Solea: Working
Title
Having spent more than a decade with Samiam, Sergie Loobkoff has seen
and experienced it all. Whether it was sharing the stage with some
of the most notable acts, headlining their own shows or dealing with
the pressures and procedures of major labels, Loobkoff is perhaps
one of the most intelligent and talented songwriters in the industry
today. His new project, titled Solea, features Garrett Klahn (formerly
of Texas is the Reason), Johnny Cruz from Samiam and Niko Georgeadis.
Although elements of both Samiam and Texas is the Reason can be heard
in this new sound, they've collectively taken a new direction, one
that is free from all the hype and pressures that surrounded their
previous work. Their experience has given them one giant advantage
over many of today's newer acts - all those early mistakes from naiveté
are done and gone. With all the building blocks firmly secured, Solea
can concentrate on writing, recording and touring, an aspect a new
act has the juggle with getting their foot in the door. An advantage
most welcomed by the band as they are currently in search of a reliable
label to release their work. Having worked with labels both indie
and major, they know that selecting the right label can mean the difference
between a long lasting successful project and one that fizzles out.
1. Thanks for taking the time to share with us your work and
music. Who else is involved with Solea and how did this project
come into fruition?
I've been friends with Garrett (the singer, formerly of Texas is
the Reason) since his old band toured Europe with my old band in
1995 or 96. After that, we would see each other on tours and vacations
for years. He lives on the east coast and I've always lived on the
west coast, so it was a couple times a year. Then last summer, I
got an odd email from him saying, "I want to move to SF next
year and play with you." And, although I've always admired
him I was a bit hesitant...because in the last couple of years,
he played in some bands that had more in common with the Black Crowes,
Verve and Flying Burrito Brothers than what I am into: which is
generally like Jawbreaker, Dinosaur Jr., Sonic Youth, Alkaline Trio,
etc. While his recent bands sort of rejected punk and 90s indie
rock, I'm interested in playing that and I feel that is the kind
of music he excels at playing and writing. He insisted that he was
cool with playing music more like what I was
thinking...and lucky for me, that is what transpired. He even cut
of his hippy, Britpop haircut!
2. How has everything been so far?
It has been great. We've had no problem coming up with songs and
they come together quickly. We've recorded demos twice and they
went smoothly, we've toured the east and west coasts and they went
well. We were also totally happy that lots of people came out to
check out what we were doing.
3. Solea may be a new project but all the members have been
in bands before, most notably yourself and Johnny, how important
has that experience been? Especially with everything Samiam has
been through, dealing with labels, constant touring and releasing
records on a regular basis?
I think that is the main thing that has developed our band so fast.
I mean, we are a new band with new songs, but we have quickly turned
into a group that works well together and is productive. Plus, there
is already a lot of interest in our band because of our history,
which is nice. Many new bands get together and have terrible times
getting booking agents, shows, managers, lawyers and especially
fans. We are very aware that we have a gigantic jump on all of those
things. But it is a fine line between using band histories as a
stepping-stone and being a sad band that relies on its members'
passed glory. I think we are confident of our new songs and are
handling it as a new entity worthy of it's own merit.
4. You're currently in search of a reliable label, has your
experience with previous labels been a strong factor in deciding
which label is best? What advantages has working with all those
previous labels given Solea?
Like I said, we have a big advantage. The people at labels that
listen to demos get dozens to hundreds a week...they can't listen
to all of them. I think most of those people are bound to put ours
on the top of the listening stack simply out of curiosity. But that
isn't going to get any band signed...only listened to. Hopefully
we can figure something out. We've had a few meetings with labels
but nothing concrete...now that we have our second demo, hopefully
we can move on. The fact that Samiam went through the ringer with
Atlantic and Garrett went through similar times with New Rising
Sons on Virgin helps us see rationally at the major labels. If you
see that we did sign to a major in 6 months, you can determine less
that Solea garnered a major label contract and more specifically,
that no larger, suitable indie label wanted us. So far, we have
gotten a lot of attention from majors and lukewarm responses from
the indies. It's a bummer because we would definitely rather be
on Vagrant, Jade Tree, Epitaph or whatever. On the other hand, we
have done our time with tiny indie labels that have little to no
resources, which are neat companies, but not for us at this stage
of our lives.
5. Has the pressure been different, compared to Samiam? How
different has it been emotionally and mentally when you go into
the studio to write and record?
It's nice; now, there is no pressure, no expectations. We are new
and no one expects anything out of this. The best thing is that
now, we can open up for any band and not feel lame. We've opened
up for Thursday, Jealous Sound, Rival Schools and had great shows...but
with Samiam, we would have felt lame to open up for newer bands...well,
we wouldn't have. It's just like the new Green Day tour. Sure, they
are big and rich, but it must be a bit of a bummer to open for Blink
182 (who are newer and shittier). Or Bad Religion opening for Blink
last year. In the studio, it has felt fine. I don't feel pressure
in there...it is nerve racking because so much is out of your control
(and in the hands of the engineer) but I am confident in our new
songs and the members.
