"It's so much easier to hide behind self-deprecation and much easier to mope than it is to celebrate."
It's been four years between albums for Melbourne's Harmony, with members focusing on other projects and babies entering the frame.
"Alex [Lyngcoln, drummer] and I had a baby daughter in that time so that's where the majority of our energy has been placed," explains Lyngcoln, as he reflects on the years since the band's last album, Carpetbombing, was released. Away from Harmony, Lyngcoln is also at the core of The Nation Blue and recently made his first foray into releasing solo albums, while other members, such as Erica Dunn (Tropical Fuck Storm), have multiple extracurricular activities. "It's an allocation of time for things," Lyngcoln explains. "The band was dormant after we did a couple of tours. Everyone has been really busy with other things and Harmony has just been sitting there. It's nice to put it back together."
After the confessional, angst-ridden content of Harmony's previous releases, Lyngcoln felt compelled to approach Double Negative from a new perspective and, as stated in the album's title, he used a technique that incorporated the style of his earlier writing and cleverly reconfigured it towards a more positive outlook. "I just wanted to flip it and sing about something else. With the birth of a child, you really struggle to continue putting a lot of negativity out into the world. I just found it wasn't helping my depression and mental wellbeing singing about negative shit, so I decided to write about something more positive," he explains. "That's really hard to do, it's so much easier to hide behind self-deprecation and much easier to mope than it is to celebrate. Wallowing in the crucible of grief was just something I couldn't do for another record so we changed our focus to try and write about love, which is one of the most hazardous terrains you can enter into as a songwriter. It's been responsible for some of the greatest music of our time and also the vast majority of the worst," he grimaces.
"I worked my way into it by trying to employ negative language. I looked at it through descriptors of negative things such as war. Taking the same kind of lexicon that I've used in the past but try to print it in double negative and apply it in a positive way. When I write a chord progression it always tends to revert to the same tricks and my vocabulary is limited to a certain amount of words that slide together. I wanted to try and refine them and use them differently."
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Previous Harmony albums have had a dense, lo-fi quality to them, and though it suited Lyngcoln's throat-shredding howls, it often obscured the songs and lacked the warmth and nuance that Amanda Roff, Quinn Veldhuis and Erica Dunn's lush vocal harmonies called for. This time they worked with producer Mike Deslandes and recorded in a group environment at Kyneton Mechanics Hall.
"It was recorded much in the same way as the two last The Nation Blue records. Mike has an amazing mobile studio and so we went to the same hall because it is suited to Harmony a lot more. I'd wanted to do it there for a long time. Mike recorded it and as I was recovering from wrist surgery and a hernia, I had a solid eight weeks to mix it over summer and obsess and fall in and out of love with it. I'm happy with it, it's the best thing I've done recording-wise," he proudly states. "The other records have been pieced together. This was the band playing in a room live and then each night the girls would come in and record their vocals live. They were long days. Mike would clock off recording the band and then I'd jump in the seat and start recording the girls until 2am. There are vocal takes where I've nodded off and they were trying to wake me up. It was probably a bit ambitious," laughs Lyngcoln.
That ambition has resulted in by far and away the band's best work and with Lyngcoln and family relocating to Greece for a year in 2019, fans would be well served to catch them on their upcoming tour, before temporary hibernation again beckons.