together during their brief stint as TRER, they struck up a deal with XL and now two EPs later, and with a further EP and later an album on the way, theyve set other projects on the back-burner.

On their latest EP, Arla II, the pair draw on refracted, big room trance and the kind of 90s rave that has been a particularly heavy influence on the younger Russell brothers output over the years. Tracks such as O-Coast and Powder Dry mark out their ability to craft music together that draws on their own solo discographies while also adding a further dimension that doesnt necessarily adhere to the rules of techno and club music.

The pair are in high moods as we meet to speak over lunch, covering their early relationship with techno, the shift from TRER to Overmono and their unorthodox approach to sampling amongst other subjects.

Listening to you both DJ, be it together or individually, I feel like theres a strong lineage of faster, harder 90s techno running through it all, which differs somewhat to the more widely heard techno of today, with labels like Tresor and Djax-Up-Beats figuring heavily amongst the music you play out?

Tom Russell: I suppose some of my first introduction to the harder techno was stuff like Producer and others like Stu Allan and Carl Cox. This was around the early 1990s and I was listening to that along with some of the stuff emerging from Berlin and labels like Downwards, as well as, as you say, Tresor and Djax-Up-Beats. That was all somewhat in a different world to the techno that I had been listening to before.

Ed Russell: For me, I was probably listening to stuff like that when I was around 8, and Tom was 18 when he got his decks and was playing that music. Im not sure if it made too much of an impression immediately, but I got some turntables when I was around 11 and the only records I was mixing with were ones that I was pinching from Toms room. I cant remember any specific records and I wish I could, but I guess some of it would have been that faster, harder techno. For me, I guess I went back and discovered it all retrospectively, especially with UK rave music in general.

Particularly in your music as Tessela, Ed, 90s rave culture has obviously been a strong reference point with regards to the hardcore and breakbeat of that time. Is that something that youve looked to incorporate into Overmono, or has that happened unconsciously perhaps?

ER: Its something that definitely folded into Overmono but we didnt set out to do so. Part of it would come down to the box of records Tom got when we first started writing for Overmono.

TR: My brother-in-law was a DJ in Leeds back in the late 80s and early 90s and he had tons of vinyl that had been gathering dust for a number of years down in a cellar, and he said that I could check it out to see if theres anything that I might want. The first box we checked out had loads of amazing early Detroit stuff like Underground Resistance and Transmat records inside, and it was like oh my god, this is amazing, Ill take the lot, and he wanted to get rid of them so he was fine with that. Then I got them all home and it was just a total letdown because Id discovered all these records in this one box but then all the others were just not the same at all. There was a lot of UK stuff that I couldnt even tell if they made it to official press because a lot of them were promos.

A lot of it is really bad, but we decided that we would just spend some time at the start of the project going through all these records and just pulling samples out, like drum loops, breaks, synths and whatever else we fancied. We built up a big library of sounds we thought were interesting, and that was almost the start of Overmono. We just almost exclusively used these samples to make the basis of some tracks.

ER: It was quite nice having a starting point like that.

TR: It was a totally different way of working for me at least, because Ive never really used sampling very much in my work before.

Did any of that library find its way into the finished Overmono recordings then?

ER: Theres quite a lot that weve used, especially in the first record. Most of it we tried to obscure beyond recognition just to avoid any issues, so nobody should be able to find out what it is.

TR: People will probably try hard to find out now.

ER: There were one or two that we did have to clear or re-record. I think, more generally, because I wasnt around to experience 90s rave culture first-hand because I was too young at the time, it feels more for me like Ive somehow gained some sense of ownership because it is still what Ive come from and what Ive grown up with. For me it feels much more natural to take influence from 90s UK rave culture than making disco records or something, because it wouldnt feel authentic at all. Obviously early rave records were doing stuff like that in that they were speeding up parts of early hip-hop records or whatever, so thats not to say that you have to always have some ownership over what it is youre producing, but for me it feels that I can go through and take influence from this big archive of samples we have, and have it still feel genuine.

Why did you start afresh with Overmono rather than perhaps continuing with the TRER project?

TR: I guess we dont specifically see Overmono as a solely techno-focused project. TRER was more techno-focused and that project just came about without us really intending it to. A promoter from Ireland wanted to book us to do a live project and then that led to some further bookings and it spiralled a little from there.

