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He advises new fans should check out 'The Brown Album' if they're looking for an easy road into Orbital's music, oddly ignoring the opportunity to plug the forthcoming retrospective album. "'The Brown Album' is a good favourite and has continuity," he says. "I'd recommend they listened to that. Or they should buy the back catalogue. Or get their dads to buy it all for them!"
Playing live involves more preparation than audiences might think. "We have to convert all of our songs so we can perform them live. We use basic sequencers live, but the stuff gets written on computer so it has to be condensed and made more basic. It's a very boring process and it takes three weeks when you're not really doing any music."
As for the next album proper, "We decided to come up with a record first and then see who wants it, says Phil. "We could sign to someone now and then have them say when the record comes out, 'oh, it's not what we were expecting', but we want to avoid all that. We want people to sign it for what it is and I'm sure they'd agree that'd be the best way to do it. We could just release it ourselves and get a distribution deal. All the live stuff is our own company anyway, so it's really a formality."
"We haven't really lost much with not being with a record company anyway," he continues. "It's actually quite liberating."
On Orbital's last album, a special guest appeared. As radio stations are known to prefer tracks with vocals, one could be forgiven for wondering whether David Gray's participation meant A Big Marketing Opportunity.
"He's my brother in law," corrects Phil. "He's a laugh, and it's all very casual. It wasn't done because it'd be good for marketing, it was just a laugh. But then he became David Gray writ large..." Unlike The Chemical Brothers, then, Orbital won't be resorting to indie blokes for their future records.
"I decided we shouldn't stay there much longer, with lightning ten feet away..." - Phil
One thing Orbital do a great deal is sample. Some people are not convinced that sampling is any different to ripping off. "What we normally do is take a tiny snippet or a loop from something rather than a whole riff," says Phil. "You'll listen to something and a light will just go on and you'll think 'I like that'. Something will just stick out and you'll think that'll be a great sound source to synthesise and twist and turn. The sampler is a creative tool with a whole synthesised section to it. You can take a chord from a record with a guitar on it and twist it so much that it has nothing to do with the original. That's a creative way of using a sampler."
"Or," he continues, somewhat mischieviously, "you can just take a huge chunk, like Fatboy Slim. I'm coming from a world of hip-hop, with three decks, where two are running at the same time and you're creating a third thing. If you're taking a big chunk, you have to ask, are you bringing anything to the party?"
The interview's nearly over, and Phil is asked to describe his most memorable Orbital gig. "One of the most bizarre gigs we've ever played was up a big tower in Germany," he begins. "We were asked to play on the top of this flume tower, on a metal platform. There were about 10 people and thunder and lightening and we did a track called 'The Box' as a Hammer house of horror version and it was so appropriate! All this lightning coming down... it was fantastic."
"But then I came to my senses," he continues, "and decided we shouldn't stay there any longer on the top of a tower when I could see lightning ten feet away from me...! So I just scarpered, but my brother was so pissed he just stayed there and played like a madman! It was quite an experience."
Audiences at Orbital's forthcoming gigs shouldn't expect the Hartnoll brothers to conjure appropriate weather systems, but Orbital can magic up a fine live experience. Even now, Phil Hartnoll will be building up his neck muscles to take the strain of those Mag-lites...
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