Jim: “Our first album [A CALL TO THE VOID] was done in our studio box we have in Manchester, all digital, using plugins and guitar simulators. But a lot of the timeless albums that you hear, they have that character of real-life stuff. So we were like, ‘Okay, let’s go and twiddle some fucking knobs. Let’s go and flick some switches.’”
Han: “‘Let’s make stuff tangible again. Go back to basics.’ I think we had, like, nine amp heads we could pick from, and we could switch between them, fiddling with the knobs, spending ages going, ‘That’s not right, that’s not right…’ We wanted it all to be as analogue as possible. We were writing in this compound with all these synths and loads of different amps and sounds. We didn’t want any of it to be digital. We got there and went pedal shopping for two days.”
Jim: “I think the only thing that Han and I had spoken about going into it was timeless albums by bands like blink-182 and Green Day and My Chemical Romance, where they were trying to write a whole cohesive record. We wanted something like that, where it had all been written at the same time.”