ER: A friend of ours started a label called Brothers and asked if we could contribute a track to it and that was the only TRER track that we wrote. We never decided to start that project but it just carried on for a while, but we both knew that wasnt what we wanted to do together in terms of musical output, I guess because it felt too similar to what we were doing on our own already. We liked the idea of having an outlet for all the other ideas that might get squeezed out of your solo work. Your influences get narrower and narrower as your sound develops and you grow more accustomed to the way you work, and in a way thats really nice because you feel more comfortable writing and can carve out your own niche. At the same time though, you might find that you cant work in some other ideas or they get pushed out, and doing Overmono means we can entertain those ideas and see if they can work in other ways. The two records weve put out so far, weve been able to work on without being limited to this idea of whether other people can play them out in clubs.

Have you brought ideas that you were working on individually before into the fold for further work with Overmono?

ER: Not too much from before, but there is something that Tom wrote around 10 years ago that I think is absolutely amazing. We tried working it into something recently and spent around a month going around in circles until we finally accepted it wasnt working.

Why was that?

TR: I just dont think its particularly as amazing as Ed thinks.

ER: Its good, but its very big room.

Listening to something like O-Coast, I hear quite a trance-y, big room element to it even if it doesnt fall into other obvious big room traditions. That doesnt have to be a bad thing of course.

TR: Yes, especially with trance. We both love a bit of trance - its become such a dirty word. We love melodic stuff and theres a huge amount of great stuff. Obviously there was a time where techno and trance were on very similar wavelengths and theyve both crossed over into our work. As for big room, I guess a lot of my records as Truss are made to be played at big raves.

Youve been co-running Poly Kicks, so in terms of working with XL on Overmono, was it the case that that gave you the chance to think bigger?

ER: When we started the project, there was a five-day writing session in a cottage. We did that independently. We decided it would be a good idea to book out this cottage in South Wales and we took down as much kit with us as we could. We broke down on the way and spent a night in Newbury so we only had three days there. We just made music day and night with no phone, no internet reception. There were no distractions and I think we came out with around 15 tracks. I guess that comes back to having your solo focus narrowed over time, and then we had all these possibilities working together.

TR: We werent writing for a label or with any other considerations apart from just doing what we wanted to do.

ER: Youre always chasing that feeling of hitting on a good idea. You feel so uplifted. We did it as just an enjoyable writing experience without boundaries and it was really free and easy. Once we had the music we didnt know what to do with it. We thought Poly Kicks wouldnt be the right place because its very much focused on 12s and playable, club-focused records. XL was top of our list really.

TR: It felt it would be the best fit.

Its my understanding that youre in the process of working towards an album, so hows that coming along?

ER: Ive been reading quite a lot and making notes in preparation for the album, gathering thoughts and ideas. We need to set some boundaries before we start writing, so were trying to create some sort of manifesto I guess within which to work.

TR: As liberating as it is to have all those possibilities, it can also be a hindrance, whether its the techniques we use or the equipment.

Would you say the process of working together has come more naturally as the years have passed?

TR: I think its always been really easy right from the off.

ER: I find it pretty much impossible to make music with anyone else actually. Ive tried a few times with friends

TR: You can be pretty stubborn.

ER: I can be. Im a bit of a megalomaniac as well so I find it hard to relinquish control sometimes, but that works better if youre brothers rather than if youre mates. Youre less bothered about writing something with somebody and being scared of their reaction. If we dont like each others ideas, we can take criticism.

TR: Neither of us hold back really when we dont like something or think something should be improved. There will always be times when one of us feels strongly about something and the other feels the opposite and its of course about trying to find some kind of compromise there to make you both happy. It doesnt really often happen though. Were on the same wavelength for the most part.

ER: If were not both into something, theres probably a reason why. Theres a track were working on at the moment where Tom thinks the synth line sounds like an awful, distorted electric guitar-based drum & bass record. I cant remember who its by.

TR: I probably shouldnt say really.

Do you want to draw out silly elements in what you do though? For example, Tom, your work as Blacknecks definitely didnt take itself seriously.

TR: Yeah, we both definitely like stuff that doesnt take itself too seriously. I think some of our favourite music has a certain tongue-in-cheek element about it, but doesnt cross too far over the line. Blacknecks I think was very borderline - maybe a few times we went over the line, but that was the nature of the project. With Overmono, it might just be a sample we use where only we know the source of it, but nobody else does, so its something for us.

ER: Some of the samples are pretty outlandish and I dont think we should give away where they come from.

TR: Were both big fans of Aphex for example, and one of the things I love most about Aphex is the humour in everything he does.

Arla II is out now on XL. Overmono play live at Field Day on June 3. For tickets and more information, click here

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In A Trance: Truss & Tessela's Overmono Interviewed - The Quietus

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