Gazette Interview with Alta Mira

Alta Mira set to release new album

Long recording saga took place in studio with “creepy” history

Recording a debut album has been a bit of an adventure for Albany-based rock quartet Alta Mira. The group's self-titled effort on local indie label Indian Ledge has been in the works for approximately two years, and follows 2007's “Fables and Fabrications” EP. While total recording time only added up
to about two weeks, the group's members commuted to Barefoot Studios in Brighton, Mass., near Boston, whenever they had time, eventually amassing the album’s 12 songs.
And the studio itself, a former insane asylum with roughly 500 band practice rooms now housed within, provided its own challenges. In fact, the “creepy” atmosphere in the building helped lend a hand in
creating the album's dark moods.

HAUNTING QUALITY
“I've been told that it has sort of a haunting quality to it, and I can definitely see that on a couple of tunes,” said vocalist Joe D. Michon-Huneau from a coffee shop in Albany. “I don't think it was ever
really intention, but being in that atmosphere, it was pretty interesting.”
“We used to walk out of the studio in the hallways, and there were 30 bands playing in different rooms,” added bassist August Sagehorn. “It was like walking through the gates of Hell.”
The resulting album blends influences ranging from Radiohead to The Beatles to Tool, switching from pensive verses to full-throttle walls of distortion at the drop of a hat. It will be released at Revolution Hall on Saturday night at a performance featuring Railbird, Mathew Loiacono and Matt Durfee (who will also help Alta Mira fill out its sound during the show).
In keeping with the band's experimental tendencies, the release show itself is being dubbed an “experiment”. Along with performances, the hall will play host to installation artwork by Nick Reinert, and the band has teamed up with iPIX to record the show in 3D and make the video available online at a later date.
“We don't even know what it's going to look like; we haven't even been shown the technology yet, but from what Nick Cosimano [head of Indian Ledge] says, it's pretty mind-blowing,” Michon-Huneau said. “He said the only way he can describe it is that it sort of feels like you're expanding your peripheral vision.”
The band – featuring Sagehorn's brother Hunter on guitar and Tommy Krebs on drums – first came together in 2004, Michon-Huneau, at the time playing guitar in an acoustic duo, tried out as vocalist for the then three-piece band, which at the time was also acoustic. “We didn't have very good equipment at all,” Michon-Huneau explained.
The band's initial funk-driven sound presented a challenge to him vocally. “I wasn't really used to that style, but I was like 'Oh, I'll give it a shot,'” he said. “I never really tried to get outside of my range before. These guys constantly push me to do different things with my voice that I didn't think I could do with it.”
Soon the groups began gigging at coffee shops in the area. “We used to play Caffe Lena's a lot – I think they were sick of us after a while,” Michon-Huneau said.
By the release of the band's first EP, the music had gone completely electric. The self-titled debut continues in the vein, with songs such as “The End of My” built around multiple guitar lines and
rich vocal harmonies.

RECENT SONGS
Roughly half the songs on the album were written only this year, although others such as “To Clear the Moon” have been in the band's repertoire for some time now. The group's members filled out the album's sound with piano, mandolin and guitar effects that were found in the studio.
“Taylor [Barefoot, studio owner] has just a wall of guitars and a floor's worth of effects pedals that we were able to screw around with at will,” Michon-Huneau said. “He had, I think, two different, or
three different rooms that we would try to record different parts in. I know I did vocals in four different areas.”

- Brian McElhiney

Daily Gazette, 12.3.09

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