Who needs a recording studio? Royal Forest tracked their new album in a handful of unorthodox locations, including a single-pop airplane and a WWII submarine. They filled the songs with tape loops and other electronics, too, stretching the boundaries of a familiar genre — Americana — that tends to shy away from that sort of experimentation.
The result is Spillway, a collection of rootsy, sepia-toned tunes that bridge the gap between the familiar and the unexpected.
โWe tried to take familiar musical ideas we grew up with — like โ70s Americana — and bend them into something new,โ says bandmate Justin Douglas. โโJohn Denverโ is a good example of that. We wrote the song in a cabin near the Frio River, starting with an arpeggiator loop, an acoustic guitar and the verse melody. It was constructed to rely on a simple vocal line and a driving beat; the song doesn’t have a chorus. The offset dual drums came from watching Jim Keltner and Ringo Starr playing together in โConcert for Bangladesh.โโ

