The List

6 Times Musicians Took DIY to a New Level

When one thinks of DIY music, one might think of simply recording an album in a barebones studio at home. These six bands and artists decided to take things a step further with some very creative DIY techniques. Letโ€™s look at six times musicians took DIY to a new level!

1. Impaled Northern Moonforestโ€™s โ€œJokeโ€ Black Metal Album

This self-titled EP from 2000 was initially supposed to be a joke. The acoustic black metal outfit Impaled Northern Moonforest itself was meant to be an ironic depiction of DIY Norwegian black metal outfits. The songwriting wasnโ€™t well-thought-out and the band rarely practiced or rehearsed. Their only EP was also recorded with significant volume restrictions because someone was sleeping in a nearby room. You can tell that the percussion on this EP was made up of someone slapping their thigh or a bed of some sort.

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2. Animal Collective Recorded โ€˜Campfire Songsโ€™ Outdoors

This 2003 album was technically a self-titled debut, though it was later classified as another Animal Collective album. This is a really fascinating piece of work and an excellent example of musicians taking DIY to a new level. The entire album was recorded in one take, outside in the middle of November in Maryland. The ambient sounds of nature are what make this album so special.

โ€œWe wanted it to sound like a campfire feels,โ€ said Noah Lennox of the album. โ€œAnd I think that also made us think of campfire songs that you can sing with a bunch of people and everybody gets connected and feels good and safe.โ€

3. Ricky Eat Acid Used Lo-Fi Techniques to Elicite Loneliness

Ricky Eat Acid produced a number of soft, acoustic songs with a simple cheap keyboard for Seeing Little Ghosts Everywhere from 2011. Itโ€™s an ambient album with lo-fi and minimalistic instrumentation. The combination of instrument choices, the occasional sound of an AC running, the pitter-patter of rain outside a window, and the sounds of cars driving by all elicit a deep, haunting sense of loneliness on this album.

4. Grimes Recorded โ€˜Visionsโ€™ With Garageband

This is another great example of musicians taking DIY to a different level, and also probably the most well-known example. Grimes recorded the entirety of her cult classic album Visions using only the early 2010s version of Garageband, some vocal pedals, a sampler, and her keyboard. If you want to get into electronic music but feel like you donโ€™t have the right equipment, take some notes from Grimes.ย 

Itโ€™s also worth noting that she blacked out all of her windows and refused to leave her room for nine days to make herself hallucinate while recording it, so thereโ€™s that.

5. Ryu Hankil Used Typewriter-Trigged Instruments on โ€˜Becoming Typewriterโ€™

Ryu Hankil recorded the 2009 album Becoming Typewriter using DIY instruments that were triggered by the inputs of a (you guessed it) typewriter. It doesnโ€™t get more experimental and DIY than that.

6. Zebra Zebra’s โ€˜Iโ€™m Still Playingโ€™ Remixed Sounds From a Two-Year-Old

This 2016 album is a fascinating piece of work and one of the best experimental albums of that year. All of the sounds on this album were made by Laura, Tim Thorntonโ€™s two-year-old daughter. Thornton set up a few different mics in his home studio along with some โ€œtrapsโ€ for the kiddo. A few items include toys to throw down the stairs, some bubble wrap, a wide range of instruments at her level of accessibility, and a pitch-shifted delay on a microphone.

Photo by Hisham Bharoocha

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