6. You've given us a small sample of the Solea sound on mp3.com,
how would you best describe this sound?
I think it is very much a progression of later Samiam with Texas
is the Reason style vocals. I have written a majority of the music,
so it's really the songs that would have been on the next Samiam
record. Obviously, the voice is the most important aspect of a band
and Garrett's is very recognizable. I think TITR was a very 'e-m-o'
band, and this (like Samiam) is conscious not to pander to the current
tastes of people. We are avoiding the clichés of emo and
just trying to write songs that will still be good when emo is dead
and gone.
7. What are the immediate and future plans for Solea?
In a perfect world, we will soon find a label and will record our
record in June after our 2-week German tour. But things always have
a way of fucking up. But the plan is to do that, then tour Brazil
for a week and then release the record in September and do full
us and European tours. We'll just have to see.
8. With the growth of online media, how important has the Internet,
mp3 and the resources available online been to yourself as a musician
and to Solea?
I think it is great. I mean, we have had these songs up on mp3.com
and you can track how many people have checked it out. How else
could we have gotten 14,000 people to listen to our band when we
are label-less? I think it is really, really neat.
9. What do you do differently in terms of spreading the word
and getting news out compared to say 1991? Has this growth in media
and availability been kind to musicians who did all this before
the commercial use of the Internet?
In 1991 you spent a lot more time and effort with the mail...and
money. Now you have the internet and even better CD burners and
laser printers. Making a CD now is simple and sounds great...back
then you had cassettes that sounded terrible. It is great. Plus
we have saved so much time writing songs and sending them to each
other via the internet (Garrett and Niko live in buffalo, NY, Johnny
lives in Oakland and I live in Los Angeles). Then also, you could
sell cassette demos, but that was pretty much a rip off. We've sold
200 demos at shows and that product isn't really inferior to what
real CDs are.
10. You've been able to tour around the world and play in front
of people everywhere, are there places where you haven't been and
would like to go someday? Or are the plans of Solea different from
say touring the world?
Our major goal is to tour Europe, where Samiam and Texas is the
Reason were by far the most popular. I think we will do extremely
well there. After that, we want to go to Japan like Samiam did several
times but also new places like Brazil and Australia, which I expect
will happen very soon.
11. Has your song writing influences changed since the start
of Solea? Or do you still write songs for the same reasons you did
back in 1989?
I have always just done my thing. For better or worse. I hope that
I've gotten better at it, but that is a subjective thing.... some
people like disjointed, fucked up song writing (like I was doing
in the early 90's) and others like concise, poppier things like
I go for now. I would say that I like later Samiam and Solea music
much more than the early stuff of Samiam. If I like it, I'm happy
and if others agree all the better.
12. What do you look forward to the most when you perform, write
songs and record with Solea?
Meeting people and having fun. There is never going to be a lot
of money or glory...but I can always have things to look forward
to in music. It's a great feeling when you know that next month
you are going to Japan or something. I'm not going to argue the
philosophical question, "what is better doing something or
to anticipate doing something?" But living life with an intriguing
future is better than wondering if the next days are going to be
boring.
13. What takes up most of your time outside of Solea and when
you all have free time, does the band spend time together?
We all live very, very far apart, so we spend no time together
outside of the band. It's pretty strange. But maybe that will be
good in the long run. I mean, living in the same house with a band
would stink. When you get home from a long tour, you want nothing
to do with your band mates that you were cramped up with in a van
or bus for months on end. Garrett is planning to move to California
in the end of summer, so maybe that will change. As for me, I do
graphic design and skateboard outside of the band. Not so much skateboarding
since I left the bay area 5 months ago...because I left my old man
skater crew behind but a little.
14. You've worked with many great producers and artists over
the years, are there plans for future collaborations on a Solea
record?
We'll see. I'd love to have Tim O'Heir, who produced the last Samiam
record again, but we'll see...Definitely, we want to play with some
the great bands out there, Jealous Sound, Alkaline Trio, Jets To
Brazil, Cutlass Supreme, Saves the Day, Jimmy Eat World, Rival Schools,
etc...
15. In the future, how would you like to be looked upon most,
whether it is by your fans, family or friends?
My friends are important, but I don't care if they like my band.
I've never gone out with a girl that even liked Samiam, so why should
it be any different with Solea. Fans are great, but they aren't
necessarily real...they like you one year and the next they think
they are for your little brother or something because they've moved
on. Which is fine, but disheartening sometimes. I always get a little
embarrassed when I hear a band like AFI or something rave about
their fans like they are family. It's great that they have such
devoted fans (and AFI for example have insane devotion) but they
aren't family or friends...they are strangers who like what they
do. I'm kinda uncomfortable with the concept to be honest.... although
I understand that I am supposed to kiss their ass, it's hard for
me to do.
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