For Florida's sole remaining sex surrogate, love is a many splintered thing.
It's not just giant companies cashing in on America's defense industry.
How a throwaway idea at the Barkley ad agency became the "Sonic Guys."
A diner's guide to Texas's oldest Mexican restaurants.
The Pitch: It sounds like living in Brooklyn really affected your songwriting on this record.
Bird: Yeah, I'm sure it has, totally. The music we made in the past was a reflection of living in a certain place and the experiences of that. But in a way, the amount of touring we've been doing kind of affected the way the record came out, too. It wasn't just the living-in-New York thing. It was a combination of those different things.
It took a lot less time to record Places Like This than the previous two albums. Why was that?
It was definitely a different scenario than how we've recorded in the past. We got together with an engineer, and it was the first time we'd been engineered by someone who wasn't in the group, and that certainly made it kind of different. That freed up our hands a lot so we were able to think more about the music — the actual performance of the music as opposed to the stuff we've been obsessed with in the past. Either way, it was the first time we'd really become a band.
So why were you able to get it done a lot faster?
Because of the engineer and because we can play a lot better than we used to be able to play, technically. Before, it would take us a week to record one guitar part.
And you were playing the new material on tour before you went into the studio, right?
Yeah, that's right. We pretty much wanted it to be a reflection of us as a live band as opposed to trying to create a more alternate universe again.
Did you record it live in the studio?
Yeah, a large percentage of the stuff was recorded live. There are a few songs, except for vocals, that were recorded live. A couple of the songs had live vocals as well. We just wanted to make it really unpremeditated and spontaneous and play it how we would play it live and try to capture that energy.