Saturday, October 31, 2015

The Garden talks about their latest record and how an incline is better than a decline

On Friday the 30th of October we had a date with the second best looking twins on the planet. The first place obviously goes to Gary and Ryan Jarman from The Cribs. Due to a shattered phone screen Wyatt was excused for the first part of our interview. I guess some things are still more important than an interview with the hottest new blog in town. We still had a lovely talk with his twin Flechter about the up’s and down’s of being a new band and what influenced them on their latest album, ‘Haha’. 


Today is the third time you play in Brussels, your second time here at Madame Moustache. Did you already had the time to get to know the city a bit better?
Fletcher: Some cities we’ve played I know my way around. But this particular one not so much. I know this area and that’s about it. 

Do you have any favourite places to go back to when you’re touring?
Fletcher: Yeah totally! I like going to Denmark. I like going to Asia. For specific places I’d like to go back to Indonesia, that was fun last time. I like Texas. Texas is nice.

Did your home place Orange, California, influence your music in any way?
Fletcher: Not really. There were some bands from California which I like to listen to growing up. They might have served as a backbone for me and what I do now. But I don’t think they really directly influenced me on what I’m doing right now.

Would your music have been different if you grew up somewhere else?
Fletcher: Maybe? I really have no idea! 

Do you think stylistic elements, like album covers, are important to what you’re trying to convey with your music?
Fletcher: Visual art is important to some people. I’m always kind of lazy when it comes to the visual art part. We were more focused on what we’re actually doing than the album cover. We do like album and visual art but most of the time we just forget about it. We try to focus on it ever so often because it is definitely important. 

What do you think about your career in music at the moment?
Fletcher: It’s actually changing all the time. There’s always up’s and down’s. But as long as you keep going on a steady incline instead of a steady decline it’s always a bit better. We’re slowly inching up. So yeah, we’re doing good!

Are you proud of how far you’ve come with your music?
Fletcher: You learn to appreciate it a lot after a while. I guess if you start it doesn’t really matter if you’re good or bad. In my eyes when we first started nobody seemed to care about anything we were doing. When we started touring, still nobody cared. Then we started touring harder and things changed and people came to our shows. You get used to it in the beginning. Doing your thing and sleeping at terrible places. But when things do get better you really learn to appreciate it. I'm happy where we are now.

Congratulations on your last album ‘Haha’. How was the writing process?
Fletcher: It came kind of natural!

When did you write the songs and was it east to compose them?
Fletcher: The album went through a year before we got it how it’s now. Because we were touring we didn’t have much time to work on it. Every time we went home we just had a short period of time to record some songs. We had the songs made already but they were like crappy demo’s. So we did have to record them all again. We wanted a more refined sound than what we already had. It would have taken us only a few weeks if we weren’t touring though. The only song we recorded in the studio was ‘Egg’, all the other songs were made alone, at our home. 

You once said that every song has a meaning? But is there also a theme on the album?
Fletcher: It’s just a collection of different ideas. It’s about places we went and are still going. Mostly it’s things we believe in, things we’ve experienced and things that are important to us. 


For the second part Wyatt joins us in the dark smoking room at Madame Moustache. We tried to find an answer to the question that most scientists have been trying to find an answer on for decades: Are identical twins really that similar? We gave the Shears twins seven small dilemma’s and found out their different views on some of them.

Gorilla or Tractor






Morning person or Night person






Fastfood or Home made




Crowdsurfing or Moshing





Drum ‘n’ Bass or Drums and bass




Jebediah or Jessesiah





French fries or French kiss






How do you see eachother?      



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