What in your mind is the biggest difference between Transatlanticism and Plans?
We went into Transatlanticism with a pretty good idea of which songs we were going to record. But I think a lot of things about the record were just happy accidents. If there’s one big difference between that and Plans, it’s that we broke up the recording into a lot of chunks with Transatlanticism, so the record unfolded over a longer period of time. With Plans, we flew to the East Coast for a month, took a week off, and then went into the studio for another month to finish it. Also, a lot of songs I wrote for Plans were keyboard songs, songs that came together on the computer, a lot of cut-and-paste kind of stuff. So when we got into a room and started running through the songs, it wasn’t like we strapped on guitars and just barreled through it playing music together. Now, I’m making a conscious effort to spend more time on guitar, and I think we’re all more excited about constructing everything together in a room together. But I think that with every album you learn what works and what doesn’t work.
One last thing: have you had to beef up your live show for the larger venues?
I think we’ll always be comfortable just getting up and playing songs. But being on tour with Franz Ferdinand was a real eye opener for us. I think that we learned that when you get into larger venues and the tickets become more expensive, you can spend some money to make it more of an event. So we bring out a lighting director and we really try to fill the room. And from all accounts, people seem to enjoy the bigger production. We’re performing as well as we ever have, and we’re as personable as we’ve always been, and now we have this extra element. Because people do have to pay more money for tickets, and a lot of people who come to see us now expect a concert, not just a show. And if that stuff offends you, then don’t go to the show. I mean, if people don’t want to listen to our music anymore because of the way the band has grown over the last couple of years, I’m not going to lose sleep over it.
DEATH CAB FOR CUTIE | Opera House, 539 Washington St, Boston | November 2-3 | $29.50 | 617.931.2000
Related:
Death Cab for Cutie and Franz Ferdinand, Gorillaz in the midst, Phoenix/WFNX Best Music Poll 2008, More
- Death Cab for Cutie and Franz Ferdinand
Refugees from the heady indie explosion of 2003, Franz and Death Cab are currently sharing space on a concert poster featuring an emo-like Band-Aid heart and a MySpace logo.
- Gorillaz in the midst
Remember the great electronica gold rush of ’97, the year Madonna’s Maverick label won a massive bidding war over long-ignored rave mystic Liam Howlett, a/k/a Prodigy, and we all grooved to the electropunk clash of “Smack My Bitch Up”?
- Phoenix/WFNX Best Music Poll 2008
The chill of victory.
- Start with some Spice
The game is on for the reunited Spice Girls.
- Feel the music
I personally find it comforting that the current number-one single in the country has a chorus that goes "I'll gas up the jet for you tonight, and baby we can go wherever you like."
- Neo-new-what?
The real album of the year is a disc that probably didn’t cross many people’s paths in 2006, a Rhino comp titled Future Retro that pairs various DJs/electronicists (Richard X, Tiga, the Crystal Method) with classic new-wave tracks by the Cure, Echo & the Bunnymen, Depeche Mode, and New Order.
- Mae
Virginia Beach–based Mae play catchy, pretty pop-rock perfect for kids whose parents won’t let them wear their Death Cab for Cutie T-shirts to Sunday school.
- Peter Bjorn and John | Seaside Rock
It’s really pointless. And somewhat nice.
- Work ethics
You can file Jason Molina with the über-prolific. Magnolia Electric Co., "Lonesome Valley" (mp3)
- The new year is full of promise
Local music took a few hits in 2006, with the shuttering of more venues, leaving us with a small cluster of fully functioning outlets for homegrown bands: AS220, the Ocean Mist, Cats, and the Living Room.
- Say it ain't so, Joe
Breaking: Biden resigns the vice-presidency amid Wentzgate scandal
- Less

Topics:
Music Features
, Entertainment, Music, Music Reviews, More
, Entertainment, Music, Music Reviews, Pop and Rock Music, Singer Songwriters, Neil Young, U2, Alternative and Indie Rock, Death Cab for Cutie, Ben Gibbard, Less