Paul Armor talks to Duann Scott (DS) and Ruth Wilson (RW) from Toby 1.
“With the sublime vocals of classically trained Ruth Wilson and the innovative production style of Duann Scott, Toby1 is laptop rock”, or so says the press release that came with the CDR fresh from the mastering studio. ‘I think its still warm from coming straight out of the burner’ says Duann as he passes the disc too me…
What’s with the name Toby1?
DS: Well there are two stories to the name, or should I say two lies to it. The first is that I was going to name my first-born child Toby-one, but no woman in her right mind would run with that. The other story is the obvious Star Wars connection, but as you know there is a band called Kinobe and we thought Toby1 plus Kinobe what a perfect double billing one day, and we would get first rank, because Kinobe plus Toby1 just doesn’t sound right at all! Really, the name for my first-born will be Nacho Gonzales…truly! Actually, we had this gig booked at Minke Bar in Adelaide and at this stage we were Duann and Ruth or Ruth and Duann, which didn’t really work. We had a deadline for the press for the gig and we came up with it in the heat of the moment!
Laptop rock hey? Live you sound very much like a complete band but it’s just you two, a lappy, violin, flute, mic and other random noise generating devices. Can you explain your live set up?
DS: Yeah that’s us; I am hoping to define the genre that we started.
RW: Little people behind the screens do all our work for us, the computer controls them and damn, they’re good!
DS: When we started out I had a lot of analogue instruments synced live and running through a sequencer. That got cut back because it was getting too chaotic and out of control hauling the gear around; it was temperamental in good and bad ways, but basically it gave me the shits. I love my laptop. Ruth sings live and plays various instruments, depending on what she can be bothered bringing along. So it is “band” music in a way because all the sounds are live when we recorded them, the bass is fingers on strings, no sequencing, it is us playing.
We have a back-of-the-house-studio number with our lovely mixing desk and all our instruments set up, always ready to rock! We run everything into Protools, so I can multi track all the elements, and mix them together. For live performances, I like remixing, tweaking and making sure the effects are right for the room we are playing in.
RW: Usually Duann will have something and pass it onto me. I like to improvise and do a lot on the spot. That is generally where the track starts and we just expand from there. Another way we work is when I have a song laid down and Duann reworks it until it sounds nothing like it started. That is normally the gauge as to when it’s sounding good, otherwise we would still be mixing and playing around and never get around to putting down anything final.
Are there any plans for the complete Toby1 band?
DS: Not right now. That would be the ideal plan, but at the moment the live the band is a laptop, Ruth and her assorted instruments, and me. It’s easier, simpler and a hell of a lot more fun for us.
How do you describe your sound?
RW: That’s a crap question and I hate it!. It’s Jazz, pop, folk, rock, electro…
DS: The easiest shortcut would be compare it to someone else, and people have been saying that it’s somewhere between Portishead and Björk, with a bit of Moloko thrown in on the side.
RW: The automatic assumption is that you are therefore a lesser version because you are merely just a copy…it doesn’t work for me.
DS: It could be worse, we could be getting 1992 Iggy Pop comparisons. The exciting thing for us is that all our projects are so diametrically opposed musically: there’s the stripped back acoustic folk of Ruth's solo work, there’s the experimental stuff I do, and then the Modular electronica thing. When we come together all these different tangents converge and create the Toby1 sound. (Continued top of next column) |